Showing posts with label Gulf oil spill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gulf oil spill. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Busted!

We knew something didn't smell right...


The ill-fated Deepwater Horizon...

Back in May, just after the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe began, The Bliss Index/yours truly - told you in print and on the air that something didn't smell right about a number of issues connected to the Obama Administration's handling of the disaster.

One of the most troubling matters that arose in those dark days following the explosion, blow-out and massive leak was the decision to slap a ban on offshore oil exploration/drilling that was supposedly backed by the consensus of experts in the field.

We now know that the report that led to the moratorium was nothing short of a lie.

According to Politico.com, "The White House rewrote crucial sections of an Interior Department report to suggest an independent group of scientists and engineers supported a six-month ban on offshore oil drilling, the Interior inspector general says in a new report. In the wee hours of the morning of May 27, a staff member to White House energy adviser Carol Browner sent two edited versions of the department report’s executive summary back to Interior. The language had been changed to insinuate the seven-member panel of outside experts – who reviewed a draft of various safety recommendations – endorsed the moratorium, according to the IG report obtained by POLITICO."


Politico continues: "The six-month ban on offshore drilling installed in the wake of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill became a major political issue over the summer, as Gulf State lawmakers and industry groups charged the White House with unfairly threatening thousands of jobs."

For all the Obama Administration and its allies say about having "science-based policy," this revelation seems contrary to what they have stated. The truth is that the decision was never based on science but, instead, it was made as part of an agenda that is more interested in outcomes than it is in fact.

From Greenenergyreporter.com: Good for Climate Bill - Carol Browner sees opportunity in crisis...The BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico could end up being a good thing for the climate bill – or, at least, that’s the storyline that the Obama Administration has started pushing. White House energy czar Carol Browner told Bloomberg this morning that the leaking oil well “is actually heightening people’s interest in energy in this country and in wanting a different energy plan.”

Thursday, July 15, 2010

"Recovery Summer" or "The Summer of George?"

The president and his team have declared this the "Recovery Summer," which is actually beginning to look a lot more like the "The Summer of George."


Upon closer examination, though, it does seem to be a period of recovery - perhaps, however, not in the way the term's originators had intended.

Maybe it's "The Summer of Keith"...


Redefining "success": Despite all of Congress' "accomplishments" (aka: jamming unwanted legislation down the public's throat), voters don't seem all that impressed. I wonder why?

Add Congress: Despite all the bad news and troubling poll numbers, Madame Speaker is not worried...

Great news from the administration's efforts in the areas of housing and lending: "Mortgage applications hit 13-year low, foreclosures spiking"...

Add great news: Over at Hot Air, we learn that, "Factory output dropped by the largest amount in the past year, the Commerce Department announced yesterday." I'm guessing that information wasn't manufactured...

Make up your minds: A New York Times story reports "“The Federal Reserve disclosed on Wednesday that its chief policy makers were divided on whether the weak economy faced a new, potentially dangerous threat in the form of deflation." Folks, please - this "Summer" thing is never going to get off the ground if you can't agree on this stuff...

Recovering from the spill?: According to the Washington Examiner, "Democrats refused to allow a vote today on an amendment introduced today by Rep. Paul Broun, R-Ga., to ensure press access to the gulf oil spill. Broun's amendment was a response to numerous reports that government authorities and BP are keeping the press away from areas affected by the spill." How's that transparency working for ya?

Recovery in the Gulf: The Associated Press is reporting out of New Orleans that, "The oil has stopped. For now. After 85 days and up to 184 million gallons, BP finally gained control over one of America's biggest environmental catastrophes Thursday by placing a carefully fitted cap over a runaway geyser that has been gushing crude into the Gulf of Mexico since early spring." Whew!

Finally!

(This was, by the way, supposed to be The Summer of George...)

Sunday, July 11, 2010

The Week Ahead®

A look at some of the people and events making news this week…

Question: Who said this? - “I’m not going to rest or be satisfied until the leak is stopped at the source, the oil in the Gulf is contained and cleaned up, and the people in the Gulf are able to go back to their lives and their livelihoods.” Question: Who is about to embark on his third vacation since the leak began?


Thank goodness that's been taken care of...now he can take that break he so richly deserves!

Add oil: With the Obama Administration’s ban on offshore drilling, companies are closing down operations in U.S. waters…and moving them to international locations…where rules aren’t as stringent…oh, and taking thousands of American jobs with them.

Add “break time!”: I think this makes it 39 rounds of golf since taking office – Hope & Change & Tee Times.

Just making sure to plug all the holes...

According to The Washington Post, “In an effort to replicate the tea party's success, 170 liberal and civil rights groups are forming a coalition that they hope will match the movement's political energy and influence. They promise to ‘counter the tea party narrative’ and help the progressive movement find its voice again after 18 months of floundering.” They’re calling it the “One Nation” movement. Previously, it was known as the “Democratic Party.”

What is Jerry Brown’s plan to fix the budget mess in California if he should be elected governor? It’s a secret, of course

Another '60s-'70s politician had a "secret plan"...

Of course they’re not the only ones:California Republicans seek to unravel Obama's health care law

Did you hear the one about the Veep who flies into LA for an appearance on “The Jay Leno Show” and causes hours of delays at Los Angeles International Airport? Yeah, real funny.

This is what happens when Al Gore moves into the neighborhood: What summer? Record cold at LAX as July gloom continues

Speaking of global warming: How did actor/activist Leonardo DiCaprio balance concerns over “warming” with his desire to see the World Cup in-person? Why, fly on a private jet to South Africa, of course…

News item:PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — Former President Bill Clinton says he's frustrated that international donors aren't making good on a lot of the earthquake aid they promised for Haiti. In an interview with The Associated Press ahead of the six-month anniversary of the quake, Clinton says donors have given only 10 percent of the aid they promised. Clinton is co-chairman of the commission overseeing reconstruction aid.” Somewhat related news item: “Clintons Eyeing $10.9 Million Home In Bedford Hills


Irony thy name is "Clinton"...

So explain the argument for bigger government…again: Inflated Federal Pay: How Americans Are Overtaxed to Overpay the Civil Service

I know we promised to never mention LeBron James but this bears mentioning – why did LeBron choose Miami (Florida) over Cleveland (and Ohio)? Well, one reason is that the high cost of living in the latter, particularly when it comes to taxes, can be punishing. Just ask Tiger Woods and a host of other big-time athletes and celebs why they’ve moved to Florida and the reason most cited: no state tax. In LeBron’s case, signing with Miami stands to make him millions more in the long run.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Perfect storms...


Right now, if you’re an incumbent (and part of the party in power, to boot); you’re probably not sleeping very well. If you’ve got the sympathetic ear of a spouse, friend or therapist, you’re probably telling that person that there’s a perfect storm out there…a collection of storms coming together, descending like fire and brimstone from the heavens…just waiting out over the horizon for you and your kind.

Problem 1: The economy. Nuf said? The markets are troubled, the banks are teetering, confidence is faltering, housing is a mess, and jobs are disappearing. What more do you want to know?

A good place to start is with jobs (or should we say the lack thereof?): Noted economy watcher the CEO and co-CIO of Pimco, Mohamed El-Erian, told CNBC that unemployment is no longer a lagging indicator. According to the report, “Unemployment has shifted from a lagging indicator to a leading one and is warning government policymakers to confront problems in an economy mired in slow growth. The consideration of unemployment as a lagging indicator is a favorite mantra among economists who believe the rate primarily looks at the past rather than what is to come. But the internal details of current trends paint a different picture: More than half the labor force out of work for more than 26 weeks, the average length of unemployment at greater than 35 weeks, and the unemployment rate of 25.7 percent for 16- to 19-year olds.” El-Erian said, “These are structural aspects which cannot be solved overnight, cannot be solved with a cyclical mindset. And they are worrisome because they make the unemployment rate not only a lagging indicator but also a leading indicator."


Add unemployment: When it comes to employment, recent federal data reflected the worst June for the private sector in decades. In a piece for the San Francisco Examiner by Tom Blumer, the results justified “total depression.” According to Blumer, “The Seasonally Adjusted number for June is bad enough. In fact, June's seasonally adjusted workforce shrinkage is the largest for any June since 1963. But the Not Seasonally Adjusted number representing what really happened is even worse. In a normal June, the workforce increases significantly, because lots of people occupied with other things during the rest of the year typically test the waters in the seasonal and summer-job market. But whereas an average of about 1.75 million did so during the past seven Junes, including almost 1.6 million last year during the recession, only 901,000 did so in June of 2010. You have to go all the way back to 1954 to find a lower workforce change during June in the private sector than the June we just experienced. On a population-adjusted basis, the June 2010 figure is the worst June performance in the 63 years BLS has been tracking the data.” He took a swipe at the president, writing, “President Obama claimed that, ‘We are headed in the right direction.’ I'm not buying it, nor are hundreds of thousands of people who figuratively sat on the couch in June because they know how bad the prospects for gainful employment in the real world actually are.”

Last add jobs: John Batchelor Show colleague, Joseph Brusuelas (director at Moody's Economy.com, where he covers the U.S. and global economies for the Dismal Scientist web site; formerly, chief economist at Merk Investments L.L.C. and chief U.S. economist at IDEAglobal), provides the following: “The [chart below] is the Economic Cycle Research Institute’s weekly job growth index. It flattened out the week of April 30 and started contracting the week of June 1. [Another chart – not included - shows] the cumulative number of individuals exhausting benefits by week based on Department of Labor Estimates. This is the near term policy issue that the Congress will have to address when the return from recess. If they do not, 3.3 million individuals will exhaust benefits by the end of July. This is a major problem.”

And that, as Joe will tell you, is an understatement.


Let’s look at housing and mortgages: Diana Olick, CNBC’s Real Estate Reporter, reports that “New Loan Delinquencies on the Rise Again.” The bad news on the housing front goes like this: “Just when you thought things might be turning around, the mortgage crisis takes yet another little dip to the downside. Lender Processing Services just put out its May Mortgage Monitor, and some promising trends aren't so promising anymore, specifically new delinquencies and cure rates.” She adds, “While the total delinquency rate rose 2.3 percent, which is not surprising given how much is in the pipeline, the 30-day delinquent bucket jumped 10 percent. That is surprising because the number had been coming down of late. The LPS data report says that's because the ‘seasonal improvement period has expired,’ but I'm not sure normal seasonal patterns really apply to this market anymore. More likely is that home prices are not rebounding at the expected/hoped for pace, prompting more borrowers who are underwater on their loans to choose not to pay. And while the job market isn't bleeding so much anymore, it's not adding jobs back at the rate we need, nor is it re-instituting those full time jobs that were slashed to part-time, leaving many borrowers still "underemployed." So the delinquency rate nationwide now stands at 9.2 percent from this particular data set, and with the rise in new delinquencies, it won't be coming down any time soon.”

Add housing: Despite “rock-bottom rates,” many experts believe the housing sector is in perhaps its most precarious position – ever. In an ABC News report, the government-backed financial institutions - Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac – (not to mention most of the mortgage market) are “on “government life support.” In the story, Rich Blake reports, “Interest rates for homebuyers are lower than at any time since the Eisenhower era and home prices in many regions have fallen drastically. Buyers who qualified for the federal tax credit program that ended in April, meanwhile, were given extra time, through the end of September, to close on their homes.” Rich goes on to report, “And yet, home sales are in decline. Existing home sales fell 2.2 percent in May compared to the prior month, the National Association of Realtors said in June. Pending home sales -- contracts signed but not closed -- dropped 30 percent in May, the NAR said July 1. As perplexing and disturbing as this economic brainteaser may seem, the housing sector would be in even worse shape if not for those twin government sponsored enterprises, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, both in government conservatorship and bleeding assets. Such a scenario, a housing market propped up by Fannie and Freddie, several economic experts admit glumly, is akin to running a power plant on an auxiliary generator that is jumper-cabled to a car running on fumes.”


Problem 2: The majority party can’t help themselves. Despite all of the signs, warnings and public anger, many of its stalwarts are determined to repeat history and further drive the economy into the ground.

According to the Wall Street Journal, the current finance reform legislation – aka: The Dodd-Frank bill – is so chock-full of problems that it will damage the American economy…perhaps irreparably. “Remaking American finance hasn't yet become law, but corporate treasurers are already bracing for its impact. In the days surrounding this fall's election—after the close of the September 30 quarter—expect a series of warnings on liquidity from companies that had nothing to do with the credit panic and are not even in the finance business. It could be an eerie replay of ObamaCare, whose passage triggered a series of charges by public companies facing higher retiree health-care costs. If Dodd-Frank passes the Senate, U.S. companies could be forced to put up an additional $1 trillion in collateral.”

What’s more, it’s expected to send tens of thousands of American jobs (and maybe more) overseas. Nice work there, boys.

The culprits...

Problem 3: Your Dear Leader is not leading. A year-and-a-half ago, the twin promises of Hope and Change™ were supposed to be a positive thing. Now look: landmark legislation that promises to Change© America – perhaps for the worse – for decades to come was enacted, but only after being pushed through by majority votes…over the will of the people. The people are now pulling back and the support that was once there for the Dear Leader is beginning to dry up.

According to the Gallup Poll,Obama Job Approval Rating Down to 38% Among Independents - Overall job ratings for the president continue to be below majority level.” The venerable survey company now says that “Thirty-eight percent of independents approve of the job Barack Obama is doing as president, the first time independent approval of Obama has dropped below 40% in a Gallup Daily tracking weekly aggregate. Meanwhile, Obama maintains the support of 81% of Democrats, and his job approval among Republicans remains low, at 12%.”

If you’re someone who rode the Dear Leader’s coattails to victory or to a position of power, come November you should be afraid…be very afraid.

Dear, Happy Leader...

Problem 4: The minority party - thanks to the majority leadership’s overreach, incompetence, lack of vision and focus, as well as inexperience – has risen from the dead. Just a year or so ago, pundits predicted that the majority party would “rule for decades to come.” Take all of the negatives listed above and throw in a socio-political movement like the Tea Party, and it all changed in the blink of an eye. The minority party has now laid claim to key positions in New Jersey, Virginia, Massachusetts and numerous other state and municipal offices. The predictions are that come November, the minority will likely take back the House of Representatives, will challenge in the U.S. Senate and is “poised to win the most gubernatorial seats in 90 years. Republicans on pace to eclipse the 24 seats won in 1928, 1966, and the Republican Revolution of 1994; GOP could challenge 100+ year Party mark of 29 seats won in 1920. The question on the minds of officeholders, party leaders, and D.C prognosticators is not whether the GOP will gain seats in the midterm elections across state and federal legislative and executive offices, but how many.”

Problem 5: The war (in Afghanistan) was inherited, to be sure, and the current administration was saddled with the burdens left after the previous administration all but neglected the fight for years. The problem now – beyond the recent McChrystal dust-up – is at least two-pronged: a lack of vision and a corrupt partner. The theater’s new commander, Gen. David Petraeus, has said the allies are “…in it to win it,” but the longer it drags on without any vision from the Commander in Chief – beyond just issuing a quit/withdrawal date – the more the conflict will be viewed as a waste.


Problem 6: The BP oil leak/spill in the Gulf of Mexico. We’re now at Day 78…and counting. The problems continue to worsen, despite promises of Hope & Change®. Obviously, the blowout and disaster weren’t Obama’s fault (though his administration does share in some of the blame), but his team has woefully underperformed during the crisis. What’s more, it has shown that the administration’s energy policies, crisis management abilities and business sense are out of whack. The president and his supporters should not be surprised that disappointment now rules the day. When you promise that government has all the solutions to your problems – be they healthcare, banking, industry, etc. – don’t be surprised when folks get a little miffed at your inability to handle disasters…especially when you spent the last president’s term criticizing him for his lackluster performance in crisis situations.

Problem 7: Immigration - with 59 percent of the electorate against illegal immigration; states fighting cross-border crime; and a growing unemployment problem, this is the time to stand against illegal immigration...not champion a softening of enforcement or attitudes. Instead, the public has been treated to a lecture on tolerance and acceptance...not to mention a lawsuit against Arizona, which is trying to protect its citizenry at a time when the feds won't...

Friday, June 18, 2010

Signs of the times...

First, we saw this on Facebook today. Couldn't help ourselves...



We’re from the government and we’re here to help: BP Oil Spill: As Pay Czar Promises Money, Workers Turned Away From BP Claims Center (ABC News)


Hi-ho, hi-ho...

We’re from the government and we’re here to help, Part 2: Hundreds of Construction Workers Forced Into Unpaid Leave to Accommodate Obama Photo Op. (JammieWearingFool)

We’re from the government and we’re here to take your money: Obama v BP - America’s justifiable fury with BP is degenerating into a broader attack on business. (The Economist)

We’re from the government and we’re here to take your money, Part 2: Obama Admin. Argues in Court That Individual Mandate Is a Tax. Remember when we were told that the individual health insurance mandate is not a tax. The Obama Administration just appealed to the courts, “…the individual health insurance mandate is a tax.” (American Spectator)

Oh, oh! - Campbell Soup recalls 15M pounds of SpaghettiOs (apnews.myway.com)


Maybe the problem is that Spaghettios and chlorine don't go together...

Why did I get rid of my sharks with frickin' laser beams attached to their heads? - U.S. Testing Pain Ray in Afghanistan. (Wired/Danger Room)

If only there was a way they could legally “take” money from tourists to help pay for things -Nevada's unemployment rate tops in nation, 14%. (Las Vegas Review-Journal)


Casinos - aka: Nevada's personal ATMs...

I always love it when people say “communism works, it just hasn’t been done right.” Tell me, does anyone do it like the Norks? - North Korea Turns To Private Markets In Effort To Avert Second Famine (Outside the Beltway)

Take a guess where people and money go…where government takes less of their money, intrudes less on their lives and where opportunity exists. Surprised? America as Texas vs. California: Who’s Moving Where Edition. (The Enterprise Blog)

It’s always interesting when you have a press secretary who doesn’t understand the media (and its audiences): Robert Gibbs Defends Obama, Takes Shot At Cable News. (New York)

Bonus: As we approach the November elections, Taegan Goddard’s Political Wire pegs the biggest mistakes of the run-up. Here they are –

Top Ten Campaign Gaffes of 2010

"The year is not even half over and First Read already has a pretty good list of political gaffes made so far on the campaign trail" -

1. Gordon Brown's "
bigoted woman" remarks

2. Martha Coakley says
Schilling is a Yankee fan

3. Sue Lowden and
Chickens for health care

4. Vaughn Ward's
Puerto Rico is a country

5. Arlen Specter and the
College Republicans

6. Carly Fiorina's
hairy situation

7. J.D. Hayworth's
history lesson

8. Jim Gibbons --
the mistress and the airplane

9. Jerry Brown and
Nazi propaganda

10. Bob Etheridge gets
too close for comfort



He's No. 9 on the list but at the bottom of many others...

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Learning as we go...

On Tuesday night, President Barack Obama will speak to the American people about the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico – nearly two months after BP’s Deepwater Horizon blew-up unleashing the worst ecological disaster in U.S. history.

According to the NY Times, “President Obama will use his first Oval Office speech Tuesday night to outline a plan to legally compel BP to create an escrow account to compensate businesses and individuals for their losses from the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, administration officials said on Sunday.

Here comes the speech - nearly two months later...

“President Barack Obama's upcoming schedule makes clear he is almost entirely focused on the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, but the president is forging ahead with a full legislative agenda,” according to a report by The Hill. “Aides to the president say Obama is able to "chew gum and walk at the same time," but the spill has clearly become the top issue at the White House as Obama will spend two days in the Gulf this week before addressing the nation on Tuesday and meeting with BP officials on Wednesday. To be sure, the president has given a few talks to the people and the press, but this will be the first speech of this magnitude – nearly two months after the disaster began.”


Deepwater Horizon - nearly two months ago...

During the nearly two months since the catastrophe ensued, we’ve learned a great deal about what has and hasn’t been done – mostly what hasn’t:

As essayist David Warren points out, “We learned a simple thing this week: that the BP clean-up effort in the Gulf of Mexico is hampered by the Jones Act. This is a piece of 1920s protectionist legislation, that requires all vessels working in U.S. waters to be American-built, and American-crewed. So while, for instance, the U.S. Coast Guard can accept such help as three kilometres of containment boom from Canada, they can’t accept, and therefore don’t ask for, the assistance of high-tech European vessels specifically designed for the task in hand. This is amusing, in a way: a memorable illustration of … the sort of stuff I keep going on about. Which is to say, the law of unintended consequences, which pertains with especial virulence to all acts of government regulation.”

  • We know that administration officials got tough with BP, “[ripping] ripped up BP's plans for increasing the amount of oil being captured from the leaking well, saying they were insufficient. The company was given a 48-hour deadline, due to expire last night, to come up with plans that would capture more of the oil, which is still leaking at a rate of 30,000 barrels a day.” (Just so you know, the deadline came and went…)
  • We learned that all of this is really someone else’s fault.
  • We found out that “according to the Center for Responsive Politics and financial disclosures, over the last twenty years of oil-giant BP’s political action committee, the largest recipient has been President Obama.”
  • We’ve learned that when it comes to the opinions of celebrities, media and assorted hacks, the overriding tack is, “Hear no evil, speak no evil…”
  • We know Interior Secretary Ken Salazar falsified a report by experts in order to have a moratorium on offshore drilling put in place.


The tragedy continues to unfold...

Closing quote: "Even though I'm president of the United States, my power is not limitless. So I can't dive down there and plug the hole. I can't suck it up with a straw." -- President Obama, quoted by the Washington Post, on the BP oil spill in the Gulf.