Have a happy Easter.
[Update a few minutes later]
Not that I don’t appreciate the thought, but just to make some readers aware who are reciprocating, in case they weren’t — I’m not a Christian myself, or even a theist.
Have a happy Easter.
[Update a few minutes later]
Not that I don’t appreciate the thought, but just to make some readers aware who are reciprocating, in case they weren’t — I’m not a Christian myself, or even a theist.
…for Republicans:
Following the passage of the health care bill, 53% now say they trust Republicans on the issue of health care. Thirty-seven percent (37%) place their trust in Democrats. A month earlier, the two parties were essentially even on the health care issue.
These results are consistent with the finding that 54% of voters want the health care bill repealed. Rasmussen Reports is tracking support for repeal on a weekly basis. Still, health care ranks just number five among voters on the list of 10 important issues. The economy remains the top issue of voter concern as it has been for over years.
On the economy, Republicans are trusted more by 49% while Democrats are preferred by 37%. That’s a big improvement for the GOP following a five-point advantage last month. More voters who make under $20,000 annually trust Democrats on this issue, but voters who earn more than that favor Republicans.
Remember the old definition of insanity? The president has been talking (and lying) about his health care nonstop for over a year now, and it doesn’t make it any more popular. Now that we’ve actually seen the bill, why does he imagine that continued bloviation and lies about it are going to work any better? “Go for it,” indeed.
[Sunday morning update]
The great elaborator:
His wandering approach might not matter if Obama weren’t being billed as the chief salesman of the health-care overhaul. Public opinion on the bill remains divided, and Democratic officials are planning to send Obama into the country to convince wary citizens that it will work for them in the long run.
It was not evident that he changed any minds at Friday’s event. The audience sat politely, but people in the back of the room began to wander off.
Yes, this will turn opinion around. Maybe he should have let TOTUS answer.
[Update a few minutes later]
Roger Simon is concerned about the president’s mental health:
Now I admit I am not a professional psychiatrist or psychologist, nor do I see myself even remotely as a paragon of mental health, but I have made a decent living for over thirty years as a fiction writer whose stock in trade is perforce studying people and this is one strange dude. He makes Richard Nixon seem almost normal.
I first began worrying about this during the Reverend Wright affair. Obama insisted, as we all recall, that he did not know the reverend’s views even though the then candidate had spent twenty years in his church, been married by him, had his children baptized by him and taken the inspiration for his book from Wright. Now most educated people would have a pretty good idea about Wright after five minutes, let alone twenty years. The reverend is not a subtle man. Yet Obama told us he didn’t know.
Was the candidate lying or was he just so dissociated from reality that he didn’t see what was in front of his eyes? Or perhaps a little of both? Whatever the conclusion, it is not a happy one. The same man is before us now — only we’re not in the midst of a campaign. We have no way out. He is leading our nation during a time of economic crisis with a world changing so rapidly that our heads spin.
That’s the danger of voting based on charisma and “hope,” rather than a hardheaded view of the reality.
Paul Spudis says that NASA lost its way on the way to the moon.
It was clear that once the Griffinites came in, the lunar goal was being sabotaged by people who didn’t really believe in it (e.g., Doug Stanley). But I’m more sanguine than Paul is. There’s plenty of time to again make the case for moon first, and most of the things that we need to do (get commercial crew going, develop depot technologies) are independent of destination. That’s what Flexible Path is all about. As the time approaches at which it will be realistic to think about affordably going beyond LEO, we can decide how best to proceed. The most important thing in the near term, it seems to me, in that regard is to fund ISRU technologies and further prospector missions, and perhaps even robotic prototypes of processing facilities. That will provide a lot more ammunition for Paul and others who want to exploit the lunar resources and bootstrap the rest of the solar system with them.
And Clark Lindsey responds, also explaining why commercial crew really is commercial, honest, even it it is a monopsony (which it won’t be).
The EPA wasted thousands on low-emissions cars in Copenhagen when they were offered zero-emissions transportation for free. Yup, I sure want these people policing my carbon output.
…will still smell as foul. You’ll be as shocked as I am to learn that reports of the organization’s demise have been greatly exaggerated.
Science writer Michael Fumento remembers an amazing Good Friday, that was almost a Very Bad Friday, from years back.
Those tiny black dots are nanobots delivering a lethal blow to a cancerous cell, effectively killing it. The first trial on humans has been a success, with no side-effect.
Faster, please. I wonder if innovations like this will continue under ObamaCare?
Some thoughts on the history of space art, with some excellent examples of the prescience of many of the artists.
Dave Kopel weighs in. And discusses an important issue — if the mandate is struck down, how much of the rest of the monstrosity can survive? Unfortunately, the calorie labeling requirement is probably severable. But most isn’t.
I also agree with Jonathan Turley — to let the mandate stand is to put a complete end to federalism. Which of course has been the left’s goal for decades.