The Respectfully Republican Conversation

Options
1173174176178179252

Comments

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009

    Rocky, there are the one's that HATE Pres Bush...you heard "Bush Derangement Syndrome." 

    This is a funny article. Krauthammer is also a psychiatrist.

    Bush Derangement Syndrome
    Charles Krauthammer
    Friday, December 05, 2003

    Diane Rehm: ``Why do you think he (Bush) is suppressing that (Sept. 11) report?''

    Howard Dean: ``I don't know. There are many theories about it. The most interesting theory that I've heard so far -- which is nothing more than a theory, it can't be proved -- is that he was warned ahead of time by the Saudis. Now who knows what the real situation is?''

    -- ``Diane Rehm Show,'' NPR, Dec. 1

    It has been 25 years since I discovered a psychiatric syndrome (for the record: ``Secondary Mania,'' Archives of General Psychiatry, November 1978), and in the interim I haven't been looking for new ones. But it's time to don the white coat again. A plague is abroad in the land.

    Bush Derangement Syndrome: the acute onset of paranoia in otherwise normal people in reaction to the policies, the presidency -- nay -- the very existence of George W. Bush.

    Now, I cannot testify to Howard Dean's sanity before this campaign, but five terms as governor by a man with no visible tics and no history of involuntary confinement is pretty good evidence of a normal mental status. When he avers, however, that ``the most interesting'' theory as to why the president is ``suppressing'' the 9/11 report is that Bush knew about 9/11 in advance, it's time to check on thorazine supplies.

    When Rep. Cynthia McKinney first broached this idea before the 2002 primary election, it was considered so nutty it helped make her former Rep. McKinney. Today the Democratic presidential front-runner professes agnosticism as to whether the president of the United States was tipped off about 9/11 by the Saudis, and it goes unnoticed. The virus is spreading.

    It is, of course, epidemic in New York's Upper West Side and the tonier parts of Los Angeles, where the very sight of the president -- say, smiling while holding a tray of Thanksgiving turkey in a Baghdad mess hall -- caused dozens of cases of apoplexy in otherwise healthy adults. What is worrying epidemiologists about the Dean incident, however, is that heretofore no case had been reported in Vermont, or any other dairy state.

    Moreover, Dean is very smart. Until now, Bush Derangement Syndrome (BDS) had generally struck people with previously compromised intellectual immune systems. Hence its prevalence in Hollywood. Barbra Streisand, for example, wrote her famous September 2002 memo to Dick Gephardt warning that the president was dragging us toward war to satisfy, among the usual corporate malefactors who ``clearly have much to gain if we go to war against Iraq,'' the logging industry -- timber being a major industry in a country that is two-thirds desert.

    It is true that BDS has struck some pretty smart guys -- Bill Moyers ranting about a ``right-wing wrecking crew'' engaged in ``a deliberate, intentional destruction of the United States way of governing'' and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman, whose recent book attacks the president so virulently that Krugman's British publisher saw fit to adorn the cover with images of Dick Cheney in a Hitler-like mustache and Bush stitched-up like Frankenstein. Nonetheless, some observers took that to be satire; others wrote off Moyers and Krugman as simple aberrations, the victims of too many years of neurologically hazardous punditry.

    That's what has researchers so alarmed about Dean. He had none of the usual risk factors: Dean has never opined for a living, and has no detectable sense of humor. Even worse is the fact that he is now exhibiting symptoms of a related illness, Murdoch Derangement Syndrome (MDS), in which otherwise normal people believe that their minds are being controlled by a single, very clever Australian.

    Chris Matthews: ``Would you break up Fox?''

    Howard Dean: ``On ideological grounds, absolutely yes, but ... I don't want to answer whether I would break up Fox or not. ... What I'm going to do is appoint people to the FCC that believe democracy depends on getting information from all portions of the political spectrum, not just one.''

    Some clinicians consider this delusion -- that Americans can only get their news from one part of the political spectrum -- the gravest of all. They report that no matter how many times sufferers in padded cells are presented with flash cards with the symbols ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, MSNBC, NPR, PBS, Time, Newsweek, New York Times, Washington Post, L.A. Times -- they remain unresponsive, some in a terrifying near-catatonic torpor.

    The sad news is that there is no cure. But there is hope. There are many fine researchers seeking that cure. Your donation to the BDS Foundation, no matter how small, can help. Mailing address: Republican National Committee, Washington DC, Attention: psychiatric department. Just make sure your amount does not exceed $2,000 ($4,000 for a married couple).

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009

    Very good opinion piece.

    Bush Derangement Syndrome

    National Review Online: Is The Widespread Spite Against The 43rd President Rational?

    Dec. 5, 2008

     

       


    (National Review Online) This column was written by Jason Lee Steorts.

    Yesterday I wrote some thoughts about the shallowness of the "Is social conservatism ruining the Republican party?" debate. I said it distracts attention from a number of distinctions that merit consideration if we wish to understand people's political allegiances. Today I'd like briefly to consider these distinctions' application to one issue and one man: the Iraq War and George W. Bush.

    I will not try to justify any judgment of either, although my opinions will show through; let's save the justifying for another day. What I wish to do instead is offer some broad-brushstroke description of the way Bush and the war have come to be seen, in slow motion and over many years. These brushstrokes are the landscape upon which voters formed many more particular views. Consider what I say in the light of your own observations and ask whether it contains any truth.

    I'll organize my comments with reference to the distinctions I introduced yesterday, though the order will be different.

    Brand-name voting versus rational-analysis voting.

    What I think is that the Iraq War ruined President Bush's brand and President Bush ruined the Republican brand. I think that's what sank us in 2006 and 2008. Sure, there were scandals, there was rampant spending and government bloat, there was a charismatic Democratic nominee, and in the final weeks of the '08 campaign there was a financial crisis that sealed John McCain's fate. But I think it was his fate. It probably would have been the fate of any Republican nominee.

    Bush survived the '04 election largely by running a national-security campaign. The memory of 9/11 was fresh and Iraq had not yet descended into the sectarian bloodbath that turned "We can't police a civil war" into a pungent sound bite. (The Golden Mosque bombing, recall, happened in early 2006.) It helped in '04 that the Democrats nominated a man with the warmth and charisma of Massachusetts cod. The WMD hadn't turned up and there was a growing consensus that the war had been fought on a false premise, but the feeling was still: It's a dangerous world, and now is no time to rock the boat.

    Then Iraq really went to hell. A perceived mistake became a perceived catastrophe, and most people just wanted to be done with it. They wanted to be done, too, with the man and the party who had brought it to them.

    These attitudes were not, in my opinion, the product of rational analysis, because the impulse behind them was more punitive than corrective, more backward- than forward-looking. Was the Iraq War unwinnable in 2006? Manifestly not, as the surge has shown. Was there serious discussion in 2006 of whether the war was unwinnable? Not really. A relative handful of specialists debated the question, but in the main one side asserted yes, the other no, and that was that.

    To my mind, this was a frightening thing. It would have behooved us, amidst all the recriminations, to spend some time on questions like these: How does one recognize an unwinnable war? Should we be thinking in binary alternatives - winnable versus unwinnable - or should we be looking at things probabilistically? Should we be making, that is, a cost-benefit analysis - and what is the right analysis here? What are the consequences of this defeat? Does it embolden al-Qaeda? Does it destabilize the region further? How about Iran - will it not gain tremendously from our loss? And that's not to mention the human cost: After what we have put the Iraqis through, should we not demand a very high standard of certainty that the war is in fact unwinnable before abandoning them? But that framework isn't suited to vengeance - and we were out for blood.

    Social issues versus moral issues.

    Say what you will about Bush's social conservatism, it was nothing new. In fact, it fell short of many social conservatives' expectations. New was: Halliburton blood for oil torture Guantanamo domestic spying extraordinary rendition - plus ample (and amply televised) doses of death death death death death.

    Consider the remarkable traction of the slander that "Bush lied, people died." I had variations of it repeated to me by many well-educated non-extremists. None of them could justify it beyond pointing out that WMD stockpiles had not been found in Iraq. If you told them that the administration's claims about Iraqi WMD were consistent with the views of just about every intelligence agency in the world, and that there is a difference between a lie and a mistake, they hardly cared. If you explained that, had the administration really been after Saddam's oil, there were much cheaper ways of getting it, they hardly cared. They just knew Bush was a liar.

    It is a special irony that the president who spoke in the most idealistic language since JFK has been branded a tyrant. Criticize his "freedom agenda" if you like, but don't tell me he didn't mean it. Decry his judgment if you like, but don't tell me he is unmoved by suffering. Is there a president in living memory who cried more in public than Bush did? There he was with wounded troops, tearing up; there he was on TV talking about a 9/11 orphan, his lip quivering. Compassionate conservatism, expanded welfare state, funding for AIDS treatment in Africa on a scale that dwarfed Bill Clinton's efforts - but it didn't matter, because everyone just knew Bush was full of malice.

    Then lo, who should appear but a messiah? It was Barack Obama's genius to offer, not an alternative platform, but an alternative brand sold as a secular religion. "Hope" and "change you can believe in" would in other elections have been banalities, but in this election, context became content, and the content was contrastive: roughly, the Prince of Darkness versus the Light of the World.

    Of course, Obama had some help.

    Influencers versus influenced.

    The elites and intellectuals (as defined yesterday), far from being immune to Obama's stylistic seduction, were uniquely susceptible to it. Much more than the public at large, they look down on Bush's Texas twang, his dropped g's, his "nucular," his Evangelical Christianity, his lapel pin. They prefer the ethics of the ACLU and the English of law professors.

    That preference is relevant to understanding the psychotic hatred many of them directed at Sarah Palin. Sure, she made mistakes - but weren't they listening to Joe Biden's gaffes? His making up of facts in the vice-presidential debate? Biden, however, has trained himself to talk like them. Palin bears the cultural markers of a W. - the dropped g's, the "nucular," the Evangelical Christianity. If you hated him, you hated her in equal measure, and then you hated her a little more for reminding you of him.

    That the influencers tended to see Bush as a jingoistic, fundamentalist idiot rather than a worthy adversary with whom they had profound disagreements inevitably influenced their presentation of his policies. They are supposed to specialize in nuance and subtlety; the assessment of a war fought against an appallingly cruel autocrat, on the basis of flawed but sincerely believed intelligence, would seem to cry out for such virtues. Their narrative instead combined the nuance of an infomercial with the subtlety of a morality play. Again, think what you will of Bush's policies - but don't tell me you arrived at a thoughtful view of them by reading the fulminations of Paul Krugman and Frank Rich.

    The influencers convinced the public that the war had been a mistake but failed to get it thinking about how the mistake should be managed. They convinced the public that the war had been wrong but failed to get it thinking about whether we could right the wrong. And when the tide turned - when Iraq stabilized, and we started to win after all - they offered the public a yawn.

    ***

    I have much sympathy for our 43rd president. I think a good, maybe even a great man has been vilified. It's fine with me if you disagree. But it is not fine with me, and it should not be fine with you, and it is not good for any of us, that the discourse surrounding this man has been so foolish.

    I've dwelt on the foolishness because I think it is relevant to what I said yesterday about communication: about the need to justify our beliefs from the ground up, in a way comprehensible and persuasive to those who don't already hold them.

    I am fond of Bush's colloquial, unpretentious English, and law professors bore me to death - but Bush is not a gifted extemporaneous speaker. Would the received wisdom about the war be quite what it is had it been justified with the suave articulacy and command of detail of a Mitt Romney? I can't know, but I suspect not.

    Bush also seems to have made a decision to put on an air of certainty, even as the public's doubts grew. I recall his saying, in response to a question about this certainty, that the commander-in-chief must appear strong and confident for the sake of the troops. (I paraphrase.) That seems right, to a point. But the president must also reassure the people he leads that he understands their concerns. Here too I think Bush fell short.

    After the failure to find WMD in Iraq, he might have done much more to control the terms of debate. He might have explained - again and again and again - that the war's justification depended not only on what Saddam had done, but on what Saddam might do. He might have said this in regular press conferences, not occasional speeches. He might have personally announced the intelligence discoveries in post-war Iraq, which left no doubt that Hussein intended to reconstitute his WMD programs as soon as U.N. sanctions were lifted. He might have talked in concrete terms about the strategic stakes, the price of losing. He might have told the public: "Look, we've made some great big mistakes, but they were honest mistakes, and we still need to win, and this is how we'll do it" - and he might have told them this long before the '06 midterm rout.

    In March of 2003, the American people had a very clear idea of why they were going to war, and that idea was: WMD. When the question became instead whether to stay at war, they never heard anything like the best possible affirmative answer. Giving the best answer is all the more important when you're up against cultural gatekeepers who despise you and the policy you're justifying puts a lot of blood on TV. Neutralizing those disadvantages would have been beyond the power of any president, but I think Bush could have done better, and I think we should learn from his mistakes.

    All right, that'll do for today. Return tomorrow, if you'd like, for the final installment of these ramblings, in which I'll tell about my uncomfortable relationship with opinion journalism.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009

    The N. Y. Times is lining up too if their paper stays survives long enough.

  • pinoideae
    pinoideae Member Posts: 1,271
    edited January 2009

    Two interesting articles Shirley.

  • pinoideae
    pinoideae Member Posts: 1,271
    edited January 2009

    Obama's visit an 'important statement,' diplomat says

    Updated Sun. Jan. 11 2009 2:12 PM ET

    CTV.ca News Staff

    A former U.S. ambassador to Canada says it's an "important statement" that president-elect Barack Obama will make his first foreign visit to Canada after his inauguration.

    Obama is reviving the longstanding tradition after it was broken by President George Bush, who chose to visit Mexico instead.

    Speaking Sunday on CTV's Question Period, Gordon Giffin said the move is an effort by Obama to reach out to his country's biggest trading partner and forge a new relationship that is based on working together both on North American issues and on the world stage.

    "It's a significant indication of the level of importance that the Obama team places in our friendship with Canada, our alliance with Canada and our neighbourhood with Canada," Giffin said. "So I think this is an important statement."

    Giffin speculated that Obama won't meet with Prime Minister Stephen Harper armed with a list of objectives.

    However, the two are expected to discuss a wide range of issues, including the economy, the struggling auto industry, the environment and energy initiatives.

    The two may also agree to work together on an Afghanistan policy, as Obama attempts to move forward an expanded U.S. military role in the country as Canada's mission winds down.

    Whatever the topics of discussion, Giffin said the visit will lay the groundwork for a new relationship between the U.S. government and its allies.

    "I think this is the beginning of an initiative by the president, to be followed up around the world by our new secretary of state, to evidence to our friends and allies around the world that we're back in the mode of listening to our friends, and talking with our friends, and co-ordinating with our friends, as opposed to sitting in Washington and instructing our friends," Giffin said.

    He also speculated that Obama would meet with Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff if the two men's schedules allowed for it.

    While on the campaign trail, Obama often spoke about the possibility of re-negotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement.

    However, Liberal MP Bob Rae said that neither the U.S. nor Canada should seek to alter their trade policies.

    "I don't think either one of us can afford to go off on protectionist tangents," Rae told Question Period. "We have created this integrated marketplace over several decades and there's no going back."

    Both Conservative MP Peter Kent, minister of state for foreign affairs, and NDP foreign affairs critic Paul Dewar, said that the two leaders should focus discussions on the ongoing economic crisis.

    The two countries' economies are so highly integrated that Obama and Harper must work together on investment, trade and manufacturing issues, they said.

    "We need to get down to the hard work of getting our economies straightened out and the only way we do that is working with the Obama administration to ensure that we have fair trade, but also that we re-organize key areas, like the manufacturing area," Dewar told Question Period. "Otherwise they're not going to be doing well and Canada's going to be hurting because we so desperately rely on their economy."

  • vivre
    vivre Member Posts: 2,167
    edited January 2009

     Summer quoted:

    A former U.S. ambassador to Canada says it's an "important statement" that president-elect Barack Obama will make his first foreign visit to Canada after his inauguration.

    Obama is reviving the longstanding tradition after it was broken by President George Bush, who chose to visit Mexico instead.

    I hate to burst your bubble Summer, but Obama had a meeting with the Mexican president yesterday. I guess your media still is drinking the Obama koolaid. I wonder how the canadian press will feel when oblahblah kowtows to the labor unions and gets rid of free trade as he promised them.

    Oh yeah, he promised everyone the sun and the moon, we will see how many excuses he comes up with for not being able to fulfill his promises. Now that he is beginning to understand that we cannot close Gitmo because no one wants these criminals, he is saying that he will not have time to deal with it for a while. He promised all these tax cuts to convince that poor lady from detroit that she will not have to worry about her car payments anymore. Now he is saying the economy is too weak for tax cuts. He is a master politician. Just promise the folks everything and then use your charm to convince them they really do not need it when you cannot give it to him. We will be seeing a lot of this.

  • vivre
    vivre Member Posts: 2,167
    edited January 2009

    Great analogy Sherri. I have longed felt that Obama is the snake hiding in the grass. Sadly, even when the snake is slithering around in snowy Chicago, people still think that he is harmless because even snakes are cute to some people.

    I am so glad that I no longer have any lumps in my breasts but the big lump in my throat, put there because of the fear that this man will destroy this country is choking me. I truly HOPE he will CHANGE his mind on all his promises and do the right thing. I just cannot get over the fact that the same people who have destroyed the great state of Illinois will now be in charge of the whole country. My only hope is that, as in Illinois, when they get all the power and can no longer blame the other party, their infighting will eventually bring them down.

  • mke
    mke Member Posts: 584
    edited January 2009

    Summer may have some bubbles, but I don't think you hit one Vivre.  The first sentence clearly says the first foreign visit AFTER the inauguration.  The media reported his Mexico visit as well as his European tour before he was president elect.

    To me it seems like a factual article, not evidence of KoolAid.  I don't know whether Obama will try to get rid of NAFTA or not.  It wouldn't necessarily be to Canada's disadvantage in the long run, but certainly would be in the short run.  However I agree with Bob Rae, there is really no going back to put the genie in the bottle, it's entirely too entangled now. 

  • Paulette531
    Paulette531 Member Posts: 738
    edited January 2009

    Sherri...to answer your question about Obama followers waking up one morning and realizing they have been fooled...they may but in psych that scenario is called the cognitive dissonance theory and more than likely they will rationalize their choice...it is human nature!

  • moodyk13
    moodyk13 Member Posts: 1,180
    edited January 2009

    Good gosh Shirley, must you always post a novel?       Actually, I am stalking everyone on this thread.  I have an agreement with a few pilots that are in the Airforce---see, I caught them stalking me, and I promised no to report them, if they would fly me around the country.

    How else, would I know about IBC, and how else could I have gotten that slimfast to rock

    And ya'll thought I was just another pretty face.......

  • moodyk13
    moodyk13 Member Posts: 1,180
    edited January 2009

    Let's see how many bands I can remember:  Pink Floyd, AC/DC, Led Zepplin, FogHat, Mothers Finest, BlackFoot, Allman Brothers, Genesis, Paul McCartney and Wings, Earth-Wind-Fire, Atlanta Rythym Section, ELO, Foreigner, Molly Hatchet, ZZ-Top, Journey, Styx, REO Speedwagon, Def Leopard, Lynard Synard, Bily Squire, Heart, Loverboy, Van Halen, Steppenwolf, Kansas, MoodyBlues, Pat Benetar, The Pretenders, Alan Parson Project, The Eagles, Bread, Merle Haggard, Hank Williams Jr., Travis Tritt, The Carpentars, Kenny Rogers, Barry Manillow, SuperTramp, Elton John, George Thurgood, Jefferson Airplane & Starship, Rolling Stones,  and now my head hurts so I'm stopping........

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009

    Creedence Clearwater, Black Oak Arkansas

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009

    Three Dog Night

  • vivre
    vivre Member Posts: 2,167
    edited January 2009

    You are all showing your age.LOL

    Joy to the World

    All the boys and girls

    Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea

    Joy to you and me. . .

    Oh, I remember hearing that song, driving down the street with my hunky high school heartthrob, as he sang loudly. Those were the days my friend, we thought they'd never end . . .

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009

    Ah yes....who can forget "Alice's Restaurant'!  A classic.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009

    This is a poor recording but you can still walk down memory lane

    Alice's Restaurant

  • vivre
    vivre Member Posts: 2,167
    edited January 2009

    Okay, now that you are namedropping Sherri,

    I went to high school with Carla DeVito, who sang with Meatloaf. So take that you country girl! LOL

    I am watching the Hillary hearings, listening to all her cronies toss her little nerf balls and pile on the accolades.  I cannot help but get mad at the tone of these hearings when the dems are approving one of their own, in contrast to the nastiness that they show when they were questioning a Bush nominee. Looks like Hillary will not have to answer any of the questions we would really like answered:

    Questions Hillary needs to answer by Rowan Scarborough

    http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=30248

    Then, just as the senator from South Carolina comes on to ask a few hard ball questions, I hope, cspan cuts to a house vote. What the heck???

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009

    Oh I was watching some tapes of Hillary --- talk about bad hair days!!

    ----------

    Shirley, I just don't understand where people get off crying for Bush to be criminally prosecuted.  I also don't understand the venom of some people over there, the hatred.  Why was it ok to hang an Obama poster but it is racially insensitive to hang a McCain/Palin poster, that it made this person sick?  How does she think the Obama poster made some people feel?  Some people are sick about his election too ... 

    I have visited some political boards and there is not the same hatred. I think that the other boards I have seen have more middle of the road Dems ... because not EVERYONE is spewing out their guts about Bush. 

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009

    Vivre, you talking about "The Hillary Show?"  Smile  I watched about two minutes of it.

    Moody, very interesting novel...worth the read.  Wink

    I didn't go to school with any famous people.

    Carla Thomas (Gee Whiz, Look at His Eyes), Aretha Franklin ( too many songs to list), Claudine Clark (Party Lights), The Shirelles(Mama Says), Buddy Holly and the Crickets (killed in plane crash with The Big Bopper), and a WHOLE BUNCH more of the REAL, REAL oldies.  However, when the music changed to head banging music I CHANGED to country. 

    So, Sherri, I'm jealous that you know Vince Gill and Garth.

    Are any of you OLD enough who watched the Micky Mouse Club?  Or Bandstand when they were in Philly?  Awww, the good OLD days. Laughing 

    Shirley

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009
    Rocky, I don't know why some people have Bush Derangement Syndrome.  Perhaps it's because he stood firm for what he believed.  The war is a biggy just like the article said.  And now that it's going better we hear nothing about it.  There's still violence in Iraq, but not to the degree it was before the surge.  I want the war in Iraq and Afghanistan to succed for the sake of the people who live there.  Not for us (the U.S.), but for them.
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009

    Vivre, I think Meatloaf was on Hannity's new show last night.

  • Paulette531
    Paulette531 Member Posts: 738
    edited January 2009

    So...this is an interesting article...should we refer to him as "Geithner the non-taxpaying blah blah blah" or just let him slide and accept he made a mistake or didn't realize some things or WTF ever! LMAO!

    Source: Treasury nominee failed to pay taxes

    By BRETT J. BLACKLEDGE, Associated Press Writer Brett J. Blackledge, Associated Press Writer - 26 mins ago

    WASHINGTON - President-elect Barack Obama's choice to run the Treasury Department and lead the economic rescue effort disclosed to senators Tuesday that he failed to pay $34,000 in taxes from 2001 to 2004, a last-minute complication in an otherwise smooth path to confirmation.

    Timothy Geithner paid most of the past-due taxes days before Obama announced his nomination in November, an Obama transition official said. The unpaid taxes were discovered by Obama's transition team while investigating Geithner's background, the official said.

    The transition official requested anonymity because the source was not authorized to discuss Geithner's situation.

    Obama reiterated his support Tuesday for Geithner as senators who are considering the appointment quizzed Geithner behind closed doors.

    "He's dedicated his career to our country and served with honor, intelligence and distinction," incoming White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said. "That service should not be tarnished by honest mistakes, which, upon learning of them, he quickly addressed."

    Geithner failed to pay self-employment taxes for money he earned while working for the International Monetary Fund from 2001 to 2003, the transition official said. In 2006, the IRS notified him that he owed $14,847 in self-employment taxes and $2,383 in penalties from 2003 and 2004.

    Transition officials discovered last fall that Geithner also had not paid the taxes in 2001 or 2002. He paid $25,970 in taxes and interest for those years several days before Obama announced his nomination, the transition official said.

    Geithner also didn't realize a housekeeper he paid in 2004 and 2005 did not have current employment documentation as an immigrant for the final three months she worked for him, the transition official said.

    Geithner is the second Obama nominee to face controversy. New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson withdrew his name on Jan. 4 as Obama's Commerce secretary after questions surfaced about an ongoing federal investigation.

  • ijl
    ijl Member Posts: 897
    edited January 2009

    Sherri,

     I thought it is legal to deduct summer camp fees, since the kids are taken care of in summer camp. I know I did it and it was legal.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009

    Sherri, I was going to say the same thing that ilj said.  Some programs are called Summer Camp because the parents go to work and the kids have to stay there all day.  Field trips, arts and crafts, etc are provided.  But kids have to go to After-school programs during the school year and Summer Camp when off track.  I certainly take the tax deduction, too!

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009

    Sherri, if I were sending my dd away, I would write off the amount of the normal day camp and accept the difference for the going away camp.  But let me share with you, full time care when they are on vacations is expensive!!  I pay between $150-180 a week for care depending on how many days she goes (and that doesn't even count Saturday day-care)

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009

    Let me tell you a little about my dh.  He fills out our income tax and he reports ALL income.  Last year all he worked contracting was somewhere over $700..not much more.  He called the company because they hadn't sent his 1099 (or whatever he needed..shows you how much I know).  Anyway, they check and said they must not have sent him one and that they wouldn't send him one....I guess due to the amount he made.  The man put it on the income tax ANYWAY.  He said he didn't want to be audited and it would be his luck that he would be.  Honest?  Yep. 

    The other day I took a 30 day prescription to Wal Mart because I had to mail off my 90 day one.  The lady at the pharmacy was kind enough to ring up the other two or three items I had because no one was behind me.  I looked at my receipt and the script wasn't on it.  I thought something wasn't right.  I turned around and told her..she checked the bag to see if it was in there..it was and she didn't charge me.  She thanked me and I told her I didn't want to get her in trouble..she said she would have been in trouble...that $10 would have come out of her pocket.

    So, Geithner, IMO knew exactly what he was doing even when hiring an illegal.  He's not stupid (I don't think..yes he was..HE WAS CAUGHT!).

    Shirley

  • Paulette531
    Paulette531 Member Posts: 738
    edited January 2009

    Sealed

    ON A LIGHTER NOTE...WOOHOO SHERRI...BUT I THINK I WILL PASS ON THAT CHANGE PIE...LMAO!

  • moodyk13
    moodyk13 Member Posts: 1,180
    edited January 2009

    AlwaysHope, SherriG, Vivre, those are great ones!  I am sure there are still many more out there that if someone posts them we'll be like "oh yea!"

    And EVERY Thanksgiving at noon sharp, we listen to Alice's Resturant.  LOL

    OMGosh!!   Okay, due to chemo brain, when I try to think of something I knwo, I get blocked so help me out ladies.  It is the song they (here in the south) call "the beer drinking song" and country music gurus call it the perfect country/western song and goes "I was drunk the day my mom got outta prison. I went to pick her up in the rain, but before I could get to the station in my pick-up truck, she got run'd over by the danged ole train....and I 'll hang around as long as you will let me......"

    Someone PLEASE tell me who this is...!!!!!!! 

  • vivre
    vivre Member Posts: 2,167
    edited January 2009

    Sorry Moody, this yank never heard that one. But I do know the words to Georgia.

    Georgia, Georgia . . .

    Actually, I know two words to Georgia

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009

Categories