Category: “Your Tax Dollars At Work”

  • Meanwhile, In Vermont . . .

    . . . the state has banned brownies and other chocolate treats in schools.

    Seriously.

    The late author Robert A. Heinlein said it best:  “Never underestimate the power of human stupidity.”

  • The Militarization of School Police

    This comes from KHOU out of Houston Texas

    Jonn has posted about the Militarization of Police here and here but it seems that no less than 10 Texas School Districts are using the DOD program to get M16s, body armor, militarily vehicles, ammunition and other goodies. Remember this is the same DOD program that has been  so successfully managed by police departments around the country. That was sarcasm by the way.

    State records show 10 different school district police departments in Texas received military surplus equipment, including trucks, guns, and armor, through a Department of Defense program. The districts include the following:

    Frenship ISD

    Texarkana ISD

    LaJoya ISD

    Linden-Kildare CISD

    Aledo ISD

    Beaumont ISD

    Ector County ISD

    San Antonio ISD

    Edinburg CISD

    Spring Branch ISD

    These are K-12 school districts. My question is how did the DOD give this stuff to them? Is there no oversight? Yea I know that they use Sandy Hook, Columbine and others as a reason. But come on. do they really think those tragedies would have been averted if the school district had been armed better than some NG units?

    In all, the departments received 64 M16 rifles, 18 M14 rifles, 25 automatic pistols, and magazines capable of holding 4,500 rounds of ammunition as well armored plating, tactical vests, and 15 surplus military vehicles.

    Under the program, school police departments received the equipment at little-to-no cost. But not everyone’s thrilled.

    “We don’t necessarily believe that this kind of equipment leads to students feeling more secure and safe in schools,” said Brennan Griffin of Texas Appleseed.

    The group has studied school police polices for years. Griffin calls news that military rifles have found new homes in Texas schools “concerning.”

    “We’ve seen how even much less-lethal devices like tasers and pepper spray get used inappropriately and end up harming children,” he told the I-Team.

    Locally, Spring Branch ISD police received 10 automatic pistols and 13 rifles.

    Police Chief Brawner says the rifles are available only for use by tactically-trained officers in an emergency. He says when not being used in training, the military weapons are locked in the department’s armory.

    But Griffin cites studies showing the typical active-shooter crisis lasts only about 12 minutes.

    “It’s hard to see how an officer would be able to gain access to the armory, bring it to the school, assess the situation and somehow use that weapon in the time that a school shooting usually occurs,” said Griffin.

    We already have problems with police stationed in schools being used to enforce school policy instead of the law. I can see a situation being escalated by the fact that the systems have this equipment so they feel they must use it. An upset parent or student being confronted by police in Body Armor and M16s instead of a principle or counselor that is willing to sit down and find resolution.

    Having school systems own equipmet like this is a very bad idea.

  • And In the “Idiots Being Idiots” Department . . . .

    Here’s a look at some recent bureaucratic inanity, courtesy mostly of our PC libidiot “brethren”.

    And, just for our “global warming”    propagandists   aficionados:

    Finally:  just because I like this – and I think it fits here quite nicely – here ya go (smile):

  • YGBSM. Again.

    Everyone knows that there are certain places EBT cards can’t be used.  Liquor stores, for one.

    So places where marijuana can be legally sold (in states where such sales are legal, like Colorado) must be places where EBT card use is banned – right?

    Well, actually . . . no.  The DHS has confirmed to Senator Jeff Sessions of Alabama that EBT cards can in fact be used at shops where marijuana is sold lawfully.

    I’m not joking.

    Senator Sessions has announced his intent to introduce legislation banning that practice.  My question:  why in the hell hasn’t DHS done that administratively already?

    Oh, yeah – I remember now why.  The linked article indicates that DHS claims they have “no authority” to ban the practice.

    GMAFB.  Since when has that stopped anyone in the current Administration from doing anything?

  • Pyrrhus Would Understand

    Remember that “big victory” we heard about recently for the state of Nevada? You know, the one where Tesla Motors announced that they would build their huge, $5 billion, high-tech battery factory in Nevada vice California, Arizona, Texas, or New Mexico?

    Well, that victory apparently came with a price: somewhere between $2 billion and $3 billion in tax incentives from Nevada. That works out to somewhere between 50 and 60 percent of the cost of building the Tesla-owned facility.

    From Tesla’s latest regulatory filings:

    The total capital expenditures associated with the gigafactory through 2020 are expected to be $4-5 billion (sic), of which approximately $2 billion is expected to come from Tesla.

    And where will the rest of the money to build for the factory come from?  Nevada taxpayers will be on the hook for it.  That’s kinda how tax incentives work.

    There are a few other things about the deal that would bother me if I were a Nevada resident, too.  Like the fact that Tesla currently has roughly $2.6 billion in cash – and around $4 billion in liabilities.

    There’s also this:

    “Tesla has also disclosed its overhead costs are now rising 20% on a year-over-year basis, and research and development expenses are increasing 30%.”

    Finally, Tesla’s current business plans project that they’ll be making (and, presumably, selling) 500,000 electric vehicles annually by 2020. Tesla also expects their new battery factory to reduce costs of battery pack production vis-à-vis current sources by more than 30% per-killowatt-hour.

    Somehow, I just don’t see both of those happening.

    Hey, I hope this works out for the good people of Nevada. But I can’t help thinking – based on what we’ve seen from other similar “green energy”       boondoggles      efforts going belly-up over the past few years – is that there’s a better-than-even chance they’ll end up quoting Pyrrus of Epirus concerning the Battle of Asculum:

    “One more such victory, and we shall be undone.”

  • About That Economic Recovery . . . .

    Well, we all have heard that the economy is “recovering”. Hell, seems to me we’ve been hearing that for around 5 years now. (smile)

    But I’m not really sure I wanna buy that. Irrespective of the fact that I’d look outside at 10AM if the current Administration told me it was daytime, there are a few other troubling indicators.

    Like what? Well, like the fact that the US labor participation rate has been mired in the 62.8 to 63.0 percent range for nearly a year (since October of last year, or for the past 11 months). Prior to October 2013, the last time the civilian labor participation rate was that low was during the Carter Administration – in April 1978.

    In contrast, in January 2009 the labor participation rate was 65.7 percent. The “so what”?  That means that there are between 5 and 6 million fewer people working today than would be working if the economy was in as good a shape, employment-wise, as it was in January 2009.

    That doesn’t sound much like a recovery to me.  But what do I know?

    The reason for the drop in the fraction employed? A sh!tload of people have simply become discouraged, left the US labor force, and are no longer even bothering to look for work. In fact, so many people quit the labor force last month that unemployment actually fell a bit last month – in spite of the fact that job creation last month was the lowest in any month this year, and was far below expectations.

    Oh, and BLS job creation figures for June and July were revised downward by 28,000, too.  That (downward revision of previously-published job creation figures) seems to be happening a lot, too.

    Again:  doesn’t sound much like a recovery to me.

    This Carteresque economic malaise is mirrored in the activities of those who are currently counted as “officially unemployed”. The situation regarding finding work is so bad that an “officially unemployed” person is actually statictically more likely to be found spending time shopping for items other than groceries or gas or engaging in recreational/leisure activities than in looking for workSeems to me that someone needing a job to support themselves and their family would spend more time looking for employment than shopping for nonessential items or recreation – but that’s just me.

    If there were any significant number of jobs to be had, that is.

    However, I do wonder how anyone seeking a job can manage to come up with the money to keep doing that for months or years at a time – I certainly wish I could.  Like the man said: “Oh, that ain’t workin’ – that’s the way to do it . . . . “

    But I guess I can understand why the unemployed are shopping for things other than groceries with the few dollars or benefits they can scrape together. Milk futures have now hit an all-time high, having risen 24% this year alone. This means that we can expect to see milk – already at $3.65 a gallon – to rise in price in the coming months.  Ditto anything that has milk or dairy products as a primary ingredient.

    This is really no surprise to anyone who’s been buying groceries this year.  Inflation for food is outstripping inflation in general substantially.

    You know, if I didn’t know better I’d ask, “What freaking recovery?”  But the Administration says the economy is recovering nicely.  So I must be wrong.

    . . .

    Yeah, those “happy days” are truly here again. We should all bow down before the all-knowing current Administration and paean their efforts to restore the US economy!

  • YGBSM – Yet Again!

    I’ve talked before about this Administration’s problems with “conveniently” missing e-mail and related IT issues here.

    And here.

    And here.

    And here and here and here. Jonn’s talked about the issue here, too.

    Well, guess what. And yeah, you probably have a good idea what I’m going to say next by now.

    Yep – it’s happened yet again. This time, it looks like another five IRS employees key to the IRS scandal have had some e-mail from the time in question “conveniently” become “lost”.

    Oh, did I happen to mention that two of those employees who “lost” e-mail this time around just happened to be IRS employees in Cincinnati – the same IRS office that the Administration claimed “went rogue”, and which the Administration      tried to use as patsies/”fall guys”      initially tried to claim was solely responsible for the whole scandal?

    Well, if I didn’t mention that before . . . I guess I just did.

    Sheesh. Smoking gun, hell – the barrel on this one is so hot it’s beginning to freaking melt.

    If anyone out there still believes this was just another “convenient coincidence”, I’m guessing they also believe in the Tooth Fairy, the Easter Bunny, leprechauns, and Santa Claus.  And I’ve got this bridge on which I’ll make them one helluva deal . . . .

  • Another Periodic ObamaCare Update

    Another look at what new and novel     f-ups     instances of incredible incompetence     idiocy     monumental clusterf**ks      events are occurring under the “ObamaCare” banner.

    Oh, and remember when I wrote that the     incompetent cretins in charge      responsible Administration officials were flatly refusing to release any information about the “healthcare.gov” system security plan? Well, it  looks like we now might know the real reason why the Administration was so reluctant to divulge any information.  Apparently system security for Healthcare.gov was as competently managed as the website’s implementation.

    The hackers didn’t take any data. Instead, they . . . planted malware.

    Oh, and that’s only a part of the story.  Apparently it’s been known since February that there was a good chance the site might be vulnerable. It seems that some of the developers of the website worked for a firm known to have connections to the Belarussian government.

    . . .

    Good grief. We need to rip this absolute abomination of a law into small pieces – all roughly 1,000 pages of it; burn those pieces to ash; mix the resulting ash with quicklime and water; and dump that caustic slurry down an abandoned mine.  Now.

     

    Author’s note:  my apologies for the inadvertent duplication of text in the article as originally posted.  It’s fixed now.