An opinion on the ‘EPA Gravy Train’ – and why shutting it down is a good thing | Watts Up With That?

There are few things that really make me angry.  One of them is liars.  The other is corruption and scheming to steal and cheat.

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Like the race baiting industry, many companies payoff their “accusers” to avoid bad press and court/legal fees.  They call it “sue-and-settle” because the Boards of Directors have no spine and their only concern is growing the business.  It wouldn’t surprise me if there is some kind of tax deduction that Congress has allowed for these kinds of settlements so the net effect to the companies is a slap-on-the-wrist and the tax payer is the one to take it in the end, literally.

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So it goes with many other endeavors, especially one called the “environmental lobby.”

Ever wonder what all the lawyers that are churned out by all the law schools around the country, and the world for that matter, do for a living?  They put their clever minds and legal beagle pens to work crafting ways to fleece the golden goose.  And their lobby’s grease the palms of plenty of our so-called “law makers” which is a patently false description if ever there was one, to tilt the playing field in their favor.

Hence, another gravy train is born and the money flows.  Under the last administration, the national debt doubled from $9 TRILLION, that is $9,000,000,000,000.00, yes, count them, twelve (12) zeros there! to more than $18 TRILLION.  Ever ask yourself, just where does all that money go?  Sure, some of you will rightly declare that a goodly portion went to the MIC, the Military Industrial Complex, and the wars in the middle east but that is another gravy train that is being addressed as we speak.

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EPA Sect’y Pruitt is doing a damn fine job as a businessman and an administrator of a department that has gone way off course from it’s legislated mandate.  In business, there are such things as priorities, performance measures, effectiveness and zero based budgeting.  The fact that the government is paying off special interests and their is literally no accounting for this “gravy train” should concern all Americans.  This is stupidity run amok.

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Now you might say, well, you must be a conservative, a Republican for sure.  Well, I might surprise you when I say that I am very much a conservative and that includes taking care of the environment.  But I would be hard pressed to say I am a Republican because I detest most of those in Congress who call themselves “Republicans.”  In name only!  I am a realist when it comes to making trade-offs to using the environment and the needs of people and society at large, however, there are many abuses that occur by public and private companies, organizations and individuals who need to be reigned in and held accountable for their abuses.  This is where justice needs to be applied, not on the individual citizen and his or her liberties as is being done today.  I also do not accept rule by parties outside the US like the United Nations or the EU.  The US is sovereign just as I am a sovereign individual. – Mongoose

 

An opinion on the ‘EPA Gravy Train’ – and why shutting it down is a good thing

Foreword by Paul Dreissen.

Author, advisor and former US Senate aide and Colorado Department of Natural Resources director Greg Walcher has written an important article on how sue-and-settle lawsuits ignored and abused our fundamental rights to legal due process from their very beginning – while enriching the environmentalist groups that brought the legal actions. He also explains why EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt was absolutely right to terminate the practice.

Walcher’s analysis should be read by every legislator, regulator, judge … and actual or potential victim of this infamous practice.


Time to get them off our gravy train

Sue and settle schemes reward pressure groups, and hurt the rest of America

by Greg Walcher

EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt recently issued a directive to end a 20-year string of “sue and settle” cases that have funneled untold millions of tax dollars to environmental organizations. Predictably, those groups and their allies have been apoplectic about it.

Many of these groups have grown from grassroots citizen movements to gigantic cash-flush conglomerates, with much of the cash coming from the government they appear or pretend to be fighting. Many now have separate legal arms with hundreds of attorneys, whose primary job is to sue the government and keep the cash flowing. They are part of the $13-billion-per-year U.S. environmental industry and lobby.

These organizations vehemently object to the phrase “sue and settle,” claiming it oversimplifies a very complex legal procedure. But in fact, the strategy isn’t really very complicated at all.

Congress has created a mess, with all sorts of processes and procedures agencies must follow in making rules and decisions. Every step of the way, those decisions are subject to potential lawsuits. For entirely different reasons, Congress also authorized the government to pay the legal bills of people who are forced to sue to defend their interests against government overreach.

It didn’t take long for clever organizations, and their allies in government, to figure out how to turn that combination into a massive public policy ATM that gives them our money to finance their ideologies, disinformation campaigns, and more activism.

Government officials sometimes get frustrated by that pesky process required to make decisions that they think should be quick and easy. That’s where “sue and settle” comes in.

A “friendly” organization files a lawsuit demanding the very action the officials want to take anyway. So the government agency reaches an out-of-court settlement – often in a carefully selected friendly court – in which the agency agrees to the action demanded by the lawsuit, and agrees to pay the organization’s legal fees as part of its penance.

The court agrees to the settlement, part of which often seals the details (such as legal fees), making it difficult for anyone to track these deals. The parties who are most directly affected by the decisions are left out of the process; they never get to testify, never get their day in court, because the case was settled without going to court.

About 20 years ago, government agencies stopped collecting data on these settlements, so that they were no longer “able to” (or had to) report to Congress on the amount of money involved, or the groups to whom our tax money was being paid. Long-time observers know it amounts to hundreds of millions of dollars over the years, and the recipients are mostly large environmental organizations.

Mr. Pruitt was right to direct an end to such abuses. Almost immediately, a group of 58 former EPA attorneys wrote a letter sharply criticizing his action, arguing that ending the practice will somehow harm the American people, as well as “fair and efficient operations” at EPA. Their letter is 13 pages long and has 23 footnotes, but you have to expect that from lawyers. For anyone who cares to wade through all the verbiage, their explanation is very telling.

The lawyers accuse Pruitt of “attempting to give regulated parties a special and powerful seat at the table with no corresponding role for other members of the public.” In other words, in their view, people who have no direct stake in the ruling should have the same seat at the same table as those directly affected.

They also claim the new directive does “a grave injustice by alleging, without evidence, collusion with outside groups.” They should know; these are some of the same folks who made sure that allegation would be “without evidence,” by hiding the attorney fees, other financial payments and other details of these settlements from Congress and the public.

Most telling of all, though, is this little gem from page eleven: “It is EPA’s failure to comply with legal requirements that is the problem, not the people who sue EPA….”

That is a remarkable contradiction from the letter’s signatories, who began by claiming the Pruitt directive would harm “fair and efficient operations” at EPA. That is, operations under rules that they devised to serve themselves and their allies, agendas and ideologies, especially during the Obama years.

Two more things you should know about the 58 former EPA employees who signed the letter. First, they are partisans who regularly criticize the current Administration. Most of the same people signed a similar letter on April 27, titled “Earth Warms While Trump Ignores Science,” as well as a February 15 letter to senators opposing Pruitt’s confirmation.

Second, and perhaps more important, they are environmental attorneys who object to ending the secretive gravy train that has paid the salaries of environmental attorneys for years. Could some of them now be working for organizations that sue the government, hoping to get their own “fair share” of these lucrative settlements? Might their paychecks actually depend on that very system?

“Sue and settle” is a gravy train never envisioned by Congress. It cannot withstand public scrutiny.

These attorneys ought to recall, and adhere to, the ethics of “Paper Chase” star John Housman, who once touted financial managers who “make money the old fashioned way – they earn it.”

__________

Greg Walcher (www.GregWalcher.com) is president of the Natural Resources Group and author of “Smoking Them Out: The Theft of the Environment and How to Take it Back,” now in its second printing. He is a former head of the Colorado Department of Natural Resources.

via An opinion on the ‘EPA Gravy Train’ – and why shutting it down is a good thing | Watts Up With That?

Merry Christmas to All !!

Merry ChristmasIt used to be a very simple and welcomed greeting at home, in the workplace and wherever you shopped.  But somehow, on the heels of the over commercialization of this special event, the SJW crowd has turned it into a holiday for every religion as a way to negate the Christian aspect of the day.

This has nothing to do with any other religion or day of worship even if it conveniently coincides with the calendar timing.  It does not have to do with the historical accuracy of actual day of Christ’s birth as many detractors try to point out.  It has everything to do with event that did happen, the event in which God sent His only son, to be born as a human being, to show us as a living example, how to live among men.  He brings to life, in flesh and blood, the Word of God, which is depicted in the Bible.

So if you find yourself questioning the need or the reason for all the “celebrating” that goes on at this time of year, remember to keep your eye on the prize.  It is not about gifts, it is not about food, it is not about parties and get-togethers, although those are well and good and enjoyable for everyone.  The focus is and should be on the word “CHRISTmas.”

And don’t fall prey to the brainless efficiency that perpetuates the moronic “Xmas” message.  The use of the “X” completely negates Christ in the word and makes the holiday truly a secular event, something that many like to see happen.  They like this because Christians believe in an Almighty being, creator of all, who gave us his Son as a way of salvation, and the decision is given to each of us to accept that gift.  But people don’t like responsibility, they don’t like standards especially when those rules encroach on their freedom to live how they want.  After all, God did give us free will.  But along with free will come consequences.  You can choose to do things the right way or the wrong way.  Your choice.  Standards by their nature are things to be achieved, goals to be worked towards, aspired to.  People need inspiration and challenges to aspire to and none are better than to excel at being a godly person in the image of Christ.

God does not promise us a problem free existence in this life.  However, if we work to live by his rules, “The 10 Commandments” are the best summary, then we have the best chance of staying on the path to a righteous life, one that will most closely emulate that of His son, Jesus Christ. – Mongoose

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Operation Paperclip: Nazi science goes West — Secret History — Sott.net

Secret History

Operation Paperclip: Nazi science goes West

Operation Paperclip

The bleak truth is that a careful review of the activities of the CIA and the organizations from which it sprang reveals an intense preoccupation with the development of techniques of behavior control, brainwashing, and covert medical and psychic experimentation on unwitting subjects including religious sects, ethnic minorities, prisoners, mental patients, soldiers and the terminally ill. The rationale for such activities, the techniques and indeed the human subjects chosen show an extraordinary and chilling similarity to Nazi experiments.

This similarity becomes less surprising when we trace the determined and often successful efforts of US intelligence officers to acquire the records of Nazi experiments, and in many cases to recruit the Nazi researchers themselves and put them to work, transferring the laboratories from Dachau, the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute, Auschwitz and Buchenwald to Edgewood Arsenal, Fort Detrick, Huntsville Air Force Base, Ohio State, and the University of Washington.

As Allied forces crossed the English Channel during the D-Day invasion of June 1944, some 10,000 intelligence officers known as T-Forces were right behind the advance battalions. Their mission: seize munitions experts, technicians, German scientists and their research materials, along with French scientists who had collaborated with the Nazis. Soon a substantial number of such scientists had been picked up and placed in an internment camp known as the Dustbin. In the original planning for the mission a prime factor was the view that German military equipment – tanks, jets, rocketry and so forth – was technically superior and that captured scientists, technicians and engineers could be swiftly debriefed in an effort by the Allies to catch up.

Then, in December 1944, Bill Donovan, head of the OSS, and Allen Dulles, OSS head of intelligence operations in Europe operating out of Switzerland, strongly urged FDR to approve a plan allowing Nazi intelligence officers, scientists and industrialists to be “given permission for entry into the United States after the war and the placing of their earnings on deposit in an American bank and the like.”FDR swiftly turned the proposal down, saying, “We expect that the number of Germans who are anxious to save their skins and property will rapidly increase. Among them may be some who should properly be tried for war crimes, or at least arrested for active participation in Nazi activities. Even with the necessary controls you mention, I am not prepared to authorize the giving of guarantees.”

But this presidential veto was a dead letter even as it was being formulated. Operation Overcast was certainly under way by July 1945, approved by the Joint Chiefs of Staff to bring into the US 350 German scientists, including Werner Von Braun and his V2 rocket team, chemical weapons designers, and artillery and submarine engineers. There had been some theoretical ban on Nazis being imported, but this was as empty as FDR’s edict. The Overcast shipment included such notorious Nazis and SS officers as Von Braun, Dr. Herbert Axster, Dr. Arthur Rudolph and Georg Richkey.

To read the rest of the story, please click the following link:

via Operation Paperclip: Nazi science goes West — Secret History — Sott.net

Mueller’s Credibility Problem – WSJ

Mueller’s Credibility Problem

The special counsel is stonewalling Congress and protecting the FBI.

Robert Mueller
Robert Mueller PHOTO: THEW/EPA-EFE/REX/SHUTTERSTOCK/EPA/SHUTTERSTOCK

Donald Trump is his own worst enemy, as his many ill-advised tweets on the weekend about Michael Flynn, the FBI and Robert Mueller’s Russia probe demonstrate. But that doesn’t mean that Mr. Mueller and the Federal Bureau of Investigation deserve a pass about their motives and methods, as new information raises troubling questions.

The Washington Post and the New York Times reported Saturday that a lead FBI investigator on the Mueller probe, Peter Strzok, was demoted this summer after it was discovered he’d sent anti- Trump texts to a mistress. As troubling, Mr. Mueller and the Justice Department kept this information from House investigators, despite Intelligence Committee subpoenas that would have exposed those texts. They also refused to answer questions about Mr. Strzok’s dismissal and refused to make him available for an interview.

The news about Mr. Strzok leaked only when the Justice Department concluded it couldn’t hold out any longer, and the stories were full of spin that praised Mr. Mueller for acting “swiftly” to remove the agent. Only after these stories ran did Justice agree on Saturday to make Mr. Strzok available to the House.

This is all the more notable because Mr. Strzok was a chief lieutenant to former FBI Director James Comey and played a lead role investigating alleged coordination between the Trump campaign and Russia during the 2016 election. Mr. Mueller then gave him a top role in his special-counsel probe. And before all this Mr. Strzok led the investigation into Hillary Clinton’s emails and sat in on the interview she gave to the FBI shortly before Mr. Comey publicly exonerated her in violation of Justice Department practice.

Oh, and the woman with whom he supposedly exchanged anti-Trump texts, FBI lawyer Lisa Page, worked for both Mr. Mueller and deputy FBI director Andrew McCabe, who was accused of a conflict of interest in the Clinton probe when it came out that Clinton allies had donated to the political campaign of Mr. McCabe’s wife. The texts haven’t been publicly released, but it’s fair to assume their anti-Trump bias must be clear for Mr. Mueller to reassign such a senior agent.

There is no justification for withholding all of this from Congress, which is also investigating Russian influence and has constitutional oversight authority. Justice and the FBI have continued to defy legal subpoenas for documents pertaining to both surveillance warrants and the infamous Steele dossier that was financed by the Clinton campaign and relied on anonymous Russian sources.

While there is no evidence so far of Trump-Russia collusion, House investigators have turned up enough material to suggest that anti-Trump motives may have driven Mr. Comey’s FBI investigation. The public has a right to know whether the Steele dossier inspired the Comey probe, and whether it led to intrusive government eavesdropping on campaign satellites such as Carter Page.

All of this reinforces our doubts about Mr. Mueller’s ability to conduct a fair and credible probe of the FBI’s considerable part in the Russia-Trump drama. Mr. Mueller ran the bureau for 12 years and is fast friends with Mr. Comey, whose firing by Mr. Trump triggered his appointment as special counsel. The reluctance to cooperate with a congressional inquiry compounds doubts related to this clear conflict of interest.

***

Mr. Mueller’s media protectorate argues that anyone critical of the special counsel is trying to cover for Mr. Trump. But the alleged Trump-Russia ties are the subject of numerous probes—Mr. Mueller’s, and those of various committees in the House and Senate. If there is any evidence of collusion, Democrats and Mr. Mueller’s agents will make sure it is spread far and wide.

Yet none of this means the public shouldn’t also know if, and how, America’s most powerful law-enforcement agency was influenced by Russia or partisan U.S. actors. All the more so given Mr. Comey’s extraordinary intervention in the 2016 campaign, which Mrs. Clinton keeps saying turned the election against her. The history of the FBI is hardly without taint.

Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who appointed Mr. Mueller, is also playing an increasingly questionable role in resisting congressional oversight. Justice has floated multiple reasons for ignoring House subpoenas, none of them persuasive.

First it claimed cooperation would hurt the Mueller probe, but his prosecutions are proceeding apace. Then Justice claimed that providing House investigators with classified material could hurt security or sources. But House Intelligence Chairman Devin Nunes has as broad a security clearance as nearly anyone in government. Recently Justice said it can’t interfere with a probe by the Justice Department Inspector General—as if an IG trumps congressional oversight.

Mr. Nunes is understandably furious at the Strzok news, on top of the other stonewalling. He asked Justice to meet the rest of his committee’s demands by close of business Monday, and if it refuses Congress needs to pursue contempt citations against Mr. Rosenstein and new FBI Director Christopher Wray.

The latest news supports our view that Mr. Mueller is too conflicted to investigate the FBI and should step down in favor of someone more credible. The investigation would surely continue, though perhaps with someone who doesn’t think his job includes protecting the FBI and Mr. Comey from answering questions about their role in the 2016 election.

 

Appeared in the December 5, 2017, print edition.

via Mueller’s Credibility Problem – WSJ

*****

And the plot thickens.

Nothing has been found in months of investigation to implicate President Trump of anything “Russian” and the 2016 election.

However, much has been found out about:

Hillary, Uranium One, the Steele Dossier, the FBI, and a host of questionable characters in the Justice Department who all have knives out for Trump blood.  Voter fraud, stealing the Democrat nomination from Bernie Sanders, media fraud and debate questions leaked to Hillary are but a few of the things that should be prosecuted as crimes.  Crimes against the American people for which ample evidence applies.  And then there are the blockers like James Comey who put themselves out front to clear the path for Hillary by creating a scene full of FUD, Fear – Uncertainty – Doubt in which to lock up people and their voting intentions.

I am glad that at least a sizable portion of this country has citizens who can still think critically about what is going on and not just play the part of lemmings following a loser over the cliff to their destruction.  What we are now witnessing is the implosion of the liberal/socialist movement in America.  I won’t say it is dying because it isn’t, unfortunately.  Like cockroaches, they will always find a way to survive, come back and re-infest what others have built.

In my book, this special counsel and investigation has always been a big waste of everyone’s time and money.  It was purely a political witch hunt and it should never have occurred and it should be shut down immediately. – Mongoose

“You Can Be Sure …” by CoyotePrime at runningcauseicantfly.blogspot.com

From Clipboard

“You Can Be Sure…”

“Never, ever forget that nothing in this life is free. Life demands payment in some form for your “right” to express yourself, to condemn and abuse the evil surrounding us. Expect to pay… it will come for you, they will come for you, regardless. Knowing that, give them Hell itself every chance you can. Expect no mercy, and give none. That’s how life works. Be ready to pay for what you do, or be a coward, pretend you don’t see, don’t know, and cry bitter tears over how terrible things are, over how you let them become.”
– “For Whom the Bell Tolls”

“The world breaks everyone and afterward many are strong at the broken places. But those that will not break it kills. It kills the very good and the very gentle and the very brave impartially. If you are none of these you can be sure it will kill you too but there will be no special hurry.”
– “A Farewell to Arms”

“Man is not made for defeat. A man can be destroyed but not defeated.”
– “The Old Man and the Sea”

– Ernest Hemingway
POSTED BY COYOTE PRIME AT 3:24 PM

via Running ‘Cause I Can’t Fly: “You Can Be Sure…”