Monday, November 30, 2009

Most Americans Angry at Feds

The Climategate scientists are agreeing to reveal their data, at least the data that they didn't destroy.  Why trust "science" that is based on data that has been destroyed?  British doctors are being told to give advice to their patients about how they can shrink their "carbon footprint."

 

ObamaCare could cost over $6 trillion in its first ten on-budget years, will allow criminal aliens to get health care, and would give the HHS Secretary unprecedented new powers for an unelected bureaucrat.  Maybe these are just a few of the reasons why support for the measure is only at 41%, with 53% opposing it.

 

Seventy-one percent of voters are angry at the federal government, which is up five points since September.

 

The Justice Department says that ACORN can be paid for all of the contracts they received before Congress banned all funding to the organization.

 

Nancy Pelosi says that the American people would accept larger deficits and more debt as long as there are (government) jobs.  Obama is going to have a "Jobs Summit" Thursday, and I'm guessing there will not be much talk of creating private sector jobs.

 

The Obama Administration is going to pressure and publicly "embarrass" mortgage companies to reduce more peoples' loan payments.

 

The Fairfax County, Virginia is considering a meals tax to keep their government big.

 

Swiss voters approved a constitutional ban on minarets, the towers on top of mosques, on Sunday.

 

Iran is building 10 new uranium plants.  Clearly, Obama has done nothing to make them or anybody else in the Muslim world hate us any less.  Meanwhile, Muslim honor killings are spreading in the United States.

 

Obama will give his speech tomorrow night on his Afghanistan policy that apparently will include an exit strategy.  British troops are already planning on pulling out of Afghanistan by next year.

 

The guy suspected of killing four police officers in Washington State over the weekend was pardoned by Mike Huckabee in 2000.

 

Most voters do not consider a political candidate's religious faith as an important factor in how they vote.

 

The Republican Party can only agree that they don't like Obama, Pelosi, and Reid running things in Washington.

 

GM is working with the blind to make hybrid and electric cars louder.

 

A majority of voters have a favorable opinion of the AARP, but their support of ObamaCare is hurting their reputation.

 

Why does Gov. Perdue need a PAC that raised about $400,000 last year if he can't run for Governor again?

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