Why the Rust Belt just gave Donald Trump a hero’s welcome

http://nypost.com/2017/07/25/why-the-rust-belt-just-gave-donald-trump-a-heros-welcome/

YOUNGSTOWN, OH – (Salena Zito, New York Post.  Please click on the link to read the full story.  Here is an excerpt below.)

This town was on fire.

 

President Donald Trump and Melania at the Youngstown Ohio rally (New York Post photo.

By 1 in the afternoon on Tuesday, every main thoroughfare downtown was filled with happy people heading toward the Covelli Centre. Folks dressed in red, white and blue crisscrossed the main grids as vendors sold “Make America Great Again” ball caps, American flags and bottles of water.

Thousands had filled the gravel parking lot to wait until the doors opened at 4, license plates revealing they had traveled from as far as Indiana, Michigan, Pennsylvania and West Virginia to see the president speak directly to them in this Rust Belt city.

Music played on almost every corner as Donald Skowron, a retired Youngstown police officer, drove his green pickup truck up and down Champion Street — in the back, a 6-by-8-foot homemade wooden Trump-Pence sign straddling the bed of the truck, with two large Trump flags flowing from the top.

McCaleb: After two wins, Madigan plays political game with school funding

https://www.ilnews.org/opinion/mccaleb-after-two-wins-madigan-plays-political-game-with-school/article_a8e255f6-6c0a-11e7-a843-83ccd44bf811.html

SPRINGFIELD, IL – (Dan McCaleb, Illinois News Network.  Please click on the link above for the full column.  Here is an excerpt below.)

In his more than 30 years as Illinois’ powerful House speaker, Michael Madigan has won far more political battles than he’s lost.

Illinois is losing big time, but what concern of that is it to Madigan? He keeps his power, and everyone else loses more and more money.

This month alone, Madigan won the battle to adopt the most expensive budget in state history without the kinds of structural reforms Gov. Bruce Rauner wants to help right the state’s fiscal ship. Think pension reform, workers’ compensation reform, deep spending cuts and property tax relief. None of these things that have been part of Rauner’s Turnaround Agenda are in place.

 

‘The chickens have come home to roost in Illinois’

(Editor’s Note — This is a column I wrote on March 16, 2016 — only 15 months ago — about the tax and spend mentality that has been created by the Illinois General Assembly. There is a lot of discussion about who made the right vote in the recent budget vote in Springfield. Please take a few minutes and read this. It gives a great example of the mess that has been created in Illinois.    JM)

Everybody – from the wealthiest to those just barely scraping by – has a household budget. Those budgets are based on the amount of revenue coming in versus the amount of expenditures going out and when things get out of whack, working families are faced with three choices – spend less, increase revenue or some combination of the two. There’s no other way out.

As we’ve sadly learned year after year here in Illinois that same philosophy doesn’t apply. In the Land of Lincoln lawmakers can squander money like drunken sailors, and then when revenue doesn’t match expenditures they simply raise taxes to refill the coffers. Tax and spend … tax and spend.

This past week Illinois Comptroller Leslie Munger went on a statewide tour to educate the public about the current financial mess in Illinois. Munger broke down the numbers in a way that can be related to a monthly household budget and easily understood. Munger explained the bleak picture by removing six zeroes from all revenue and expenditures. If you thought it was a bleak picture in billions, it’s even more dismal in dollars we can related to.

The state’s backlog of bills is more than $7 billion, so that’s comparable with you having $7,000 in bills on your kitchen table. There’s another $2 billion in unpaid bills, so that’s the same as going to the post office and finding another $2,000 in bills.

And on top of that the state has an unfunded pension system – worst in the nation – that totals $110 billion. Munger said that’s like having $110,000 in credit card debt. She added that the state’s daily revenue is approximately $100 million, which is like having $100 in your bank account. Clearly, a household or business would be bankrupt facing a financial mess like that.

While the media has done a great job of reporting all the proposed cuts to state government very few have reported the ‘why’ or ‘how come’ to the story.  First, Gov. Rauner has been in office 14 months, so he’s trying to clean up a mess he didn’t create.

For decades, Democrats and Republicans in Illinois have been digging a hole financially. Lawmakers would overspend, raise taxes, overspend some more and raise taxes again. And nobody during that time frame ever had the courage to say ‘put the shovel down and stop digging’ until Rauner came along and said the current path is unsustainable and cuts have to be made. And because of that, he’s the villain, he’s the bad guy.

Some of you might be wondering why the state just doesn’t raise taxes again instead of making budget cuts. Let me show you another layer to the current misery in Illinois that has been conveniently overlooked. According to a study by the Pew Charitable Trust Research & Analysis, since 2008 Illinois has shown a 22.5 percent increase in tax revenue, tops in the nation. As a comparison the remaining states in the nation had an average increase of 2.5 percent. And that increase wasn’t because of an increase in jobs it was because of the tax-and-spend mentality in Springfield.  In fact, for every job created in Illinois last year, two families went on food stamps.

So, during the past eight years while there has been a 22.5 percent increase in tax revenue in Illinois the budget deficit has more than doubled from $3 billion to $7 billion and the pension deficit has increased from $48 billion to $110 billion.

Despite those numbers that show Illinois in a financial abyss there are those who continue to say that the state simply needs to raises taxes and continue down the clearly unsustainable road we’re on. The state has been without a spending plan for more than nine months, yet Munger said the biggest problem is that lawmakers want to continue to spend money … even though there is none.

“They (lawmakers) don’t understand the problem. We are out of money,” Munger said. “We’re at a breaking point.”

In other words, after years of tax and spend and tax and spend some more … the chickens have come home to roost in Illinois.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A warehouse of questions about wasteful state spending

http://chicago.suntimes.com/opinion/a-warehouse-of-questions-about-wasteful-state-spending/

CHICAGO, IL – (Chicago Sun Times Editorial Board –  Please click to read the whole article above.  Here is an excerpt below.

At a time when Illinois is sitting on $14.3 billion in unpaid bills, it’s dismaying to learn that the state rented a warehouse for $2.4 million that it could have bought outright for $750,000.

Yes, $2.4 million is a drop in the bucket when it comes to state spending, but such wastefulness begs the question of how well — or, rather, how poorly — the rest of our tax money is being spent. And it’s a miserable sales pitch for an income tax hike that both Democrats and Republics know is coming sooner or later.

Two suburban Chicago legislators — state Sen. Tom Cullerton, D-Villa Park, and state Rep. David McSweeney, R-Barrington Hills — have called for an Illinois Legislative Audit Commission investigation into the warehouse’s five-year lease.

WDQN: I will miss you

by Steve Dunford 

The studio of WDQN , from the station’s Facebook page. The station was located on the north edge of DuQuoin in the village of St. Johns

Radio station, WDQN in DuQuoin , 1580 on the AM dial, left the airwaves this evening.

When I lived in Sesser, I used to enjoy their format, when it was simulcast on the 95.9 FM frequency.  I could pick the station up in at least a 30 mile range.  They boasted of the top 80 format; Top 40 country, and top 40 on the pop charts, with some classic tunes of both genres mixing in.    They still had local and national news at the top of the hour.

A few years back, Three Angels Broadcasting, out of Thompsonville purchased the FM frequency.

When I was the  pastor of the East Side Baptist Church in Mt. Vernon, I would listen to a lot of NASCAR races on the way home from church.  I would occasionally catch yes, the Chicago Cubs at times.  This ol’ Cardinal fan enjoyed listening to the late Ron Santo call a game.

I would follow the DuQuoin Indians making their playoff runs in football and Indians basketball from time to time.

I think I have established that high school sports means a lot to me. Each play by play man in each community is the face of high school sports. The face of the DuQuoin Indians for me was Steve Marek.

I hope an online streaming service, another station, or as long time morning man Dave Juhl was pleading on Facebook Live, someone buy the station.

There will be a huge hole in the local media.  It was the only radio station in Perry County.  It was an affilliate of the Illinois News Network, and delivered commodity reports.

From a lifelong resident of Franklin County,  I will miss you.

 

 

 

 

How do we measure success of high school coaches?

Coach Gillespie on the sidelines. (Ann Beckett, Marshall County Daily photo)

Coach Gillespie on the sidelines. (Ann Beckett, Marshall County Daily photo)

DRAFFENVILLE, KY- This is an editorial that ran in the Hopkinsville KY New Era Sun by Chris Jung. It addresses the dismissal of Marshall Co. KY high school coach Gus Gillespie. I only have met him once in a handshake, but I have heard nothing but good things said about him. The author makes some good points, and please click to read it. -sd

Trump’s foreign policy revolution -Charles Krauthammer

charles krauthammerHere is an excerpt from Charles Krauthammer’s weekly Editorial in the Washington Post. Please click to read the entire column.  The flurry of bold executive orders and of highly provocative Cabinet nominations (such as a secretary of education who actually believes in school choice) has been encouraging to conservative skeptics of Donald Trump. But it shouldn’t erase the troubling memory of one major element of Trump’s inaugural address. The foreign policy section has received far less attention than so revolutionary a declaration deserved. It radically redefined the American national interest as understood since World War II. Trump outlined a world in which foreign relations are collapsed into a zero-sum game. They gain, we lose. As in: “For many decades, we’ve enriched foreign industry at the expense of American industry; subsidized the armies of other countries” while depleting our own.

Do Americans Hate Each Other?

american-hate-cartoonIn early December, a wildfire raged through the Great Smoky Mountains and destroyed nearly 1,000 homes in Gatlinburg, Tenn. Thousands were evacuated. Close to 200 people were injured or made ill by the blaze. Fourteen were killed. In the midst of this tragedy, numerous messages appeared on social media that were as despicable as they were dispiriting. One man sent out a tweet that said, “Laughing at all the Trump supporters in Gatlinburg as their homes burn to the ground tonight. Too bad it’s not the whole state burning.” Someone else tweeted that “a few confederate flag flying hillbillies losing their mobile homes isn’t newsworthy.” Another suggested “maybe it’s ‘god’ punishing them for voting for Trump.” I read this piece this morning. It was very thought provoking. Read the rest of the story from David Horsey of the LA times.

Obama’s final, most shameful, legacy moment

charles-krauthammerClick to read Charles Krauthammer’s weekly column from the Washington post. Here is an excerpt; The audience — overwhelmingly Jewish, passionately pro-Israel and supremely gullible — applauded wildly. Four years later — his last election behind him, with a month to go in office and with no need to fool Jew or gentile again — Obama took the measure of Israel’s back and slid a knife into it. People don’t quite understand the damage done to Israel by the U.S. abstention that permitted passage of a U.N. Security Council resolution condemning Israel over settlements. The administration pretends this is nothing but a restatement of long-standing U.S. opposition to settlements……

Sangamon County Board prayers…..Atheist Rob Sherman passes last week……Former Illinois First Lady Passes away…

Governor Richard Ogilve (R term 1969-1973) and his wife Dorothy while he was in office (Chicago Tribune photo)

Governor Richard Ogilve (R- term 1969-1973) and his wife Dorothy while he was in office (Chicago Tribune photo)

Here is an editorial piece by Bernard Schoenberg of the SpringfieldJournal-Register that I came across. It talks about how some came to issue with a prayer that was said before a Sangamon County Board meeting. This slipped by me but Rob Sherman, an atheist who had several filings in court claiming separation of church and state, was killed in a plane crash last week. Also he memorializes the life of former Illinois first lady Dorothy Ogilve. Click to read the entire article.

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News