“I will not accept any advice that comes from outside, from wherever it comes and for whatever reasons.” Meaning, he ain’t going anywhere until the elections in September. Though he says he’ll turn things over to the VP at some point. And the feckless US — having turned on its ally — now has the worst of both worlds: we appear weak to our enemies and duplicitous to our friends.
February 10, 2011
“Under Fire From Right, House GOP Proposes $100 Billion in Cuts”
Finally. Some balls: In another victory for tea party rebels in Congress today, House Appropriations Committee Chairman Harold Rogers, R-Ky., scrapped his original plan for spending cuts and announced that he will seek to cut $100 billion from what President Obama had requested for this fiscal year. “My committee has been working diligently to go line-by-line in every agency budget to find and cut unnecessary spending to reduce our deficit
BREAKING: from CNN, Mubarak NOT leaving
So says the Egyptian information minister. The story, apparently, is quite fluid. Much like the Obama Administration’s stance has been! Zing!
“Republicans Splintering on Size of Cuts”
Going Gingrich? Notes TerryH, who sent along the link, “I suppose you could say it’s better than nothing. […] However, given the huge deficits embedded within Medicare, Social Security, ObamaCare, etc would it be more accurate to say that ignoring entitlements is worse than nothing in that it ignores the root cause of the deficit problem?” To which protein wisdom responds: Ahyup. More here.
BREAKING: Mubarek to resign tonight?
HP: Reports are saying that Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak will “meet protesters demands,” with some saying that he will transfer power to the military tonight. […] Reports the AP: Military and ruling party officials say President Hosni Mubarak will speak to the nation soon and meet the demands of protesters. Protesters are insisting he step down immediately. Military officials say the armed forces’ supreme council has been meeting all day
“Going Gingrich”…?
ALG: scarcely a month after being handed control of the U.S. House, Republicans are already losing sight of why they were given another chance. In retreating from their commitment to cut $100 billion from the budget (which let’s face it — will barely make a dent in our $14 trillion debt) the GOP is demonstrating a fundamental but all too familiar lack of courage. Republicans are also refusing to address
