Government Inefficiency: Treasury Department Lacks Manpower To Monitor TARP Fund Distributions

More bureaucratic inefficiency. Via Reuters:

The U.S. Treasury Department lacks the manpower to properly monitor how big companies that got billions of taxpayers’ money use it, a critical report on Tuesday from an oversight agency said.

The Office of the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (Sigtarp) was not meeting its responsibility for monitoring how insurer AIG, Bank of America, Chrysler, Citigroup, GM and GMAC use bailout funds.

“Twenty months into its administration of TARP, Treasury simply has no legitimate excuses as to why it has still failed to accomplish the critically important task of assembling a robust compliance staff,” the audit report said.

In a few years we will be reading the same story, except about how behind the government will be in issuing government run health care insurance payments.

Revisiting Sotomayor’s Confirmation Hearing

Watching the Kagan hearings and reading about the recent Supreme Court decision upholding the 2nd Amendment (there really should be no need for this) it made me think about the most recent Supreme Court nominee hearings.

Sonia Sotomayor at her hearing in 2009:

The committee’s chairman, Patrick Leahy, first told Sotomayor that he enjoys target shooting on a regular basis back home in Vermont and then asked, referring to Heller, “Is it safe to say you accept the Second Amendment is an individual right?

Sotomayor answered plainly, “Yes sir,” and added, “I understand how important the right to keep and bear arms is to many people; one of my godchildren is a member of the NRA.”

Fast forward to this week and read for yourself Sotomayor’s opinion:

JUSTICE BREYER, with whom JUSTICE GINSBURG and JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR join, dissenting.
In my view, JUSTICE STEVENS has demonstrated that the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of “substantive due process” does not include a general right to keep and bear firearms for purposes of private self-defense. As he argues, the Framers did not write the Second Amendment with this objective in view. See ante, at 41–44 (dissenting opinion). Unlike other forms of substantive liberty, the carrying of arms for that purpose often puts others’ lives at risk. See ante, at 35–37. And the use of arms for private self-defense does not warrant federal constitutional protection from state regulation. See ante, at 44–51.

The Court, however, does not expressly rest its opinion upon “substantive due process” concerns. Rather, it directs its attention to this Court’s “incorporation” precedents and asks whether the Second Amendment right to private self-defense is “fundamental” so that it applies to the States through the Fourteenth Amendment. See ante, at 11–19.

Liberals are chipping away at our rights and freedoms, remember this as you watch the Kagan hearings.

Elections have consequences…

Bureaucratic Incompetence On Every Level

Dick Morris has an excellent post describing the layers of bureaucracy trying to combat the oil leak:

According to state disaster relief officials, Alabama conceived a plan – early on – to erect huge booms off shore to shield the approximately 200 miles of their state’s coastline from oil. Rather than install the relatively light and shallow booms in use elsewhere, the state (with assistance from the Coast Guard) canvassed the world and located enough huge, heavy booms – some weighing tons and seven meters high – to guard their coast.

So, Alabama decided on a backup plan. It would buy snare booms to catch the oil as it began to wash up on the beaches.

But…the Fish and Wildlife Administration vetoed the plan saying it would endanger sea turtles that nest on the beaches.

So, Alabama – ever resourceful – decided to hire 400 workers to patrol the beaches in person scooping up oil that had washed ashore.

But…OSHA (the Occupational Safety and Health Agency) refused to allow them to work more than twenty minutes out of every hour and required an hour long break after forty minutes of work so the cleanup proceeded at a very slow pace.

Remember this?

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Government is the most inefficient way to get anything accomplished.

CO2 Is So 2009-The New Push Is Control Over Methane And Nitrous Oxide

Now that the CO2 thing is not really working out for the radical environmentalists, the new big push is going to be the regulation of methane and nitrous oxide that results from farming.

Via treehugger.com:

One more piece of information supporting how important your personal dietary choices are in dealing with climate change: New research published in the journal Global Environmental Change shows that by reducing the amount of meat and dairy eaten and changing farming practices, by 2055 we could reduce emissions of methane and nitrous oxide–two greenhouse gases far more potent than carbon dioxide–from agricultural sources by more than 80%.

Summing up the research, study lead author Alexander Popp of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research says, “Meat and milk really matter. Reduced consumption could decrease the future emissions of nitrous oxide and methane from agriculture to levels below those of 1995.”

Radical environmentalist are consistent, whether its how we generate electricity or how we farm and what we eat, the message is the same, if we don’t change our ways now, the entire planet is doomed.

And global warming is a fraud and a hoax.