Archive for the ‘corruption’ Category

Nation chooses GOP; California chooses suicide.

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

There were huge Republican gains all across the nation yesterday. They took over the House of Representatives by the largest margin since 1948. John Boehner will be speaker with a clear mandate from the tea parties. Harry Reid hung on to his seat by some typical Nevada shenanigans with casinos getting their employees to vote, whether they wanted to or not. The Republicans failed to get a majority in the Senate which is a mixed blessing. Some of the tea party candidates had a hard time lacking experience.

California, on the other hand, turned back to the past and elected Jerry Brown governor. This is a disaster but he apparently won by a comfortable margin. I would imagine Gloria Allred has a big payday coming. The notorious housekeeper will, of course, be discarded. Barbara Boxer seems to have survived but this has little to do with the impending California catastrophe except as she is another indicator of the fatuous voters here. The only good news is that redistricting reform passed but it has to get past Brown. In addition to Brown, the the entire Democrat statewide slate won, which will make the coming collapse the clear responsibility of the party and its policies.

To add more weight on the scale, the voters passed measures to make tax increases easier, removing the 2/3 vote requirement from Prop 13 in 1978. They also rejected a suspension of the lunatic “cap and tax” law passed two years ago which was going to roll back global warming by killing even more California jobs.

I wonder if Jerry Brown thinks the Congress, with the House in Republican hands, is going to bail out his state when the pensions and state employee salaries and benefits break the budget. He was elected by the employee unions, which is only fair as he was the governor who made such unions legal by executive order. In 1983, the British Labour Party, in a last gasp of the old trade union Marxists, ran for election on a pure leftist, if not communist, manifesto. It was called “The longest suicide note in history.” Tony Blair followed as Labour Party leader. I wonder what will follow Jerry Brown?

Why Sarah Palin resigned as governor of Alaska

Monday, November 1st, 2010

Sarah Palin has been harshly criticized for her inexplicable decision to resign half way through her term as governor. This has been used to allege she is unstable, that there were corruption charges coming against her and even that she and Todd were considering a divorce. This was all political spin and the lies have not stopped coming. Now we get another glimpse of Alaska politics and an explanation of what happened to force her out.

Joe Miller, a tea party candidate for Senator, won the Republican primary defeating Lisa Murkowski, daughter of the governor who appointed her and almost the last of the Republican machine that ran Alaska for 50 years until Sara Palin beat Frank Murkowski in the Republican primary for governor four years ago. Ted Stevens has died and Lisa is the last of the pork shippers. Her decision to run as a write-in candidate was partly due to her sense of entitlement and partly pressure from the corrupt machine in Alaska that was in a panic that clean politics was about to break out. An article in National Review today explains much of this. Hans von Spakovsky was a member of the Justice Department under George W Bush and has written a number of pieces in support of the two career DoJ lawyers who have attacked the political decision to dismiss the New Black Panther case after it was won. That case is part of a trend that began when Obama was elected and appointed Eric Holder as Attorney General.

The latest shenanigans by Alaskan election officials and the Voting Section of Justice’s Civil Rights Division show a dangerous willingness to bend regulations in furtherance of political objectives.

Here is the background: After Joe Miller defeated Sen. Lisa Murkowski in the Republican primary, Murkowski decided to run as a write-in candidate — meaning that her name would not be on the ballot, and thus that ill-informed voters will not be reminded at the polling place that she is an option. But on October 15, the Alaska Division of Elections decided to provide polling places with posters listing write-in candidates and their party affiliations. The list would obviously help Murkowski.

The problem is that posting such a list violates the Election Division’s own regulations, which specifically state that “information regarding a write-in candidate may not be discussed, exhibited, or provided at the polling place, or within 200 feet of any entrance to the polling place, on election day.” That’s why the Election Division has never provided a list of write-in candidates in any election in the past.

Alaska politics has been corrupt since statehood. Republicans have dominated but Democrats are no less corrupt. The other scandal going on over the Miller election has concerned an accidental recording of the staff of a TV station in Anchorage planning a political “dirty trick” on MIller. Miller has been portrayed as a hick and a know-nothing in spite of the fact that he graduated from West Point in 1989 and Yale Law School in 1995. Why is this such a huge focus of the left ? Because he is the Senator who could give the Republicans, not only the majority, but the conservative majority. Lisa Murkowski is part of the corrupt machine of Alaska politics. That corrupt machine was defeated by Sarah Palin and is now facing another defeat by a tea party supported candidate who will not “go along to get along” as Lisa has. They will literally do anything to stop him as they did anything they could to stop Sarah, including filling hundreds of phony ethics complaints that would have bankrupted her family while they stopped the business of the state of Alaska. She has strong opinions about these people and is not shy about expressing them.

Hell hath no fury like a corrupt politician rejected by the voters. Murkowski is now saying she may not caucus with Republicans if elected. She sounds like Charlie Crist, doesn’t she ? How long before Bill Clinton is in Alaska talking to Scott McAdams? If he can remember his name.

Sarah Palin defeated the corrupt Frank Murkowski, renegotiated the gas pipeline contract to get a better deal for residents, and enraged the corrupt establishment in Alaska. When she returned to Alaska after the 2008 election, they made her life hell. Now they are trying to do the same to Joe Miller for daring to interrupt the gravy train and its last engineer, Lisa Murkowski.

In spite of all this, Miller is still winning.

More here. “Out of context” means they got caught red handed.

An example of how uncertainty kills jobs.

Saturday, October 23rd, 2010

This account of how a Seattle area lumber yard is trying to survive the age of Obama shows the effect of uncertainty on unemplpyment. Anyone who reads modern analyses of the Depression realizes that the causes included uncertainty about regulation and tax policy by Roosevelt. He is once described as having chosen the price for gold that day by choosing his lucky number. He was completely ignorant of economics. There was some excuse for it then because no one really knew how macroeconomics worked. Read Amity Schlaes book, The Forgotten Man, and the conclusions pour forth about how the New Deal prolonged the Depression. There is no excuse for repeating the policies that prolonged the Depression.

Dunn’s great-grandfather, Albert L. Dunn, founded the company in 1907. It has never failed to turn a profit. But now, that streak is at risk. Dunn points to an atmosphere of uncertainty at all levels of government — on taxes, healthcare, and a host of economic issues – that is stifling demand for his products. “When rules are changing and taxes are increasing and regulations are increasingly, it causes everyone to pause, and that’s what we’re seeing today, a pause,” Dunn says.

This is exactly what happened in the Depression as policies changed and professors experimented with the economy.

“Business owners have no idea what government’s going to do to them; they don’t know what health-care is going to cost, they don’t know about the 2001, 2003 tax cuts, whether they’ll be reauthorized or not,” Rossi said. “For someone to actually invest and grow their business too, they’re going to have to be able to plan two, three, five years in advance, and right now you can’t plan for next week.”

Rossi’s opponent, Patty Murray, has to be the dumbest member of the Senate but Washington is a deep blue state, like California. Barbara Boxer would put up a stiff competition as the dumbest Senator if a contest were held. Rossi was denied the governorship of Washington two years ago through fraud when a box of ballots were “found” in a Democrat poll worker’s car during the recount. Let’s hope Washington state, where I once owned property, has learned something since then.

The attack on the Senate

Thursday, August 5th, 2010

The country is slowly but surely turning away from the leftist policies of Barack Obama and the Reid/Pelosi Democratic Party. Yesterday, the voters of Missouri rejected the Obamacare mandate by a huge majority. Only 20% of the population, when surveyed, believes that we are being governed with our consent. Angelo Codevilla, has postulated the existence of a a governing class and a country class. This essay has spread around the internet like wildfire. Suddenly, the term “country class” is everywhere. I have previously discussed its meaning, as have many others.

One would expect the left, and the “governing class” (Is there a difference ?) to prepare a response. We are seeing the first skirmishes of the counter attack.

IT’S THE INSTITUTION, NOT THE PERSONALITIES…. In his column today, David Broder agrees that the Senate is failing as legislative body. Noting George Packer’s much discussed piece, “The Empty Chamber,” the Washington Post columnist notes with a degree of sadness what’s become of the chamber.

But Broder believes Packer overlooked an institutional problem:”Packer does as good a job as I have ever read of tracing the forces that have brought the Senate to its low estate. But he does not quite pinpoint the crucial factor: the absence of leaders who embody and can inculcate the institutional pride that once was the hallmark of membership in the Senate…. [I]t would be so much easier if there were leaders ready to lead.”

The Senate is failing us. Why ? Well, there are several diagnoses but they all come down to one basic problem.

“It’s unconscionable,” Carl Levin, the senior Democratic senator from Michigan, said. “The obstructionism has become mindless.”
The Senators were in the Capitol, sunk into armchairs before the marble fireplace in the press lounge, which is directly behind the Senate chamber. It was four-thirty on a Wednesday afternoon. McCaskill, in a matching maroon jacket and top, looked exasperated; Levin glowered over his spectacles.

“Also, it’s a dumb rule in itself,” McCaskill said. “It’s time we started looking at some of these rules.”
She was referring to Senate Rule XXVI, Paragraph 5, which requires unanimous consent for committees and subcommittees to hold hearings after two in the afternoon while the Senate is in session. Both Levin and McCaskill had scheduled hearings that day for two-thirty. Typically, it wouldn’t be difficult to get colleagues to waive the rule; a general and an admiral had flown halfway around the world to appear before Levin’s Armed Services Committee, and McCaskill’s Subcommittee on Contracting Oversight of the Homeland Security Committee was investigating the training of Afghan police. But this was March 24th, the day after President Barack Obama signed the health-care-reform bill, in a victory ceremony at the White House; it was also the day that the Senate was to vote on a reconciliation bill for health-care reform, approved by the House three nights earlier, which would retroactively remove the new law’s most embarrassing sweetheart deals and complete the yearlong process of passing universal health care. Republicans, who had fought the bill as a bloc, were in no mood to make things easy.

Of course ! The Republicans were being obstructionist in trying to stop a bill that, one year later, is rejected by 70% of Missouri voters.

In the words of Senator Judd Gregg,

“Obviously, they presume the Republican Party is an inconvenience. The democratic process is an inconvenience. It also appears, considering the opposition to this out in America, that the American people are an inconvenience.”

I really think this is at the heart of it. They know best and those who “obstruct” their plans must be silenced or removed.

Another front in the war between the “governing class” and the people is the Electoral College.

The Massachusetts Legislature has approved a new law intended to bypass the Electoral College system and ensure that the winner of the presidential election is determined by the national popular vote.

“What we are submitting is the idea that the president should be selected by the majority of people in the United States of America,” Senator James B. Eldridge, an Acton Democrat, said before the Senate voted to enact the bill.

Under the new bill, he said, “Every vote will be of the same weight across the country.”

But Senate minority leader Richard Tisei said the state was meddling with a system that was “tried and true” since the founding of the country.

“We’ve had a lot of bad ideas come through this chamber over the years, but this is going to be one of the worst ideas that has surfaced and actually garnered some support,” said Tisei, who is also the Republican candidate for lieutenant governor.

In fact, what the vote would do is disenfranchise the voters of smaller states and rural areas, who also just happen to vote Republican, so that the elections for president would be dominated by the deep blue urban areas whose voters are typically dependent on government largesse and who, except for the small governing class enclaves with in gates, pay few or no taxes.

In some ways, we could visualize a beneficial effect as the two halves of the country divide into a leftist urban coastal enclave and a central hard working “country party” America. Note which states have already approved the measure to bypass the Electoral College.

Illinois, New Jersey, Hawaii, Maryland, and Washington have already approved the legislation, according to the National Popular Vote campaign’s website.

Illinois is the only non-coastal state but it is distinguished by its corrupt government and collapsing financial status.

We could not have expected they would not fight back. It’s interesting to see that the attacks seem to be on traditional institutions, especially those that restrain bad ideas.

Frank Flanagan

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

When the second world war ended, and the boys began to come home, my parents held parties for all of them who came back to Chicago. Many were friends of my cousin, Bud Kerrison, a B 17 bombardier who served in North Africa. Bud flew 50 missions; the 8th Air Force flying out of England only had to complete 35 missions because their loss rate was higher. His friends, some of whom were from Chicago, had similar military records and had served with him in the same theater. In addition to his Chicago buddies, a bunch of friends from other cities came to the parties and quite a few of them stayed. Why ? Bud had two beautiful sisters and they had a large number of beautiful girlfriends.

Here are Bud and Marion with me in the middle.

There were quite a few marriages that began with my parents’ parties and my mother kept in touch with many of these couples until she died 55 years later. There were a lot of beautiful girls and they all stayed married to the guys they met at the parties.

On of the friends of Bud who stayed on was great big guy named Frank Flanagan. His father was Chief of Detectives in the Philadelphia PD and, as some say, if cut, Frank would bleed blue. At that time, and for years afterward, the Chicago PD was corrupt but, as in any big city department, there were pockets of career officers who maintained the honor of the position and were respected even by the corrupt among them. One such was the father of Pat Neary. She was a beautiful girl with a Irish smile. Her father was an Inspector of the Chicago PD and a great guy. I was about 8 years old then and was fascinated with a tie clasp he wore that had suspended from it a tiny revolver. The tiny pistol worked mechanically and the trigger could be pulled and the cylinder would revolve and the hammer would fall, just as with a real pistol. He told me it even shot tiny bullets but I fear that may have been an embellishment. There are such tiny working guns, so maybe he wasn’t exaggerating after all.

Many of those girls from 1946 stayed beautiful into old age. I haven’t seen Pat in 20 years but she was trim and beautiful with a slight Irish accent the last time I saw her. She had three beautiful daughters.

Marion still looks pretty good at the age of 92. That’s her son Kerry who is 65. She lives alone in a nice condo and goes to the movies with my sister every week.

Anyway, Pat and Frank got married and lived happily ever after, except for one small problem. The Chicago PD pay scale was lousy. They could not afford a house for years and Pat drove an old clunker of a car. My father used to show up with piles of toys for the kids but no one doubted that the purpose of the low salary was to keep the policemen susceptible to bribery. Frank put up with it and there was never a whiff of anything improper about him. The crooks in the department knew this better than anyone else and so a little conspiracy was launched to protect Frank, and probably others like him, from the hustlers. The Mafia had a stranglehold on Chicago and the one place where someone like Frank was least likely to run a foul of organized crime was hit and run accident investigations.

Frank became chief of Hit and Run. A few years later, Life magazine ran a special feature on him as the first crime lab in Chicago law enforcement history began to get results. They developed means of identifying paint chips recovered from accident scenes and then identifying the make, model and year of the car the chip came from. That is no big deal now but it was revolutionary then. The rate at which hit and run crimes were solved became phenomenal. The Life Magazine feature began with a photo of Frank answering the telephone with his signature greeting, “Hit and Run, Flanagan.” He went on to Homicide and thrived as a good Homicide detective.

In 1960, everything changed. The city was hit with a monumental scandal when it was discovered that a burglary ring was run from a police district on the North Side. Corruption had taken over the department and Mayor Daley was faced with a desperate need for a respectable figure to take over the department and clean it up. He found him in a Harvard Professor named Orlando Wilson. Daley was desperate and this gave Wilson enormous power. He could have just about anything he wanted.

In 1960, Chicago mayor Richard J. Daley, in the wake of a major police scandal,[6] established a commission headed by O.W. Wilson to find a new police commissioner.[7] In the end, Daley decided to appoint Wilson himself, as Commissioner.[8] Beginning on March 2, 1960,[4] Wilson served the Superintendent of Police of the Chicago Police Department until 1967 when he retired.
Reforms demanded at the outset by Wilson included establishment of a non-partisan police board to help govern the police force, a strict merit system for promotions within the department, an aggressive, nationwide recruiting drive for hiring new officers, and higher police salaries to attract professionally qualified officers.[8]

Wilson began searching the department for honest and competent men. He found Frank Flanagan in Homicide and made him Chief of Homicide. Among the big homicide cases investigated by Frank was the Richard Speck case, in which Speck raped and murdered 8 student nurses in one night. It was a huge sensation in Chicago for years.

Here is a copy of a Chicago police newspaper (pdf) with a story about Frank and a photo of Pat and his three daughters. Pat is still beautiful there, 18 years after they met at my parents’ party. The two stories about Frank are on pages 4 to 7.

I got stimulated about this after reading a post at Patterico by Jack Dunphy. Dunphy (a pseudonym) wonders what is wrong with Chicago? Crime is out of control and nothing is being done, or at least it seems that way. The details of the sickening situation are here. My brother-in-law is a retired CPD officer. He was retired by the time the situation as described arrived but he was constantly frustrated in the promotion process as affirmative action was in full flower then and only blacks were considered for promotion. If there were not enough blacks applying, some white officers would be considered. The linked article does not mention race but you can be sure it is a huge factor. My brother-in-law finally gave up and stopped taking the sergeants’ exam, a disservice to my sister, but he was sick of watching the list posted every six months.

Frank died a few years ago and, unfortunately, had no sons. He and Pat (still with us but ailing) were the products of a tradition of police families. Maybe if there was a Flanagan on the force, things might be better. In addition to his police service, Frank was the commanding officer of an Army Reserve unit in the city. He retired a full colonel. There aren’t many like him. Among other things, he was a big, hearty, friendly guy and he never lost his Philadelphia accent.

Deficits and taxes.

Sunday, July 25th, 2010

I switched back and forth today between This Week and Fox News. That is my usual practice although, without George Will, I have little interest in the This Week discussion period. The Fox regulars would seem, from the complaints of the left, to be garden variety Republicans on economics. Therefore, it is disappointing to see them mouthing the same old Washington nostrums. They seem to agree that deficits are a problem but spending is never mentioned. Not once on Fox News Sunday was cutting spending mentioned. To hear a mention of reducing spending, it was necessary to watch Jake Tapper’s interview of governor Chris Christy on This Week.

Juan Williams, nearly always to the left of the rest of the panel, brought up the old canard (of course) of Clinton era tax rates. Letting the Bush tax cuts expire was simply going back to the Clinton rates and the economy was booming. Fair enough. If that is the case, why not go back to Clinton era spending ? Why not go back to Clinton era government employee numbers ?

Let’s see. The 1999 data is here, and shows that the 1999 budget included:

A more realistic headcount begins with the 1.9 million full-time permanent civilian federal workers who get their paychecks and identification cards from Uncle Sam. Add in the 1.5 million uniformed military personnel and 850,000 U.S. Postal Service workers who were counted in the federal workforce until their department became a quasi-government corporation in 1970, and the total full-time permanent federal workforce was just under 4.3 million in 1996, the last year for which good numbers are available on both the visible and shadow federal workforce.

That should give us a fairly good comparison. How many civilian federal employees are there ? The bureau of labor statistics says 2.0 million. There is a number that would give us some real information.

Table 1. Federal Government civilian employment, except U.S. Postal Service, November 2008
(Employment in thousands)

United States Total Executive departments Defense, total Army

1,909 1,664 652 244

Notice that this is November 2008 data, just before Obama was elected. Notice also that the military is much smaller than in 1998. Notice also that the number of federal employees had only increased by 9,000 in ten years.

What happened after Obama was elected ? Well, the number of federal employees has gone to 2.15 million !. That’s an increase of 250,000 in two years.

Juan, let’s make a deal. We can go back to Clinton tax rates if we lay off 250,000 federal employees.

The Washington line is always to raise taxes to deal with deficits. I wish a well documented, well written book about Harding and Coolidge would be written. Maybe Amity Schlaes could do it. The 1920 recession was more severe than the 1929 contraction. Why don’t we hear about it ?

Because Harding and Coolidge cut government spending in half and advocated a “return to normalcy.” The economy boomed and the recession was over.

A Nexus Between Medical Journals and Government.

Monday, July 5th, 2010

The Wall Street Journal has one more article on the effect of Obamacare on doctors. A couple of interesting statements bring up some statements on an excellent medical blog I read.

First the WSJ points about Obamacare.

The act will reinforce the worst features of existing third-party payment arrangements in both the private and public sectors — arrangements that already compromise the professional independence and integrity of the medical profession.

Doctors will find themselves subject to more, not less, government regulation and oversight. Moreover, they will become increasingly dependent on unreliable government reimbursement for medical services. Medicare and Medicaid payment, including irrational government payment updates, are preserved (though shaved) and expanded to larger portions of the population.

The Act creates even more bureaucracies with authority over the kinds of health benefits, medical treatments and procedures that Americans get through public and private health insurance. The new law provides no serious relief for tort liability. Not surprisingly, various surveys reveal deep dissatisfaction and demoralization among medical professionals.

I’ve been posting about this for a couple of years and it is no surprise.

Now here is where it gets interesting.

On top of existing payment rules, regulations and guidelines, the new law creates numerous new federal agencies, boards and commissions. There are three that have direct relevance to physicians and the practice of medicine, and the nature and scope of the regulatory regime will be decisive.

Under section 6301, the new law creates a “non-profit” Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute. It will be financed through a Patient Centered Outcomes Research Trust Fund, with initial funding starting at $10 million this year, and reaching $150 million annually in Fiscal Year 2013, with additional revenues from insurance fees.

Don’t you think the “Patient Centered” touch is a nice one ?

In effect, the Institute will be examining clinical effectiveness of medical treatments, procedures, drugs and medical devices. Much will depend upon how the findings and recommendations are implemented, and whether the recommendations are accompanied by financial incentives or penalties or regulatory requirements.

Under section 3403, there will be an Independent Payment Advisory Board, with 15 members appointed by the president. The goal of the board is to reduce the per capita growth rate in Medicare spending, and make recommendations for slowing growth in non-federal health programs. It’s hard to imagine any other outcome other than continued payment cuts.

Now, we turn to the blog I mentioned. The author, a cardiologist mostly retired, discusses a recent randomized clinical trial. The way we decide on “clinical effectiveness” in an ideal world is randomized trials. They are the Gold Standard. So how was a recent randomized trial treated in a major medical journal? From the blog.

This week, the Archives of Internal Medicine published four (four!) articles assaulting the legitimacy and the importance of the JUPITER trial, a landmark clinical study published in 2008, which showed that certain apparently healthy patients with normal cholesterol levels had markedly improved cardiovascular outcomes when taking a statin drug.

Superficially, at least, the JUPITER study appears to have been pretty straightforward. Nearly 18,000 men and women from 26 countries who had “normal” cholesterol levels but elevated C-reactive protein (CRP) levels were randomized to receive either the statin drug Crestor, or a placebo. CRP is a non-specific marker of inflammation, and an increased CRP blood level is thought to represent inflammation within the blood vessels, and is a known risk factor for heart attack and stroke. The study was stopped after a little less than two years, when the study’s independent Data Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB) determined that it would be unethical to continue. For, at that point, individuals taking the statin had a 20% reduction in overall mortality, a dramatic reduction in heart attacks, a 50% reduction in stroke, and a 40% reduction in venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. All these findings were highly statistically significant.

This is a dazzling result for a randomized trial. Usually, you are looking at small changes and trying to calculate the “p value” to see if it is significant. Why would a journal publish attacks on such a dramatic study ?

If medicine were practiced the way it ought to be – where the doctor takes the available evidence, as imperfect as it always is, and applies it to each of her individual patients – then the incompleteness of answers from the JUPITER trial would present no special problems. After all, doctors never have all the answers when they help patients make decisions. So, in this case the doctor would discuss the pros and cons of statin therapy – the risks, the potential benefits, and all the quite important unknowns – and place the decision in the perspective of what might be gained if the patient instead took pains to control their weight, exercise, diet, smoking, etc. At the end of the day, some patients would insist on avoiding drug therapy at all costs; others would insist on Crestor and nothing else; yet others would choose to try a much cheaper generic statin; and some would even opt (believe it or not) for a trial of lifestyle changes before deciding on statin therapy.

This is the way we all want to practice. “Best Practice” they call it.

But in recent years, and especially now, as we bravely embark on our new healthcare system, this is not how doctors will practice medicine. Instead, they will practice medicine by guidelines. These guidelines (which, in modern medical parlance, is a euphemism for “directives”) are to be handed down from panels of experts, identified and assembled by members of the executive branch of the federal government.

And this makes the stakes very high when it comes to a clinical trial like JUPITER. For guidelines do not permit a range of actions tailored to fit individual patients (consistent with the uncertainties inherent in the results of any clinical trial). Instead, guidelines will seek to take one of two possible positions. That is, under a paradigm of medicine-by-guidelines, the results of clinical trials generally cannot be permitted to remain imperfect or nuanced or subject to individual application, but must be resolved by a central panel of government-issue experts into a binary system – yes (do it) or no (don’t do it). In the case of JUPITER, the guidelines must decide whether or not to recommend Crestor to patients like the ones enrolled in the study, at a potential cost of several billion dollars a year. It should be obvious that the answer which would be more pleasant to the ends of the central authority, and by a large margin, would be: No, don’t adopt the JUPITER results into clinical practice.

Well, we shouldn’t worry because all doctors, and especially well known academics are ethical. Right ?

Right ?

Now comes the interesting part and I think he is absolutely correct.

This, DrRich submits for your consideration, is likely what instigated the almost violently anti-JUPITER issue of the Archives this week. DrRich theorizes that what we’ve got here is a bunch of wannabe federally-sanctioned experts, auditioning for positions on the expert panels. What better way to get the Fed’s attention than to let them know that you are of the appropriate frame of mind to assiduously seek out scientific-sounding arguments to discount the straightforward and compelling, but fiscally unfortunate, results of a well-known clinical trial?

Of the four papers appearing in this week’s Archives, three are more-or-less legitimate academic articles that make reasonable points, but do no harm to the main result of JUPITER. The fourth is a straightforward polemic, which has no place in a peer-reviewed medical journal, and whose very presence, DrRich believes, very strongly suggests that the editors of the Archives themselves must be auditioning for the Fed’s expert panel.

Most doctors resent guidelines unless they are obviously data driven. Most of that data comes from randomized trials.

What we are seeing her is the erosion of the ethics of those who publish and conduct such studies and who use them to establish guidelines. There is another type of guideline, call “consensus guidelines” in which a committee of “experts” debates the best practice. These are the guidelines most doctors distrust. Now we see the corruption of even the randomized trial as a source of data driven guidelines.

Shakedown

Friday, June 18th, 2010

We had a mini-firestorm yesterday after the House energy committee had BP CEO, Tony Hayward (now ex-CEO), in for a ritual beating. Joe Barton, a Texas Congressman and an honest man (as well as far better qualified to comment on the oil spill than 95% of his colleagues) apologized to BP for the disgusting treatment they had received from the Obama administration.

If you listen to what he says, there is nothing that I see as untrue. What really outrages me, is the behavior of the Republican leadership of the GOP in the House. They threatened him with loss of his position as ranking member. They ordered him to apologize for his remarks. This is truly outrageous.

Of course, the White House, showing that they can move quickly on issues that matter to them, immediately attacked Mr Barton. I am not surprised at their reaction. What would you expect them to say, knowing Barack Obama as we do now? Joe Biden, the Vice-President, attacked Mr Barton with considerably more skill than Obama and his usual minions. Biden has had decades to develop his skills in lying.

Later that day, under enormous pressure, Joe Barton apologized. Unfortunately, I cannot find the You Tube version of that statement but I have heard it and can reassure conservatives that his backing down was not of the cowardly variety but he maintained the truth of his earlier statement and apologized for the “misconstruction” of his statement. Of course, those misconstruing it, did so purposefully.

The scene we have witnessed the past few weeks is one of incompetence by our government (The Coast Guard stopped oil removal by barges because they could not verify the presence of life jackets on board) and grandstanding by Congressmen with a very weak connection to the science of the situation. Congressman Barton has BS and MS degrees in Engineering and has served as a consultant to the oil industry before his Congressional career. He is uniquely well qualified to judge the present situation. He represents a district heavily involved in the oil industry. What do you expect ?

I can understand the administration trying to mitigate the image of their incompetence. What I cannot accept is the reaction of Congressman’s Barton’s colleagues in the GOP leadership. That is disgusting. I got a call from the Republican Party an hour or so ago. I gave the lady calling a piece of my mind on this issue. I did it politely but I hope it registers. If Congressmen Boehner and Cantor can’t do better than this, I wonder how much difference it makes who is in the majority.

Maybe Mr Barton could have phrased his comments more artfully but IT WAS THE TRUTH !

Enough is enough

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

Tipper Gore seems to have had enough of fat Al. What will be interesting is the property settlement. That’s where we will find out how much global warming paid off.

‘I can’t wait to see.

Congressman McDermott speaks his mind

Sunday, March 21st, 2010

Congressman McDermott, a former psychiatrist and Saddam supporter, spoke his mind yesterday in the House, ending with a biblical quote. This is James 2:15-17.

15 If a brother or sister is naked and lacks daily food, 16 and one of you says to them, “Go in peace; keep warm and eat your fill,” and yet you do not supply their bodily needs, what is the good of that? 17 So faith by itself, if it has no works, is dead.

That is not exactly the version McDermott uses but it is an interesting point. Which political philosophy, liberal or conservative, gives more to charity ? That biblical quote does not admonish the faithful to pass a law requiring everyone to give money to the poor brother or sister. It speaks of you.

yet you do not supply their bodily needs

The Congressman, aside from his rant about “teabaggers,” needs some Bible study. I don’t recall Jesus admonishing anyone to run for office or to force others to contribute to the poor.

McDermott has some odd friends, one of whom was hanged several years ago.

The alleged Saddam Hussein spy money that paid for Rep. Jim McDermott’s trip to Iraq in 2002 came after a stranger called a Seattle anti-war activist and offered to finance the prewar visit.

The Seattle activist, Bert Sacks, said he was making arrangements for the trip at McDermott’s request when he got the call out of the blue from a man who identified himself as a concerned Iraqi-American.

Federal prosecutors believe the money was illegally funneled from Saddam’s intelligence officials, through an unnamed intermediary, and to a Dearborn Heights, Mich., activist named Muthanna Al-Hanooti.

The Justice Department has said McDermott and two other Democratic congressmen on the trip did not know Saddam’s regime paid for it. They have not been accused of any wrongdoing.

Al-Hanooti was indicted Wednesday for his alleged work on behalf of Saddam’s regime, including setting up the trip under the direction of Iraqi intelligence officials. He has pleaded not guilty and his attorney said he would “vigorously defend” himself against the charges.

Yes, McDermott could use some Bible study.