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Jon Coupal

RONALD REAGAN WOULD BE SMILING

Because Ronald Reagan left office almost 25 years ago we shouldn’t be surprised that most young adults do not remember him. But the real question is whether his views about America and its place in history retain any relevance at all to today’s Millennial generation.

When Reagan, after his presidency, spoke to a meeting of members of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association in 1992, he stressed the importance of passing on our hard earned freedoms to future generations and the willingness to fight to preserve them. He contrasted our constitution with those of other nations, saying almost all the world’s constitutions are documents that tell the people what their privileges are, while with ours, “we the people” tell government what it is allowed to do. Speaking of the importance of limiting overreaching government, he said, “This belief has been the underlying basis for everything I have tried to do.”

Since the election of Barrack Obama, with his costly big government agenda, commentators have opined that the values associated with free markets, limited government and individual responsibility do not resonate with the millennial generation. This… Read More

Katy Grimes

ALRB Part ll: Background on ALRB Chair Shiroma

This series reports on the backgrounds of the board members and officials ofthe ALRB. Part 1 ishere.

The Agricultural Labor Relations Board is made up of five members, the board was created when the Agricultural Labor Relations Act was signed into law in June 1975 by Gov. Jerry Brown.

With two vacancies, the board currently hasthree members:

* Chairwoman Genevieve A. Shiroma, who has served on the board since 1999, was… Read More

Katy Grimes

EDD responds to questions on computer glitches

This is Part 1 of a series.

Obamacare’s computers aren’t the only government systems struck by major glitches.

Two months after a California Employment Development Departmentcomputer crashcut off tens of thousands of Californians from their unemployment benefits, the EDD remains overwhelmed by overdue unemployment claims from thousands of people looking for jobs.

State Labor Secretary Marty Morgenstern, an appointee of Gov. Jerry Brown, quicklyordered EDDofficials to pay the unemployment claims immediately, and check eligibility later. Yet today thousands of… Read More

Ron Nehring

Latinos to Obama: Adios

Democrats maintain a hammerlock on statewide offices in California in large part due to their success in earning the overwhelming support of Latinos, Asians and African-Americans nationally. In a state which is 38% Latino, Democrat success statewide depends on holding on to this massive portion of the electorate.

For this reason California Democrats should be concerned about this week’s Gallup data showing that President Obama – the man who more than any other defines the Democrat Party in every precinct across America – has seen his support among Latinos plummet more than with any other group.

The numbers are striking. In the course of 11 months, the President’s support has dropped from 75% of Latinos to 52%, a 23 percentage point decline.

There is no way to spin this into anything other than a big problem for the President and his 2014 Democratic candidates.

Let’s dig deeper.

According to Gallup, Latinos’ support of Obama “have shown the most variation of any group…That means their views of him are less firmly anchored than those of other groups.” In other words, Latinos were never totally sold on President Obama in… Read More

George Radanovich

American Exceptionalism – Are We There Yet?


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When he exited the Constitutional Convention in 1787, Benjamin Franklin was asked by a citizen what form of government the delegates had given the young country. “A republic, if you can keep it.” How faithfully have we adhered to Franklin’s admonition? Have we kept it? Does this exceptional experiment in individual liberty and limited government remain exceptional?

“If you can keep it.” Inherent in this proviso is an acknowledgement that human frailty could undermine the grand experiment; that the gift given could become an opportunity for license instead of for responsibility, restraint and self-governance. The choice between exceptionalism and mediocrity lay entirely with the people.

So, how are we doing with American Exceptionalism and how do we measure it? Is the happiness of the individual a determinant, and how do we measure that? US Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy explained that, for the framers of the Declaration of Independence “happiness meant that feeling of self-worth and dignity you acquire by contributing to your community and to its civic life.”

Using Kennedy’s definition as a starting point, a… Read More

Kevin Dayton

California Supporters of Economic and Personal Freedom Can Plan for 2014 by Thinking Locally

Want to advance and protect economic and personal freedom in California in 2014?

Turn off the talk radio. Instead, turn on Cable Channel 19 or whatever station broadcasts your local government meetings. Or look up your local government web sites for agendas, minutes, and archived videos of meetings.

You may discover the Left advancing its agenda through the mundane policy implementation and administrative operations of your local governments, with virtually no resistance or news media coverage. But you can turn the tables.

Here are two suggestions on how YOU can make a difference in 2014 in your city.

Explain Bond Measures to Your Friends, Neighbors, and Coworkers

California voters almost always approve ballot measures that authorize local K-12 school and community college districts to borrow money for construction by selling bonds. Most voters know little about school construction finance. They vote for bond measures to “help the kids.”

While this incomplete knowledge about bond measures gives educational districts a chance to mismanage huge amounts of money with impunity, it also gives you the opportunity in… Read More

Jon Fleischman

My “Holiday” Is Almost Over!

I didn’t really formally announce that I was doing so, but after nine years straight of output that typically was 8-10 columns a month and another 20-30 blog posts, I decided it was time for a break. I decided I would take a month off (half of which overlapped a family vacation). Of course we’ve had plenty of original content on the site, and between our editors, John Hrabe and Anton Hartmann, we’ve continued to bring you our news aggregation.

I did pen one column, on the race to succeed Bill Emmerson in the State Senate, because it had to be written in a timely manner. It’s actually been harder than I thought to step back. But I’ve forced myself to take this needed break.

I’ll be chilling for the rest of this week and then I will be back next week — renewed and ready to take on liberals, regardless of their political affiliation.

Happy Hannukah to all!

Jon… Read More

Ron Nehring

Socialism takes a hit in key Central American election

Communism may have been relegated to that “ash heap of history” Ronald Reagan described in his 1982 address to the British Parliament, but a new strain of “21st century socialism” as envisioned by former Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is on the march in Central and South America.

Fortunately, that march came to a halt ten days ago with the election of a new conservative President of Honduras.

For years, socialists south of our border have led a drive to move Central and South America to the radical left. In 2004, Venezuela under Hugo Chavez and Cuba under Fidel Castro founded the Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas (ALBA) as a new socialist club to serve as a counterweight to the United States in the region and strengthen socialist regimes in the member states. In the 9 years since its founding, it has grown to 9 members, all with socialist governments: Antigua/Barbuda, Bolivia, Cuba, Dominica, Ecuador, Nicaragua, Saint Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines and Venezuela. In addition, the group has three “observer” countries: Haiti, and the virulent anti-US regimes of Iran and Syria.

In 2008, then-Honduran President Manuel Zelaya,… Read More

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