#rsrh Eloquent? In what universe?

This is a perfectly acceptable article about the problems facing the President over his position on the Ground Zero mosque*; but I’m going to pushback on one, specific point.

White House aides have spent four days trying to explain exactly where the normally eloquent president stands on the mosque.

President. Obama. Is. Not. Eloquent.   He merely reads a speech well (for a non-actor).  The then-candidates 2008 media appearances were carefully scripted: his use of a teleprompter is at this point infamous; his extraneous manner of speaking is actively cringeworthy; compared to his two immediate predecessors, the President has the charisma of a radish; there’s a very good reason why President Obama avoids open-question press conferences like the bubonic plague; and his most famous catchphrase (which I viciously threw back in his face here) is a ripoff of Bob the Builder.

So can we stop pretending otherwise? It kind of annoys. Or peeves.

Continue reading #rsrh Eloquent? In what universe?

RSC’s red meat for today.

The Republican Study Committee’s latest video is available after the fold. Personally, the older I get the more careful I become about going too many times to the Ronald Reagan well… but the comparison here between him and the people running the government right now is both spot on, and stark.

Very, very stark.

Moe Lane Continue reading RSC’s red meat for today.

Hey, Ray Bradbury will be 90 in a week!

And he sounds nicely… cantankerous.

Bradbury wrote darkly about bookburning in “Fahrenheit 451,” but he sounds ready to use a Kindle for kindling. “I was approached three times during the last year by Internet companies wanting to put my books” on an electronic reading device, he said. “I said to Yahoo, ‘Prick up your ears and go to hell.’ “

He’s right, by the way: the man doesn’t write science fiction. He writes myths that sometimes have rocket ships in them.

#rsrh Sen. Levin hit with pie.

A couple of Lefty antiwar nuts, we-hate-the-Jews edition:

Ahlam Mohsen, 23, a Michigan State University senior, was arrested by the Big Rapids Department of Public Safety after the incident. The assault came after a speech by another protester, Max Kantar, 23, of Big Rapids, who criticized [Sen Carl] Levin [D, MI] – chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee – for his stance on U.S. foreign policy issues, including “Israel war crimes against the Palestinian people.” After Mohsen pied the long-time senator, both she and Kantar fled from Pepper’s.

I mention this mostly because you have to look at the picture: Continue reading #rsrh Sen. Levin hit with pie.

Reid’s new Angle on 9/11 mosque.

Sharron Angle went off on Harry Reid on the subject of the Ground Zero Mosque this morning – she takes the position that while people have the right to build a mosque there, they should show some delicacy of their own and build it somewhere else – and Greg Sargent was practically licking his chops in response. He was of the opinion that making opposition to the President’s position – once we figure it out – a midterm issue would be a bad idea for Republicans, and he leaped on Angle’s opposition:

Angle’s position, apparently, is that the group has the right to build the center but Obama is wrong to have voiced support for that right. After all, he didn’t directly endorse the project anywhere, nor should he have. I would like to hear Reid break his silence on the issue, though.

I’m guessing that Sargent reconsidered that wish, once Reid actually spoke out… and took the position that while people have the right to build a mosque there, they should show some delicacy of their own and build it somewhere else. Which is not surprising: the mosque is extremely unpopular, to the point where it’s even less so than, well, Harry Reid. So much so that Reid’s reflexive adoption of his opponent’s position (no matter how matter it makes knee-jerk liberals pound their heads against the wall) was preferable than taking a contrary stand. Continue reading Reid’s new Angle on 9/11 mosque.

#rsrh Go gouge greenbacks from GOP!

I have to say, I like the layout of The West [Coast S]Wing: it’s a project by the NRCC to fundraise $100 grand for the fall elections in response to Obama and Pelosi fundraising at an elitist Hollywood function tonight.  Matching contributions from Republican House Members, so go nuts.

Generally speak, I have to say: the new NRCC website aesthetics are pretty good.  Solid, not flashy, not gimmicky.  Good work there.

Obamacare worth 17.5K dead women a year?

Apparently.

If you’ve missed the Avastin controversy, here’s a quick summary of it: Avastin is a general anti-cancer drug that got fast-tracked by the FDA a few years ago and is now prescribed to under 18 thousand women a year in the United States who suffer from the last stages of breast cancer.  It doesn’t cure the cancer; it has side effects; and its beneficial effects are disputed… but the drug has its defenders as well as its detractors.  However, now the FDA is contemplating reversing its approval of Avastin, which would probably mean the end of both its coverage by Medicare, and a subsidy program for low-income women.

Why?

Because then it won’t be covered by Medicare and the government can end the subsidy program for low-income women, of course.  The difficulty here for Obamacare supporters is that Avastin can cost up to $100K a year – the aforementioned subsidy program only covers about 40% of that, by the way – and under Obamacare the government would have to be the one to make the awkward and politically fraught call on whether or not to spend a lot of money making available a drug that doesn’t magically destroy cancer on the spot.  It’s another ‘take a pill‘ kind of situation, in other words: or to be even more inflammatory (but perfectly accurate), it’s another ‘death panel’ kind of situation.  There’s no good answer for an Obamacare enthusiast: if the drug’s available and you subsidize it, that’s up to a couple of billion dollars right there per year that the government will have to pay for a treatment of disputed efficacy (and demand for the drug will assuredly go up, if it’s subsidized).  If the drug’s available and you don’t subsidize it, you’re denying care under your system that was available previously (which is precisely what has been promised as not going to happen).  But if you can get the FDA to remove the approval, well… problem solved, right?

Assuming that you don’t have advanced breast cancer, of course.

Moe Lane

PS: Yes, I’m sure that the FDA will deny that cost considerations are what’s driving this possible reversal of approval.  Yes, certainly, of course they would have made the incredibly rare call of re-reviewing a fast-track drug if Avastin only cost $100/year.

PPS: The central fallacy of Obamacare is that it assumes that you can repeal the laws of supply and demand if you wish hard enough.  When it comes to socialized medicine… increased coverage, decreased costs, better service: pick one.

No, if you want to be able to pick two you need to go back to a market-driven solution.

Sure, the fashion industry doesn’t…

…exacerbate body image issues.

Sure, it doesn’t.

I don’t know where I saw this, but ye gods and little fishes!

There is no possible way that 99.N% of the female population could achieve a look like that without major surgery*.  And possibly time on the rack.

Moe Lane

PS: Must have been Instapundit where I saw it first.

*The expression on that Miss J. Alexander guy is priceless (and speaks well of the fellow); click through to see it.