Surrounded by lies

unemployment gallup numbers feb 2015

Anyone who understands that it is impossible to raise employment by raising public-spending – admittedly a very small number – would understand that unemployment in the US was never going to improve given the economic policies of the Obama administration. But you can get the official unemployment rate down either by creating more jobs or by getting those who used to have jobs to drop out of the labour force. The above graph is from this story, with its quite ominous heading, Gallup CEO: I May “Suddenly Disappear” For Telling Truth About Obama Unemployment Rate. There really is a reason to worry for anyone who says anything that is even a step or two outside the accepted PC grid, although I think he is a tad on the paranoid side. Getting fired and left in disgrace is more the modern style. As for the unemployment data, this is the full story:

Years of unending news stories on U.S. government programs of surveillance, rendition and torture have apparently chilled the speech of even top business executives in the United States.

Yesterday, Jim Clifton, the Chairman and CEO of Gallup, an iconic U.S. company dating back to 1935, told CNBC that he was worried he might “suddenly disappear” and not make it home that evening if he disputed the accuracy of what the U.S. government is reporting as unemployed Americans.

The CNBC interview came one day after Clifton had penned a gutsy opinion piece on Gallup’s web site, defiantly calling the government’s 5.6 percent unemployment figure “The Big Lie” in the article’s headline. His appearance on CNBC was apparently to walk back the “lie” part of the title and reframe the jobs data as just hopelessly deceptive.

Clifton stated the following on CNBC:

“I think that the number that comes out of BLS [Bureau of Labor Statistics] and the Department of Labor is very, very accurate. I need to make that very, very clear so that I don’t suddenly disappear. I need to make it home tonight.”

After getting that out of the way, Clifton went on to eviscerate the legitimacy of the cheerful spin given to the unemployment data, telling CNBC viewers that the percent of full time jobs in this country as a percent of the adult population “is the worst it’s been in 30 years.”

That he has much he has much to worry personally about I have my doubts, but professionally, he will have become a target. This transgresses the Democrat narrative and he will be savaged by the usual far-to-the-left media liars the US is full of (see Brian Williams).

But as important as the labour market is, this is the major story at Drudge, and it really ought to be on the front page of every paper in the world, given its significance. It won’t be, but if we are hoping to lower unemployment and raise living standards, the kinds of lies we are now so used to will have to be called out a bit more often.

PAPER: ‘GLOBAL WARMING’ BIGGEST SCIENCE SCANDAL EVER

So it is, and we small band of brothers (and sisters) know it all too well. But what about the media, and our political leaders and the scientific grants-receiving community and those who seek wealth and power through green-related scares. From the story:

Two weeks ago, under the headline “How we are being tricked by flawed data on global warming”, I wrote about Paul Homewood, who, on his Notalotofpeopleknowthat blog, had checked the published temperature graphs for three weather stations in Paraguay against the temperatures that had originally been recorded. In each instance, the actual trend of 60 years of data had been dramatically reversed, so that a cooling trend was changed to one that showed a marked warming.

This was only the latest of many examples of a practice long recognised by expert observers around the world – one that raises an ever larger question mark over the entire official surface-temperature record.

Following my last article, Homewood checked a swathe of other South American weather stations around the original three. In each case he found the same suspicious one-way “adjustments”. First these were made by the US government’s Global Historical Climate Network (GHCN). They were then amplified by two of the main official surface records, the Goddard Institute for Space Studies (Giss) and the National Climate Data Center (NCDC), which use the warming trends to estimate temperatures across the vast regions of the Earth where no measurements are taken. Yet these are the very records on which scientists and politicians rely for their belief in “global warming”.

Homewood has now turned his attention to the weather stations across much of the Arctic, between Canada (51 degrees W) and the heart of Siberia (87 degrees E). Again, in nearly every case, the same one-way adjustments have been made, to show warming up to 1 degree C or more higher than was indicated by the data that was actually recorded. This has surprised no one more than Traust Jonsson, who was long in charge of climate research for the Iceland met office (and with whom Homewood has been in touch). Jonsson was amazed to see how the new version completely “disappears” Iceland’s “sea ice years” around 1970, when a period of extreme cooling almost devastated his country’s economy.

It may surprise them, but how many here will be surprised? No one any longer even reacts to the lying, so routine has it become. Just imagine if we didn’t have the net.

Media lies, everyone amazed

This story about Brian Williams having not been on the plane he said he was on is only astonishing for the length of time it took for the facts to come out since the events involved go back to 2003 and there were many witnesses. The media, by and large, are on the left side of politics which is why what began originally as a story of heroic survival in an Iraqi war zone has transmogrified into curiosity over whether he had also lied about his reports on the hurricane that hit New Orleans. Journalists have an agenda, and while their pretend-ethics say they shouldn’t, the do. This are the stories at Drudge:

Brian Williams Apology Over Iraq Account Challenged…
PILOT: All that hit us was dust…
VIDEO: How story changed…
‘Imagination Inflation’…
Once claimed saved puppy from burning house…
BROKAW: Drop anchor!
NBCNEWS BOSSES ‘HANGING HIM OUT TO DRY’…
CONFUSION AT CNN…
TURNESS ON THE FURNACE…
Breaks Silence in Memo…
‘Truth Squad’ investigates…
HEIR TO NBC THRONE?
PAPER: Couric eager…

The lack of curiosity about Barack Obama’s past – such as his university transcripts – is a metaphor for a much larger problem.

I hope he didn’t stick it under his chair

It’s in Hindi, but every so often you hear the words “chewing gum” and there’s no doubt what it’s about. Is he still a smoker? Does he need Nicorettes even after at least six years? Is the media in the US covering up even about this too? In India, apparently, it is GWB they prefer, which may be why this bit of disrespect was reported on.

“Indians are pro-Bush,” said Gurcharan Das, a prominent writer. “He saw that with China rising, America needed a big country to be an ally. He hyphenated India with China and de-hyphenated it with Pakistan and Indians loved that.”

Whatever the view may be of him elsewhere, in India the 43rd president is seen as a straight-talking statesman. In 2008, Modi’s predecessor as prime minister, Manmohan Singh, assured Bush: “The Indian people deeply love you.”…

The things that drive other foreigners nuts—the unshakable certitude, the folksy language—Indians like.

“George W. Bush occupies a special place in the minds of many Indian foreign policy elites,” Sadanand Dhume, an India-born specialist on the country at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington, D.C. “In a nutshell, Bush took India seriously.”

Meanwhile, Obama takes nothing seriously, other than his amour-propre.

Bolt is back

Actually, he is still in Holland. But in case you missed them, there are two new posts up at his blog. The first is, No, you are not all Charlie. Here is the whole thing:

I am in Holland and the other night, in Groningen, passed one of those demonstrations now held all over Europe in support of the magazine Charlie Hebdo and the journalists murdered this week by Islamists. Many people held up the sign seen at all these demonstrations: Je suis Charlie. I am Charlie.

Pardon me, but those signs are just not true. Charlie Hebdo was selected by al Qaeda for attack precisely because almost no one else was Charlie Hebdo. It was almost alone in newspapers and magazines to mock the ideology that so many other journalists fear. That is why it was the target, and, say, The Age, The Guardian or the New York Times not.

And I suspect this attack will work. There will in fact be fewer Charlie Hebdos than ever. More on this in tomorrow’s Sunday Herald Sun, once the lawyers have carefully checked what I am permitted to say under our already absurd laws against free speech.

The second is his column in the Herald Sun today, Are we really all Charlie? No, no and shamefully no. Here are the first two paras:

PROTESTERS around the West, horrified by the massacre in Paris, have held up pens and chanted “Je suis Charlie” — I am Charlie.

They lie. The Islamist terrorists are winning, and the coordinated attacks on the Charlie Hebdo magazine and kosher shop will be just one more success. One more step to our gutless surrender.

UPDATE: Perhaps more than just a one-week wonder: French Premier Declares ‘War’ on Radical Islam as Paris Girds for Rally:

Prime Minister Manuel Valls declared Saturday that France was at war with radical Islam after the harrowing sieges that led to the deaths of three gunmen and four hostages the day before. New details emerged about the bloody final confrontations, and security forces remained on high alert.

“It is a war against terrorism, against jihadism, against radical Islam, against everything that is aimed at breaking fraternity, freedom, solidarity,” Mr. Valls said during a speech in Évry, south of Paris.

We’ll see. Check back in about a week.

Why the Republican reluctance to take on tough issues

Ever heard of Elizabeth Lauten. Well no one else in America had either until she made a passing comment on the dress sense of Obama’s older daughter. This is how it began at a Thanksgiving media event involving the President:

One minor Capitol Hill staffer thought the girls were dressed inappropriately and acted a bit churlish. And then, for some reason, she wrote about it on Facebook.

Well so what, right? These, however, were just the stories in the Washington Post. You can go to the link which will then allow you to link to each of these stories.

Aide to Tennessee congressman knocks Obama kids

The long and fraught history of judging the president’s kids

White House: First daughters should be off-limits

Indigestion over the Obama girls: Why a GOP staffer’s below-the-belt jabs were particularly wrong.

GOP aide’s online dig at Obama daughters creates backlash: A GOP staffer criticized the demeanor of Sasha and Malia Obama at the turkey pardoning.

Criticizing first kids? Still not a good idea. The ex-GOP aide who called out the president’s kids violated the unspoken staffer code.

GOP aide resigns over criticism of Obama daughters

When GOP staffer put Obama children ‘at a bar,’ it continued American tradition of trashing black females’ morality: Views like hers historically excused the abuse and disregard of human beings judged not worthy of consideration by people who also prayed.

Hill staffer quits after comments about first daughters: Those on both sides of the political aisle believed Elizabeth Lauten broke a cardinal rule when she criticized the Obama girls in a Facebook post.

Nothing classy about Elizabeth Lauten’s criticism of the Obama girls

Hill staffer Elizabeth Lauten resigns after remarks about Obama daughters

This is in a newspaper that still hasn’t mentioned Gruber, probably because their readers would be too stupid to understand the story. This is in a country that obsesses about the shooting of a thug who attacked a cop. This is a media that never mentions the IRS.

The Republicans must play a very careful waiting game on any issue that is intended to damage the standing of Democrats, and Obama in particular. This is Drudge on immigration:

SESSIONS: Republicans On Verge Of Breaking Campaign Promises…
CRUZ to HOUSE LEADERS: ‘Do what you said you would do’…
LEFT MOCKS: ‘War’ on Obama’s immigration order lasted about 5 minutes…
Conservatives to buck Boehner…
‘Symbolic’ Vote on Amnesty…
Gutiérrez presses ‘millions’ to get documents ready…
Mayors plan summit to implement…
POLL: Support for path to citizenship for illegals at record low…
UPDATE: 17-state coalition sues over amnesty order…
OBAMA PLANS PROCESSING FACILITY WITH 1,000 NEW AGENTS IN VA…
WASH POST: President’s unilateral action has no precedent…

Things must be brought to a slow boil. The ignorance of the American media is matched only by its willingness to inflict as much damage as it possibly can on Republicans. It makes for disastrous policy and is making much of America uninhabitable, but there is no misunderstanding what the problem is.

What Abbott said and the media heard

Having actually listened to the same speech that is being reported in the paper today, I am not entirely sure those who are doing the reporting quite cottoned on to what the Prime Minister was getting at. The AFR, for example, starts its story on Tony’s speech thus:

Business leaders have told Tony Abbott to sell his own budget, spurning the Prime Minister’s invitation to be more vocal in backing the government’s agenda.

A business association will never back a political party, or will do so only at great risk to its own future. The ALP is little more than the union agenda in a Parliamentary setting, but business and business associations have to work with everyone and in doing so stay politically neutral. Even I, in my occasional days in the media representing business, could criticise Paul Keating and live to tell the tale because, but only because, I never strayed outside our own council-determined policy position.

If I may therefore interpolate, what the PM was saying was that if business wanted to see some of those things that business would like to see – a smaller deficit, lower taxes, a more open industrial relations environment, improved trade relations, or anything else where its own agenda happens to coincide with the Government’s – then it should start pushing these issues harder. The point is not to back the government’s agenda but to back its own, and make it known that there are certain things that business wants the Senate to pass because it will make Australia a better place.

And as just one place where business might find itself assisted by the Government’s agenda, there was another story in the AFR today, No pay rises without efficiency talks, under planned law, which in the paper was titled, “Coalition moves to keep lid on strikes”. It begins:

Ways to make workplaces more efficient would have to be discussed as part of every wage negotiation under a law proposed by the Abbott government.

I promise you this. No other conceivable government in this country will be trying to get such a change made. If business doesn’t back a government which will make such changes they may find themselves dealing with a government that under no circumstances ever will. They need only support the policy but they can do it by whispering it to each other where no one can hear or can say so in public where their support might count.

Not quite as simple as ABC

I know too little about media policy but as I watch the manoeuvering by the ABC Board, I am reminded by something my cousin told me when I visited Canada in July. He is a sound technician with the CBC in Toronto and the Chairman had just given a speech in which he had said that of the eight priorities the CBC had, television and radio came last. Here is a story from The Globe and Mail from around that same time that seems to show a kind of parallel shift taking place in our own ABC with that in Canada. It’s a story titled, Why does the CBC compete with newspapers? Here’s what I think is relevant:

The CBC strategy calls for TV/radio to be the lowest priorities and Internet and “mobile” services to be given the highest priority and predicts that by 2020 twice as many people, 18 million per month, will use CBC digital/mobile services.

Until a year or two ago CBC was open about its ambitions to compete with daily newspapers for readers. Here are some past statements by Hubert Lacroix, president of CBC, which show that his current strategy was developed as early as 2008:

“We must be a content company. Don’t think of us…as simply a radio or television broadcaster.”

“…we are now much more a content company than a broadcaster.”

“That means offering audio, video and text content on multiple platforms… We are an integrated content company.”

Compare and contrast with this from the editorial in The Australian today:

The creation of ABC Digital Network is a reckless development, pushing the broadcaster further into the most dynamic area of the media world. Start-ups like Mamamia and Buzzfeed, the entry of Guardian Australia and others, and expansion into apps by traditional media, among other innovations, mean there is more media competition than ever. The ABC is not there to compete against and crowd out new and existing entrants in ultra-competitive areas.

I can only say to you folks in the commercial media you are being surrounded by a billion dollar octopus that will put you out to pasture if it can. A bit of self-interest by the commercial media operators would go a long way to contain what will be an overgrown ideological monster that will be very hard to contain if it is not stopped now.

And just to remind us of the stakes for the Coalition, ABC cuts: Bill Shorten vows to increase funding. There are many ways to get rid of Murdoch and a free press, but the best one of all is to compete them to death through government funding its own media organisation.

Unlike promising no carbon taxes, nobody voted for the Coalition because they promised not to touch the ABC. Circumstances change, and if this is not strangled at birth, you will live to regret this for a very long time to come.

The sheltered workshop of the ABC

What else would you expect from a sheltered workshop. This is by “Louise Evans is a former manager at ABC’s Radio National and former managing editor at The Australian” and titled, The ABC has flab to be cut. It’s not just “flab” but the usual lazy layabout attitudes of anyone in a government sinecure. Listen to this description:

The RN budget was another shock. It was predominantly tied up in wages for 150 people. There was precious little budget to do anything new or innovative and you couldn’t turn any program off, no matter how high its costs and how poor its audience share and reach.

The executive would pander to the whims of celebrity presenters because they gave the ABC “edge and credibility”, yet would take for granted journalistic giants like Fran Kelly and Geraldine Doogue who present world-class programs.

While online rules the media world, trying to get some RN producers to repurpose on-air content for online was like pulling teeth. Plus the systems they were using were archaic, due to a failure to invest in efficient, integrated content-management systems that worked across divisions and on multi platforms, especially on mobile devices.

There was also blatant waste. Taxi dockets were left in unlocked drawers for the taking and elephantine leave balances had been allowed to accumulate. When programs shut down for Christmas, staff would get approval from their executive producers to hang around for a week or two “to tidy things up”. One editor asked for his leave to be cut back by a week because he’d need to pop into work during the holidays to “check emails”.That constituted work.

Yet attempts to tighten basic oversight of taxi use and leave, controls that are the norm in the corporate world, were frowned upon by the ABC executive and actively discouraged as “not the main game”.

Programming and content generation was another shock. While other media organisations live and die by their ratings, circulation and readership figures, some ABC programmers considered ratings irrelevant. Some producers strongly resisted editorial oversight and locked in segments that lacked editorial rigour and relevance. So the weekly Media Report went to air discussing foreign press freedoms while hundreds of Australian journalists were being made redundant just down the road.