Just say “no” to ObamaCare

Today’s Denver Post report on Democrats’ running roughshod over Republicans to pass Obama care contained this gem from Grover Norquist of Americans for Tax Reform:

“If you’re a Republican and the Democrats have an 80-vote margin in the House, your one job is not to put your fingerprints on the murder weapon.”

There’s a time to offer constructive solutions and a time to just say, “No!”  This is the latter.  Nothing can make a government takeover — directly or indirectly — of health care palatable, and fortunately for Republicans who are too often enticed by the media to avoid appearing to be “obstructionists,” President Obama and Democrats aren’t inclined to offer so much as a fig leaf to entice the most wobbly-kneed in the GOP caucus.

Warning labels for baseball bats? Say it ain’t so!

It’s natural to sympathize with the parents of Brandon Patch, the 18-year-old baseball pitcher who died after he was hit by a batted ball in 2003.

Sooner or later, sympathy must yield to logic and reason, so when Brandon’s parents sued the bat’s manufacturer, Louisville Slugger, and a jury awarded them $850,000, they contributed to the terribly misguided notion that behind every tragedy lies a lawsuit. read more…

Twitter is mental flatulence

Kudos to David Harsanyi for his excellent column, “C’mon, admit it.  Twitter is useless.”

To this point, I’ve found Twitter so aggressively worthless that I was forced to research exactly what I was missing. In the process, I stumbled across a useful New York Times tech column penned by David Pogue that clarified all. The headline read, “Twitter? It’s What You Make It.”

In summation, like your beloved pet rock, Twitter is useful only in your imagination.

He won’t be accused of this often, but in this case, David is much too kind. read more…

Ritter’s idea of ‘freeze’ more like a ‘slushie’

Walk into a typical third grade classroom, and most students can explain what means to “freeze” something.  They can explain that when water freezes it becomes ice and is solid.

“Little Billie” Ritter may have missed those lessons because, as governor, he regularly demonstrates a poor grasp of elementary science. read more…

Supreme Court’s power grab might backfire

In an audacious power grab, the Colorado Supreme Court recently embraced, by a 4-3 decision, a judicial doctrine that would relegate the other two branches of government — and the voters — to a perfunctory role.

The high court’s activist majority used Lobato vs. State not only to intrude on the legislature’s constitutional authority to determine funding for public schools; it also self-servingly suggested that no policy decision is off-limits to judicial review. read more…

Health mandate: Kiss your money and your freedom goodbye

Talk about personal responsibility is cheap. Legislating personal responsibility isn’t.  Take the movement to require everyone to purchase government-approved health insurance.

If at first this seems like a reasonable requirement necessary to reduce cost shifting by those who do not pay their own fare, then step back and think again.  The damage caused by such a mandate is far greater than the problem it purports to solve. read more…

Obama’s dangerously deluded foreign policy

Say what you will about Bill Clinton’s foreign policy shortcomings, but for the most part he had the good sense not to squander Ronald Reagan’s legacy of peace through strength.

By contrast, Barack Obama’s foreign policy seems to be predicated on a boundless faith in his own persuasive powers and the naïve notion that our international antagonists are merely misunderstood. Not since Jimmy Carter has American foreign policy been so obsequious or short-sighted. read more…

Whose business is your health care?

Our ongoing debate about government’s role in health care is proving worthwhile because it forces people to focus on the real tradeoffs in a system mandated — if not directly operated — by government, rather than one selected by individuals or their employers.  Today, our system is a dysfunctional hybrid. read more…

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Quote of the Day

Legislative enactments, presidential actions, and amemdments to the constitution are all things which publicly announce changes in the law of the land, providing foreknowledge of the changes in the legal framework within which free people may act and plan. Judge-made innovations are, in effect, ex post facto laws, which are expressly forbidden by the constitution and abhorrent to the very concept of the rule of law.

— Thomas Sowell, The Quest for Cosmic Justice

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