Costco Labeling Bibles as Fiction

Photo Credit: CALEB KALTENBACHWhat do the Bible, “The Hunger Games” and “Fifty Shades of Grey” have in common? All three are works of fiction, according to the booksellers at Costco.

Pastor Caleb Kaltenbach made that shocking discovery last Friday as he was shopping for a present for his wife at a Costco in Simi Valley, Calif.

“All the Bibles were labeled as fiction,” the pastor told me. “It seemed bizarre to me.”

Kaltenbach is the lead pastor at Discovery Church, a non-denominational Christian congregation in southern California.

He thought there must be some sort of mistake so he scoured the shelf for other Bibles. Every copy was plastered with a sticker that read, “$14.99 Fiction.”

Read more from this story HERE.

Emails: IRS Official said Lerner Threw Cincinnati Office Under the Bus

Photo Credit: REUTERS/Jonathan ErnstAn IRS official blasted Lois Lerner for her attempt to blame the agency’s targeting scandal on low-level employees in Cincinnati, according to newly released emails.

“Cincinnati wasn’t publicly ‘thrown under the bus’ (but) instead was hit by a convoy of Mack trucks,” wrote Cindy Thomas, former director of the IRS exempt organizations office in Cincinnati, in a May 10, 2013 email to Lerner obtained by the House Ways and Means Committee.

Thomas wrote the email on the very day that the IRS targeting scandal broke when Lerner, a senior agency official based in Washington, D.C., admitted that her exempt organizations division engaged in improper targeting of conservative groups.

Lerner initially claimed that the agency’s Cincinatti office was solely responsible for the practice. The New York Times went to bat for the administration, characterizing the Cincinatti office as a “backwater” filled with “low-level employees.”

Read more from this story HERE.

Judge Won’t Allow Holder Appeal Now in Contempt Case

Photo Credit: ReutersA federal judge has refused Attorney General Eric Holder’s request that he be allowed to proceed now with an appeal in a case where the House of Representatives is seeking to enforce subpoenas for documents related to the controversial Operation Fast and Furious gun investigation.

In a ruling Monday afternoon, U.S. District Court Judge Amy Berman Jackson said her September 30 ruling rejecting Holder’s request to dismiss the lawsuit was not such a close call that it deserved immediate review from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.

“While the Court agrees with defendant’s characterization of the matter as significant, that is not the test,” Jackson wrote in her new four-page decision (posted here). ”

Jackson’s latest ruling means it is likely the Justice Department will have to produce a detailed log of what was withheld from the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee and why. Rounds of protracted litigation over the legitimacy of the withholdings seem all but certain, unless the sides come to an agreement which has heretofore eluded them.

“The Court is not of the opinion that its denial of the motion to dismiss involves a controlling question of law as to which there is a substantial ground for difference of opinion,” she wrote in her Monday order, issued just one business day after Holder’s lawyers asked for the immediate appeal. “The ruling was based upon Supreme Court precedent and Circuit precedent, and it was decided in accordance with an opinion issued by another judge of this court in a substantially similar matter…. Defendant has not pointed to any precedent that would supply the grounds for a difference of opinion.”

Read more from this story HERE.

Another ObamaCare Cost: Feds Gave $4.4B to States for Exchange Websites

Photo Credit: Fox News By Fox News.

The Obama administration gave states roughly $4.4 billion in taxpayer dollars to set up their own ObamaCare websites, according to a new analysis, in the latest revelation about the faucet of federal spending switched on by the 2010 passage of the health care law.

Some of the states even took federal money, then decided to let the federal site handle enrollment.

While the steep cost of HealthCare.gov — which is the federally run site — has come under fire, the money granted to the states has so far generated little attention. And while the 14 state-run sites have operated more smoothly than the problem-plagued federal site and have accounted for the lion’s share of signups, the federal money spent on tech support, advertising and other startup costs have hardly yielded the level of customer enthusiasm and participation the administration projected.

Just 106,000 Americans have enrolled since the Oct. 1 rollout — far short of the 500,000 the administration hoped would sign up in the first month. The state-run sites handled 75 percent of the transactions.

The study on state-site spending by the conservative-leaning Americans for Tax Reform group shows the money was distributed through the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services grants and argues “federal taxpayer funds were shoveled to states for a variety of vague purposes.”

Read more from this story HERE.

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Photo Credit: ReutersObamacare: So, what could go wrong next?

By David Nather.

Busted website, canceled policies, lousy early enrollment numbers. And that could be just the warmup.

Because the lesson of the last six weeks is that when it comes to the Obamacare rollout, if it can go wrong, it probably will.

The stumble-filled debut of President Barack Obama’s health care law is drawing new attention to the other risks that have been on the radar screen of health care wonks for months. Think health insurance plans sinking under the weight of sick customers, newly insured people being stunned that they still have to spend on health care, and possibly another wave of canceled policies — right before the 2014 elections.

They’re mostly worst-case scenarios, and an Obamacare recovery in the next few months could still prevent some of the biggest ones from ever happening. But health care experts are taking all of them a lot more seriously now — because at this point, why wouldn’t they?

A complete list of possibilities could be overwhelming, but here are the main ones to watch…

Read more from this story HERE.

Common Core and School Choice

Photo Credit: James Sarmiento/flickrOur current public education system is a cognitive dissonance writ large. In it we try to prepare our most precious youth for the rigors of global free market competition in an institution that actively suppresses it. How can a noncompetitive socialist education model- where everyone gets a trophy possibly prepare our students for the real world of intense market competition? It can’t.

Let me ask you a question. Would you buy a car that was rated 17th best in the world for quality? Would you buy a new computer or a iPad that was ranked 17th fastest? Would you go into a grocery store and purchase a similarly priced carton of milk that was ranked 17th in quality? Not likely. However, our public schools were recently ranked 17th in the world and taxpayers have no choice but to go with what is currently on the shelf. To borrow a phrase from the health care debate, we have a single payer education system. In state rankings Alaska ranks near the top in education spending but near the bottom in academic performance. Continually throwing more money at the problem only grows the burgeoning bureaucracy and further diffuses educational responsibility and accountability. Change is in the air. However like a lot of change options, one wears a black hat and one wears a white hat.

Two antithetical educational paradigms are competing for ascendancy in the public debate- Common Core and School Choice. The former seeks to homogenize our underperforming schools through imposing common standards and intrusive teacher and student data mining, while the latter seeks just the opposite by giving teachers and parents more latitude in education and interjecting free market competition into public schools.

The elements of Common Core were recently adopted in Alaska in a most circumlocutious way that bypassed the state legislature’s constitutional authority when the governor signed on to the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC)- a supergoverment group.

The goal of Common Core is to provide common standards in math and English language arts to better prepare students for college and the job market. Its diverse supporters include President Obama, Bill and Melinda Gates and Governor Jeb Bush. On the surface it sounds like a laudable and commendable idea. In practice however politics, sexuality, and political data mining have been woven into it causing widespread teacher and parent revolts and rejection in many states.

Proponents of Common Core state that the standards are just that- they do not represent curriculum. However, if your read the appendices, textbooks are cited in which to meet the standards. These textbooks are purchased on a six-year procurement cycle meaning they will be around for a long time.

Many of the standards have been criticized for being dumbed down and highly dubious. For example in mathematics, if a student adds 2 + 2 and arrives at 5, the answer can still be regarded as correct if the student justifies how they arrived at the answer. In another example, the political redistribution of wealth is used to illustrate the nonpolitical distributive property of algebra. Age inappropriate sexuality or even pornography is said to be at the core of at least three of the approved books. Perhaps the most disturbing feature of Common Core is the Fourth Amendment crushing imposition of Longitudinal Data Systems (LDS) to compile teacher, student, and family data. Students will have no constitutional privacy rights but will have their education information permanently recorded, shared among federal agencies, and sold to outside vendors. Extra-education data will also be recorded such as health, family political affiliation, religious affiliation, and income level. In Alaska, personal data from the PFD database has already been data mined.

On the opposite end of the spectrum, School Choice seeks to remove bureaucratic burdens from teachers and parents and let free market competition continuously improve the quality of education. For instance, if parents were given an educational voucher for each child, they could choose the best school to educate their child. Public schools, charter schools, and private schools would all have to compete for public funds, students, and the best creative teachers. History tells us that the biggest driver of innovation and technology as well as the best reducer of costs is free market competition.

Where do you find the highest performing schools in the English speaking world?- Alberta Canada. They have School Choice specifically written into their constitution. Parents have the freedom to place their children in any school of their choice. Schools compete, standards rise, and costs are lowered. We should have a strong public debate on amending Alaska’s State Constitution to implement School Choice similar to Alberta. After all it makes sense to copy what works instead of doubling down on what doesn’t.

Will the black hat George Orwellian 1984 model prevail in Alaska? Or will the white hat 1776 educational freedom and privacy model prevail? One thing is for certain, they are mutually incompatible. You cannot have freedom without privacy. Common Core involvement in the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC) coupled with the Alaska P-20W (pre-kindergarten through postsecondary education and workforce) Statewide Longitudinal Data System (SLDS) must be immediately banned by the state legislature during this next legislative session or the data mining of teachers, students, and home schoolers will grow unabatedly. Even if School Choice were adopted without banning Common Core, data mining and federal manipulation will extend into virtually any educational form. The death of privacy is the death of freedom.

I believe that all states in America, “are, and of right ought to be, free.” Abdicating the educational responsibility of our state legislature is wrong. As you ponder these thoughts remember that freedom, privacy, and free market competition isn’t just a metaphysical idea held by a few Americans. It was the belief of those who built this nation from the ground up- many of whom’s sons now lie under lonely white crosses as a result of defending these sacred principles. Freedom is America.

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“Daniel Hamm resides in Palmer Alaska. He is an international airline pilot, small business owner, author, and active in local politics.”

Official: Alaska Looking at Equity Stake in Pipeline to Protect its Interests, Advance Project

Photo Credit: Arthur ChapmanAn Alaska official said Monday the state is looking at taking a multibillion-dollar equity stake in a major natural gas pipeline project as a way to protect its interests and help make the long-hoped-for project a reality.

Natural Resources Commissioner Joe Balash said Gov. Sean Parnell’s administration views a potential equity stake of 20 percent to 30 percent favorably. But he said any level of participation would depend on legislative buy-in and the terms the companies pursuing the project are willing to accept.

Assuming the project costs $45 billion — a figure at the lower end of the range previously announced by the companies — the state would be looking at $9 billion to $13.5 billion for such a stake.

Balash said he’s hoping that range narrows significantly over time as the idea gets more scrutiny.

The option stems from a report commissioned by the state to see how Alaska could protect its royalty interest and ensure it receives the maximum value possible for its natural gas.

Read more from this story HERE.

Educator, Heal Thyself

Photo Credit: Hash MilhanM.I.T. Economics Professor and Obamacare “architect” Jonathan Gruber offers American education a pathway to fairness.

In a recent interview with NBC News reporter Chuck Todd, Gruber said this about America’s healthcare system:

“We currently have a highly discriminatory system where if you’re sick, if you’ve been sick or [if] you’re going to get sick, you cannot get health insurance. The only way to end that discriminatory system is to bring everyone into the system and pay one fair price. That means that the genetic winners, the lottery winners who’ve been paying an artificially low price because of this discrimination now will have to pay more in return.”

For the moment, let’s put aside a discussion of the Professor’s possible implied reference to eugenics (“[if] you’re going to get sick”). Rush Limbaugh, in his November 15 nationwide radio broadcast, suggested that Gruber interjected eugenics into the healthcare debate by saying there’s a “lucky gene pool.”

One can clearly infer, though, from the Professor’s comments that the lucky gene pool is, for those who swim in it, a prevenient cause of discriminatory healthcare practices that benefits the lucky gene-holders.

Healthcare is a huge system that affects almost all Americans, but it’s not the only one. So instead of swimming in Professor Gruber’s healthcare gene pool, let’s focus on “discriminatory” practices where it also matters to a vast number of people. Education.

The only way, the Professor says, to end the discriminatory practices of the healthcare system in America is to “bring everyone into the system and pay one fair price.” If that’s good for healthcare, why not apply it to education?

America’s educational institutions constitute a huge system made up of private and public schools (pre-K to 12), community/junior colleges, state universities, private colleges and universities, and service academies. Taken together, they represent a potpourri of learning environments, nearly all of which receive some level of city, county, state and/or federal government funding assistance.

According to Professor Gruber’s definition of discrimination, America’s educational system is patently unfair and discriminatory, systemically favoring the “genetic lottery winners.”

How so? you ask. Well, consider this:

The average salary of professors teaching at the top five Massachusetts colleges is $200,000. We’ll put aside how Gruber supplemented his M.I.T. salary in 2009 with a $297,000 contract with the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (HHS). That was probably a part-time consultative gig associated with his Obamacare architectural design services.

Meanwhile, in 2012, the average salary of a tenured, full-time professor teaching at a two-year community college was $51,000. What makes that fair?

In a candid moment, Dr. Gruber might argue that he’s teaching at the prestigious M.I.T., and not at Grayson Junior College, because he’s better educated than the average Junior College Economics Professor. He earned the right to teach at M.I.T. and to enjoy his enhanced salary, he might claim, by earning a Ph.D. in Economics at Harvard.

But, unfortunately, that wouldn’t neatly align with his sociological credo. Jonathan Gruber is the son of the New York University Stern Finance Professor (Emeritus) Martin J. Gruber, who received his Ph.D. from Columbia, and was once Director of the National Bureau of Economic Research. That’s equivalent to a winning genetic lottery ticket, isn’t it?

According to Professor Gruber, the only way to end discriminatory practice in healthcare is “to bring everyone into the system and pay one fair price.” Let’s be fair and apply that to universities.

Dr. Gruber received an undergraduate degree in economics at M.I.T. where, in 2013, annual student tuition, room and board, plus books and personal expenses total about $57,000 — more than the average salary of a community college professor, who obviously could not afford to enroll a child at M.I.T. based on his/her income.

According to Professor Gruber’s sociological definition of fairness, the wide disparity in matriculation costs at America’s universities represents financial discrimination. Students who swim in the lucky gene pool are much more likely to attend M.I.T. than students who work part time at a fast-food restaurant to pay their tuition at Grayson County Junior College.

As Professor Gruber said, “The only way to end that discriminatory system is to bring everyone into the system and pay one fair price.” Okay then, why not one salary for all college professors — one standard tuition for all college students. That’s the Gruber Paradigm of Fairness applied to American education, is it not?

Perhaps the Professor would retort that private schools, like M.I.T., should not be required to adhere to a ubiquitous standard of fairness, since they’re not publically supported. But that dog won’t hunt. M.I.T. received $475,000,000 in federal grants in 2012. That qualifies as big-time public support.

But some will still excuse private universities from the need to be fair. In that case, let’s visit our local Independent School District — particularly in the large urban areas. Looking there we see arts and magnet schools, college prep courses for the more zealous students and a variety of accelerated learning opportunities for the select few taught by the best teachers. Why are these not discriminatory educational practices according to the Gruber definition of fair?

At a relatively early age, public school students are pegged as advanced learners — while teachers balk at being judged on their pedagogical skills — and promoted into a more intense educational environment, while other students languish on the public school bus of mediocrity.

The only way to make public school fair is “to end that discriminatory system [and] bring everyone into the system.” No separate and unequal parts — that’s discriminatory, al la Gruber.

Unless, of course, you’re one of Dr. Gruber’s genetic winners and can pay for a concierge education. In that case, never mind.

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First published at American Thinker.

Since 2007, Lee Cary has written hundreds of articles and blogs for several conservative websites, including the American Thinker and Breitbart’s Big Journalism & Big Government (as Archy Cary), been quoted on national television (Sean Hannity) and on nationally syndicated radio (Rush Limbaugh, Mark Levin). His articles are cited in Jerome Corsi’s The Obama Nation and in Levin’s Liberty and Tyranny. Cary now writes for the Texas-based site teaparty911.com.

Newborn Baby in Colombia ‘Comes Back from the Dead’ More than 10 Hours after Being Sent to Morgue

Photo Credit: Alamy A Colombian baby came back from the dead more than 10 hours after being sent to the morgue.

The tiny tot – now named Milagros (Miracles) – was born prematurely in Quibdo in the Pacific state of Choco in the early hours of Wednesday, November 13, last week.

Her mother Jenny Hurtado was just 27 weeks pregnant when she was rushed to the San Francisco de Asis hospital at 2:45am.

Medics performed a C-section but, unable to find signs of life, declared the newborn deceased just 35 minutes later – at 3:20am.

Taken to the morgue, the baby was placed inside a box. Staff then waited for her fisherman father to collect her.

Read more from this story HERE.

George Zimmerman Charged with Felony after Allegedly Pointing Gun at Girlfriend (+video)

Photo Credit: CNNGeorge Zimmerman was charged Monday with felony aggravated assault after allegedly pointing a shotgun at his girlfriend, according to Dennis Lemma, chief deputy with the Seminole County, Florida, Sheriff’s Office.

Zimmerman, who was acquitted earlier this year of murdering teenager Trayvon Martin, was arrested after the incident at the home of Samantha Scheibe, Lemma said. He also was charged with two misdemeanors — domestic violence battery and criminal mischief — in connection with the same incident, Lemma said.

Zimmerman is being held in jail without bail and will make his first appearance in front of a judge Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. ET.

Differing 911 calls

According to a police report on the incident, Scheibe said that after an argument Zimmerman broke a table with a shotgun then pointed it at her “for a minute.”

Read more from this story HERE.

Proof of Obamacare’s Intentional Deception

Photo Credit: WND A group that has been the driving force in branding Obamacare has recommended a series of phrases, some deceptive, that the White House and Democrats have used to sell the health-care law to the public, WND has found.

The little-known Herndon Alliance has been behind the marketing of Obamacare since the inception of the legislation.

It was the group that crafted President Obama’s false claim that Americans can maintain their “choice” of doctors and insurance plans.

Along with advising the Obama administration, Herndon has been providing strategy to Enroll America, the main organization pushing for the uninsured to sign up for Obamacare. Enroll America’s executive director, Ron Pollack, was a founding member of Herndon.

The Herndon Alliance is “the most influential group in the health arena that the public has never heard of,” reported Politico in 2009.

Read more from this story HERE.