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Katy Grimes

EPA, CARB To Blame For Cheating Car Emissions

In the early 1970’s, the Environmental Protection Agency forced automakers to cut emissions. And the cars were awful. I remember a 1972 Chevy Caprice station wagon, 140 horsepower, 4300 lbs. Chevy claimed the horsepower was 160 – even at that, it was still grossly underpowered.

Prior to the EPA, that particular engine was rated at 250 horsepower. The EPA took 40 percent of the engine capacity away. When you’re pushing a 4300 lb car with only 140 horsepower, the gas mileage is terrible. Cars didn’t run well. They were unreliable. The only thing that saved the car industry was fuel injection – something Porsche, Mercedes and BMW were already moving to.

Car manufacturers were lying then, and they’ve been forced to lie again.

Chapman University’s Center for Demographics and Policy just published a new study, which verified California’s 2011 Greenhouse Gas Emissions were just one percent of emissions worldwide. According to the study, even if California’s emissions dropped to zero from now until 2050, which is the year Brown there would be no significant effect on the environment because of greenhouse gases generated by developing nations… Read More

Richard Rider

Is the press biased? Is the Pope Catholic?

by Richard Rider

Jaded cynic that I am, still I was stunned by the biased “news” story today in the nominally centrist SAN DIEGO U-T. It’s anawesomedemonstration of how liberal bias in media is so strong that the reporters and editors don’t even think of it as bias.

The “news” story below is an ode to Pop Francis — especially for his calls for social justice and drastic environmental restrictions because of global warming. But the story interviews only the usual cabal of left wing activists who back the progressive agenda. The number of people at the staged Pope’s cheerleader gatherings (watching him on TV or holding press conferences) number in the dozens at best — not the hundreds, let alone thousands.

Read the headline and the sub-headline below. You’d think all of San Diego was enthralled by the Pope and his economic message. Of course, that’s not the case — not even close. I find such dishonesty breathtaking.

Not a single dissenting opinion was presented, in spite of using two reporters to assemble this propaganda piece. The story touts… Read More

Richard Rider

Chula Vista Police Dept bought shoes for needy kids? Nope.

Here’s one of the ways our media fails to accurately report a story. Indeed, in this government “charity” category, this misrepresentation is more the rule than the exception.

Granted, it’s not a big story. It’s a feel-good episode that might have raised some interesting points, but didn’t.

HEADLINE: [Chula Vista] Police Dept. outfits kids with new shoes, socks

$12,000 was spent on providing shoes, socks and school supplies for 284 needy students — a commendable activity. Nothing wrong with the charitable effort. Indeed, it’s good that such efforts are recognized by the media. But this story gives credit where it’s NOT due.

The Chula Vista Police Department did NOT “outfit” the kids with shoes. They didn’t spend a dime doing that.

But surely at least the police OFFICERS took up a collection for the kids. Nope. Apparently none of the money was donated by the cops.

Well, then surely the police labor union provided the funding, using union dues. Again, nope. Not a… Read More

Edward Ring

How Government Unions Are Destroying America

Not one presidential candidate, apart from Gov. Walker’s last-ditch rhetoric prior to dropping out, has discussed the problems with unionized government as a major issue. That’s too bad, because these problems are bigger than even most critics acknowledge.

When people discuss the need to reform, if not eliminate, public sector unions, the only reason typically cited is that their demands are bankrupting our cities and states. And reformers also usually fail to communicate the fundamental differences between government unions and private sector unions, or emphasize the bipartisan urgency of public sector union reform. Government unions don’t merely drive our cities and counties into service insolvency if not bankruptcy, they are distorting policy decisions of fundamental importance to the future of America.

With a focus on California, and in no particular order, here is an attempt to summarize how this is occurring:

(1) The Economy

California has the highesttaxes and fees in the U.S., and is consistently ranked as the worst state in America to do business. California also has the highest paid public employees in the… Read More

The Fight Against Special Session Taxes

Last week marked the conclusion of the 2015 Legislative Session, which ended on an overall positive note.

One Legislative victory was toning down Senate Bill 350, another big government environmental bill which would have required a 50% reduction in California’s petroleum usage by 2030. Thanks to an amendment taken close to the end of session, California drivers will not be forced to comply with the unrealistic task of cutting their gasoline use in half over the next 15 years.

Republicans also held the line against taxes, and I am happy to report no new taxes were created this year.

But even with victories like these, our work is… Read More

Arnold Steinberg

Did Walker Walk the Walk?

Scott Walker is gone.

Walker’s presidential campaign is out of money, though his super PAC (not the official campaign) has raised more than $26 million. Major donors will properly demand refunds of the mostly unspent money. That’s what donors to former Texas Gov. Rick Perry’s $17 million super PAC ($12 million on hand) did, when Perry ended his presidential campaign ten days ago.

Walker and Perry each “suspended” the formal campaign, which is distinct from their super PACs. Suspension means each candidate can still get Federal matching funds to pay campaign debts. Walker now can use your tax dollars to fully pay his prescient campaign strategists. This is yet another aspect of wonderful campaign reform, the fiction that tax dollars purify the process.

Given the seductive allure of those Federal dollars, and the super PAC resources available for advertising, Walker and… Read More

Jon Fleischman

FlashReport’s Top Twenty Bills To Veto – 2015 Edition

Introduction from FR Publisher Jon Fleischman

When we go through hundreds and hundreds of bills to find the ones that we consider to be the most egregious, harmful or inappropriate, it is our hope that a responsible Governor would veto all of them. Remember, we’re talking about the worst bills. If the Governor signs any of the bills listed below, it is bad news for the people of California. This is our tenth year in a row featuring this column. Each year, we partner with two conservative members of the State Legislature — this year is no different. Our thanks go out to both State Senator Joel Anderson and State Senator John Moorlach, and to their staff members, for their hard work in selecting the terrible bills below out of hundreds and hundreds on the Governor’s desk.

Normally our legislative partners compile 20 bills to veto — but this year I took some personal privilege and picked one bill that truly makes me nauseous to highlight first, and so below it are 19 other bills compiled by the Senators. Let me also give an “honorable mention” to a particularly heinous bill… Read More

Katy Grimes

Sen. John Moorlach: The Fiscal Conscience of the CA Legislature

Former Orange County Supervisor John Moorlach won his Senate race in March, and already has become a standout. Now-Senator John Moorlach, R-Costa Mesa, has waged challenges to Democrat Gov. Jerry Brown’s May Budget revise, minimum wage hikes, Democrats’ lack of fiscal restraint and perpetual overspending.

Moorlach, eloquently, but authoritatively, has become the Legislature’s outspoken expert on California’s Department of Transportation’s 3500 unneeded engineers and gross careless spending, while the governor simultaneously asked taxpayers to foot the bill for even more transportation taxes.

In 1994,… Read More

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