Daily Archives: August 31, 2010

TV Network “Russia Today” Nominated for iEmmy on Behalf of the President — Obama, Not Putin

August 31, 2010
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TV Network “Russia Today” Nominated for iEmmy on Behalf of the President — Obama, Not Putin

 by Mike Gray   Kim Zigfeld at Pajamas Media connects the dots:   But now we’ll have to rethink the true meaning of tragedy. After all, you can’t blame a fox for stealing chickens. You have to blame the farmer who is too lazy to bother protecting the chickens properly. If Barack Obama had not been so sickeningly deferential towards Putin’s regime when he visited Moscow, if he had not so totally ignored the plight of human rights and democracy, Russia Today would have had nothing to report (but rather, something to cover up) and the International Academy of Television Arts and Sciences (IATAS) would therefore have had nothing to honor.   After all, if Obama can receive a Nobel Prize, why not, indirectly, an Emmy award as well?   Obama is just the fox. Where is the Republican farmer, who is supposed to be protecting the American chickens? Why hasn’t he done more to stand up against this neo-appeasement policy, as Ronald Reagan surely would have done?   More here.

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The European Welfare State Is Something to Be Envied (If You Don’t Live in Europe)

August 31, 2010
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The European Welfare State Is Something to Be Envied (If You Don’t Live in Europe)

 by Mike Gray   On the Mises Daily weblog, Kaj Grüssner of Finland tells us that, while everything looks great on paper, the reality is different:   Government-run education — “One might think it great that there are so many places of higher learning in a country with so few inhabitants, a proof that its people are educated and civilized. Few things could be further from the truth. …. with higher education so accessible, it lures thousands of people every year to go for a degree, even though they have no business in the world of academia. This produces a great number of bachelors, masters, and PhDs who don’t have any value on the job market because they studied literature, art history, religious studies, or something like that. In many cases, they didn’t choose their major because they actually thought it would give them a job; they chose it because it seemed fun or interesting, or it was easier to get into than law school or medical school. “Unemployment among educated people has become a chronic problem. The other side of the coin is that Finland has long had an acute shortage of people with trade skills: carpenters, plumbers, mechanics, and so

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Which Should Be Reformed First, Government or Culture?

August 31, 2010
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Which Should Be Reformed First, Government or Culture?

by Mike Gray Using as his starting point the famous quotation from John Adams—”Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other”—Adam Graham on Pajamas Media explores the question of just where reform should begin: What Adams suggests is the people’s character impacts our government’s character. The early generations of Americans were independent-minded folks. Help for those in need came from the church, the family, or the community. Citizens expected only a few limited functions to be performed by the state. In 21st century America, we expect the government to provide Social Security retirement and disability, unemployment insurance, Medicare, Medicaid, student loans, and Pell Grants. Parents expect their children to have a free public education through thirteen years of school. Graham’s conclusion: We cannot effect a permanent reduction in the size and scope of government, or meaningful government reform, unless we change our culture’s demand for the government to provide our every need …. those on the right who think conservative goals for limited government can be achieved through passing economic legislation are spitting in the wind. We will never have a limited government until we have

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