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  1. #151
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    I'm pessimistic that the powers that be are interested. It's borderline impossible, IMO, that the Treasury and Fed weren't aware of the bubble that ended up bursting in '08. It's possible they didn't think it would get THAT out of hand, but there's no way they were not privvy of what was going on.
    Again, I can assure you that the powers that be are VERY, VERY interested in AIG's investments.

    The problem is that these companies get really, really big, and that complexity becomes a risk in and of itself.

    AIG actually, at one point, made eyeglasses and shoes, although the CEO never knew that, because it was buried so far down in the org chart.

  2. #152
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    Gov. Brownback Caught Shielding Gun-Nut, Neighbor-Terrorizing Brother from Criminal Charges




    From The Topeka Capital-Journal:

    On the night of Nov. 4, 2012, a hail of gunfire cascaded from inside a large truck surging by the Peines’ home. While a sheriff’s deputy was collecting shotgun and .223-caliber ballistics evidence soon after in the darkness, the same truck cruised past the house.

    The driver fled as the deputy followed in pursuit with lights flashing.

    A second deputy blocked the road with a patrol car to end the chase.The Linn County law enforcement report on the incident said a “noticeably intoxicated” Brownback leapt out through one of the truck’s back doors.

    He informed officers nobody in the vehicle had a shotgun.

    The report says the driver, 20-year-old Tyler Agler, revealed a pair of shotguns were in the cab.

    Agler was Kara Jo Earnest's (Jim Brownback's step-daughter) boyfriend.
    ...
    Despite assurances by Linn County Undersheriff Greg Jackson of certain prosecution of Jim Brownback, Joann Peine said she was eventually told by the sheriff’s department that evidence in the case had been “lost.”

    Jim Brownback sounds like a complete nightmare.

    According to the article, his niche as a farmer is buying diseased or otherwise infirm animals, insuring the ones that don't survive and reselling the few that recover for meat. There's a story from a neighbor of his leaving a sick bull dying for days, doing nothing to either comfort it, or put it out of its misery, saying something like, "insurance will cover it."

    He outright stole two cows from another neighbor.

    Jim Brownback told an area acquaintance he was under orders not to threaten or intimidate his neighbors, at least until his brother Sam's re-election campaign had ended.

    Low and behold, on midnight of Election Day, Jim started firing guns at his neighbor's home, every five minutes, like clockwork.


    He also admitted to filling jars with an explosive called Tannerite, and using them for target practice - creating massive explosions on his property.


    He once scattered nails on his neighbor's driveway, another time blocked it with heavy farm equipment, and yet another time left a dead deer there.


    Jim Brownback also likely killed his neighbor's dog, who was found dead in a ditch fifteen miles from the home.


    Perhaps, thanks to this stunning expose, Sam will no longer be able to protect his monster brother.


    http://www.dailykos.com/story/2015/0...s?detail=email



  3. #153
    Veteran SpursforSix's Avatar
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    Gov. Brownback Caught Shielding Gun-Nut, Neighbor-Terrorizing Brother from Criminal Charges


    From The Topeka Capital-Journal:

    On the night of Nov. 4, 2012, a hail of gunfire cascaded from inside a large truck surging by the Peines’ home.
    LOL. Anagram alert!!!!
    oh crap. either short an "s" or have one too many "e"s.

  4. #154
    Mr. John Wayne CosmicCowboy's Avatar
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    Livestock insurance doesn't cover death by disease or natural causes.

  5. #155
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    The Brownback Crash Continues in Kansas


    Menzie Chinn updates us today on how things are going in Sam Brownback's Kansas. Answer: not so good.




    The chart on the right compares Kansas to the rest of the country using coincident indexes, an aggregate measure of economic performance tracked monthly by the Philadelphia Fed. It consists of the following four measures:

    • Nonfarm payroll employment
    • Average hours worked in manufacturing
    • Unemployment rate
    • Wage and salary disbursements deflated by the consumer price index


    The index is set to 100 at the beginning of 2011, when Gov. Brownback took office. Brownback ins uted an aggressive program of tax cuts and budget reductions, promising that this supply-side intervention would supercharge the state's economy. But the reality has been rather different. Kansas has underperformed the US economy ever since Brownback was elected.


    Why is that? Is the Fed using the wrong employment data? Chinn says no: "The decline shows up regardless of whether employment is measured using the establishment or household surveys."

    Is it the weather? "Drought does not seem to be an explanation to me."

    How about the poor performance of the aircraft industry? "Evidence from employment data is not supportive of this thesis."


    So what is it?

    "I would argue much of the downturn especially post January 2013 is self-inflicted, due to the fiscal policies implemented."

    Surprise! I wonder if Kansans will ever figure this out?

    http://www.motherjones.com/kevin-dru...ntinues-kansas



  6. #156
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    Gov. Brownback Says Zombie Preparedness Month Starts Soon In Kansas




    KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Absent a zombie apocalypse before then, Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback this week will sign a proclamation designating October as “Zombie Preparedness Month” in his state.

    The ceremony is planned for Wednesday at the Capitol, a reminder of the need to be prepared for any emergency. Kansas Division of Emergency Management staff will be on hand.

    “If you’re prepared for zombies, you’re prepared for anything,” Brownback said in a statement. “Although an actual zombie apocalypse will never happen, the preparation for such an event is the same as for any disaster: make a disaster kit, have a plan and practice it.”

    http://www.nationalmemo.com/gov-brow...oon-in-kansas/





  7. #157
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    Kansas Misses Fourth Straight Projection as Revenue Enters Freefall

    The Kansas budget had 'baked in' a leniency of $70M for missed projections, and with October's numbers in, Kansas has now broken the bank so to speak, as the $11M miss from revenue forecasts puts Kansas $72.3M below the budget.

    This Friday, Kansas experts are expected to downgrade year over year forecasted revenue, which could be a body blow to a state that will need to rethink current strategy early within the legislative term.
    http://cjonline.com/...

    On Friday, analysts and economists from the Brownback administration, the Legislature and three state universities are expected to downgrade the revenue projection for the fiscal year ending June 30. The revised forecast becomes basis of the governor's new $6 billion budget plan to be delivered at outside of the next legislative session.

    Jim Ward, Democratic House member from Wichita, Kansas highlighted the problem. "The budget disaster continues in Kansas. Governor Brownback refuses to recognize the fact that his tax plan is destroying the Kansas budget."
    The budget miss applies only to current projected budget as currently set, and does not react the the ongoing case before the Kansas Supreme Court regarding school funding. Plaintiffs in the Gannon case, who received a favorable ruling this summer, have asked the court to lift the stay in regards to their verdict.

    Should the court agree with the plaintiffs, the Kansas Budget would be found inadequate of the cons utional duty to fund schools and the continued forecast misses by the administration would put the state seriously behind revenue requirements to match obligation.


    Once considered a Republican possibility in 2016,
    Brownback's Kansas instead is the Republican utopia no Republican Presidential candidate wants to touch or even mention, despite selling eerily similar economic advice to the nation as a whole.

    http://www.dailykos.com/story/2015/1...l?detail=email



  8. #158
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    Because Repugs love Wounded Warriors

    U.S. Veteran's Children Taken Away Over His Use of Medical Marijuana

    When Raymond Schwab talks about his case, his voice teeters between anger and sadness.

    “People who don’t understand the medical value of cannabis are tearing my family apart,” says the Kansas father of five and US veteran, who has a prescription for marijuana in neighboring Colorado, where it is legal.

    Nine months ago, Schwab tried to move to Colorado to grow medical marijuana for fellow veterans. While he and his wife were there preparing for the move, the state of Kansas took their five children into custody on su ion of child endangerment, ensnaring his family in interstate marijuana politics.


    Cases like the Schwabs’ have become a lightning rod for marijuana activists and have left courts, family attorneys and Child Protective Services (CPS) unsure of where the lines are drawn in this brave new world of legalized cannabis.


    “There’s still a stigma against parents who use medical marijuana,” says Jennifer Ani, a family law attorney who says she sees around five similar cases a month – in 95% of which she believes the child was in no reasonable danger. “As much as marijuana is a moving target throughout the nation, with Child Protective Services it’s even more so.”


    She says that concerns about contact-highs or children eating raw cannabis are often cited but are not scientifically sound arguments that a child is in danger. Contact-highs have been widely discredited as a myth, and cannabis must be cooked before it can get you high.


    http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-pol...er1050050&t=16



  9. #159
    俺はまんこが大好きなんだよ baseline bum's Avatar
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    LOL why not take kids away for second hand tobacco smoke too then?

  10. #160
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    LOL why not take kids away for second hand tobacco smoke too then?
    it's Kansas, logic is not sought or encouraged.

  11. #161
    Grab 'em by the pussy Splits's Avatar
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    National jobs report exceeded expectations today adding over 240k. Meanwhile, in Republican paradise:

    Horrible Kansas jobs report a new punch in gut to Gov. Sam Brownback

    Kansas loses 4,000 jobs in January
    State now has added only 1,400 jobs in last 12 months
    Growth rate of 0.1 percent is one of worst in nation

    The long-awaited January jobs report delivered a fresh batch of bad news Friday to Gov. Sam Brownback and Kansans.

    The figures provide yet more proof that the income tax cuts Brownback signed in 2012 — and which took effect three years ago in January 2013 — are not working as he promised to boost employment.

    Highlights of the huge new national jobs report from the state and federal Bureau of Labor Statistics:

    ▪ Total nonfarm employment in the Sunflower State fell by 4,000 from December 2015 to January 2016.
    ▪ Kansas had only 1,400 more jobs this January than in January of 2015. That’s far short of Brownback’s goal of adding 25,000 more jobs a year during his second term.
    ▪ Overall, the annual growth rate in Kansas was a puny 0.1 percent from January 2015 to January 2016. That was one of the worst in the nation.
    ▪ U.S. job growth was a much healthier 1.9 percent over the January 2015 to January 2016 span.
    tlongII

  12. #162
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    From bad to worse for Sam Brownback’s Kansas

    In his first term, Brownback’s “experiment” led to debt downgrades, weak growth, and state finances in shambles. Perhaps the jobs picture is more heartening? Guess again. The Kansas City Star’s Yael Abouhalkah reported today on the state’s latest job numbers.

    Let this stunning news sink in: The Kansas jobs report released Friday shows the state lost another 1,900 jobs in February and now has 5,400 fewer jobs than it did one year ago.


    That’s right: The Sunflower State had a “growth” rate of negative 0.4 percent from February 2015 to February 2016, the first time that’s happened in more than five years. That negative employment rate is one of the worst in the nation.

    The same piece noted that, just a year ago during his re-election campaign, Brownback set a goal of 25,000 new jobs, per year, for a total of 100,000 new jobs in his second term. Eighteen months later, Kansas has created 1,600 jobs.


    Put another way, the GOP governor set a projection of over 2,000 jobs per month. Since then, Kansas has created about 90 jobs per month.

    It’s possible Brownback and his allies might want to blame President Obama’s economic policies, but at a national level, the job market looks very strong and unemployment has dropped to an eight-year low. The governor might be tempted to say his policies need more time, but his “experiment” started five years ago.

    After Brownback signed the largest tax cut in state history, the Republican governor declared, “My focus is to create a red-state model that allows the Republican ticket to say, ‘See, we’ve got a different way, and it works.’”

    When GOP officials control the levers of power, and they’re able to implement the exact agenda that Republicans dream of, it’s certainly true that the “red-state model” represents a “different way.”

    Why anyone would believe it “works,” however, is a mystery.

    http://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-s...d=sm_fb_maddow

  13. #163
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    Coup D’Tea: Kansas Republicans File Bill To Nullify Judicial Branch


    Brownback and his extremist cohorts organized election challengers by upstart Tea Partiers against anyone in the legislator who dared stand against him, bankrolled by millions of dollars from the Koch Brothers’ Americans For Prosperity. This left him with a supermajority in the statehouse and nobody left to challenge him – except the state courts, which found in 2014 that his devastating cuts to education were uncons utional.

    But the power of judicial oversight may soon be coming to an end as well.

    State legislators have proposed Senate Bill 439, which would allow for “the impeachment of any Judge who acts contrary to the wishes of the legislature.”

    consider that Brownback had framed his entire budget-wrecking rampage as an “experiment” to showcase the value of neoliberal extremism in contrast to President Obama’s“socialistic government overreach.”


    http://occupydemocrats.com/2016/03/1...dicial-branch/



  14. #164
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    A Closer Look at Kansas’ Tax Cuts

    http://ritholtz.com/2016/03/a-closer...Big+Picture%29

  15. #165
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    Outraged by Kansas Justices’ Rulings, G.O.P. Seeks to Reshape Court

    Look at the states, where political attacks on judicial decisions are common and well-financed attack ads are starting to jar the once-sleepy elections for State Supreme Court seats.

    Nowhere is the battle more fiery than here in Kansas. Gov. Sam Brownback and other conservative Republicans have expressed outrage over State Supreme Court decisions that overturned death penalty verdicts, blocked anti-abortion laws and hampered Mr. Brownback’s efforts to slash taxes and spending, and they are seeking to reshape a body they call unaccountable to the right-tilting public.


    At one point, the Legislature threatened to suspend all funding for the courts. The Supreme Court, in turn, ruled in February that the state’s public schools must shut down altogether if poorer districts do not get more money by June 30.


    “A political bullying tactic” and “an assault on Kansas families, taxpayers and elected appropriators,” is how the president of the Senate, Susan Wagle, a Republican, responded to that ruling, which was based on requirements in the state Cons ution. Mr. Brownback spoke darkly of an “activist Kansas Supreme Court.”


    In March, in the latest salvo, the Republican-controlled Senate passed a bill to authorize impeachment of justices if their decisions “usurp” the power of other branches. But the climactic battle is expected in the November elections, when conservatives hope to remake the seven-member Supreme Court in a flash, by unseating four justices regarded as moderate or liberal.


    Partisan conflict over courts has erupted in many of the 38 states where justices are either directly elected or, as in Kansas, face periodic retention elections, without an opposing candidate. As conservatives in Washington attempt to preserve a majority on the federal Supreme Court, politically ascendant conservatives in several states are seeking to reshape courts that they consider to be overly liberal vestiges of eras past.


    “We’ve seen this tug of war between courts and political branches all around the country,” said Alicia Bannon, a senior counsel at the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University.


    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/02/us...er=rss&emc=rss

    The strategy to over the judicial system, at Federal and state levels, is fundamental to the VRWC/1%/BigCorp, going back decades.

    And it's all done behind social/religious charades, and esp weaponizing the 1st and 2nd Amendments.

    And Repugs call Obama "lawless"?

    No Law Is Above The Man

    America is ed and un able, in permanent decline towards an all-powerful oligarch, a plutonomy, a kleptocracy.
    Last edited by boutons_deux; 04-01-2016 at 05:30 AM.

  16. #166
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    With Kansas In Crisis, GOPers Abandon Gov Brownback On Tax Cuts

    After he became Kansas governor in 2011, Sam Brownback slashed personal income taxes on the promise that the deep cuts would trigger a furious wave of hiring and expansion by businesses.

    But the "shot of adrenaline" hasn't worked as envisioned, and the state budget has been in crisis ever since.

    Now many of the same Republicans who helped pass Brownback's plan are in open revolt, refusing to help the governor cut spending so he can avoid rolling back any of his signature tax measures.


    If Brownback won't reconsider any of the tax cuts, they say, he will have to figure out for himself how to balance the budget in the face of disappointing revenue.

    "Let him own it," Republican Rep. Mark Hutton said. "It's his policy that put us there."

    Tax collections missed projections in 11 months of the last year. A growing number of Brownback's conservative allies want to scale back the tax cuts to ease the budget crunch.


    Brownback took office on a pledge to make Kansas friendlier to business and successfully sought to

    cut the top personal income tax rate by 29 percent and exempt more than 330,000 farmers and business owners from income taxes.

    The moves were popular in a Legislature where the GOP holds three-quarters of the seats.


    The governor argued that Kansas had to attract more businesses after a "lost decade" in the early 2000s, when private sector employment declined more than 4 percent.

    The predicted job growth from business expansions hasn't happened, leaving the state persistently short of money.

    Since November, tax collections have fallen about $81 million, or 1.9 percent below the current forecast's predictions.


    "We're growing weary," said Senate President Susan Wagle, a conservative Republican from Wichita. While GOP legislators still support low income taxes, "we'd prefer to see some real solutions coming from the governor's office," she said.


    Last month, Brownback ordered $17 million in immediate reductions to universities
    and earlier this month

    delayed $93 million in contributions to pensions for school teachers and community college employees.


    The state has also siphoned off more than $750 million from highway projects to other parts of the budget over the past two years.


    Lawmakers are worried about approving any further reductions in an election year. All 40 Senate seats and 125 House seats are on the ballot in November.


    Democrats have long described Brownback's tax cuts as reckless.

    Republican critics want to repeal the personal income tax break for farmers and business owners to raise an additional $200 million to $250 million a year.


    Debate over the next budget will intensify after lawmakers return from a recess later this month. They could follow through on their threat by adjourning without making specific reductions and leaving the governor with the authority to do so. He faces fewer repercussions because he will not appear on the ballot again before leaving office in January 2019.

    Brownback rejected earlier calls to scale back the tax cuts and shows no signs of backing down.

    He declined to be interviewed about the lawmakers' unusual demand until new revenue projections are released Wednesday.

    Spokeswoman Eileen Hawley said the governor will release proposals afterward for balancing the budget, but, "a plan to raise taxes on small businesses or anyone else will not be among them."


    Brownback blames the economic sluggishness — the state ranked 43rd in total personal income growth in 2015 — on slumps in agriculture, energy production and aircraft manufacturing.


    "You've got some global issues that are going on that we have absolutely no control over," Brownback told reporters at a recent news conference.


    But Scott Drenkard, an economist for the conservative Tax Foundation, told legislators last month that

    farmers and business owners appeared to pocket the extra money from the state's recent tax cuts rather than use it for expansion — "tax avoidance, not job creation."

    The state's personal income tax collections dropped 24 percent during its 2014 budget year, down $713 million.

    They've increased since, but the official projection for the 2017 fiscal year is less than $2.5 billion — still 15 percent off the 2013 peak.


    Meanwhile, Kansas reported gaining only 800 private-sector jobs between March 2015 and March 2016, a mere 0.1 percent increase.

    Last year, legislators plugged part of the budget gap by increasing sales and cigarette taxes as part of a $400 million revenue-raising package.

    Brownback's administration has floated the idea of selling off the state's rights to future tobacco settlement payments, but lawmakers have been cold to such borrowing.

    The continuing budget turmoil has been "just amateurish," said Republican Sen. Jim Denning, a former conservative ally of Brownback's who has become a critic. "I'm not happy with how things played out."

    http://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/ka...+%28TPMNews%29

    Kock Bros/Conservative "trickle down", "tax cuts pay for themselves", "shot of adrenaline" ?

    Proven yet again to be pure BULL .

    Repug MISgovernance, what's not to ridicule?

    Jindal's LA is similarly financially ed, Jindal replaced by a Dem (for now).



  17. #167
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    Arthur Laffer ...

    .. served as the architect of Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback’s (R) failed right-wing economic experiment, which destroyed state finances and did little to improve the state’s economy.

    Laffer vowed that Brownback’s plan would generate “enormous prosperity,” which is largely the opposite of what’s actually happened.


    When the the GOP governor’s agenda failed to deliver on any of the guaranteed results, Laffer was pressed for an explanation.

    “Kansas is doing fine,” he boasted.

    http://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/republican-economic-plan-gets-the-wrong-kind-endorsement?cid=sm_fb_maddow

    Last edited by boutons_deux; 04-21-2016 at 06:40 AM.

  18. #168
    W4A1 143 43CK? Nbadan's Avatar
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    Kansas governor eyes tobacco bonds for budget fix
    Source: Reuters
    Kansas governor eyes tobacco bonds for budget fix
    April 20, 2016


    (Reuters) - Kansas Governor Sam Brownback offered options on Wednesday for dealing with sinking revenue for the state's current and next budgets, including the sale of tobacco bonds.

    With the fiscal 2016 revenue estimated to drop by nearly $94 million and fiscal 2017 revenue expected to be $134.7 million less than previously projected, the Republican governor said Kansas could raise about $158 million through its first sale of bonds backed by its share of a 1998 multi-state settlement with U.S. tobacco companies.

    Several states and local governments have sold tobacco bonds with some using the proceeds as a one-time boost for their sagging budgets.

    Brownback said he would also divert $185 million in sales tax revenue slated for the highway fund to the fiscal 2016 and 2017 general fund and continue a 3 percent university funding cut into fiscal 2017.
    Read more: https://www.yahoo.com/news/kansas-go...ess.html?nhp=1

  19. #169
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    Kansas governor eyes tobacco bonds for budget fix
    Source: Reuters
    Kansas governor eyes tobacco bonds for budget fix
    April 20, 2016




    Read more: https://www.yahoo.com/news/kansas-go...ess.html?nhp=1
    "He added that he does not support a tax hike to patch up the budget."

    Classic VRWC strategy = America, now state by Repug/red/slave state.

  20. #170
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    Kansas strips Planned Parenthood of state Medicaid funding, in violation of federal law

    Just weeks after the Obama administration warned states that their Medicaid funding would be jeopardized if they tried to defund Planned Parenthood, Kansas goes and does it—strips Planned Parenthood of the state's portion of Medicaid funding.

    Kansas isn't first state to try this, and courts have acted by blocking the clearly and unequivocally illegal defunding in four states. This move is a testament to how deeply committed Kanas Gov. Sam Brownback is to grinding his state into dust. As if it wasn't in a deep enough crisis, now the state's going to take on a very expensive lawsuit. All so Brownback could punish poor women just a little bit more.

    http://www.dailykos.com/stories/2016/5/4/1523056/-Kansas-strips-Planned-Parenthood-of-state-Medicaid-funding-in-violation-of-federal-law

  21. #171
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    What's The Matter With Kansas? Bible humpers, for one.

    Mom who took kids to sing for Oregon militants claims biblical right to beat her children bloody

    They testified Wednesday during a 2 1/2-hour hearing in Shawnee County that their mother, Odalis Sharp, beat them several times a week with a rod and belt, shoved soap in their mouths, called them names and slapped their faces and private parts.

    A social worker also testified that Sharp refused to cooperate during a neglect investigation earlier this year and then during a follow-up report of emotional and physical abuse.


    “They said it’s typical to always receive some type of bruising and other times have bled from the swats,” the social worker testified. “The children told me they were fearful. They did not want to return to their mother.”


    A sheriff’s deputy testified that one boy who fled told investigators that his mother had beaten one sibling until the child’s nose bled — and continued to beat the child.


    “He described a spanking that consisted of 47 swats,” the deputy testified. “He described that after 27 spankings, the child started to bleed from the nose, and 20 more spanks occurred after that.”


    Sharp admitted to using a rod to punish her children.


    “A lot of my friends know that I use a rod,” Sharp testified. “That is not a secret.”

    “We need to turn to God, because the system is corrupt,” Sharp said. “They lie, they twist, they make false charges, they abuse people, and then they turn around and put people in prison, and then they accuse them of abuse.”

    That’s pretty much what Sharp said the last time one of her children was removed from her care and placed into protective custody over previous abuse allegations.


    Sharp said her son, then 15, had run away from home because he was unhappy with “the right, wholesome and pure path in which I was leading him — in which God was leading us.”


    The single mother of 10 dragged seven of her children to the Malheur National Wildlife Preserve, where they sang patriotic and religious songs for the armed militants who took over the federally owned land and refused to leave until their anti-government demands were met.

    http://www.rawstory.com/2016/05/mom-...ildren-bloody/

    Does American Bible humping Christianity, like police work and prison work and BigFinance, make people mentally ill, and/or does it attract mentally ill people?



  22. #172
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    National jobs report exceeded expectations today adding over 240k. Meanwhile, in Republican paradise:



    tlongII
    tlongII The OP will go down in infamy, like "Romney will win a landslide"...

    Talk about a total failure of an economic theory.

    What does it say when a major political party stakes it's intellectual credibility on such a ty idea, i.e. supply side economics?

    SMFH

  23. #173
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    Let this stunning news sink in: After losing a whopping 3,700 jobs in April, Kansas now has lower total nonfarm employment than at any time since ... September 2014.


    In addition, the new jobs figures out Friday from the state and federal governments show that Kansas had a “growth” rate of 0.0 percent over the 12 months, while losing 600 jobs since April 2015. That’s the seventh worst rate in the entire country.


    The horrible new jobs information continued a very bad week for Gov. Sam Brownback and Kansans.


    On Wednesday, Brownback slashed another $97 million from the budget, in addition to diverting another $185 million from highway funds and delaying a $100 million state payment into the public employees’ pension plan.


    These moves continued his reckless budget reductions, mostly caused by the fact that his 2012 income tax cuts never have produced the jobs or new revenues Brownback promised four years ago.


    On Friday, the Kansas Department of Labor did not mention any of this bad news in the top of its press release. Instead, it said that the Kansas unemployment rate had dropped to 3.8 percent from 3.9 percent in April.


    Brownback apologists quickly pointed out the state had a meager gain of 800 private sector jobs. Again: Who cares? People with government jobs lost them, so total employment was down.


    But others are doing far better than Kansas.


    ▪ Missouri added 37,100 jobs over the last year, for a growth rate of 1.3 percent. That was 33rd best in America. In March, the Show-Me State had posted the 11th worst rate in the nation with a 0.9 percent rate.


    ▪ U.S. employment has surged by 1.8 percent over the last 12 months. In fact, the nation has added 2.692 million jobs. Of that amount, Kansas accounts for a loss of 600 total jobs in that span.


    ▪ Idaho had the highest year-over-year growth rate of 3.8 percent, while Delaware was at 3.7 percent and Oregon at 3.5 percent.


    ▪ The worst states were North Dakota, with a negative growth rate of 3.8 percent and Wyoming at negative 3.7 percent.


    The April news continued a bad string of months for the Sunflower State.


    For example, the March numbers showed Kansas with the seventh worst job growth rate for the previous 12 months at 0.0 percent.


    Incredibly, the numbers had been even worse in February: The Sunflower State actually had 5,000 fewer jobs in that month than it did in the same month in 2015.
    http://www.kansascity.com/opinion/op...e78817667.html


  24. #174
    Grab 'em by the pussy Splits's Avatar
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    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/04/us...mary.html?_r=0

    tlongII

    Kansas Republicans Reject Gov. Sam Brownback’s Conservatives in Primary
    By MITCH SMITH
    AUG. 3, 2016

    Republican voters in Kansas rebelled against the policies of Gov. Sam Brownback on Tuesday, ousting his fellow conservatives in at least 11 state legislative primary races amid widespread angst about Kansas’s financial situation.

    With some races still undetermined on Wednesday, but also leaning toward moderates, the primary was a tangible sign of the grumblings that have been going on under the surface in heavily Republican Kansas, as deep cuts to taxes, a centerpiece of the Brownback agenda, have left the state short on revenue and led to cuts to government services.

    “People, they were frustrated,” said Dinah Sykes, a moderate Republican from the Kansas City suburbs who defeated the conservative in bent in her State Senate district. “They were ready for people to listen to them and be accountable to them.”

    The results promised to reshape the dynamics in the Legislature, which has been dominated in recent years by conservatives friendly to Mr. Brownback, and perhaps add pressure for the governor to reconsider some of his tax policies, which were predicated on a supply-side theory of economics and championed by conservatives nationally. Kansas has repeatedly missed revenue collection targets, has seen its credit rating slashed and has cut funding for some government services during Mr. Brownback’s tenure.

    “It was schools, it was roads, it was the fact that some communities were hoping for job growth that didn’t happen,” said Chapman Rackaway, a political science professor at Fort Hays State University who called Tuesday’s results a “repudiation” of Mr. Brownback’s policies.

    Kansas remains an overwhelmingly Republican state, and the party will almost certainly retain large legislative majorities after the general election in November. And Mr. Brownback himself was elected to a second four-year term in 2014.

    But Tuesday’s vote highlighted a longstanding split in the state party between conservatives and a moderate bloc that sometimes aligns with Democrats. Patrick R. Miller, a political scientist at the University of Kansas, said Tuesday’s results came from “Brownback’s unpopularity laid on top of that traditional divide.”

    At least six conservative senators lost their primaries, political scientists and local news media said, along with five conservative House members. Three more conservative House members were trailing moderates in close races. Other moderate candidates won primaries in districts where the conservative in bent did not seek another term.

    In addition, Republicans in one congressional district voted out Representative Tim Huelskamp, a farmer who had become a Tea Party favorite in Washington but had annoyed party stalwarts and been removed from the Agriculture Committee.

    His opponent, Roger Marshall, had support from major farm groups in the state.

    State Senator Greg Smith, who lost to Ms. Sykes, said “discontent with the governor” and a lack of nuance in local news coverage contributed to the conservative losses. He said there seemed to be a “schism in the Republican Party” between conservatives who “support the party platform” and “folks who register as Republicans because they know that’s the only way they can win the office,” but who in fact have more in common with Democrats.

    On Wednesday, Mr. Brownback’s office sought to frame the vote as part of a broader disenchantment with current officeholders.

    “Kansas is not immune from the widespread anti-in bency sentiment we have seen across the nation this election season,” Eileen Hawley, a spokeswoman for the governor, said in a statement.

    That position was partly echoed by Kelly Arnold, the chairman of the Kansas Republican Party, who said Tuesday’s results probably indicated some level of disapproval of current leadership in the state, but also frustration with the status quo at all levels of government.

    “I think you saw a lot of people just kind of fed up with what’s going on, the current in bency, and that’s on the federal level and state level,” Mr. Arnold said.

    In legislative races from suburbs to the state’s vast countryside, concerns about finances and tax policy repeatedly rose to the forefront. In central Kansas, Ed Berger, a former community college president, defeated the State Senate majority leader, Terry Bruce, a major ally of Mr. Brownback.

    On his campaign website, Mr. Berger warned that “our state is on the wrong track and our district’s current senator, in lock step with the governor, is the one leading it in the wrong direction.”

    Voters “had concerns about the fiscal viability of the state, I heard that quite frequently,” Mr. Berger said in an interview on Wednesday. “They know that the state can’t continue on the course that we’re on.”

    Many of Tuesday’s winners will still face general election opponents, but no matter who is elected in November, some have suggested that moderate Republicans and Democrats, if they band together, might be able to muster enough votes to block parts of Mr. Brownback’s agenda from becoming law.

    Kerry Gooch, the executive director of the Kansas Democratic Party, said the results in the Republican primary showed widespread discontent and frustration among voters, and a desire for things to change.

    “I definitely think it shows that Kansans are paying attention,” Mr. Gooch said, “that Kansans are not happy with what Governor Brownback and extreme Republican legislators have been doing to our state for the last six years.”

  25. #175
    Complete player hitmanyr2k's Avatar
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    Kock Bros/Conservative "trickle down", "tax cuts pay for themselves", "shot of adrenaline" ?

    Proven yet again to be pure BULL .

    Repug MISgovernance, what's not to ridicule?

    Jindal's LA is similarly financially ed, Jindal replaced by a Dem (for now).
    The sherriff went all in on Jindal Some Republicans are finally starting to wake up.


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