Daily Archives: August 11, 2003


Late Night Reading

Idols of the Marketplace links toWhiskeybar and Talkleft on the upcoming ashcroft concert tour.
Scott Wickstein at White Rose has some examples of Big Brother hard at work.
BLAH3 hammers War on the Cheap and supports Al Franken’s use of Fair and Balanced. And from the other side Kim takes Fox to task as well.
There is a discussion of Afghani Snow Leopards from a Libertarian perspective at Samizdata and Catallarchy.
Will Wilkinson has some thoughts on the false alternative of a forced choice between intrinsicism and subjectivism.
Good Night!


Raining on the bush parade

Moorish Girl says A Storm is Brewing. Check out this Washington Post article:

The new information indicates a pattern in which President Bush, Vice President Cheney and their subordinates — in public and behind the scenes — made allegations depicting Iraq’s nuclear weapons program as more active, more certain and more imminent in its threat than the data they had would support. On occasion administration advocates withheld evidence that did not conform to their views. The White House seldom corrected misstatements or acknowledged loss of confidence in information upon which it had previously relied:

Yep, I think its brewing and can see the lightning on the horizon.


Fiscal Conservative: bush?

Last night I linked to a couple posts on Howard Dean and fiscal conservatism. Today I’ll take a quick look at bush. Fresh from the Cato Institute is this:

The new estimates show that, under Bush, total outlays will have risen $408 billion in just three years to $2.272 trillion: an enormous increase in federal spending of 22 percent. ….
But the real truth is that national defense is far from being responsible for all of the spending increases. According to the new numbers, defense spending will have risen by about 34 percent since Bush came into office. But, at the same time, non-defense discretionary spending will have skyrocketed by almost 28 percent. Government agencies that Republicans were calling to be abolished less than ten years ago, such as education and labor, have enjoyed jaw-dropping spending increases under Bush of 70 percent and 65 percent respectively.
……
in inflation-adjusted terms, Clinton had overseen a total spending increase of only 3.5 percent at the same point in his administration. More importantly, after his first three years in office, non-defense discretionary spending actually went down by 0.7 percent. This is contrasted by Bush’s three-year total spending increase of 15.6 percent and a 20.8 percent explosion in non-defense discretionary spending.
Sadly, the Bush administration has consistently sacrificed sound policy to the god of political expediency. From farm subsidies to Medicare expansion, purchasing reelection votes has consistently trumped principle. In fact, what we have now is a president who spends like Carter and panders like Clinton.

Republicans really want to reelect this guy? Go figure.
Via Steve Verdon who has more.