In an alley behind a non-descript row of brick buildings on North Speer Boulevard, and on the other side of a large metal gate with armed guards standing in front, Republicans have set up a “war room” in Denver.
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“Just consider this the Ministry of Truth,” quipped Dick Wadhams, chairman of the Colorado Republican Party.
The interior of the 30,000-square foot building is marked by trendy light fixtures and concrete floors. A press conference area is equipped with a podium and framed by a background that repeats the oppo center’s message, “Not Ready ‘08: A mile high, an inch deep.”
Here’s a simple tool I made to figure out whether John McCain’s right that Obama will raise your taxes. Numbers are taken directly from the Tax Policy Center’s August 25th calculations for single, married, and elderly families.
Here’s a visual summary of data compiled earlier using the same methodology from the Washington Post:
Last month, John McCain reversed himself on affirmative action. Until at least April of this year he supported affirmative action as implemented by the United States armed forces. That is to say, extremely race-based, but without strict quotas.
The first lesson is that affirmative action in the Army eschews quotas but does have goals. Guidelines for Army promotion boards are to select minority members equivalent to the percentage in the promotion pool. This means that the Army promotion process is based not on the number of minority members in the Army, but on the number of minority members in the pool of potential promotees to the next higher rank. Very important, there are no “timetables” to meet goals.
The motivation for the Army’s promotion policies are obvious: the ranks of officers should culturally mirror those under their command. McCain was consistent in his support of affirmative action in the military (and obviously implemented these policies in the Navy), repeatedly calling the United States armed forces “the greatest equal opportunity employer in the world.”
The state shall not discriminate against, or grant preferential treatment to, any individual or group on the basis of race, sex, color, ethnicity, or national origin in the operation of public employment, public education, or public contracting.
This would unquestionably forbid the state from, for example, exactly mimicing the military’s policies when it comes to promotions in the ranks of prison guards, school teachers/administrators, etc. In other words, it seems that McCain’s completely reversed a long-held position, and that in the whir and rumble of the last month, no one’s really bothered to pin him down on whether or not this is the case, what drove his decision, and what ramifications this might have on his supported of continued affirmative action at the federal level both within the military and without.
Are the Denver Dems downing the stock market today? The Dow is off 230 points, starting right from the get-go. So-called market analysts are blaming financials and the credit crunch as they always do. But there’s more.
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With the Denver Dems strutting their stuff, this could be a bumpy week for stocks. Did anyone say free-market capitalism is the best path to prosperity?
To which, the obvious reply is: No.
Clinton: +225%; Bush: +7%
This is not analysis, but, contra Kudlow, at least it’s not bullshit.
Update: Here is some (sort of) analysis; if Kudlow were right, which he isn’t, the DJIA would be highly correlated with the InTrade Dem08 contract (assuming some that both markets have reasonably similar opinions of the odds of having a Democrat win in November). Is this true? Here’s a chart comparing the two indexes over the past year:
Trellises. Trading dollars for risky mortgages, so long as I'm not doing it. The rapidly approaching annual lapse in winter vegetables' exclusive appeal.