Saturday, April 30, 2011

War Of Words With RINO Barbara Anderson

 It all started with CLT leader Barbara Anderson e mailing me about helping us promote the Independence Tea Party's anti-tax day rally in Salem Massachusetts backon April 16.

From:
Barbara Anderson <barbara@cltg.org>
View Contact
To:TP-David Beaupre vulcher777@yahoo.com
Hi David.  I saw in the SN that the Indendence/Cape Ann Tea Party is having a rally on Riley Plaza next Saturday at 1.  We are sending a week’s schedule to our activists and want to promote this, but can’t find it on your website.  Is it still on?  Need to know right now.

So she contacted us first not us contacting her.

These were the comments posted by me on her Salelm News column
Barbara Anderson showed her true colors at the Independence Tea Party rally in Salem last week
Barbara Anderson
Thanks for asking, Dan. I'm hoping David complains with a letter to the editor so I have an excuse to write an entire column about this. I'm still steaming.
After I promo'd the Independence Tea Party rally in my column, Chip and I went to be part of the crowd. I didn't know I was a speaker until I read it in the Salem News just before rally day. If I'd been actually invited to speak, I would have issue my warning: if I'm part of the program, don't use the rally to 1) threaten Scott Brown (not that he'd care, but those who threaten to defeat him next year embarrass themselves and the people they are with) and 2) don't use the Tea Party for the anti-gay agenda and 3) don't announce that the social issues are just as important as the fiscal issues; or if you do, know that, as part of the program, I will interrupt, I will loudly object, which I did.
We have one chance to turn things around, in 2012, and the Tea Party is our only hope. It shouldn't be hijacked by the SocCons, to whom most voters can't relate, or we will lose.
No longer supporting the Indendence Tea Party.
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Ms.Anderson rudely interupted some of our guest speakers and myself as well all because we mentioned our Junior US Sen.Scott Brown's (RINO-Ma) votes on some controversial issues and it will hurt CLT in their effots to collect donations
Barbara Anderson in response to David Beaupre
Ah, more idle threats. I wasn't at the rally for CLT, people in the crowd seemed more interested in my column, which we are always careful to note is my personal opinion.
The only guest speaker I recall interrupting was anti-gay activist Brian Camenker, not for the first time. He should have warned you. I know I told you often what I think of using the Tea Party for the SocCon agenda and thereby getting in the way of our ability to save America.
No one who knows me expects me to be well-behaved.
It's either you interrupted me as you did Ms.Anderson or you didn't.Just for the record and the truth most at the rally were not impressed with you as you were condescending as the left is.
Oh and by the way we here at the Independence Tea Party are proud to be Conservative on the fiscal issues as well as the Social issues and we are not afraid to give the LORD God the glory.
 Hey Barbara you can continue saying and spinning what you think happened at our rally and you can continue to use this column as your bullypulpit but the whole rally was VIDEO TAPED if it hasn't already been viewed on salem access tv it will and Cape Ann had their video going as well.Oh and just for the record Brian Camenker took a video as well.So the truth will come out.
Now here is what I was talking about a link to the rally video

then go to access shows a-z  
 look for  North Shore Tea party Meeting
  then you can click & play
So RINOS like Anderson will be uncovered for the frauds that they are
 So as  told you Ms.Anderson the truth is coming out

Sarah Says NO!

Sarah Palin On Raising Debt Ceiling: "Hells No"



"Hells no!" Former Gov. Sarah Palin (R-Alaska) said about raising the debt ceiling. "It just shows the American people we're not serious yet. We're still going to incur more debt and we don’t have to increase the debt ceiling in the next few weeks."

Friday, April 29, 2011

Eagan Doesnot Tell The Full Truth At Lenk Hearing

Councilors play dirty at hearing

By Margery Eagan Boston Herald Columnist
  It was a crazy seesaw on Beacon Hill yesterday between adoring supporters of Barbara Lenk — Deval Patrick’s nominee to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court — and her detractors, a couple of whom seemed unhinged.
Supporters spoke to the Governor’s Council hearing of Lenk’s “exceptional intellect . . . fairness . . . judgment . . . temperament” and unbiased adherence to the law.
Detractors spoke mostly about sex. Councilor Marilyn Devaney spoke of “penile/vaginal penetration” — David Funnell of the Commonwealth Covenant Keepers, of “bodily pleasures, unbridled sexual license” and the “militant homosexual subculture elevating their shame to status.”
Omnipresent anti-gay crusader Brian Camenker discussed some “disgusting,” “vulgar,” “profane” and “degrading” Concord Carlisle High School play about homosexual lovers, though it was unclear how that connected to Lenk.
At one point, the prose turned so wanton that Councilor Mary-Ellen Manning advised those under 18 to leave.
I believe only Lenk’s two teenage daughters, who remained, were underage.
Then Manning delved into whether incest statutes cover homosexual activity.
“You with me on that?” Manning asked Roderick Ireland, the state Supreme Court’s chief justice and the first witness to support Lenk’s nomination.
“I’m following you so far,” Ireland replied.
He may have been the only one.
You had to wonder: Are these sessions always XXX-rated? Or was yesterday’s so fleshy because Lenk is openly gay and — despite her tailored appearance in navy suit and librarian’s glasses — suspected by some as a secret swinger and immoral advocate for homosexual incest?
She later assured councilors that she opposes all incest, but had ruled in a particular incest case on a narrow definition of the crime. The Legislature later broadened the statute to include homosexual acts.
Clearly, those who support abolishing this odd council, including this newspaper, would have reveled in the embarrassing, cringe-worthy performance of Councilor Charles Cipollini. He launched into a bizarre series of questions to Lenk including whether she’s “a supporter of Dr. Kevorkian, yes or no?”
“Councilor,” admonished Lt. Gov. Tim Murray, who presided over the proceedings.
“Yes or no!” Cipollini pressed on.
“Are you asking me?” Murray said to Cipollini. “At this moment, I think I am (with Kevorkian).”
For her part, Lenk sat stoically throughout, declining to give opinions on issues that might come before her and insisting that rule of law, not her personal life, determines her rulings. No word on what she really thought of the “bodily pleasures” brigades.


Commentary

I find it funny how Eagan didn't say that when asked by the Governors Councilors about how her partner actually had a case brought before Barbara Lenk at one point but don't let Margery Eagan's liberal biases get in the way.Talk about a conflict of interest.Lenk was also asked by The Council about the second amendment from what I have been told she became puzzled.
Last point I was told by our own Governors Councillor Mary Ellen Manning who does a great job by the way that there was no media there or news reporters whatsoever during the hearing.

Former Obama Supporter Has Seen The Light

Black Chamber of Commerce President Blasts "Marxist," "Brownshirt" Obama


Today on The Laura Ingraham Show, Harry Alford, president and CEO of the National Black Chamber of Commerce, blasted President Obama's anti-business administration in an explosive interview. Alford, a 2008 Obama supporter, labeled the administration "Marxist" and "fanatical." "They might as well put on the brown shirts and swastikas," he said.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

You Are A Racist For Asking For Obama's Birth Certificate


How can this be?

Reagan Reclaimed By Steven F. Hayward (National Review Online)

 The news that President Obama decided to read a biography of Ronald Reagan during his Christmas holiday in Hawaii might be taken as a sign that Reagan’s triumph over liberals is complete. Can anyone imagine John F. Kennedy admitting he was reading a biography of Calvin Coolidge, or Jimmy Carter taking in lessons from Dwight Eisenhower? This represents the culmination of a remarkable turnabout in Reagan’s reputation, most notably among liberals, who might have been expected to do to Reagan what an earlier generation of partisan historians did to Coolidge. Instead, we have seen a raft of books from liberal grandees such as Richard Reeves and Sean Wilentz giving Reagan his due.

But while conservatives should pocket these unexpected concessions, they should also note that the admiration of Reagan in the media-academic complex is highly qualified and mostly limited to his role in the Cold War. (And even this story they get wrong.) About the domestic-policy Reagan, liberals are currently engaging in a clever two-step — either excoriating Reagan with recycled 1980s clichés (favors the rich, hates the poor and minorities, reckless deregulation, and so forth), or making him out to be a crypto-liberal who tacitly set out to shore up the welfare state while cloaking himself in anti-big-government rhetoric. Ever so slowly, liberals are attempting a subtle revisionism. This revisionism is alarming not simply as an offense against historical accuracy, but also because the Liberal Revised Standard Version of Reagan will be used against the Tea Party and congressional Republicans in the months and years to come. We can expect to hear (and have already heard once or twice) that even Reagan didn’t attack entitlements the way Paul Ryan and today’s radical House Republicans propose to do.

It wouldn’t be the first time the Left has pulled off a historical Brinks job on a Republican whose achievements and popularity could not be destroyed with a direct attack. A hundred years ago, the leading Progressives appropriated Abraham Lincoln for their cause, even as they explicitly attacked Lincoln’s (and the Founders’) central political philosophy of natural rights. It culminated in the chutzpah of Franklin Roosevelt’s declaration in 1929 that “it is time for us Democrats to claim Lincoln as one of our own,” and in the early 1990s with New York’s ultra-liberal governor, Mario Cuomo, ostentatiously embracing Lincoln because “he’s reassuring to politicians like me.”

The liberal revision of Reagan has been unfolding for a while now, and at the center of it is the effort to separate him from his conservative beliefs. Joshua Green wrote in The Washington Monthly in January 2003 that “many of [Reagan’s] actions as president wound up facilitating liberal objectives. What this clamor of adulation is seeking to deny is that beyond his conservative legacy, Ronald Reagan has bequeathed a liberal one.” He raised taxes! He talked to the Soviets and reached arms agreements! Green’s article was provocatively adorned with a cartoon rendering of Reagan as FDR, complete with upturned cigarette holder. The late John Patrick Diggins, an unorthodox liberal who was a close friend of Arthur Schlesinger Jr.’s, argued in his 2007 book Ronald Reagan: Fate, Freedom, and the Making of History that Reagan deserves to be considered one of the four greatest American presidents, alongside Washington, Lincoln, and Franklin Roosevelt. His Upper West Side neighbors are still picking up their jaws off the floor. However, Diggins makes Reagan into a crypto-liberal: “Far from being a conservative, Reagan was the great liberating spirit of modern American history, a political romantic impatient with the status quo. . . . Reagan’s relation to liberalism may illuminate modern America more than his relation to conservatism.”

Jonathan Rauch offers the most complete case for Reagan as a crypto-liberal pragmatist. In a 2009 National Journal article entitled “Republicans Have Reagan All Wrong,” Rauch asserts that Reagan was not a Reaganite. He builds a purely circumstantial case. Reagan cut Washington’s share of GDP by only 1 percent, raised taxes several times, ran up huge deficits, and backed away from cutting Social Security and Medicare. The last item on Rauch’s list — entitlements — is his strongest. In 1986 Reagan abandoned Senate Republicans after they had passed cuts to Social Security and Medicare with great difficulty, and Rauch takes this as a sign that Reagan never wanted to cut the welfare state in any serious way. This overlooks that fact that Reagan did make a run at Social Security in 1981, got his head handed to him, and several months later had to be talked out of making a prime-time TV address to the nation to push the idea again. He expressed disappointment in his diary in 1983 when the Greenspan commission on Social Security came in with a conventional tax-hiking plan to keep the system alive. Under pressure in the 1984 campaign, Reagan promised not to touch Social Security, and part of his decision not to back Senate Republicans in 1986 stemmed from the simple belief that he ought to live up to that promise.

Reagan said after leaving office that his largest disappointment was not being able to control spending growth more effectively, and his budget record might have been better if he’d gotten more GOP support on Capitol Hill for several of his vetoes of big spending bills. He vetoed pork-laden water and transportation bills in 1987, but was overridden by a handful of GOP defectors. Reagan expressed scorn for timid Hill Republicans in his diary, often complaining more about them — “We had rabbits when we needed tigers” — than about Democrats. (One Republican who especially disappointed him on spending restraint was first-term senator Mitch McConnell.)

There is something passing strange about the way in which liberals now claim to understand Reagan better than today’s conservatives do, yet somehow were unable to make him out when he was right in front of them. And nothing belies the current liberal revisionism more than the trope that the Reagan years were a model of comity compared with today’s polarized climate. To be sure, Reagan could clink glasses and swap Irish jokes with Tip O’Neill, but they often argued bluntly in public and in private. We have forgotten, for example, this O’Neill attack on Reagan: “The evil is in the White House at the present time. And that evil is a man who has no care and no concern for the working class of America and the future generations of America, and who likes to ride a horse. He’s cold. He’s mean. He’s got ice water for blood.”

It should never be forgotten that the Left hated Reagan just as lustily as they hated George W. Bush, and with some of the same venomous affectations, such as the reductio ad Hitlerum. The key difference is that in Reagan’s years there was no Internet with which to magnify these derangements, and the 24-hour cable-news cycle was in its infancy. But the signs were certainly abundant. In 1982, the Madame Tussauds Wax Museum in London held a vote for the most hated people of all time, with the result being: Hitler, Margaret Thatcher, Ronald Reagan, and Dracula. Democratic congressman William Clay of Missouri charged that Reagan was trying to replace “the Bill of Rights with fascist precepts lifted verbatim from Mein Kampf.” A desperate Jimmy Carter charged that Reagan was engaging in “stirrings of hate” in the 1980 campaign. Los Angeles Times cartoonist Paul Conrad drew a panel depicting Reagan plotting a fascist putsch in a darkened Munich beer hall. Harry Stein (now a conservative convert) wrote in Esquire that the voters who supported Reagan were like the “good Germans” in “Hitler’s Germany.” In The Nation, Alan Wolfe wrote: “The United States has embarked on a course so deeply reactionary, so negative and mean-spirited, so chauvinistic and self-deceptive that our times may soon rival the McCarthy era.”

And in discussing Reagan’s greatest acknowledged achievement — ending the Cold War — liberals conveniently omit that they opposed him at every turn. Who can forget the relentless scorn heaped on Reagan for the “evil empire” speech and the Strategic Defense Initiative? Historian Henry Steele Commager said the “evil empire” speech “was the worst presidential speech in American history, and I’ve read them all.” “What is the world to think,” New York Times columnist Anthony Lewis wrote, “when the greatest of powers is led by a man who applies to the most difficult human problem a simplistic theology?”

There’s a larger point here for which liberals need to be held to account. The substantive criticism liberals made of Reagan’s foreign policy was that his confrontational approach to the Soviet Union would reinforce the Kremlin’s hard-line “hawks,” undermine liberal reformers, and maybe even lead to war. Reagan and his key aides (especially his second national-security adviser, William Clark) perceived the opposite to be the case, and were vindicated when the confused reformer Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in 1985. Liberals who now laud Reagan’s Cold War statecraft should be made to explain why they were wrong and Reagan right, for it gets directly to liberalism’s sentimental view of human affairs — which affects current policy, from the War on Terror to crime and the welfare state. More broadly, they should be made to explain why they appreciate the virtues of conservatives only after they are gone from the scene (as we have also seen with Goldwater, Eisenhower, and even Nixon to some extent).

To be sure, Reagan’s political practices were idiosyncratic, and his conservatism was not fully recognized by many on the right who wish to emulate him today. This conservatism was not the “stand athwart history” kind, as is evident in Reagan’s love for a quotation that drives many conservative intellectuals slightly batty. As George Will put it, “[Reagan] is painfully fond of the least conservative sentiment conceivable, a statement from an anti-conservative, Thomas Paine: ‘We have it in our power to begin the world over again.’ Any time, any place, that is nonsense.”

Reagan’s invocation of Paine, as well as his quotation of John Winthrop’s “City upon a Hill” sermon, expresses the core of his optimism and belief in the dynamism of American society, a dynamism that can have unconservative effects. But he explained his use of Paine in conservative terms way back in his 1965 autobiography, Where’s the Rest of Me? “The classic liberal,” Reagan wrote, “used to be the man who believed the individual was, and should be forever, the master of his destiny. That is now the conservative position. The liberal used to believe in freedom under law. He now takes the ancient feudal position that power is everything. He believes in a stronger and stronger central government, in the philosophy that control is better than freedom. The conservative now quotes Thomas Paine, a longtime refuge of the liberals: ‘Government is a necessary evil; let us have as little of it as possible.’”

Reagan’s mixture of the revolutionary or progressive Paine with the Jeffersonian limited-government Paine is a potent formula in American politics that liberals have abandoned. Regardless of the tensions in Reagan’s version, it exposed liberalism as a pessimistic and increasingly reactionary faction. It was telling that the Democratic party didn’t play FDR’s anthem “Happy Days Are Here Again” at its 1984 convention, not wanting to credit Reagan’s “Morning in America” theme. Rep. Richard Gephardt expressed their mood when he said, “It’s getting closer and closer to midnight.”

Above all, Reagan’s conservatism was rooted in constitutionalism, which is the aspect most closely connecting it with the Tea Party movement and the conservative challenge to Obama. Reagan understood that many of our problems descended from the decay of the Constitution’s restraints on the centralization of power in Washington. In one of his private letters, from 1979, Reagan wrote to a friend that “the permanent structure of our government with its power to pass regulations has eroded if not in effect repealed portions of our Constitution.”

The story of the Reagan administration’s attempts to revive constitutional limits on government power is too complicated to summarize briefly, but one aspect of it deserves notice today: the second-term initiative of Attorney General Edwin Meese to start a controversy over originalism and the Constitution. In launching this controversy in such a high-profile manner, Meese reopened a fundamental quarrel that liberals had thought was more or less closed. No prominent Republican had seriously advanced such an argument since Calvin Coolidge. The public fight Meese started over original intent, legal scholar Johnathan O’Neill wrote in 2005, “constituted the most direct constitutional debate between the executive branch and the Court since the New Deal.” Meese and his Justice Department compatriots were attempting nothing less than to wrest the Constitution away from the legal elite and return it to the people. The reaction of not only the usual suspects such as the New York Times editorial page but also two sitting Supreme Court justices and many prominent voices in the legal academy ensured that this issue would not wilt like a spring flower, and indeed it is still with us. It was a de facto declaration of war on the Left, and it contributed to the defeat of Robert Bork’s Supreme Court nomination in 1987. It looks in retrospect to be one of the most significant initiatives of the Reagan years, especially given the emergence of the Tea Party movement.

Mark Twain is credited with saying that history doesn’t repeat itself, but it rhymes. Reagan’s ascent coincided with the “tax revolt” of the late 1970s, and the tax revolt looks similar to today’s Tea Party protests. Liberals attacked the tax revolt in the same terms they use to attack today’s Tea Party. Sen. George McGovern worried that the tax revolt had “undertones of racism.” Byron Dorgan, then North Dakota tax commissioner and later a senator, said that a vote for California’s Proposition 13 (a property-tax cap the state’s voters enacted in 1978) was “a vote for latent prejudice.” The Washington Post’s Haynes Johnson said the measure was an “exhibition of widespread public mean-spiritedness.”

In the 1970s, Reagan spoke often of a populist “prairie fire” of resistance to big government, and he saw the tax revolt as the match igniting the fire that swept him to office in 1980. Yet the Tea Party makes the “prairie fire” of the tax revolt look like a small campfire by comparison. It is distinct from and superior to the tax revolt precisely to the extent that it represents a populist constitutional movement, challenging out-of-control government in a way that goes beyond arguments about tax rates.

It is exactly on this point that Reagan’s far-sightedness and his legacy become relevant. During the 1980s, there was little popular ferment behind Reagan and Meese’s campaign to revive constitutional originalism, but they pursued it anyway. When today’s liberals disingenuously invoke Reagan against the Tea Party or Republican attempts in Congress to restrain the government, Reagan’s constitutional views should be thrown in their faces. The tea partiers might well be considered Reagan’s children.

Several pundits suggested that the 1994 election, which delivered the first GOP House majority in 40 years, should be thought of as “Reagan’s third landslide.” If so, November 2 of last year could be regarded as his fourth. And if conservatives remain faithful to Ronald Reagan’s principles and practices, it won’t be the last. Happy 100th birthday, Mr. President.

Commentary

This weekend as we celebrate the 100th Birthday of the Greatest of all American Presidents the great Gipper Ronald W.Reagan let us continue to honor his great Conservative legacy by just doing what we know is right.
The Tea Party movement is truly "Reaganesque."I am proud to be a Son Of Reagan" as Mr.Hayward puts it.

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

House: No booze, lotto with EBT cash By Boston Herald Reporter Joe Dwinell

A fed-up House Speaker Robert A. DeLeo warned welfare recipients last night no matter how tough times get, buying booze, tobacco and Lottery tickets with state-issued EBT cards won’t be tolerated.
The House agreed, voting 155-0 to ban the use of the cards for the frivolous purchases.
“Alcohol, tobacco products and Lottery tickets are not acceptable necessities of life,” DeLeo said.
The vote comes after a series of Herald reports on the abuse of the Electronic Benefit Transfer cards — which quickly became a campaign issue for Gov. Deval Patrick.
As the Herald first reported, Bay State welfare recipients blew nearly $200,000 in taxpayer dough on a broad array of luxuries last year — including alcohol, lingerie, tanning parlors, jewelry, movie theaters and even pets.
State officials argued that most of the $46.4 million that welfare recipients spent using the debit cards in fiscal 2010 went to supermarkets and pharmacies.
Welfare spokeswoman Jennifer Kritz said the Patrick administration “continues to support prohibiting the use of EBT cards to purchase alcohol and tobacco products and is in the process of reviewing the language in the House amendment to ensure that it is enforceable.” She added $4 million was collected last year from welfare frauds.
The state Senate must still rule on the get-tough bill.
The legislation warns store owners they cannot accept EBT cards as payment for alcohol, smokes or Lottery games.
Violators face a fine of up to $1,000.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

What Else Is Obama Hiding

Donald Trump: Obama Was A "Terrible Student"



"I heard he was a terrible student, terrible. How does a bad student go to Columbia and then to Harvard?" Trump said in an interview with The Associated Press. "I'm thinking about it, I'm certainly looking into it. Let him show his records."

Monday, April 25, 2011

Herman Cain True Conservative

Herman Cain: "We Need To Go From An Entitlement Society To An Empowerment Society"

 
Herman Cain's economic plan: (1) lower corporate tax rates, (2) end capital gains tax, and (3) suspend taxes on foreign repatriated products.

"I believe Republicans just need to go on the offensive and explain to the American people how this is not rewarding billionaires, this is not hurting elderly people. Absolutely not. Educate the American people on how jobs are created," Cain told FOX News.

"The American people are not that stupid as the Democratic party continues to think," he added.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Krauthammer Lays It Out For 2012

 

Handicapping the 2012 competitors

By Charles Krauthammer
WASHINGTON — Unified Field Theory of 2012, Axiom One: The more the Republicans can make the 2012 election like 2010, the better their chances of winning.
The 2010 Democratic shellacking had the distinction of being the most ideological election in 30 years. It was driven by one central argument in its several parts: the size and reach of government, spending and debt, and, most fundamentally, the nature of the American social contract. 2010 was a referendum on the Obama experiment in hyper-liberalism. It lost resoundingly.
Of course, presidential elections are not arguments in the abstract but arguments with a face. Hence, Axiom Two: The less attention the Republican candidate draws to him/herself, the better the chances of winning. To the extent that 2012 is about ideas, about the case for smaller government, Republicans have a decided edge. If it’s a referendum on the fitness and soundness of the Republican candidate — advantage Obama.
Which suggests Axiom Three: No baggage and no need for flash. Having tried charisma in 2008, the electorate is not looking for a thrill up the leg in 2012. It’s looking for solid, stable, sober and, above all, not scary.
Given these Euclidean truths, here’s the early line. (Remember: This is analysis, not advocacy.)
Long shots
Michele Bachmann: Tea Party favorite. Appeals to Palinites. Could do well in Iowa. Hard to see how she makes her way through the rest of the primary thicket. A strong showing in debates and a respectable finish would increase her national stature for 2016. But for now: 20-1 to win the nomination.
Donald Trump: He’s not a candidate, he’s a spectacle. He’s also not a conservative. With a wink and a smile, Muhammad Ali showed that self-promoting obnoxiousness could be charming. Trump shows that it can be merely vulgar. A provocateur and a clown, the Republicans’ Al Sharpton. The Lions have a better chance of winning the Super Bowl.
The major players
Mitt Romney: Serious guy. Pre-vetted (2008). Tons of private- and public-sector executive experience. If not for one thing, he’d be the prohibitive front-runner. Unfortunately, the one thing is a big thing: Massachusetts’ Romneycare. For an election in which the main issue is excessive government (see Axiom One), that’s a huge liability. Every sentient Republican has been trying to figure out how to explain it away. I’ve heard no reports of any success. Romney is Secretariat at Belmont, but ridden by Minnesota Fats. He goes out at 5-1.
Newt Gingrich: Smart guy. A fountain of ideas. No, a Vesuvius of ideas. Some brilliance, lots of lava. Architect of a historic Republican victory in 1994. Rocky speakership. Unfortunate personal baggage. 12-1.
Haley Barbour: Successful governor. Experienced Washington hand. Abundant charm. Baggage: Years of lobbying, unforced errors on civil rights, early neo-isolationist deviations. Rarely without a comeback, however. 7-1.
Tim Pawlenty: Formerly, unassuming, unprepossessing, solid two-term Minnesota governor. Currently, mouse that roars. Up-tempo style, middle-of-the-road conservative content. Apparently baggageless. Could be the last man standing. 5-1.
Mitch Daniels: Highly successful governor. Budget guru. Delightful dullness satisfies all axioms (see above). Foreign policy unknown, assuming he has one. Alienated some conservatives with his call for a truce on — i.e., deferring — social issues. If he runs, 6-1.
Likely not running
Mike Huckabee: Has a good life — hosting a popular TV show, making money, building his dream house in Florida. He’d be crazy to run. Doesn’t look crazy to me.
Sarah Palin: Same deal. Showed her power in 2010 as opinion shaper. Must know (I think) she has little chance at the nomination and none in the general election. Why risk it, and the inevitable diminishment defeat would bring?
The 2016 bench
A remarkable class of young up-and-comers includes Paul Ryan, Chris Christie, Marco Rubio, Nikki Haley. All impressive, all new to the national stage, all with bright futures. But 2012 is too early — except possibly for Ryan, who last week became de facto leader of the Republican Party. For months, he will be going head-to-head with President Obama on the budget, a surrogate for the central issue of 2012: the proper role of government. If Ryan acquits himself well, he could emerge as a formidable anti-Obama.
One problem: Ryan has zero inclination to run. Would have to be drafted. That would require persuasion. Can anyone rustle up a posse?

Commentary

Romney is a lost cause as far as I am concerned.Huckabee too soft and Pawlenty doesnot impress me for some reason

Israelis killed Near Tomb Of Joseph Israeli killed, 4 wounded in West Bank

 
     
JERUSALEM – A Palestinian policeman opened fire Sunday at a group of Israelis who had come to pray at a Jewish holy site in the West Bank without authorization, killing one and wounding four, the Israeli military said.
The shooting threatened to inflame tensions in the West Bank, where Jewish settlers and Palestinians live in uneasy proximity and where settlers have responded to attacks in the past with violent reprisals.
Israeli police identified the dead man as Ben-Yosef Livnat, a Jerusalem resident in his mid-20s. Ben-Yosef was a nephew of Limor Livnat, a prominent hardline Cabinet minister from the ruling Likud Party.
Limor Livnat, who attended the funeral, told reporters that her nephew was killed by a "terrorist disguised as a Palestinian policeman."
She said her nephew was unarmed and "murdered in cold blood because he was Jewish."
"I hope he is the last victim," Livnat said.
Ben-Yosef Livnat and several companions entered the Palestinian city of Nablus early Sunday to visit a site known as Joseph's Tomb.
Jewish worshippers regularly enter the city with a special military escort to pray at the small building traditionally identified as the gravesite of the biblical Joseph, located inside a Palestinian-ruled area. Those visits are coordinated with Palestinian security forces. Israeli and Palestinian officials said Sunday's visit was not cleared with either side.
Palestinian officials notified the Israeli military that the Israelis "were shot by a Palestinian policeman who, after identifying suspicious movements, fired in their direction," the Israeli military said.
Israeli and Palestinian security forces work closely together to prevent violence. A meeting between the sides was scheduled Sunday to discuss the shooting, the military said.
Jibril al-Bakri, the Palestinian governor of Nablus, said the Palestinian Authority was investigating. "The main problem is that they (the Israelis) entered the city without coordination," al-Bakri said.
Israel's defense minister, Ehud Barak, termed the shooting "murder."
"No coordination error can justify such an incident and shooting at innocent people," he said in a statement.
Shortly after the incident, a crowd of Palestinians gathered at the tomb and vandalized the empty building, setting fires inside and throwing stones.
The Yesha Council, an umbrella group representing Jewish settlers, said the shooting proved the Palestinian government could not be trusted.
"The murder committed this morning by Palestinian policemen cannot be ignored," the group said.
Hours later, Jewish settlers attacked Palestinian cars south of Nablus, setting fire to one after its passengers fled and stoning passing vehicles before Israeli soldiers dispersed them.
The Palestinian Authority governs parts of the West Bank, though Israel retains overall security responsibility. Nablus moved from Israeli to Palestinian control in the mid-1990s as part of the Israeli-Palestinian peace process.
In 2000, after deadly fighting around the tomb, Israel's military pulled out and turned the tomb over to the Palestinians. A mob subsequently ransacked and burned the building.
The tomb was later restored. In recent years, thanks to improving security conditions, Jewish worshippers have been traveling to the tomb in organized convoys.
The West Bank has been largely quiet for several years, but tensions remain. The last attack against Israelis in the West Bank occurred in the same area on March 11, when attackers infiltrated a Jewish settlement near Nablus and killed five members of a family, including parents and children ages 11, 4 and three months.
The Israeli military has arrested two Palestinians for that killing.

Associated Press Writer Mohammed Daraghmeh contributed from Ramallah, West Bank, and Nasser Ishtayeh from Nablus, West Bank.

Happy Resurrection Sunday

   This is the day that we celebrate the resurrection of our Lord and Savior Jesus YESHUA Christ.He came into the world to save us from our sins.
   Just some of the biblical passages Matthew 28:1-10 Mark 16:1-14 Luke 24:1-47 and John 20:1-19.This is the true record of his majesty's resurrection from the dead.We Love you JESUS!


SHALOM IN HIS HOLY NAME KING YESHUA

Kristof Way Off On Easter Sunday

  Of all days to write about a way off base subject on Easter Sunday when we celebrate the Resurrection of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ about prostitution.No class whatsoever from the New York Times editors on this one.

Nicholas D.Kristof

  The title of Nicholas  D.Kristof's piece of crap this morning is "What About American Girls Sold on the Streets?"
 Kristof calls prostituiton "fail to appreciate that it’s one of our country’s biggest human rights problems."It is not a human rights problem.The columnist even goes as far to talking about a new book "“Girls Like Us,” by Rachel Lloyd, herself a trafficking survivor, illuminates the complexities of the sex industry.Oh so its like its a trade give me a break.
 Kristof goes onto say "Americans often think that “trafficking” is about Mexican or Korean or Russian women smuggled into brothels in the United States. That happens. But in my years and years of reporting, I’ve found that the biggest trafficking problem involves homegrown American runaways."
 Years of reporting yeah ok good one Nicky.
It would not be a NYT oped columnist to write about a subject that didn't use or play the race card "Typically, she’s a 13-year-old girl of color from a troubled home who is on bad terms with her mother. Then her mom’s boyfriend hits on her, and she runs away to the bus station, where the only person on the lookout for girls like her is a pimp. He buys her dinner, gives her a place to stay and next thing she knows she’s earning him $1,500 a day."
 As I stated earlier not exactly a great subject to be writing on if you ask me especially today on Easter Sunday.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Obama Testy With Reporter From Texas

Obama To Texas Reporter: "Let Me Finish My Answers"


"Let me finish my answers the next time we do an interview, all right?" President Obama tells WFAA-TV reporter Brad Watson at the end of their interview.

Rep.Allen West Tees Off On Obama

 

Allen West: Obama's Arrogance Is Like A "Third World Dictator"

"This whole talk about shared prosperity--that really gives me the goosebumps because I’m starting to believe that a community organizer is nothing but a low-level socialist agitator," Rep. Allen West (R-FL) said on Laura Ingraham's show today.

Monday, April 18, 2011

Sarah Telling It Like It Is

 The video below is Sarah Palin at the Madison Wisconsin Tea Party rally on 4/16/11.



God Bless Sarah Palin

Unions Acting As They Normally Do

 

Wis. Union Supporters Boo Tea Party During The National Anthem

 
 
Leftists and union supporters ringed the Tea Party rally in Madison, Wisconsin on 04-16-2011. Here they are booing the national anthem.

Ryan On Face The Nation

Rep. Paul Ryan: No "Rubber Stamp" For Debt Ceiling Increase


"Nobody wants to play around with the country's credit rating, nobody wants to see default happening, but we also think it is important to get a handle on future borrowing as we deal with raising the debt ceiling," Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis) told CBS' "Face the Nation."

Sunday, April 17, 2011

NYT Are Now Experts On Trying Military Prisoners


Opinion Editorial



  Now all of a sudden the New York Times are experts on trying military prisoners which is a joke in itself.Their second lead OPED this morning is "Guantánamo, on Trial" makes the NYT sound even more stupid than they already are.
  They begin their uninformed BS "In bringing justice to those accused of plotting the Sept. 11 attacks, it will never be possible to have military trials at Guantánamo that Americans can be fully proud of, or that the world will see as credible.Still, it seems certain those trials will be held. In a triumph of raw politics over the nation’s security interests, the Obama administration was forced to abandon its effort to try Khalid Shaikh Mohammed and four others in federal court, where these cases belong."
  These cases belong in what is called a Military tribunal not a civilan court where some lamebrained left winger would have sympathy on thes punk terrorists and not pus for the death penalty.
  Here are a couple of reasons why the NYT don't want the tried in a miliatry tribunal "It was announced that they will be tried before a military tribunal at the Guantánamo prison, which President George W. Bush made a symbol of torture and illegal detention."
  Torture and Illegal detention oh yeah like a Koran was flushed down the toilet too NYT.Hey NYT I have a bridge I want to sell you.
  Here is more evidence (after all we are talking about trying military prisoners) that the NYT have no idea about what they are writing about "It was a shocking example of politicians dictating a prosecutorial decision. The result: huge gaps of competency and credibility. Federal courts have a long record of successfully handling complex terrorism cases. These most important of 9/11 trials will take place in a system of questioned legitimacy, operating under untested rules, with no experience in concluding major terrorism trials.Still, there are things that should be done to avoid an utter legal shambles and administer some justice."
  The only justice for these punks is and listen good NYT the D-E-A-T-H P-E-N-A-L-T-Y I know we have to spell it out for those dumb ass liberals to understand.
  Its all about politics to these ideologues at the NYT Opinion/Editorial board.And their political philosophy is political correctness.
  The rest of the OPED goes into a ludicrous explanation and breaks down their warped perversion of how the trials should be conducted according to them "NO TAINTED EVIDENCE,ADEQUATE DEFENSE
TRANSPARENCY,LESS SECRECY."
  Just for the record U.S.Attorney General Eric Holder should just butt out of any idea about knowing anything about the military tribunal system.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Boehner Obama Out Of Their Minds On Budget

 The media and the rest of the established left wing talking heads tried to determine who won the budget battle last weekend to avoid a threatened Government shutdown by the Obama administration and the US Senate led by U.S. Sen.Harry Reid (D-Nev).
 To be totally honest nobody won but the hack politicians in Washington.U.S.House Speaker the now gutless wonder U.S.Rep John Boehner (R-Ohio) knew what needed to be done CUT CUT and CUT the budget for the rest of this fiscal year in the billions.What started at $100 billion was whittled down to $70 billion and sure enough it wasn't good enough for Obama/Reid tag team as always as is the case in D.C. Boehner leader of the so called "people's house" caved in instead of standing tall now the left wanted it cut down more to $30 billion or as we thought.
 As the week went on the liberal Democrat spin machine went into full campaign cycle House MINORITY leader Rep.Nancy Pelosi held press conference after press conference attacking us out here on the right saying Republicans want women to die by cutting Planned Parenthood and stop Medicare for the elderly the usual BS scare tactics .
 Now it was reported that the cuts were only a measly $350 MILLION not the billion promised.

WAKE UP MR.SPEAKER IT'S TEA TIME TIME TO CUT CUT CUT CUT CUT CUT CUT!

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

More Liberal BS From MSNBC'S Chris Matthews

 
Chris Matthews: Paul Ryan's Medicare Plan 'Going To Kill Half The People Who Watch My Show

 The blame game continues from the far far left wing media

Monday, April 11, 2011

Mitt Romney announces White House exploratory committee By Dave Wedge Boston Herald Political Reporter

Mitt is back in.
Former Bay State Gov. Mitt Romney officially jumped into the 2012 presidential race today by forming an exploratory committee. Taking a cue from President Obama, Romney made the announcement in a video blasted out over Facebook and Twitter after meeting with students at the University of New Hampshire. Obama announced his reelection campaign via YouTube just days ago.
"It is time that we put America back on a course of greatness, with a growing economy, good jobs and fiscal discipline in Washington," Romney says in the video. "I believe in America. I believe in the freedom and opportunity, and the principles of our constitution, that have led us to become the greatest nation in the history of the earth – and I believe that these principles will confirm American’s future as well."
Romney, who stands as the GOP frontrunner in many polls, ran in 2008 but lost in the Republican primary to Sen. John McCain. Romney has been targeted by Democrats and Republicans over his health care policy in Massachusetts, which led to the nation’s first universal health insurance program. The initiative, signed by Romney five years ago, has been portrayed as the blueprint for Obamacare.
Romney is viewed as a stiff challenger this time around as he’s already been vetted by opponents and withstood the harsh rigors of a presidential campaign, including taking hits during debates and bouncing back. Since 2008, Romney has spent a great deal of time and money building upon his national political machine, focusing on helping Republicans win races across the country. He also wrote the book, "No Apologies: The Case for American Greatness," which many pundits said was a signal he would in fact run for president again.
"This effort is not about a person, it is about the cause of American freedom and greatness," Romney says in the video.

Mitt Romney Forms Presidential Exploratory Committee


Commentary

Hey Mitt wake up!Remember the SameSex Marriage Issue and now Romney/Obama Care.Mitt you are a liberal baffoon RINO quit while you are behind

Trump Speaks

 

Donald Trump: I'm Obama's Worst Nightmare

Donald Trump says he is not the person President Obama wants to run against.

Former Constitution Party Presidential Candidate Jerome Corsi

Jerome Corsi's 'Where's the Birth Certificate?' book breaking sales records
Monday 04-11-2011 5:18am ET
 


Obama Advisor David Plouffe Full Of It

 
Obama Advisor: Trump Has Zero Chance of Winning
Monday 04-11-2011 5:20am ET


Don't tell this to Donald Trump Mr Plouffe

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Bad Points Made By NYT's Kristof


Nicolas D.Kristof

  
 One would believe in order to become an OPED columnist the writer should have at least an understanding about the certain subject that he/she are writing about.Well not at the New York Times where in order to be an OPED columnist one just have to have the NYT's editorial boards poilitcal philosophy along with buying into its extreme leftist socialist view of the world.
  NYT OPED columnist Nicholas Kristof is a perfect example of what I am saying especially in his piece this morning entitled "Our Cowardly Congress." He makes an outlandish attempt at being a fair minded writer but one can see through his BS.Kristof would not be at the NYT unless he bought into their left wing brain washing.
  He Begins "It’s unclear where the adults are, but they don’t seem to be in Washington. Beyond the malice of the threat to shut down the federal government, averted only at the last minute on Friday night, it’s painful how vapid the discourse is and how incompetent and cowardly our leaders have proved to be. A quick guide:
• Democrats excoriated Republicans for threatening to shut down the government, but this mess is a consequence of the Democrats’ own failure to ensure a full year’s funding last year when they controlled both houses of Congress.
That’s when the budget should have been passed, before before the fiscal year began on Oct. 1. But the Democrats were terror-stricken at the thought of approving spending bills that Republicans would criticize. So in gross dereliction of duty, the Democrats punted.
• Republicans say they’re trying to curb government spending and rescue the economy — but they threatened to shut down the government, even though that would have been both expensive and damaging to our economy."
 Funny how we don't hear from Kristof as we did from Fox News's Carl Cameron that the avderted Government shutdown was going to spend burrowed $$$ anyway.
 He keeps on his rant "The shutdowns in late 1995 and early 1996 cost the federal government more than $1.4 billion, the Office of Management and Budget reported at the time.It’s particularly reckless and callous to threaten a shutdown when the economy is already anemic. Among the federal workers and contractors potentially losing paychecks, some would miss payments on their homes, their credit cards or their children’s college tuition."
 Funny no mention of the military not getting paid which President Barack HUSSEIN Obama was attempting to stop funds for if the government did shutdown.How about cutting frivolous SSI checks from going out for fake claims for those lazy Americans who could care less about getting off of their asses to look foir work and make a living off of the American workers backs,I hear the crickets chirping.
 Here is Kristof sounding more middle of the road but digging himself a hole deeper "Republicans are posturing against abortion in a way that would increase the number of abortions.
Conservatives have sought to bar federal funds from going directly to Planned Parenthood and the United Nations Population Fund. The money would not go for abortions, for federal law already blocks that, and the Population Fund doesn’t provide abortions. What the money would pay for is family planning.
In the United States, publicly financed family planning prevented 1.94 million unwanted pregnancies in 2006, according to the Guttmacher Institute, which studies reproductive health. The result of those averted pregnancies was 810,000 fewer abortions, the institute said.
Publicly financed contraception pays for itself, by reducing money spent through Medicaid on childbirth and child care. Guttmacher found that every $1 invested in family planning saved taxpayers $3.74.
As for international family planning, the Guttmacher Institute calculates that a 15 percent decline in spending there would mean 1.9 million more unwanted pregnancies, 800,000 more abortions and 5,000 more maternal deaths."
  Here is a question why are we giving our taxpayer $$$ to this UN population fund.
 Here is more proof that Kristof has no idea aboyt what he is writing about "The House Republican budget initiative, prepared by Representative Paul Ryan, would slash spending and end Medicare and Medicaid as we know them — and it justifies all this as essential to confront soaring levels of government debt. Mr. Ryan is courageous to tackle entitlements so boldly, and he has a point: we do have a serious long-term debt problem, and Democrats haven’t had the guts to deal with it seriously.
Unfortunately, the new Republican initiative would worsen government debt problems, according to the Congressional Budget Office. The C.B.O. (whose numbers Republicans regularly use to attack Democrats) estimates that with current trends, debt will reach 67 percent of gross domestic product in 2022. But it finds that under the Republican plan, because of increased tax cuts, debt would reach 70 percent of G.D.P."
 Sorry Kristof its the left that use the frivolous numbers against the right from the Congressional Budget Office so get the story straight.
 But nice try Nick at trying to sound as if you are coming from the middle of the road.

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Congressman Ryan Lays It Out

 

Rep. Paul Ryan Gives GOP Address On 2012 Budget Plan

 
GOP: In this week's address, House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-WI) highlights the Path to Prosperity, the Republican budget that would spur private-sector job growth, stop Washington from spending money it doesn't have, and lift the crushing burden of debt that threatens our future. Ryan also highlights the bipartisan agreement reached this week on the largest spending cut in history -- "good news for job creators in America."

Krugman Simple Idiot "Ludicrous and Cruel"


Paul Krugman
Many commentators swooned earlier this week after House Republicans, led by the Budget Committee chairman, Paul Ryan, unveiled their budget proposals. They lavished praise on Mr. Ryan, asserting that his plan set a new standard of fiscal seriousness.
Well, they should have waited until people who know how to read budget numbers had a chance to study the proposal. For the G.O.P. plan turns out not to be serious at all. Instead, it’s simultaneously ridiculous and heartless.
How ridiculous is it? Let me count the ways — or rather a few of the ways, because there are more howlers in the plan than I can cover in one column.
First, Republicans have once again gone all in for voodoo economics — the claim, refuted by experience, that tax cuts pay for themselves.
Specifically, the Ryan proposal trumpets the results of an economic projection from the Heritage Foundation, which claims that the plan’s tax cuts would set off a gigantic boom. Indeed, the foundation initially predicted that the G.O.P. plan would bring the unemployment rate down to 2.8 percent — a number we haven’t achieved since the Korean War. After widespread jeering, the unemployment projection vanished from the Heritage Foundation’s Web site, but voodoo still permeates the rest of the analysis.
In particular, the original voodoo proposition — the claim that lower taxes mean higher revenue — is still very much there. The Heritage Foundation projection has large tax cuts actually increasing revenue by almost $600     billion over the next 10 years.
A more sober assessment from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office tells a different story. It finds that a large part of the supposed savings from spending cuts would go, not to reduce the deficit, but to pay for tax cuts. In fact, the budget office finds that over the next decade the plan would lead to bigger deficits and more debt than current law.
And about those spending cuts: leave health care on one side for a moment and focus on the rest of the proposal. It turns out that Mr. Ryan and his colleagues are assuming drastic cuts in nonhealth spending without explaining how that is supposed to happen.
How drastic? According to the budget office, which analyzed the plan using assumptions dictated by House Republicans, the proposal calls for spending on items other than Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid — but including defense — to fall from 12 percent of G.D.P. last year to 6 percent of G.D.P. in 2022, and just 3.5 percent of G.D.P. in the long run.
That last number is less than we currently spend on defense alone; it’s not much bigger than federal spending when Calvin Coolidge was president, and the United States, among other things, had only a tiny military establishment. How could such a drastic shrinking of government take place without crippling essential public functions? The plan doesn’t say.
And then there’s the much-ballyhooed proposal to abolish Medicare and replace it with vouchers that can be used to buy private health insurance.
The point here is that privatizing Medicare does nothing, in itself, to limit health-care costs. In fact, it almost surely raises them by adding a layer of middlemen. Yet the House plan assumes that we can cut health-care spending as a percentage of G.D.P. despite an aging population and rising health care costs.
The only way that can happen is if those vouchers are worth much less than the cost of health insurance. In fact, the Congressional Budget Office estimates that by 2030 the value of a voucher would cover only a third of the cost of a private insurance policy equivalent to Medicare as we know it. So the plan would deprive many and probably most seniors of adequate health care.
And that neither should nor will happen. Mr. Ryan and his colleagues can write down whatever numbers they like, but seniors vote. And when they find that their health-care vouchers are grossly inadequate, they’ll demand and get bigger vouchers — wiping out the plan’s supposed savings.
In short, this plan isn’t remotely serious; on the contrary, it’s ludicrous.
And it’s also cruel.
In the past, Mr. Ryan has talked a good game about taking care of those in need. But as the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities points out, of the $4 trillion in spending cuts he proposes over the next decade, two-thirds involve cutting programs that mainly serve low-income Americans. And by repealing last year’s health reform, without any replacement, the plan would also deprive an estimated 34 million nonelderly Americans of health insurance.
So the pundits who praised this proposal when it was released were punked. The G.O.P. budget plan isn’t a good-faith effort to put America’s fiscal house in order; it’s voodoo economics, with an extra dose of fantasy, and a large helping of mean-spiritedness.

Friday, April 8, 2011

Senator Paul On Fox

Sen. Rand Paul "Proud" Of House Speaker Boehner



Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) talks about the battle between Sen. Harry Reid (D-NV) and Speaker John Boehner (R-OH).

Go Ahead Shutdown The Government ...............

    I say do it to it.The blame game in our nations Capitol keeps on going.Come on big mouth left wing socialist Democrats and RINO moderate gutless Republicans blame the TEA Party I dare you both I challenge the establishment.
   Wait breaking news just on Fox an agreement has been reached whoop die dooo.CUT SPENDING period end of story.

We The Tea Party Take The Blame

Bachmann: Dems' Shutdown Strategy Is To Blame The Tea Party

GOP: Rep. Bachmann appeared on CNN this morning to explain that a possible shutdown is not the result of the Tea Party. Instead, it's Sens. Reid and Schumer, and Howard Dean who think a shutdown will politically profit Democrats. She also voiced her support for defunding Planned Parenthood, but she reiterated Speaker Boehner's statement saying policy riders are no longer the issue in the negotiations and that includes the issue of Planned Parenthood. Bachmann said she believes a fight should occur over the larger issue of defunding ObamaCare, not a difference of $6.5 billion in a $3.5 trillion+ budget.


Thursday, April 7, 2011

Liberal Media Elite Whines


Fired NPR CEO: Media Establishment ?Terrified? of Being Next Sting Target
Wednesday 04-06-2011 5:39am ET
 
 
Get over it Ms.Schiller NPR Sucks!
 


Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Times Big Wigs Raking In Dough $$$$ By Boston Herald Reporter Jessica Heslam

Times execs break bank

Cuts barely make a dent in salaries

By Jessica HeslamTuesday, April 5, 2011
New York Times Co. honchos took slight pay cuts but still scored staggering multimillion-dollar compensation packages last year even as the beleaguered Big Apple broadsheet’s circulation continued to fall.
Times publisher Arthur “Pinch” Sulzberger Jr. was the highest paid bigwig, raking in just over $6 million in total compensation in 2010, according to the company’s latest annual meeting and proxy statement sent to investors.
Sulzberger’s pay took a paltry $62,523 hit from the year before.
Times Co. CEO Janet Robinson was runner-up, pulling in $5.28 million last year in total compensation compared to the $6.7 million she brought home in 2009.
Meanwhile, the newspaper’s weekday circulation fell to 906,100 last year from 959,200 the year before, a roughly 5 percent drop. The Sunday circulation fell to 1,356,800 from 1,405,200.
The hefty compensations come to light as the Times — which owns the Boston Globe — is asking online readers to fork over the dough for content. The newspaper rolled out a pay system last month, and readers have to sign up for online subscriptions after reading 20 articles a month.
“A lot of companies, despite the top line (revenue) problems, met or exceeded their bottom line (profit) budgets because of cost cutting, because of growth in digital — various reasons,” said Edward Atorino, a media analyst at the Benchmark Co.
“Even though the top line didn’t look great, if they made or beat the (previous year’s) bottom line, they have to share in their success,” Atorino added. “They don’t measure success on revenues. They measure success on profits.”
Another Times honcho, COO Michael Golden, took in $2.19 million total compensation last year. CFO James Follo pulled in $1.8 million while New York Times [NYT] president and general manager Scott Heekin-Canedy earned $2.37 million.
“The New York Times Company had a very profitable 2010 and our senior managers received awards according to their executive compensation program,” the Times said in a statement.

Commentary

Didn't the New York Times owned Boston Globe just go through the ringer literally just last year and their union of all things the Boston Newspaper Guild.