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Archive for the ‘Federal Government’ Category

End-of-Year Update

24 Dec

New Jersey:

Bridgegate: I live one mile south of the George Washington Bridge in Fort Lee where the notorious three-tollbooth lanes designated for local traffic were restricted to only one for a few days in early September.   Traffic in Fort Lee was horrendous.  Gov. Christie asserted that these three tollbooths were used only for Fort Lee residents. This is a gross mischaracterization of the traffic going to the bridge during rush hour.  Motorists from Fort Lee, Cliffside Park, Fairview, Edgewater, Guttenberg and probably other communities use that particular entrance to the GW.

What were Port Authority officials thinking when they restricted access to the bridge claiming they were conducting a traffic study to see the impact of closing two lanes?

Transportation studies can be conducted using a computer simulation to determine the effects of the lane closures without disrupting the actual traffic of an area being analyzed. In short, there was no need to close two of the lanes. Whatever the motives were of Messrs. Wildstein and Baroni, two smart Christie appointed officials who resigned in the wake of this brouhaha, the fact is politicians should not run key sectors of the economy.  Why? Because their motives and goals are much different than managers of businesses who have to satisfy shareholders or risk their own capital.

The bottom line is very simple government should get out of the transportation businessAt the very least, transportation professionals not political appointees should be making decisions about the use of bridges, tunnels and highways.

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Booker versus Lonegan: why US senators should not be elected

07 Oct

After watching the first debate between Newark Mayor Cory Booker and former Bogota Mayor Steve Lonegan, it is crystal clear that Booker is an unapologetic collectivist and Steve Lonegan is an intellectual lightweight.  In addition, watching these two candidates for United States Senate insult each other confirms what critics of the 17th amendment have argued, that US senators should not be elected directly by the people but appointed by state legislatures, the way senators had originally been appointed to the United States Congress until the progressive era reforms of the early 20th century.

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Posted in Civil liberties, Income taxes, Taxes, The Warfare State

 

Cory Booker: Not ready for prime time or the US Senate

04 Sep

This story says it all.  Booker cannot talk about US aggression against Syria?  Because….?  Booker is just another career politician looking for another gig in the government apparatus of coercion, spying and massive legalized theft via the income tax and the Federal Reserve.

 
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Posted in Civil liberties, Federal Reserve, Income taxes, Taxes

 

Steve Lonegan’s trivial—and imploding–campaign

29 Aug

Steve Lonegan’s campaign is imploding faster than a sinkhole in Florida. Instead of focusing on the major issues of the day–Obama’s probable military attack on Syria, the NSA spying program on the American people, the Federal Reserve’s unconscionable money printing, the unsustainable federal budget, the reckless federal government expansion into health care known as ObamaCare, and dozens of other issues–Lonegan is getting press for his critique of Cory Booker’s handling of crime in Newark and his remarks about the mayor’s sexual orientation.

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Posted in Civil liberties, Federal Government, Federal Reserve, Healthcare

 

Chris Christie’s 2016 game plan

16 Aug

In a closed-door meeting with the Republican National Committee in Boston on August 15, Chris Christie laid out the template of how the Republicans can capture the White House in 2016. According to the Wall Street Journal, Christie made the case for “a pragmatic form of conservatism.”  In other words, Christy is signaling he does not hold any deeply held beliefs, and that his current huge lead over Democrat gubernatorial nominee Barbara Buono in this year’s New Jersey race shows how he can attract women and minorities in a state where Barack Obama easily beat Mitt Romney in the 2012 presidential election.

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Posted in Civil liberties, Federal Government, Federal Reserve, New Jersey, Presidential campaign, Warfare state, Welfare state

 

Alieta Eck’s remarkable campaign

14 Aug

Despite losing to perennial candidate Steve Lonegan in the Republican United States Senate primary on August 13, first-time candidate Dr. Alieta Eck garnered 21% of the vote.  With virtually no statewide name recognition and a paltry campaign war chest, Alieta received nearly 30,000 votes.

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Posted in Civil liberties, Federal Government, Federal Reserve, Healthcare, New Jersey, Nonprofits, Warfare state, Welfare state

 

Eck versus Lonegan: the choice is clear

07 Aug

Below is a letter I sent to The Record about its profile of Steve Lonegan on August 6.

Re “Lonegan would stick to his principles,” (August 6) about the former Bogota mayor’s never ending quest to win a statewide race, Republican voters have to ask, which principles?

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Posted in Civil liberties, Federal Government, New Jersey, Politics

 

My op-ed about Christie and the NSA

02 Aug

The Star-Ledger published my essay about government surveillance today.

 
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Posted in Civil liberties, Federal Government, Politics

 

Steve Lonegan is a neoconservative. Why is Paul Mulshine supporting him?

28 Jul

Steve Lonegan is getting good press—again–from Star-Ledger pundit Paul Mulshine.  Mulshine asserts that Lonegan, a GOP candidate for the U.S. Senate seat in the August primary, is a hard-core civil libertarian and advocate for limited government constitutional principles.

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Posted in Federal Government, New Jersey

 

Steve Lonegan: political huckster

14 Jun

“On the House side, John Boehner intends to prove the crony capitalist critique of the GOP correct.  He’ll vote for a bloated farm bill that subsidizes, funds, and kicks back whole industries that could not exist but for the congressional porkers in Washington.”

That was Eric Erickson, in this morning’s RedState.  Yesterday afternoon, there was another GOP crony capitalism lovefest here in New Jersey.

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Posted in Income taxes, New Jersey, Politics, Taxes

 

Seig Heil to Obama’s Amerika

06 Jun

No explanation is needed. Brought to you by both major political parties. Fascism has arrived under the guise of national security.

My parents decided to come to America in 1949 so they and their sons would live in peace and freedom. Another generation of Sabrins will have to defeat fascism…this time in America.

We must speak out forcefully and often. This descent into the abyss has to be reversed. Otherwise, the Statue of Liberty should be torn down.

James Madison warned us 200 years ago,  “If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land, it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy.”

Murray Sabrin, son of Holocaust survivors

 
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Posted in Civil liberties, Federal Government, Human rights

 

How taxpayers are being ripped off

28 May

In an op-ed Senator John McCain bemoans the fact that American cable and satellite subscribers are being ripped off, because they do not have the ability to cancel channels they do not watch…and for which they have to pay now.

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Posted in Federal Government, Taxes, The Warfare State, Warfare state

 

A tutorial on money, gold and inflation for Paul Krugman

14 Apr

In his New York Times column, “Lust for Gold” (April 12), Paul Krugman embraces once again monetary inflation as one of the ways to create prosperity, one of the longest enduring myths in economics.  By disparaging gold as money, Krugman also reveals his lack of understanding of monetary economics.  In addition, Krugman’s support for deficit spending also puts him in the camp of George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, who said “deficits don’t matter.”  In short, Krugman as well as Republican politicians just cannot get enough of the welfare-warfare state.

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Posted in Federal Government, Federal Reserve, Warfare state, Welfare state

 

David Stockman nails it

31 Mar

The former congressman and Reagan administration budget director lays out the case for what ails America in today’s New York Times, crony capitalism.  One of the best essays to appear in an Establishment newspaper in recent years.

 
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Posted in Federal Government, Federal Reserve, Warfare state, Welfare state

 

Ron Paul is a “crank” and an “eccentric” for speaking the truth

11 Mar

In his New York Times op-ed column (“What Hath Rand Paul Wrought”), Russ Douthat applauds Senator Rand Paul’s filibuster against the nomination of John Brennan to head the CIA.  Douthat believes Senator Paul has done the GOP a great service by highlighting issues it is embraced—“hair-trigger hawkishness and absolute deference to executive power”– that have made the Party a two-time presidential loser to Barack Obama.

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Posted in Federal Government, Politics, Warfare state