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New ad from MN Forward: Feel surprised, frustrated, or scared? That's how Minnesotans feel when they hear Mark Dayton's bad ideas--higher income taxes, higher property taxes, and more government spending. Don't let Mark Dayton knock us down.

This ad acted by Clint Howard and produced by HeritageForAmerica might as well have been targeted directly ad MN CD1 incumbent Tim Walz. Clint even has the look down.

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News was confirmed today that the champion of ObamaCare himself will be coming to Minnesota to campaign, surely for Dayton and Walz. As a conservative, I can't be happier. Obama has been an absolutely toxic asset to every race he has tried his hand at. I rarely say this, but thank you Mr. President. I would bet an Obama intervention for Walz would cost him 5 points.

For those too young to remember the great poet of the boxing ring Muhammed Ali, the "rope-a-dope" strategy is when you allow the opponent to expend great energy punching at where you are not, until they become so fatigued that they are easier to defeat.  That is what I saw Tom Emmer do at yesterday's MPR gubernatorial debate at the State Fair.  

Mr. Emmer allowed both opponents to spend a great deal of time claiming they were the better candidate because they had a "plan" and Mr. Emmer had none.  It has almost become the defining issue of the race, including as it does the DFL booth at the fair, a ridiculous sum of money spent on advertising against Mr. Emmer in that regard, and even concerns among some Republicans.  (I got over that concern quite some time ago.)   Mr. Dayton claims that his plan is better, because he is going to raise taxes, and cut taxes, and cut spending, and then spend more on education, roads, local government aid, education, health care, the environment, education, the courts, capital investment, jobs and, of course, education.  Mr. Horner claims his plan is superior because, well, he is the only one who has one, so there.  Considering Mr. Dayton's description of his plan, I might even agree with Mr. Horner.  Here's the rope-a-dope part:  What is going to happen to the other two campaigns when Mr. Emmer DOES release his plan, which I believe he soon will?  At best, the other campaigns have to quickly switch gears to attacking the plan, rather than the absence of it, and at worst will find their long-vaunted plans TKO'ed by one "Right" jab after another.  The next debate should be a real Thrilla.

Senator Dayton, MNGOP, you asked for 'em, you got 'em. Actually I'm waiting until tomorrow morning to post the new designs for MNGOP tracker shirts.

If you're not familiar with the story, have a look here.

 

Senator Dayton, MNGOP, you asked for 'em, you got 'em. Actually I'm waiting until tomorrow morning to post the new designs for MNGOP tracker shirts. If you're not familiar with the story, have a look here.

Here's tonight's teaser. Many more to come tomorrow morning.

I just got a press release form Mark Drake of the MNGOP. It's an open letter asking for submissisons for designs of the Mark Dayton requested MNGOP tracker shirts. I have done a few hundred shirts in my time, sounds like fun. Better check over the details first.

Following a tremendous public response to the unveiling of the Republican Party of Minnesota’s tracker uniforms at the Minnesota State Fair, Party Chairman Tony Sutton today announced that the Party will be holding a contest to allow Minnesotans a chance to design their very own tracker uniform for September 6, 2010, the Fair’s final day.

"As our great trackers made clear at the start of the Great Minnesota Together, Mark Dayton was named one of America’s worst senators by Time, and he is committed to raising taxes on hard-working Minnesotans.  But there are other aspects of his failed 30-year political career which certainly merit their own t-shirt.  Who can forget his bizarre and panicky decision to shut down his Senate office over a non-existent terrorist threat or his self grading of his own U.S. Senate accomplishments as an “F”?  Due to popular demand, I’m proud to announce that the Party will be a holding a one-time only tracker uniform contest where Minnesotans can submit their own ideas of what they would see our highly capable trackers wear as uniforms,” said Republican Party of Minnesota Chairman Tony Sutton.

“Mark Dayton asked us to provide our trackers with clothing identification and we were happy to comply.  Now we’re asking Minnesotans to come up with what they think our trackers’ uniforms should look like.  Given Dayton’s disastrous record, I’m sure there will no shortage of great ideas,” Republican Party of Minnesota Deputy Chairman Michael Brodkorb said.

The Party’s trackers will unveil their uniforms at 9:00 AM on Monday, September 6, 2010, the final day of the Great Minnesota Get Together at the Republican Party of Minnesota’s State Fair booth located at 1702 Carnes Ave. (between WCCO Radio and Ye Old Mill). 

Contest Rules [CHECK Emphasis mine]

Individuals can submit entries at the Party’s State Fair booth or submit them online at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .   [CHECK]

All entries must be received by 5:00 pm on Sunday, September 5, 2010. [CHECK]

Only Minnesota residents are eligible.  [CHECK]

I'll see what I can do. It is my 15th anniversary tomorrow so I may be a bit pinched for time. Check back tomorrow.

"I think having your trackers follow Mark Dayton around is the most undemocratic thing I've ever heard of!!!"  (quickly walking away)  [Well, of course it's undemocratic to hold Democrats responsible for the things they say and do, but it's completely okay to criticize Republicans, even if you have to make stuff up.]

"Those DWI ads that Dayton has up are really doing a lot of damage.  When is the Emmer campaign going to respond?"  [I said that the Emmer campaign doesn't have the millions to throw at negative campaigning like Dayton does, but it almost doesn't deserve a response.  Emmer's two offenses were 20 and 30 years ago, while Mark Dayton's last of three alcohol rehabs was just two years ago.  Who lives in the big glass house?]

"So what are you guys going to do about this terrible unemployment?"  [This gentleman was in earnest, and was seeking an answer.  I told him that we had to get control of out-of-control government spending, because that was sucking up every last nickel that private enterprise might use to stay in business and keep their current employees, or to expand and create new jobs.  After that we have to cut taxes, for the same reason, and then we have to reassure businesses that these rules are going to remain stable, so that they can plan.]

"The AFL-CIO is over there handing out these cards showing how the rich aren't paying their fair share.  That's a pretty powerful argument; how are you guys going to answer it?"  [If the the unions' numbers are correct, which I wouldn't necessarily believe, then the solution is simple: lower taxes on everybody that's not rich!  I think Mr. Emmer would prefer to gain the votes of the 90% of the people who are not rich rather than Mr. Dayton's choice to lose the votes of the 10% who are.]

"Well, I'm a proud lesbian and we're ... some day ... [sound of Charlie Brown's teacher] whanh-whanh-whanh-whanh-whah"  [Oh, yeah, that in-your-face bluster must swing a lot of people to your side of the debate. Buh-bye.]

"Just think, if we had an HONEST Secretary of State, we might just swing this election."  [Yep. Make sure you get out the vote for Dan Severson.  "If it ain't close they can't cheat" -- Hugh Hewitt]

In February 1959, Mike Wallace interviewed famous author and objectivist Ayn Rand. This is the first time I've seen this interview. The young socialist Wallace tries his best to make the case for the friendly face of socialism and collectivism. No luck Mike.  Hat tip to Trevor Loudon at NewZealBlog.

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I've placed the bits out of sequence because I believe part 2 is the best segment. But all of them are good.

Part 3

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Part 1

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Diametrically opposed views are a good thing. With healthy debate and moral clarity, we can learn and grow as individuals. Sadly we don't see it in this case: a liberal's rebuttal from an eariler Duluth News Tribune letter pointing out government and perceived Marxist growth:

A letter of Aug. 2 (“Hey, Duluth, how does it feel to be Marxist?) displayed a litany of misinformation, a knee-jerk, right-wing response to reality, and an utter disregard or even knowledge of what Marxism might be all about.

The letter’s wearisome inventory included rising gas prices; the financial irresponsibility of government officials; how our city is getting trashier; City Hall in the red; more money for hospital buildings, yet nurses cut; East High School’s football field torn apart as part of a $4 million project; a perfectly good school practically given to the University of Minnesota Duluth; no improvements to City Hall; and Christians paying for abortions via “Obamacare.”

The writer asked: “How does it feel to be Marxist?” What he should have asked was: “How does it feel to live under capitalism?”

William L.
Embarrass

If there were ever an appropriate city name placed after a writer, this is it.  Let's go to the original letter that caused Comrade William's upset:

Let’s see if you’re awake yet Duluth.

Has anyone noticed how gas prices in our city seem to go up two weeks before every holiday, but the cost of a barrel stays the same?

Has anyone noticed that when government officials want to build a new playground or trails for hiking, or when they want to buy land of more than 1 million acres, they just do it?

Has anyone noticed our city is getting trashier and trashier? Do inspectors, who you can’t find, ever give out fines for anything?

Have you wondered how we seem able to get grants from all over but our city still is in the red?

Has anyone noticed how St. Mary’s hospital cuts nurses yet has the money to build new hospital buildings? And when you contact them you speak to a person from another country who you can’t understand?

Did you notice the Red Plan went into effect practically the day the decision was made? East High School’s football field was torn apart within days, it seemed, and that was a field built as part of a $4 million project, as I recall. Good thinking!

We practically give away a perfectly good school next to the University of Minnesota Duluth, and UMD pays little to nothing for it?

All this and we can’t give our police department a decent place to work? Officers have been in City Hall since 1927; nothing has improved.

All you Christians out there: We are paying for abortions via Obamacare, yet we have heard little from the news media or the pulpits of our churches? Maybe we should give President Obama, his communist czars and the DFL another four years. How does it feel to be a Marxist? You ain’t seen nothing yet, but you will!

Rodney L.
Duluth

The former replies by name-calling instead of refuting the latter's examples. Rodney uses strong lanquage and some name-calling, but his examples are compelling. William can only come back with "right wing lying and disregard for Marxism." To William and other Marxist supporters, perhaps this Townhall article from Dennis Prager might enlighten you on communism. If you can't acknowledge that C's evil, "you ain't seen nothing yet, but you will!" and "without moral clarity, humanity has little chance of avoiding a dark future."

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Coming this fall from Ray Griggs

I Want Your Money trailer...Set against the backdrop of today's headline - 67% of Americans don't approve of Obama's economic policies, the film takes a provocative look at our deeply depressed economy using the words and actions of Presidents Reagan and Obama and shows the marked contrast between Reaganomics and Obamanomics. The film contrasts two views of the role that the federal government should play in our daily lives using the words and actions of Ronald Reagan and Barack Obama. Two versions of the American dream now stand in sharp contrast. One views the money you earned as yours and best allocated by you; the other believes that the elite in Washington know how to best allocate your wealth. One champions the traditional American dream, which has played out millions of times through generations of Americans, of improving one's lot in life and even daring to dream and build big. The other holds that there is no end to the "good" the government can do by taking and spending other peoples' money in an ever-burgeoning list of programs. The documentary film I Want Your Money exposes the high cost in lost freedom and in lost opportunity to support a Leviathan-like bureaucratic state.

TV Ad #1 for Team Emmer. Tom, Jacquie, and the whole Emmer family sit down to talk about growing jobs and reforming government in Minnesota.

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Gary Gross quotes Mark Dayton (candidate for something-or-other) as saying "It's fundamentally unfair, it's fundamentally wrong. Tom Emmer and Tom Horner think it's terrific, and Yvonne and I think it's terrible.  I think most Minnesotans who can afford to pay more taxes, the top 10 percent, are willing to do so... for the sake of the future of Minnesota. And on November second we'll find out."

So, the next time he makes this statement, somebody should ask him this:  "Tell me, Mr. Dayton, how much more did you pay in state taxes last year, above and beyond what you owed?"

I know the subject of Thursday's FCC hearing in South Minneapolis, which I was unable to attend, was actually "Net Neutrality" but, like most terms thrown about by politicians and bureaucrats these days, it seems intended more to smoke over a smoldering scheme than to firelight the truth.  If it is like my paycheck, where gross pay is what I have earned and net pay is what the government lets me keep of it, no thanks.  As for "neutrality" when it comes to the Internet, government is the aggressor here, attacking a chaotic but completely peaceable (and essentially  defenseless) Internet, so "neutrality" is not something government can, should or ought force, except on THEMSELVES.  

Had it been a fair hearing, which I understand it definitely was not, it would have come down to a debate between those who distrust Big Business and those who distrust Big Government.  I would therefore have liked an answer to one and only one question:  Who is more likely to insure the best and widest access to the Internet: unelected, politically-swayed bureaucrats who get paid the same regardless of what happens to the businesses and industry they regulate, or the businesses that survive and thrive only by providing an Internet service that more and more customers will freely choose to buy?

Last night, there was a "Townhall listening session" on government takeover of the internet and media as we know it. Sounds more like a rally and a very staged one at that. A few of questions about the show last night.

1. Who funds Free Press?
2. Who paid for two Federal Regulators to attend?
3. Who funds the raft of "Community Organizers" who provided "testimony"?
4. Are they all funded by essentially the same source? If so, they testimony was purchased?
5. Did Special Interests with a stake in the event fund the travel of the FCC Commissioners?
6. Did the Taxpayers fund the travel of the FCC Commissioners? If so, why was the panel stacked and why would they not take questions?
7. Why did Franken put out a fundraising pitch around this if it was an FCC Townhall? Is that ethical?
8. Why did Franken and Ritchie leave so quickly? Was it because there were people there who were going to ask them tough questions?

Just askin'.

Closing thought. If the business community, or a church held that kind of event with those sort of policy makers, there would likely be calls for investigations.  But we have no idea where the money trail leads or starts. Someone with more time and resources than me should look into this.


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I wrote a few days ago about the coming of the Obama FCC "Net Neutrality" roadshow. On Thursday, August 19th at 6:00 PM, there will be a public hearing on “The Future of the Internet” at South High School in Minneapolis. No surprise that libertarians and conservatives like myself oppose this—just another massive arm of the federal government that will never go away.

Here’s the actual copy from the promotion ad that was run in the St Paul Pioneer Press and apparently the Washington Post:

The Federal Communications Commission is making decisions right now that will shape the future of the Internet. Commissioners Michael Copps and Mignon Clyburn are coming to town, and they need to hear from you.

The future of the Internet is the future of free speech, our economy, our democracy …everything!


Sound more than a little bit desperate for attention?  That’s because they’ve taken the roadshow to a few different cities and they were absolute flops with 15 to 20 people showing up. They are counting on Al Franken and Mark Ritchie as star power to get more bodies In the room.

But if the show fails here in Minnesota the big government power grab tour may die, even if the effort behind the bill does not. They close with this in bold:

Tell the FCC to stand with the public and stand up to the phone and cable companies.


Read: Government and activists should oppose the free market by swallowing it whole. But who is “organizing” this government power grab anyway?  You guessed it, the usual suspects of anti-capitalists, radicals and egalitarians:

Organized by Main Street Project, Center for Media Justice, The Benton Foundation and Free Press


Main Street Project: Main Street Project helps community organizations and residents organize, build relationships and coalitions, identify priorities and create community action plans.

Center for Media Justice: Our mission is to create media conditions that advance racial justice, economic equity, and human rights

FreePress: We're working to make media reform a bona fide political issue in America. Powerful telecommunications, cable and broadcasting companies have plenty of lobbyists to do their bidding. We're making sure the public has a seat at the table, and we're building a movement to make sure the media serve the public interest.

The Benton Foundation: ...seeking policy solutions that support the values of access, diversity and equity, and by demonstrating the value of media and telecommunications for improving the quality of life for all.

Pretty easy to read the agenda there. Breaking it down simply: They know they will not be successful unless they dismantle the free market system. They want Government to run journalism and the internet. And they desperately need the people's support. Have a look at a few quotes from Robert McChesney:

“Our job is to make media reform part of our broader struggle for democracy, social justice, and, dare we say it, socialism. It is impossible to conceive of a better world with a media system that remains under the thumb of Wall Street and Madison Avenue, under the thumb of the owning class.” (Robert W. McChesney, “Journalism, Democracy…and Class Struggle,” Monthly Review, http://www.monthlyreview.org/1100rwm.htm, 11/2000)

“…any serious effort to reform the media system would have to necessarily be part of a revolutionary program to overthrow the capitalist system itself.” (Robert McChesney, “The U.S. Media Reform Movement,” Monthly Review, http://www.monthlyreview.org/080915mcchesney.php, 9/2008)

“Only government can implement policies and subsidies to provide an institutional framework for quality journalism...The democratic state, the government, must create the conditions for sustaining the journalism that can provide the people with the information they need to be their own governors.” (Robert McChesney and John Nichols, “The Death and Life of Great American Newspapers,” The Nation, http://www.thenation.com/doc/20090406/nichols_mcchesney/2, 3/18/09)


The net is working fine—prospering—and the last thing it needs is government regulation to quash this great frontier of free market innovation.

Many minority groups, and rural groups—the very same groups the net neutrality advocates claim they will help have opposed this for the reason that once Government takes over, private investors will neglect underserved areas unless they could win government contracts.

For some good articles on opposition to this big government takeover, check out NetCompetition.org. Their mission statement sounds a whole lot better than the folks sponsoring this tour: NetCompetition advocates continuing a free market Internet and opposes a government-run Internet.

If you can come out to speak out against this, please do, Thursday at 6:00.

From a Press Release from CFACT:

Last year Lord Monckton gave a presentation on global warming [for the Minnesota Free Market Institute] in St. Paul, Minnesota that became a sensation on YouTube. This inspired Prof. John Abraham of the University of St. Thomas to attack his presentation in a lengthy video. Lord Monckton has refuted Prof. Abraham using his own medium.

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Runaway Slave - the Documentary, due for release 2011. Truth long overdue. Looks Excellent. Hat Tip to New Zeal blog.

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Not much more on their site now, but in time you can learn more at: RunawaySlaveMovie.com