Friday Night Links: The Hockey Fight Edition (Video)

Its Friday Night and after a full day of listening to soccer snobs,  I’m in the mood for some old school hockey. And as an added bonus, follow the links for some excellent right wing writing.

Obama’s Oil Spill

I’m Sorry

Please allow me to be the first to apologize for the Representative’s apology. Not the first apology mind you, which was wholly appropriate in my opinionated opinion, but the second apology that was offered just five hours after the first. Congressman Barton was absolutely correct when he characterized El Presidente’s handling of the matter and should retract his second apology or at the very least, apologize for it. That being the second apology and not the first.

Obama surrenders part of America to Mexican thugs

Bob Probert vs. Ty Domi

Video: Another videographer assaulted by Democrats

I Don’t Care About Soccer

With Obama’s leadership lacking, bureaucracy wins

Mike Vernon vs. Patrick "I can't hear you because I have my Stanly Cup rings in my ears" Roy

My Boss Goes Before the Small People

Like yesterday, when BO puffed out his chest (yeah, I know, you need a microscope to tell) and called the $20 billion damage claims fund he extorted from BP a good start, saying he’d “continue to hold BP accountable.” That’s some ass kicking right there. At least you all weren’t too dumb to understand it.

Hanger 42 – Celluoid Burns Like Napalm

Hillbuzz won’t support Obama, even if Hillary is his VP

Darren McCarty vs. Claude "The Turtle" Lemieux

European flooding (be sure to check out the incredible pictures)

Gloves Off: Left-wing Extremist Chris Matthews’ Anti-Tea Party Propaganda Misrepresents & Demonizes Patriotic Americans… National Tea Party Calling for Sponsors to Drop MSNBC’s ‘Hardball’ (video)

Tom DeBaggio and the disease called Alzheimer’s

And a bonus video: “The Brawl”

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And if you are not a Red Wing or hockey fan, this hit (at the 0:50 mark) is the reason for the brawl.

The Rossi SixtySix Corvette

What do you get when you mix a modern (C6) Corvette, a beautiful mix of classic and modern styling and $130,000 (this includes a donor Corvette)?

Via The Corvette Blogger:

What we’ve always liked most about the Rossi SixtySix is the give and take with the classic Sting Ray design. While the split window is probably the cars more noticeable feature, we particularly appreciate the look of the contours over each of the four corners as well as the stinger hood and the feature line that runs down the Rossi’s spine. The front was reworked from its initial design and provides a modern look in contrast to the retro “bumpers” that will match the wheel color. Overall, this sports car has some serious curb appeal.

Global Warming Crowd Keeps Pretending Global Warming Still Exisits

The global warming (or is it climate change, it has been cool lately) crowd keeps pretending that the planet is warming and that we are all doomed unless we subscribe to their policies and change our lifestyles.

Via the New Scientist:

What hope is there for a deal on climate change based on science? The answer seems to be “not much”.

Climate negotiators meeting over the past two weeks in Bonn, Germany, enjoyed a new spirit of bonhomie as they worked to heal the rifts created by the failure of UN talks in Copenhagen, Denmark, last December. At the close of talks on 11 June, they believed they were back on track to deliver a new climate agreement by the end of 2011.

But diplomatic harmony has come at a price: sacrificing a cool future for planet Earth.

Until Copenhagen, the aim was to set targets for major emitters of greenhouse gases that would limit warming to 2 °C. That required, as a first step, that by 2020 industrialised countries cut emissions by 25 to 40 per cent compared with 1990 levels.

While that target remains an option in draft deals, most negotiators say they will have to accept whatever pledges industrialised countries are prepared to make. Right now those pledges add up to cuts of between 12 and 19 per cent, according to the UN climate secretariat. And there are loopholes that could mean even these pledges amount to virtually nothing.

“As things stand now, we will not be able to halt the increase in global greenhouse gas emissions in the next 10 years,” UN chief negotiator Yvo de Boer said in Bonn. “The 2-degree world is in danger. The door to a 1.5-degree world is rapidly closing.” De Boer is stepping down at the end of this month, and his successor, Costa Rican diplomat Christiana Figueres, said her priority was “rebuilding trust” rather than setting objectives.

You cant say the entire planet is warming if its not warming in my back yard.

The global warming / climate change crowd are only interested in control and wealth distribution. Not science.

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*Video shamelessly lifted from whatreallyhappend.com

Oil Spill Is Now An Excuse For Democrats Green Energy Agenda

Via Fox News:

“It’s time to take this tragedy and turn it into an opportunity,” Sen. Bill Neslon, D-Fla., said in a written statement. “I congratulate the president on saying we are now going to declare that this nation is getting on the road rapidly to breaking our dependence on oil. We are at a point now, through research and development, that we are going to wean ourselves from petroleum addiction.”

This really does not make sense. Contrary to popular opinion, we derive much more than gasoline for our cars from oil. In fact  the computer screen you are using to read this is manufactured from oil.

But, the push is still on for alternative & ‘clean’ energy. Of course, when you talk about alternative or renewable energy you are talking about generating electricity. The problem with trying to leverage the oil leak to advance the green energy issue is we use very little oil to generate electricity in the United States. We primarily generate our electricity using Coal, Nuclear, Natural Gas and  Hydro Power so I fail to see the connection between drilling for oil and the need for solar power to generate electricity- Unless we are all driving EVs’. And the mass adoption of EV’s that is not going to happen anytime soon.

Even if we switch to electric cars, we still need lots of oil for plastics, jet fuel, fertilizer, pesticide and myriad of other products. And, not to put too fine a point on the issue of the electric car, the hype has been building since 1911:

The designers of electric passenger carrying vehicles have made great advances in the past few years, and these machines have retained all their early popularity and are steadily growing in favor with both men and women. They are very handy for use in the cities, and numbers of the best known and most prominent makers of gasoline cars in this country use electric cars for driving between their homes and their offices.

The enthusiastic interest recently shown by the electric power companies all over the country in furthering the cause of the electric passenger vehicle assures a still greater use of these machines. In the past it was sometimes difficult to make arraignments to have electrics charged unless the vehicles wee stored in a garage where owners of electrics were catered to, but this state of affairs has been changed. Now it is possible for an owner of an electric to install his own charging plant in his stable and the electric power companies are anxious to connect their feed wires to these individual charging plants. (emphasis added)

And generating large scale power using solar power is not going to happen soon either.

Photovoltaic Cell from 1936

The problem with the idea that is that  now, today, we are going to throw all kinds of money on research and development for new alternative energy is no matter how much money is thrown at the problem you cant change physics (or the weather).

Photovoltaic effect was discovered by French physicist Alexandre-Edmond Becquerel (1820-1891) in the year 1839. Photovoltaic cells are built out of two layers-positive and negative, and the difference of potentials between these two layers depends upon the intensity of the solar radiation. Solar energy is coming on Earth in the shape of photons. Photons once they fall on the solar cell’s, are transferring all of their energy to the panel, making it possible for negatively charged electrons to burst out of the atom. These electrons after picking up the energy from photons have enough energy to move around and are moving towards other (negative) side of the panel and this is how the difference in potentials happens and electrical energy generates.

What breakthrough is going to happen in the next 10 years that hasn’t happened in the last 171 years? It’s not like scientists and engineers haven’t been working on the problem.

wind power

Wind power has been around forever and we moved away from it as a means for generating electricity to using coal power:

Campbell Dunford, director of the Renewable Energy Foundation (REF), says that Germany – which has the largest number of wind turbines in Europe – “is building five new coal power stations, which it does not otherwise need, purely to provide covering power for the fluctuations from their wind farms. I am not sure [wind] has been a great success for them.” Mr Dunford claims that Germany’s CO2 emissions have actually risen since it increased its use of wind power. Though the wind itself might, in RUK’s words, be “free,” the cost of backup capacity is likely to be astronomical. (emphasis added)

Of course, the facts about the technology the Democrats and Greens are pushing need not get in the way of their agenda:

In his Oval Office address Tuesday night, Obama said the tragedy unfolding in the Gulf should spark Congress to embrace a “clean energy” future that eases dependence on oil and other fossil fuels.

Again, Obama’s call for new, clean energy is nothing new and it echos back to Jimmy Carter (April 18th, 1977):

The world has not prepared for the future. During the 1950s, people used twice as much oil as during the 1940s. During the 1960s, we used twice as much as during the 1950s. And in each of those decades, more oil was consumed than in all of mankind’s previous history.

World consumption of oil is still going up. If it were possible to keep it rising during the 1970s and 1980s by 5 percent a year as it has in the past, we could use up all the proven reserves of oil in the entire world by the end of the next decade.

And more from Carter’s speech in 1977:

Our energy plan will also include a number of specific goals, to measure our progress toward a stable energy system.

These are the goals we set for 1985:

–Reduce the annual growth rate in our energy demand to less than two percent.

–Reduce gasoline consumption by ten percent below its current level.

–Cut in half the portion of United States oil which is imported, from a potential level of 16 million barrels to six million barrels a day.

–Establish a strategic petroleum reserve of one billion barrels, more than six months’ supply.

–Increase our coal production by about two thirds to more than 1 billion tons a year.

–Insulate 90 percent of American homes and all new buildings.

–Use solar energy in more than two and one-half million houses.

We will monitor our progress toward these goals year by year. Our plan will call for stricter conservation measures if we fall behind.

I cant tell you that these measures will be easy, nor will they be popular. But I think most of you realize that a policy which does not ask for changes or sacrifices would not be an effective policy.

This plan is essential to protect our jobs, our environment, our standard of living, and our future.

Our entire economy and way of life is based on oil and we are not going to replace it by using solar panels and wind mills.

News Roundup: The Michigan Politics Edition

Gary, Nancy and a Dove Bar:


Do you wonder why Gary “I thought I was voting for a job’s bill” Peters votes, oh I don’t know, 90% of the time in lockstep with Nancy Pelosi?

Here is a hint…it is not the Dove Bars. Via the Politico:

The economic slump isn’t stopping House Democrats from raising serious piles of cash to help retain their majority — and the powerful leadership posts that come with it. Nine top Democrats have raised a whopping $50 million for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee this election cycle, according to internal fundraising numbers obtained by POLITICO.

By far the most prolific fundraiser remains House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) at about $23.5 million — about $48,000 a day.

If you pay a visit to the Gary Peters page @ Open Secrets, you will notice that the vast majority of his campaign money has come from only a few places since 2008. Also note that the majority of his money comes from outside of his district: ActBlue ($603,757),  The DCCC ($71,737) and PAC to The Future (Nancy Pelosi’s PAC: $20,000).

What you can do if you live in Peters district: VOTE FOR ROCKY

The state of the states Gubernatorial race:

All three Republicans still hold a lead against the two Democrat candidates in the race to be Michigan’s next Governor. Via Rasmussen:

The Republicans still have the edge in Michigan’s tangled gubernatorial contest, but the race is a close one.

The latest Rasmussen Reports telephone survey of Likely Voters in Michigan finds three GOP hopefuls – Congressman Peter Hoekstra, businessman Rick Snyder and state Attorney General Mike Cox – each earning around 40% of the vote in match-ups with Lansing Mayor Virg Bernero and state House Speaker Andy Dillon. The two Democrats pick up support in the mid-30s.

But 23% to 29% of voters either prefer some other candidate or are undecided in every case.

One observation… Mike Bouchard is not in this poll.

Once the race is narrowed down to one Republican and one Democrat, whoever ends up as the Republican candidate will widen the lead.

Then again, Michigan voted for Granholm.

Twice.

Mike Cox is racking up the endorsements:

Mike Cox has picked up the Michigan Right to Life, Chamber of Commerce and Dick And Betsy DeVos. Via the Freep:

Attorney General and Republican gubernatorial candidate Mike Cox landed the endorsement of Michigan’s largest and most influential anti-abortion organization Friday, with the primary election seven weeks away.

The Right to Life of Michigan endorsement follows endorsements earlier this week by the Michigan Chamber of Commerce and 2006 GOP nominee Dick DeVos and his wife, Betsy DeVos, a former state party chairwoman.

Steve Mitchell, a veteran Republican pollster, said having the Right to Life backing is “absolutely huge. If you want any single endorsement in a Republican primary, that’s it.”

Mitchell said that more than two out of three Republican primary voters describe themselves as anti-abortion, and up to half consider issues like abortion in voting decisions.

Mike has also picked up endorsements of several state senators.

One important thing, Michigan’s next Governor really needs to embrace is a Federalist approach to Governing our state, and take notes from Governor Chris Christie. Extensive notes.

141 days until november 2nd, 2010

Sunday Night Links: The Old School Football Edition

I thought it would be great to post some old school football photos in honor of all the talk of football in South Africa ( I didn’t realize they play football in S. Africa). I guess it is almost autumn in the Southern Hemisphere.

And here are are some great articles from the conservative blog-o-sphere:

Pakistan’s Main Spy Agency Still Supports Taliban

I Am In COMPLETE Control

The talk goes on and on and on, just like me, but nothing gets done. Another month of this, and BO’s approval rating will be Less than Zero, and my employer will be living out of a dumpster.

Sure, BO has talked to the experts, so he knows whose ass to kick, but, in true BO MO, He misrepresented what those experts said, so He could stop all off-shore drilling for the rest of the year.

Obama: “I Am a Muslim”

With “free markets” like this, who needs socialism?

Obama pleads for $50 billion in state aid to save bloated government union jobs to artificially keep job numbers high for the November elections

Blood-Boiling: US Constitution, Declaration of Independence Have Warning Labels Now… Publisher Under Fire from Americans (video)

Saudi Arabia gives Israel clear skies to attack Iranian nuclear sites

Work To Do

Then there are some even younger folks. A couple of “kids” estimated age 22-25, one of them who said:

“we like the health care plan, free health care, whats not to like?”

Wonderful. Aside from the already well tattooed arms, and nose rings that show they were willing to pay for THAT kind of health care, they have no idea of what “free” really means. To them perhaps it is an understanding that some rich son of a B somewhere will just have to do with a little less, so they can participate in a system that currently seems unfair. To them the thought that “taking from others” for their benefit does not even cross the most modest line of decency, or morality, but is in fact THE moral thing to do.

These young Einsteins later reflecting such civil understandings with drive by shouts of “get a life.” Indeed..

Crisis Management: 101