California

A Bathtub Analogy to Illegal Immigration

Here’s some fluid advice from California Congressman Dana Rohrabacher (R):

Republican congressman offers immigration solution

By Dana Rohrabacher

If a bathtub is overflowing and water is spilling onto the floor, the first thing most rational people would do is turn off the faucet, remove the tub stopper and let the water drain. Then the cleanup would begin. If only the federal government was as rational.

Unfortunately, there are many in Congress who would mop up the floor before turning off the faucet and draining the tub. Instead of turning off the massive flow of illegal aliens in our country and demonstrating that the government can keep that flow at a very low trickle, Congress is proposing to legalize the millions of illegal aliens in the country first. This strategy has not worked in the past and it will not work for our country now.

There is only one way to stop this unfettered flow of illegal immigrants: cut off the jobs and benefits that attract them to America. The federal government must demand that businesses verify the legal status of their employees and administer heavy fines to those who violate the law and hire illegal aliens.

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Rohrabacher used to be our congressman before the Democrats in California Gerrymandered my Republican ass into Jane Harman’s District. We had actual rational representation up until then. Now, we have a congressperson who prioritizes Rowe v. Wade above National Security and Immigration Enforcement.

West Beaches

There are miles and miles of scenic beaches in western Los Angeles County. During our recent excursion to the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library, we took the time to return via the shoreline. I snapped these pictures as we passed beautiful beaches and homes.

This is a shot of Zuma Beach with Point Dume in the distance.

These beach front homes are just west of Malibu – I wonder how much these guys have to pay per year for tsunami insurance? Can one even get tsunami insurance?

Prop 82 Fiscal Peril

Dan Walters, in the Sacramento Bee, wrote an editorial on the adversities of Rob (aka Meathead) Reiner’s insidious California Proposition 82 – the so-called “Preschool Initiative.” Walters makes several good points about the dangers of the initiative; he also points out that a similar mentality by Gray Davis and the Democrats, lead up to California’s fiscal crisis.

Excerpted from Walters’ editorial:

Reiner preschool measure would increase state’s fiscal peril

[This is] how Reiner would finance preschool – by imposing a 1.7 percent surtax on incomes above $400,000 for single taxpayers and $800,000 for those filing jointly. And that’s no small matter.

Reiner, who resigned last week amid bipartisan and media criticism of the ad campaign, chose to tax himself and other high-earners for the same reason that he sponsored a 1998 ballot measure that sharply increased taxes on smokers to provide children’s services – the Robin Hood theory. Polls very strongly indicate that raising general taxes – sales taxes, for instance, or all income tax brackets – is a nonstarter with voters, and raising taxes on business would generate well-financed corporate opposition.

However, those same polls indicate that voters would be inclined to tax high-income taxpayers, who already pay the lion’s share of income taxes, and noxious commodities such as cigarettes. That’s why, incidentally, former Assemblyman Darrell Steinberg also tapped upper-income taxpayers a couple of years ago with his ballot measure to finance mental health services.

So what’s the downside? Why should anyone sympathize with smokers or rich people? The problem with both is that they are making supposedly vital public services dependent on revenue sources that are very problematic. Cigarette sales are already declining sharply, which translates into lower revenue for the children’s programs that First 5 touts. And relying on personal income taxes is even more questionable because the downside exposure is even greater.

Rich people don’t, for the most part, depend on paychecks for their incomes. They are business owners, investors, executives with stock options, top-tier doctors, lawyers and other professionals, and highly paid athletes and entertainers. Thus, they have the ability to manipulate how much income they actually receive for tax purposes by, for instance, delaying stock sales or triggering stock options, or leaving business earnings in corporate treasuries.

William Hamm, a former legislative budget analyst retained by the anti-Proposition 82 campaign, contends that the ability to manipulate income, even transferring it to a tax haven state such as Nevada, could actually reduce state revenue by billions of dollars should the measure be enacted – not only for preschool but all state budget categories.

[ . . . ]

The reason the state budget has chronic, multibillion-dollar deficits is that former Gov. Gray Davis and state legislators squandered a one-time windfall of income taxes on permanent spending and tax cuts that could not be sustained when revenue growth returned to normal levels. Making another big program dependent on income taxes increases the risk that California will remain insolvent for many years to come, even if the rich don’t flee to tax havens. It’s skating on very thin fiscal ice.

Emphasis added.

Pink Ranunculus

I just love spring. So many flowers and so much color. I got these little beauties at the florist a few days ago and they just seem to be getting prettier.

From www.flowers.org.uk

Ranunculus belong to the Buttercup family and is the cultured cousin of the Marsh Marigold. Its name is from the Latin for little frog. In fairy tales frogs are apt to change into princes and it was an Asian prince in just such a story who gave his name to this flower, which grows naturally in swampy ground. The prince was so good-looking that he was loved by everyone. He also had a beautiful voice but this was his undoing. He loved the open country and sang delightful songs in the presence of nymphs. He did not have the courage to declare his love to them and this haunted him so much that he died. After his death he was changed into the flower with delicate tissuey petals which bears his name.

Meathead Resigns Post

Meathead, under investigation for fraud, agreed to resign from commission post. I previously posted about the fraud allegations in Still a Meathead – Part IV.

Sacramento Bee: Reiner resigns from agency

Actor-director Rob Reiner resigned Wednesday as chairman of the California Children and Families Commission following months of controversy over whether the state agency improperly spent $23 million of public money on advertising that benefited the campaign for Reiner’s universal preschool initiative.

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Unfortunately, Governor Schwarzenegger filled Meathead’s post with Hector Ramirez who is held in high regard by the racist organization La Raza.

Schwarzenegger on Wednesday appointed a replacement for Reiner: Hector Ramirez, vice president of Para Los Niños, a Los Angeles-based children’s charity. Ramirez, who is on record supporting Reiner’s ballot measure, said he would run the agency as an “apolitical organization.”

Though Reiner announced the campaign for Proposition 82 at a press conference at a Para Los Niños preschool in Los Angeles last year, Ramirez said his organization has not taken an official position. He said he would have no involvement in any position on the measure that the board of Para Los Niños decides to take.

However, Ramirez has personally endorsed the measure. A September 2005 press release issued by the National Council of La Raza, a Latino civil rights group, quoted him as saying, “The ‘Preschool for All Act’ is the first step to make quality preschool a reality for all children.”

One more point: proposition 82 benefits will be paid for by raising taxes for “the very wealthy.” What this really means is that California will continue to drive small business and high-bracket taxpayers from the state.

Californians, vote NO on proposition 82!

Read my earlier posts on Meathead:
Still a Meathead – Part IV
Still a Meathead
Give Your Children to Us – Now
Rob Reiner Admits he’s a “Meathead”

Alligators in the Sewers – Part VI

With spring approaching, flowers are in bloom, the mocking birds sing all night long and the alligators come out in Machado Park.

Reggie: Part II is expected to open at lake in April

The original Alligator Tale of Harbor City had quite a cast of characters, including Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin. The sequel is shaping up nicely.

Rise and shine.

It’s spring. The sun is shining and temperatures are climbing. The days are growing longer.

Can Reggie’s reawakening be far behind?

Harbor City’s elusive alligator hasn’t been seen since October, when a reptile’s normal winter hibernating season begins.

But Russ Smith, reptile curator for the Los Angeles Zoo, says the South Bay’s favorite watery beast should be stirring back to life any time now in Machado Lake, where he’s eluded capture since August after he was allegedly released illegally over the summer by his owners.

“It’s going to be soon,” Smith said of the alligator’s expected resurfacing. “I still think March would be a good possibility, but I imagine the (recent) cold weather probably pushed things back a little bit. It will probably be April now.”

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Previous articles on Reggie:

Also for your amusement: Reggie not ready for close-up.