A letter from Amazon…

Dear Colorado-based Amazon Associate:

We are writing from the Amazon Associates Program to inform you that the Colorado government recently enacted a law to impose sales tax regulations on online retailers. The regulations are burdensome and no other state has similar rules. The new regulations do not require online retailers to collect sales tax. Instead, they are clearly intended to increase the compliance burden to a point where online retailers will be induced to “voluntarily” collect Colorado sales tax — a course we won’t take.

We and many others strongly opposed this legislation, known as HB 10-1193, but it was enacted anyway. Regrettably, as a result of the new law, we have decided to stop advertising through Associates based in Colorado. We plan to continue to sell to Colorado residents, however, and will advertise through other channels, including through Associates based in other states.

There is a right way for Colorado to pursue its revenue goals, but this new law is a wrong way. As we repeatedly communicated to Colorado legislators, including those who sponsored and supported the new law, we are not opposed to collecting sales tax within a constitutionally-permissible system applied even-handedly. The US Supreme Court has defined what would be constitutional, and if Colorado would repeal the current law or follow the constitutional approach to collection, we would welcome the opportunity to reinstate Colorado-based Associates.

You may express your views of Colorado’s new law to members of the General Assembly and to Governor Ritter, who signed the bill.

Your Associates account has been closed as of March 8, 2010, and we will no longer pay advertising fees for customers you refer to Amazon.com after that date. Please be assured that all qualifying advertising fees earned prior to March 8, 2010, will be processed and paid in accordance with our regular payment schedule. Based on your account closure date of March 8, any final payments will be paid by May 31, 2010.

We have enjoyed working with you and other Colorado-based participants in the Amazon Associates Program, and wish you all the best in your future.

Best Regards,

The Amazon Associates Team

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Swimming upstream….

Results of Knoxville News Sentinel poll on Al Gore receiving an honorary doctorate.

The News Sentinel editorializes on Gore being an excellent choice for an honorary degree.

UT had been reluctant to award honorary degrees in the past, but Knoxville Chancellor Jimmy G. Cheek has pushed for a different approach. He believes such degrees call attention to the university and the achievements of those associated with it. Honorary degrees awarded during commencement also point new graduates toward the heights to which can can aspire.


Well Mr. Cheek certainly got the attention he deserves.

Posted in idiocy, The University of Tennessee is stoopid, you can't make this stuff up | Leave a comment

The Questions on the Form – 2010 Census

The Questions on the Form – 2010 Census

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Hurry someone tell Al Gore…

More than 50 ships stuck in Baltic Sea ice: maritime authorities

Someone should tell the University of Tennessee Board of Trustees as well.

Posted in global warming, idiots, you can't make this stuff up | Leave a comment

Incorrigibly corrupt or incorrigibly stupid.

Judgeship for Demcare/Obamacare.

Politics as usual. Imagine if Bush did something like this. Passes right by the legacy media.

Posted in idiocy, Obama, ObamaCare, stoopid Democrats | Leave a comment

Tennessee 0-2

University of Tennessee Now 0-2 In Picking Winners: 1st Lane Kiffin, Now Honorary Award for Al Gore!

The Knoxville Knot Heads at the University of Tennessee have done it again, bucking the odds they could pick two ego gorged dysfunctional representatives to show case their institute of higher learning to the nation.


Amen.

Posted in idiocy, The University of Tennessee is stoopid, you can't make this stuff up | Leave a comment

Obama: wrong track…

According to Rasmussen poll. No doubt his popularity is increasing in the People’s Republic.

Posted in Boulder is stoopid, Obama, ObamaCare | Leave a comment

More on Al Gore’s honorary degree

Instapundit weighs in

Sorry, but the Board Of Trustees didn’t consult me on this one. If they had, I’d have said that it was a lousy move, with even more lousy timing as ClimateGate explodes to the point that even The New York Times is admitting it. But they didn’t ask, so don’t blame me. The decision was, as a great man once said, “above my pay grade.”

I’ve contacted both the Chancellor’s office and the College of Engineering (where I received my BS) to express my dismay. Both have responded, the College of Engineering primarily sayings “It’s above my paygrade” and the Chancellor’s office thanking me for my input.

I’m hopefull that the “snowstorm” that results from this decision will be much larger than the University’s Board of Trustee’s limited minds could possibly imagine. Someone needs to start a Facebook page.

Posted in Climategate, idiocy, idiots, you can't make this stuff up | Leave a comment

You go Jim

USA Today editorial by Senator Jim Bunning from Kentucky…

Why I took a stand ‘If the Senate cannot find $10 billion to pay for a measure we all support, we will never pay for anything.’
By Jim Bunning

I have been serving the citizens of Kentucky for nearly 24 years in Washington. During that time I have been a member of both the House of Representatives and the United States Senate. I have taken thousands of votes in relation to spending the taxpayers’ money. I will be the first one to admit that I have cast some bad votes during my tenure, and I wish I could have some of them back. For too long, both Republicans and Democrats have treated the taxpayers’ money as a slush fund that does not ever end. At some point, the madness has to stop.

Over a month ago, Democrats passed and President Obama signed into law the “Pay-Go” legislation. It calls on Congress to pay for bills by not adding to our debt. It sounds like a common sense tool that would rein in government spending. Unfortunately, Pay-Go is a paper tiger. It has no teeth. I did not vote for the Democrats’ Pay-Go legislation because I knew it was just a political dog-and-pony show to get some good press after some political setbacks. Since the Pay-Go rule was enacted, the national debt has gone up $244,992,297,448.11 (as of Wednesday, that is).

Why now?

Last week, Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., asked to pass a 30-day extensions bill for unemployment insurance and other federal programs. Earlier in February, those extensions were included in a broader bipartisan bill that was paid for but did not meet Sen. Reid’s approval, and he nixed the deal. When I saw the Democrats in Congress were going to vote on the extensions bill without paying for it and not following their own Pay-Go rules, I said enough is enough.
Many people asked me, “Why now?” My answer is, “Why not now?” Why can’t a non-controversial measure in the Senate that would help those in need be paid for? If the Senate cannot find $10 billion to pay for a measure we all support, we will never pay for anything.

America is under a mountain of debt. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said in a hearing last month that the United States’ debt is unsustainable. We are on the verge of a tipping point where America’s debt will bring down our economy, and more people will join the unemployment lines. That is why I used my right as a United States Senator and objected.
Only in Washington

After four legislative days of impasse, I reached a supposed deal with Majority Leader Reid to have an up-or-down vote on a pay-for amendment that would fully fund the legislation and not add to the debt. Only minutes before the vote, Democrats used a parliamentary maneuver to set aside my amendment and not vote on the actual substance of it. Only in Washington could this happen. The Democrats did not want to vote on my amendment because they knew they were in the wrong and ignored their own rules. Hypocrisy again rules the day in Washington.

I have 40 grandchildren, and I want them to grow up in a country where they have all of the same opportunities I had as a child. I fear that they will not have those opportunities if Washington continues on its course of spending without paying for it. We are at over $12 trillion in debt. I know many Americans sit around their kitchen table and make the tough decisions. It is time for the politicians in Washington to do the same.

Jim Bunning is a Republican senator from Kentucky.

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Gag me….

Former VP Gore to Receive Honorary Doctorate from UT Knoxville

Posted in you can't make this stuff up | Leave a comment

Redefining “normal”

Doesn’t sound like such a grand idea.

As chairman of the task force that created the current Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV), which came out in 1994, I learned from painful experience how small changes in the definition of mental disorders can create huge, unintended consequences.

Our panel tried hard to be conservative and careful but inadvertently contributed to three false “epidemics” — attention deficit disorder, autism and childhood bipolar disorder. Clearly, our net was cast too wide and captured many “patients” who might have been far better off never entering the mental health system.

Posted in healthcare reform, the weekend | Leave a comment

Standard Practice

Hiding data … and we’re supposed to “trust the experts”?

I’ll leave that to the Boulder liberal elites and the Daily Camera editors. Whoops, guess I repeated myself there.

Posted in Boulder is stoopid, Climategate, you can't make this stuff up | Leave a comment

Ron Paul: Whiner

Paul decries challenge in “my own primary”

Dude, stop whining, put on your shoes, get out there and campaign. Tell your consituents WHY you deserve to be their representative.

Not to mention you’re a fruitcake, but that certainly doesn’t disqualify you from being a Congressman.

P.S. As the link points out, it’s not YOUR primary.

Posted in arrogance | Leave a comment

Starlight Award for Glenn Reynolds

Congratulations to Glenn Reynolds of Instapundit fame, not to mention a University of Tennessee law professor. Glenn recently earned the Starlight Award for Distinguished Alumi from Maryville City School Foundation. Commenting on the award..

“It’s kind of weird because I have to tell you not once when I was walking around Maryville High did I ever say, ‘Oh yeah, they’ll be having me back here to give me an award,’” says Reynolds, who is the Beauchamp Brogan Distinguished Professor of Law at UT. “And the other side of it is, I think if you had asked if I cared if I got an award, I probably would have said, ‘Eh, no big deal.’ It was actually surprisingly kind of touching. It was a bigger deal to me than I thought it would be.”


Not to mention that Glenn is the “Beauchamp Brogan Distinguished Professor of Law at UT”, although I’m not sure what that is! Perhaps he’ll fill us in one day. Congratulations on the Starlight Award Glenn.

Posted in the weekend, uplifting | Leave a comment

Al Gore Speaks

The High Priest of global warming speaks. His disciples must “feel this thrill going up their legs”. He doesn’t disappoint them…

It would be an enormous relief if the recent attacks on the science of global warming actually indicated that we do not face an unimaginable calamity requiring large-scale, preventive measures to protect human civilization as we know it.

LMAO.

Of course he has these idiots fooled.

An alternative point of view.

All this is now changing. The e-mails leaked from the University of East Anglia server strongly suggest that the basic temperature data had been manipulated, yielding the reported strong surface warming of the past 30 years. Again, we had long suspected this, because the data from weather satellites showed little warming trend of the atmosphere since 1979. Available proxy data seemed to confirm this result (see “Hot Talk Cold Science” [1997] — HTCS Fig 16). But according to theory – and every greenhouse climate model — tropospheric trends should be substantially greater than surface trends.

Piling on, Christopher Brooker comments in the London Telegraph

In other words, in crucial respects the IPCC’s 2007 report was no more than reckless propaganda, designed to panic the world’s politicians into agreeing at Copenhagen in 2009 that we should all pay by far the largest single bill ever presented to the human race, amounting to tens of trillions of dollars. And as we know, faced with the prospect of this financial and economic abyss, December’s Copenhagen conference ended in shambles, with virtually nothing agreed.

added 2/28 @ 14:28
Finding new facts

No doubt Al Gore believes that the really important thing here is that the ‘global consensus’ remains unchanged. For him and other climate-profiteers, science has been flipped; it is the conclusion, not the premises, which is set in stone. If some facts fall apart, they’ll just find some new ones to prop up their proposals.

added 2/28 @ 17:46
Ann Althouse weighs in on Al Gore’s NYT editorial.

What?! I knew this was religion! We’re supposed to believe. And please don’t use “rule of law” as a synonym for government regulation.

and let me weigh in. Now that Al Gore has spoken, especially in the NYT, I expect the Daily Camera editorial staff to once again pick up the global warming baton.

Posted in Boulder is stoopid, Climategate, global warming, idiocy | 1 Comment

Impediment to Education reform

You guessed it, unless you’re from Boulder.

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Al Gore to receive an Honorary Degree

These idiots decided that Al Gore will receive an honorary degree from the University of Tennessee.

He’ll get an honorary doctor of laws and humane letters in ecology and evolutionary biology at the spring commencement exercises of the College of Arts and Sciences


Well isn’t that just *&!@ special? At least it isn’t from the College of Engineering.

Guess the University of Tennessee Board of Trustees live in some kind of cocoon or perhaps they should move to Boulder.

Posted in climate change, Climategate, idiocy, you can't make this stuff up | Leave a comment

Tennessee over Kentucky (74-65)

Home field advantage I guess. I missed the game today, but after watching the same matchup two weeks ago in Kentucky I didn’t think Tennessee would stand a chance.

It would be nice if Coach Pearl could get a consistant effort from his team. Here’s a team that beat both Kansas and Kentucky at home, but will be lucky to be ranked higher than 15th in the nation next week.

Posted in the weekend | Leave a comment

Health Care Summit

Doesn’t look like it impressed anyone…

Rasmussen goes on to remark on the political system being broken….

In his new book, In Search of Self-Governance, Scott Rasmussen observes that the American people are “united in the belief that our political system is broken, most politicians are corrupt, and neither major political party has the answers.” He adds that there is a “growing disdain for the unholy alliance between the largest corporations and our government… Some of us are ready to give up; some of us are ready to scream a little louder. But all of us believe we can do better.”


This is something Progressive can’t understand, which is why they think the Tea Party is full or right wing nuts. Their so blinded by their ideology that they can’t see the frustration of the average citizen with “government as usual”.

Posted in Boulder is stoopid, idiocy, ObamaCare | Leave a comment

Unquenchable thirst for tax dollars

Fannie Mae that is.

After the next government payout, Fannie Mae’s borrowings will carry an annual dividend cost of $7.6 billion, which the company said it will repay by borrowing more money from the Treasury. “This amount exceeds our reported annual net income for all but one of the last eight years, in most cases by a significant margin,” the company said.


What’s wrong with this picture? Foreshadowing of issues to come with Social Security and Medicare.

Why is the solution bigger, more controlling, stifling government?

Posted in big government, you can't make this stuff up | Leave a comment