Monday, January 18, 2010

Yes, it's real change in Washington

WSJ:
At the Web site of The American Spectator, think-tanker Paul Chesser takes note of a report by John Stossel on Fox Business Network "about a small window company called Serious Materials" that has big pull in Washington:
The company claims to produce the most energy efficient windows in the world, which other larger companies dispute--but that's not the point. Watch the Stossel segment [at either link above] and you'll see how Serious got some high profile endorsements from President Obama and Vice President Biden, which is suspicious because the company's vice president for policy is married to the overseer of President Obama's weatherization program, Cathy Zoi. Amazingly, Serious Materials was the only "green" window company to receive some recent tax credits from the federal government.
shocked.jpg

Stossel reports that after the segment ran, a Serious Materials flack "called to say that my story is 'full of lies.' But she wouldn't say what those lies are."

The Freedom Foundation of Minnesota has the public documents on which Stossel's report was based.

Timothy Carney at the Washington Examiner reports on another eyebrow-raising apparent conflict of interest:

Mark Ernst, in December 2007, was chief executive officer of H&R Block, the nation's largest tax-preparation company. Thirteen months later, once President Obama took office, Ernst was named a deputy commissioner at the Internal Revenue Service, where he would spend his first year drafting new regulations for tax preparers--regulations that H&R Block welcomes and market analysts say will benefit the company.
With Ernst in mind, recall Barack Obama's campaign pledge: "No political appointees in an Obama administration will be permitted to work on regulations or contracts directly and substantially related to their prior employer for two years."

Carney quotes an IRS spokesman's email saying the rules don't apply to Ernst because he "is a civil servant at the IRS; he is not a political appointee." As Carney notes, it's passing strange for an ex-CEO to pursue a second career as a civil servant. He adds: "Now we can see that the ethics rules, like much of Obama's good-government talk, is more style than substance."

The Founding Brothers defined a cynic's system in which human weaknesses were used to hold govt powers in check by balancing opposing natural desires.

But it's still up to us to recognize the realities before us to pass along what we have

This last foolish election in which a hit song was elected president due to a hopeful tune and smart lyrics, hiding a theme of revolution with promises of a better way had better be a lesson to all.


1 comment:

Unknown said...

Nope. Stossel doesn't have the facts right. To start, THREE other window companies are ELIGIBLE FOR A TAX CREDIT IF THEY DECIDE TO PURCHASE MANUFACTURING EQUIPMENT TO MAKE NEW PRODUCTS FOCUSED ON SAVING ENERGY.
Read more facts here http://blog.seriousmaterials.com/?p=1007