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Elephants in the Blue Grass

Wednesday, December 6, 2017

Al Franken Schadenfreude


As Democratic women finally call for Sen. Al Franken to resign,  it's time to recall this, from The Hill:

He barked at Amy Coney Barrett during her confirmation hearing, “I question your judgment!” and condescendingly told her that “the root word of judgment is judge.”
Last June, during John Bush’s confirmation hearing, Franken explained, “One of the qualities I look for in a judge is judgment.” He described his responsibility as using his own judgment to evaluate the judgment of judicial nominees.
In hearing after hearing, Franken has sat, face resting on fist, lecturing conservative judges for what he deems “bad judgment.”
Jump cut to today. Freeze frame on the now infamous photograph of a grinning Franken apparently assaulting a sleeping woman. Read her describe his alleged behavior:
“He came at me, put his hand on the back of my head, mashed his lips against mine and aggressively stuck his tongue in my mouth. I immediately pushed him away with both of my hands against his chest and told him if he ever did that to me again I wouldn’t be so nice about it the next time. I walked away. All I could think about was getting to a bathroom as fast as possible to rinse the taste of him out of my mouth. I felt disgusted and violated.”
And her describe her reaction to discovering the photo:
“I couldn’t believe it. He groped me, without my consent, while I was asleep. I felt violated all over again. Embarrassed. Belittled. Humiliated. How dare anyone grab my breasts like this and think it’s funny?”
Franken has made a habit of accusing Trump judicial nominees of having poor judgment seemingly because they disagree with his political opinions, but it's clearly Franken’s judgment that's lacking. No matter how much the media shakes their pom-poms every time he launches into one of his confirmation hearing morality plays, that much is clear.
Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 12:58 PM No comments:

Tuesday, October 3, 2017

Angela Leet for Mayor



This is excellent news for Louisville. Republican Metro Council member Angela Leet has confirmed that she is running for mayor.

Angela is really impressive. She is smart, tough and entrepreneurial and a mother of two boys. She has been one of the voices for common sense in opposition to the inane plan to relocate the VA center to Brownsboro Road.

And she has called attention to Louisville's murder rate, even before most people were paying attention.

She's very personable. She commands respect from across the political spectrum.

After the election, Mayor Greg Fischer will have lots of time to risk his life on all those bike paths he's been building in heavy traffic areas (speaking of which, I saw a horrible accident of bike vs. minivan on Market Street).


Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 1:11 PM No comments:

Friday, September 22, 2017

Steve Forbes Rocks U of L


This is out of sequence -- it happened a week ago --but worth mentioning nonetheless.  Publisher Steve Forbes spoke to several hundred University of Louisville students at the Schnatter Center for Free Enterprise, in the U of L College of Business (jointly sponsored by the Young Americas Foundation).

Given the lunacy that we have seen on college campuses like Berkeley and Middlebury, it was striking to see how polite the U of L students were to Forbes -- an unabashed defender or capitalism.

This is the second time in a matter of months that the Schnatter Center hosted a prominent conservative to a large and respectful crowd.  (And as noted below, the McConnell Center hosted Justice Neil Gorsuch to standing ovations yesterday).

Not surprisingly, Forbes spoke out in favor of  a flat tax.  He's been relentless on the topic over the years, correctly so.

One new thought (or at least new to me):  Forbes challenged the concept of "giving back."  As in the virtue signaling demand that we must turn over our money to the less fortunate, either voluntarily or through the coercion of the tax system.

The problem with "giving back," Forbes observed, is that it assumes that our earnings were not ours to begin with and therefore must be returned, at least in part. That's a fallacy. It also diminishes the act of charity by grounding it in guilt.

Forbes gave some advice to the students that also struck me:  sometimes it is best not to wait until you are ready. He gave the example of Chris Christie, who was urged to run for president in 2012 but declined because he was not ready; when he was ready in 2012, his time had passed and he lost badly.  Barack Obama, in contrast, ran for president while still brand new in the Senate. Many said that he was not ready, but he disregarded the advice and pressed on.

Forbes would have made a really good president. He is still consequential, however, sharing his wisdom with college students who are more interested in hearing and analyzing than protesting.






Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 12:27 PM No comments:

L'ville Loved Justice Gorsuch


The McConnell Center at University of Louisville hosted Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch yesterday and he surpassed everyone's expectations.

It was a packed crowd of 550 or so, mixed with students, lawyers, faculty.  No protests -- to the contrary, both Gorsuch and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell received standing ovations.

Gorsuch's line that appeared to resonate the most with people referred the the limited institutional competence of the judiciary and it's constitutional limitations for fixing bad statutes:  justices wear robes, not capes.  That is, we cannot expect the judiciary to fix Congress' bad policy choices. That's for the elected branch.

Gorsuch explained originalism in a way that was clear enough for non-lawyers to understand but nuanced enough to those who had been reading for thinking about it for years. He made a good argument that it is constitutionally mandated by the doctrine of separation of powers, and also supports that doctrine (and hence liberty).

My favorite moment: Gorsuch addressed a group of 40 army soldiers who have been spending the month at the McConnell Center as part of a Strategic Broadening Seminar. Gorsuch thanked the group for their service, and noted "if you don't do your job, I can't do mine."


Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 12:08 PM No comments:

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

The Truth About Trump's Judges


Finally, a piece that is not, how to put it, defamatory.  As usual, Scott Jennings nails it for CNN.

Sitting atop the Frazier History Museum in downtown Louisville on Monday morning was the who's who of Kentucky's legal community, all gathered to witness the investiture of John Kenneth Bush, President Donald Trump's latest appointee to the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
Overlooking the banks of the Ohio River, 6h Circuit Chief Judge R. Guy Cole, Jr. pointed out that the limited number of cases taken by the Supreme Court each year makes appointments to the circuit court -- the level just below the high court -- among the most important any president makes.
Scott Jennings
Scott Jennings
On that score, President Trump has hit home run after home run by appointing conservative lawyers to the various circuit court vacancies. In Bush, he found a highly qualified, Harvard-educated lawyer dedicated to the US Constitution and the nation's founding principles (he even named his dogs after Founding Fathers). During his confirmation, liberals expressed outraged that Bush had once written that America's two "greatest tragedies" were "slavery and abortion."Imagine that -- a pro-life, Republican president nominated a pro-life judge.
    A few weeks before Bush was nominated, the 6th Circuit received from Trump another Kentuckian, Amul Thapar, previously appointed federal district judge by President George W. Bush. My advice: take Thapar in the first round of your fantasy future Supreme Court Justice draft. You won't regret it. Thapar is a rock solid conservative judge whose name is on the lips of every Federalist Society member in Washington. He's close to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and well-thought of by key White House lawyers.
    Trump nominates 16 judges as Democrats look ahead to Supreme Court fight
    Trump nominates 16 judges as Democrats look ahead to Supreme Court fight
    Trump is driving liberals nuts with his circuit court nominations. Notre Dame law professor Amy Barrett, nominated by Trump for the 7th Circuit, was pilloried in a committee hearing by California Sen. Dianne Feinstein for being -- gasp -- a Catholic. Feinstein has come under criticism (including from the presidents of both Notre Dame and Princeton) since she had a melt down over Barrett's faith, further exposing just how out-of-touch today's Democratic Party is with Americans who still take their faith seriously.
    I suspect Feinstein was just as worried about Barrett's age and resume as she was her Catholicism. Barrett is in her mid 40s and counts a clerkship with the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia among her past jobs. She's a strong conservative who will fill an important seat for a very long time. The same can be said of Michigan Supreme Court Justice Joan Larsen, who Trump nominated to yet another vacancy in the 6th Circuit.
    Young, Scalia-trained additions to the federal bench have Democrats pulling their hair out.
    President Trump has made 14 nominations for current or future circuit court vacancies, with three already confirmed (Kevin Newsom of Alabama, another strong conservative, was confirmed last month). Trump is outpacing President Barack Obama in circuit court confirmations and overall judicial nominations at this point in their presidencies. Sources in the White House tell me to expect more waves of conservative judicial nominations this fall.
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    While Trump faces trials and tribulations on other policy matters, he's absolutely nailing his judicial appointments. Obama appointed about 40% of the federal judiciary by the time he left office, while Bush 43 appointed just over one-third of it. Obama's appointees were, in many cases, extremely liberal, ideologically driven people who dragged their circuits drastically to the left. Presidents have enormous impact on the judiciary, especially if their party controls the Senate for some part of their term.
    If President Trump's first year in office is any indication, conservatives should be very happy with this reshaping of the federal bench, particularly at the appellate level. Undoing the damage done to the appellate courts by Obama is a key reason why Trump must do everything he can to maintain Republican control of the US Senate in the 2018 midterm election.
    If Feinstein's reaction to Barrett is any indication, Democrats would love nothing more than to shut down the Trump Train's drop-offs at the federal courthouse.
    Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 3:15 PM No comments:

    Wednesday, August 23, 2017

    Imports Factor In to Opioid Crisis


    As Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer tries to fight the opioid crisis by suing Big Pharma, keep in mind the effect that Sen. Bernie Sanders's efforts to increase pharmaceutical importation could have on the crisis. Plainly, Sanders's approach would make a bad situation much worse.

    Barry Denton  discusses it in the News-Enterprise:

    Drug overdoses are skyrocketing in Kentucky.

    Staff at the St. Elizabeth hospital system in the northern part of the state revive six opioid overdose victims every day. Twice as many Kentuckians are dying of overdoses as car accidents.

    Incredibly, politicians in Washington are pushing a bill that would make the crisis even worse.
    The proposed law, introduced by Sen. Bernie Sanders, would legalize the importation of medicines from Canada.

    Proponents argue the bill would save patients money by allowing them to buy cheaper prescription drugs from abroad.

    In reality, those “cheaper” medicines could come at the price of hundreds of Kentuckians’ lives. Many unscrupulous pharmacies will jump at the chance to make a few bucks by sending painkillers to Americans without requiring prescriptions. The bill also would seriously strain law-enforcement’s ability to intercept illegal drugs.

    Kentuckians’ drug addictions often begin with prescription pain pills.

    In the last three months of 2016, Kentucky residents filled prescriptions for more than 17 million doses of oxycodone and 36 million doses of hydrocodone. In just one year, Clay County residents filled enough prescriptions to provide every resident – including children – with 150 doses of hydrocodone and oxycodone.

    Many of these pills wind up on the black market, fueling people’s addictions. And when addicts can’t find or afford prescription painkillers, they often turn to heroin.

    Heroin is dangerous enough on its own — but now, drug dealers are lacing heroin with fentanyl, a deadly synthetic opioid that’s 100 times more potent than morphine. Some strains of fentanyl are so potent that Narcan, a lifesaving shot used to resuscitate overdose victims, doesn’t work.
    One-third of Kentucky overdose deaths involve fentanyl.

    Legalizing prescription drug importation would make it easier for dealers to obtain massive quantities of illicit pain pills, heroin and fentanyl.

    Even though it’s illegal, some Americans already import prescription drugs.
    Many order from online Canadian pharmacies, some of which don’t even require prescriptions. Authorities sometimes are able to intercept these shipments, which often contain spoiled, counterfeit or illegal substances.

    If the bill passes, many Americans would start ordering medicines from foreign pharmacies without realizing those drugs lack the gold standard of approval from the Food and Drug Administration.
    There’d be little stopping a drug dealer from buying opioids in bulk to resell to vulnerable addicts.
    The sheer volume of shipments makes it unlikely law enforcement would be able to stop this trafficking.

    Legalized importation wouldn’t result only in pain pills flooding into Kentucky. It also could allow drug dealers to bring in pure fentanyl.

    Canadian authorities have warned that they don’t inspect drugs imported from abroad, routed through Canada and reshipped to America.

    The FDA also has no way to inspect or vet these imports.

    In other words, fentanyl- producing labs in China could ship large quantities of the drug to America via Canada. It’d be difficult for health authorities and law enforcement to distinguish between packages containing legitimate prescriptions and those containing deadly opioids.

    Kentucky’s police and first responders already are stretched thin dealing with overdoses. The last thing they need is for federal lawmakers to make it even easier to obtain dangerous drugs.
    Sen. Sanders sincerely may believe importation would help lower drug costs. But the price paid in human lives would be far too steep.
    Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 12:09 PM No comments:

    Wednesday, August 9, 2017

    No, Trey is Not Running



    Rumors have been circulating that former Kentucky Secretary of State Trey Grayson plans to primary Rep. Thomas Massie for Kentucky's 4th Congressional District.

    Trey is unequivocal:  it's not happening.

    He's looking at several interesting opportunities, but that Congressional seat is not one of them.

    Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 11:58 AM No comments:

    Wednesday, August 2, 2017

    Andy Barr Might Have a Real Race


    Check out the campaign ad from Democrat Amy McGrath, who is running for Kentucky's 6th Congressional District against Andy Barr. McGrath is a retired Marine -- and the first woman to fly an F-18 in combat. Her personal story is compelling.

    She's a much better candidate than those the Dems typically put up here, like Jack Conway and Allison Lundergan Grimes.

    Although Barr won comfortably his last two elections, his first one was tight (five points). So I would not count McGrath out.

    McGrath's ad suggests that saving Obamacare will be her primary issue.  In that sense, Republicans' failure to pass a repeal and replace may actually work to Barr's advantage. That, of course, is contrary to the notion that Republicans will get shellacked for not having kept the promise to repeal and replace Obamacare. Unless it actually happens, McGrath is running on a hypothetical.




    Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 11:25 AM No comments:

    Wednesday, July 26, 2017

    Guest Post From Dr. Barry Denton on Drug Importation


    Washington is Poised to Make Kentucky's Opioid Crisis Worse

    Drug overdoses are skyrocketing in Kentucky. Staff at the St. Elizabeth hospital system in the northern part of the state revive six opioid overdose victims every day.[1] Twice as many Kentuckians are dying of overdoses as car accidents.[2]

    Incredibly, politicians in Washington are pushing a bill that would make the crisis even worse.

    The proposed law, introduced by Senator Bernie Sanders, would legalize the importation of medicines from Canada.[3]

    Proponents argue that the bill would save patients money by allowing them to buy cheaper prescription drugs from abroad. In reality, those "cheaper" medicines could come at the price of hundreds of Kentuckians' lives. Many unscrupulous pharmacies will jump at the chance to make a few bucks by sending painkillers to Americans without requiring prescriptions. The bill would also seriously strain law enforcement's ability to intercept illegal drugs.

    Kentuckians' drug addictions often begin with prescription pain pills. In the last three months of 2016, Kentucky residents filled prescriptions for more than 17 million doses of oxycodone and 36 million doses of hydrocodone.[4] In just one year, Clay County residents filled enough prescriptions to provide every resident -- including children -- with 150 doses of hydrocodone and oxycodone.[5]

    Many of these pills wind up on the black market, fueling people's addictions. And when addicts can't find or afford prescription painkillers, they often turn to heroin.

    Heroin is dangerous enough on its own -- but now, drug dealers are lacing heroin with fentanyl,[6] a deadly synthetic opioid that's 100 times more potent than morphine.[7] Some strains of fentanyl are so potent that Narcan, a lifesaving shot used to resuscitate overdose victims, doesn't work.[8]

    One-third of Kentucky overdose deaths involve fentanyl.[9]

    Legalizing prescription drug importation would make it easier for dealers to obtain massive quantities of illicit pain pills, heroin, and fentanyl. 

    Even though it's illegal, some Americans already import prescription drugs. Many order from online Canadian pharmacies, some of which don't even require prescriptions.[10] Fortunately, authorities are sometimes able to intercept these shipments, which often contain spoiled, counterfeit, or illegal substances.

    If the bill passes, many Americans would start ordering medicines from foreign pharmacies without realizing that those drugs lack the gold standard of approval from the Food and Drug Administration There'd be little stopping a drug dealer from buying opioids in bulk to resell to vulnerable addicts. And the sheer volume of shipments makes it unlikely that law enforcement would be able to stop this trafficking.

    Legalized importation wouldn't just result in pain pills flooding into Kentucky -- it could also allow drug dealers to bring in pure fentanyl. Canadian authorities have warned that they don't inspect drugs that are imported from abroad, routed through Canada, and then reshipped to America.[11] The FDA also has no way to inspect or vet these imports.[12]

    In other words, fentanyl-producing labs in China could ship large quantities of the drug to America via Canada. It'd be difficult for health authorities and law enforcement to distinguish between packages containing legitimate prescriptions and those containing deadly opioids.

    Kentucky's cops and first responders already are stretched thin dealing with overdoses. The last thing they need is for federal lawmakers to make it even easier to obtain dangerous drugs. Senators Sanders may sincerely believe importation would help lower drug costs. But the price paid in human lives would be far too steep.

    Dr. Barry D. Denton
    Retired Police Sergeant – Louisville Metro Police Department



    [1] http://dailycaller.com/2017/04/27/opioid-addiction-is-fueling-an-average-of-six-overdoses-a-day-in-kentucky/
    [2] http://www.kentuckyhealthfacts.org/data/location/show.aspx?state=kentucky and https://www.cdc.gov/drugoverdose/data/statedeaths.html
    [3]https://www.sanders.senate.gov/newsroom/press-releases/affordable-and-safe-prescription-drug-importation-act-introduced-to-help-lower-skyrocketing-cost-of-medicine
    [4] http://www.chfs.ky.gov/NR/rdonlyres/C32BB010-C430-4261-B285-2E308E5FB6F1/0/KASPERQuarterlyTrendReportQ42016.pdf
    [5] https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2017/02/kentucky-opioids/515775/
    [6] http://odcp.ky.gov/Pages/The-Heroin-Epidemic.aspx
    [7] https://www.drugabuse.gov/drugs-abuse/fentanyl
    [8] http://www.richmondregister.com/kentucky/news/northeast-kentucky-responders-leery-of-new-drug-that-could-be/article_bcce99c3-1ca3-58a5-907e-5a60d4ff0669.html
    [9] http://www.kentucky.com/news/state/article83770067.html
    [10] https://www.yourcanadianmeds.com/
    [11] https://www.fda.gov/drugs/resourcesforyou/consumers/ucm143561.htm
    [12] https://www.fda.gov/NewsEvents/Testimony/ucm113635.htm
    Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 12:18 PM No comments:

    Imagine Taking A Cancer Drug That is Fake!


    This piece on the issue of deregulating prescription drugs comes from two former attorney generals. That begs the question:  what does Kentucky's Attorney General say about this?

    Hat tip to the Sun-Sentinel on an issue that all of us who take prescription meds -- or have friends or family who do -- should watch.

    By the way, for anyone who thinks this is not an issue in Kentucky, recall that a few years ago there was an issue in Louisville with fake Botox.

    As former state attorneys general, we are keenly aware of how stretched local
    law enforcement budgets are and how law enforcement officials already
    struggle to contain the flood of illegal drugs flowing into the United States
    from other countries. That job could get a lot harder if we have to start
    tracking prescription drugs, too.

    Bills before Congress would end a longstanding ban on the import of
    prescription medicines not previously cleared by the Food and Drug
    Administration. The proposals were floated to curb rising drug prices, but the
    potential drawbacks are daunting.

    Americans have access to safe and effective prescription drugs due in large
    measure to the strict safeguards the FDA has established to approve new
    treatments and monitor the manufacturing and distribution of existing
    medicines. Meanwhile, patients in many other countries are exposed to
    substandard medicines produced and sold with less-rigorous oversight by the
    local government. Those conditions have spawned an already massive — and
    still growing — market for counterfeit drugs all over the world.
    Those dangerous knockoffs are starting to infiltrate the U.S. market. The FDA
    website lists a number of counterfeit drugs seized in the United States that
    were sold as popular biopharmaceutical products. These imitations include
    fake Botox, fake Cialis and a number of fake cancer drugs that either lacked
    the active ingredients required to be effective or had different compounds
    entirely.
    Counterfeit drugs are often sold by unlicensed suppliers who are not
    authorized to sell or distribute prescription drugs in the United States. The
    FDA has long warned that these products are unsafe and should not be used
    because the agency cannot confirm that the makers and distributors of these
    drugs adhered to U.S. standards when they manufactured or distributed
    them.

    Other countries have been inundated with these fake drugs for years. For
    example, the World Health Organization estimates as many as 20 percent of
    the drugs sold in India are counterfeit. The WHO started warning doctors and
    other health care professionals years ago about the dangers of these
    counterfeit drugs, and the organization issues frequent reports to spotlight
    massive seizures of fake pills and other medicines that were intended for sale
    to patients all over the world.

    “Health experts believe such operations have only scratched the surface of a
    flourishing industry in counterfeit medicines that poses a growing threat to
    public health around the world,” the WHO declared in an official bulletin
    back in 2009. In 2014, Interpol warned, “Pharmaceutical crime poses a grave
    danger to public health.”

    Organized-crime syndicates have established sophisticated networks to
    produce and sell these counterfeit drugs in other countries. They have already
    started working through doctors and medical clinics in the United States, but
    U.S. import restrictions are a big reason the FDA, U.S. Customs and Border
    Protection and the Drug Enforcement Agency have been able to contain the
    problem.

    The bills before Congress would remove many of the license and oversight
    requirements on the drugs imported into the United States by lifting those
    barriers, inviting an influx of bogus pharmaceutical products from the same
    crime rings that are selling these drugs in other countries around the world
    that would love better access to the U.S. market.
    Law enforcement would inevitably be tasked with policing the problem, at a
    time when most prosecutors and law enforcement officials have their hands
    full with the growing opioid crisis. One of the biggest killers is fentanyl, a
    potent, synthetic opioid pain medication that is being laced into counterfeit
    pills.

    Just last year, the DEA issued a report sounding alarm bells about these
    synthetic opioids. There were more than 700 deaths attributed to fentanyl
    between late 2013 and 2014, and the numbers are climbing rapidly. The DEA
    report lists a number of specific cases involving counterfeit opioids, including
    the seizure last year of 500 pills in Lorain County, Ohio, that included a
    synthetic “that caused at least 17 overdoses and several deaths.”

    Opening the door to increased prescription drug importation will just make it
    easier for smugglers to ship this dangerous opioid into the United States. For
    years, we have asked police officers and prosecutors to do more with less.
    There are few signs that austerity will end. Changing laws to encourage
    importation of drugs would only add to that burden.

    Thurbert Baker is a former attorney general of Georgia. Bill McCollum is a
    former attorney general of Florida. They wrote this for InsideSources.com.
    Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 12:14 PM No comments:

    Tuesday, July 25, 2017

    More Liberals Wage War on Women


    I'm waiting for Feminists to come running to the defense of Sarah Huckabee Sanders. Sanders was recently promoted to White House Press Secretary. This mother of three has been attacked for her appearance. Ira Madison, of the Daily Beast, referred to her as a "Butch queen first time in drags at ball."  I'm not going to link to him because that would just reward bad behavior.

    This is an abhorrent way to refer to a woman, any woman. But because Sanders is a conservative, she is fair game. The hypocrisy is sickening.

    And how about the reference to transgender? Imagine if a Republican had said that about a liberal; Dems would call it a hate crime.



    Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 9:25 AM No comments:

    Thursday, July 13, 2017

    Senate Judiciary Committee Votes Yes!


    The Senate Judiciary just voted in favor of John K. Bush's nomination to the U.S. Court of  Appeals for the Sixth Circuit.

    Thanks, everyone, for all the prayers
    Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 10:53 AM No comments:

    Friday, June 16, 2017

    RIP Dave Armstrong


    How sad to learn of the passing of former Louisville Mayor Dave Armstrong. Dave was Louisville's last mayor prior to the merger of city and county governments

    Dave also was the visionary behind the Louisville Extreme Skate Park. That brought the X Games to Louisville, including tourists and the economic benefit that follows. It gave Louisville youth a fun place to get some exercise. And it made Louisville hip; Dave did all this before any of us had even heard of Extreme sports.

    Most importantly, Dave was a kind and decent man. He was smart, creative, and made his corner of the world better through public service.

    Dave was a Democrat whom Republicans and Independents could like and respect. We will miss him.


    Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 3:01 PM No comments:

    Wednesday, June 7, 2017

    Louisville Blows Past Chicago - Not In A Good Way


    The Pegasus Institute -- the new conservative/libertarian think tank here -- has just released a fascinating report on the the epidemic of violent crime in Louisville.

    The statistics are beyond appalling. The murder rate is much worse than most of us thought. This becomes apparent, for example, when one looks at the crime rate inside the Watterson Expressway as distinguished from the entire metro area.

    Here are a few statistics from Pegasus Institute Executive Director Jordan Harris:

    • In 2016, 71.18% (84 of 118) of all homicides investigated by LMPD took place in zip codes that are either wholly or partially inside the Watterson.
    • Using a conservative estimate , the population inside the Watterson Expressway is just under 275,000 residents,  meaning that with 84 total murders in 2016, this area had a murder rate of 30.5 per 100,000. If considered in isolation, this would be the 8th most dangerous major city in America, edging out Chicago, Illinois, which has a murder rate of 27.7 per 100,000. (INSIDE OF THE WATTERSON EXPRESSWAY IS MORE DANGEROUS THAN CHICAGO)
    • The majority of homicides in 2016 took place in five individual zip codes (listed in order of total); 40211, 40203, 40210, 40212, and 40215. These five areas accounted for just over 77% (65 of 84) of the murders inside the Watterson Expressway, 55% of murders investigated by LMPD (65 of 118), and 52.4% (65 of 124) of all murders in Jefferson County. Four of these five zip codes had an increase in homicides in 2016, helping to push the city-wide total to an all-time high.
    • The jump from 56 LMPD homicide investigation in 2014 to 118 in 2016, a 110% increase, is by far the largest jump in Louisville’s history, surpassing the previous two-year high of 44.7%, and larger than any other similar sized metro areas. (THIS IS NOT JUST A NATIONAL PROBLEM. THE SPIKE HAS BEEN MUCH GREATER IN LOUISVILLE)
    • The illicit drug market (i.e. opioid crisis) is not the cause of this spike. 
    • A study by Mathew Phillips, a research analyst with the Rochester Youth Development Study at the State University of New York at Albany, examined a panel of delinquent youth and found that the drug dealers within a gang are actually less likely to use weapons or commit certain violent acts than their non-drug dealing fellow gang members
    • Anonymous sources within LMPD confirmed that last year, of the 118 murders investigated by LMPD, 100 murders were considered gang related. 


    Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 10:44 AM No comments:

    Tuesday, May 30, 2017

    Louisville Needs to Pull it Together



    The Big Four Bridge -- a source of much pride and enjoyment for Louisville -- became a murder scene last night, Memorial Day.  Four people were shot, and one man has died.

    The shootings occurred at 9:30, early enough that many people were enjoying the beautiful weather. After all, Mayor Greg Fisher told us we were supposed to get out and exercise this weekend, specifically, hike, bike and paddle at Waterfront Park.

    Now those who go to the bridge to get in their steps as an effort to improve their health have to worry about getting shot.

    I am starting to sympathize with those parents who hesitate to allow their children to come downtown. There is no doubt that the violence is increasing, and now it appears that is spreading geographically -- not that it was ever acceptable when its radius was smaller.

    The Pegasus Institute has been studying the problem of violence here and solutions that have worked for comparable cities like Cincinnati. They will be releasing their recommendations shortly. I look forward to what they have to say, but remain concerned that the Fisher administration lacks the ability to implement the recommendations.












    Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 4:14 PM No comments:

    Saturday, May 27, 2017

    RIP, Jim Bunning


    Former Sen. Jim Bunnings has passed away. He was a big presence on the baseball field and the U.S. Senate. He was an important part of Kentucky's transformation into a red state. He gave many Republicans their first brake in working on a political campaign or his office.

    Our prayers go out to his family.
    Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 5:39 PM No comments:

    Monday, May 22, 2017

    Just Heartbreaking



    I've written before about Louisville's escalating murder rate under Mayor Greg Fisher's watch. The latest victim was only seven years old -- eating cake at the kitchen table Sunday evening. The bullet came through the window, apparently part of a fight in the backyard next door.

    Fisher is a nice guy and fairly pro-business for a Democrat. But he is out of his league when it comes to the gang violence and heroin epidemic that threaten to wipe out all the positive changes Louisville has attained in the last 20 years.

    The little boy's name:  Dequante Hobbs. He lived in the Russell neighborhood and was a second grader at Wellington Elementary, no doubt looking forward to summer vacation starting in just days.

    Prayers for peace for his family, repose for his soul, and justice for his murderer.


    Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 3:18 PM No comments:

    Thursday, May 18, 2017

    Mueller Should Investigate This, Too



    Former FBI Director Robert Mueller, who has been appointed as Special Counsel in the Russian investigation should also get to the bottom or why Sen. Rand Paul was surveilled by the Obama administration.

    Two reporters have told Paul that they have seen classified information in which his named was unmasked. That means Paul -- a sitting U.S. Senator -- was spyed upon by the executive branch probably by the NSA.

    And how is it that two reporters saw this?

    The whole thing stinks.


    Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 11:59 AM No comments:

    My C-J Column on Good Economic News in KY

    Reprinted with permission of the Courier-Journal:


    Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin and the new Republican majority in the House must be getting tired of all the winning since the Kentucky General Assembly’s transformational session in January. So much winning. It’s becoming difficult to keep track of all the good news.
    For example, last week, Apple announced that it will invest $200 million in the Corning plant in Harrodsburg that makes the Gorilla Glass for iPhones. The money will be used for research and development. Although it is unclear how many new jobs will result, at the very least it secures the future for the Harrodsburg facility. It cannot be a bad thing for a major corporation to spend $200 million in one’s state.
    Three weeks ago, Braidy Industries announced that it is building a $1.3 billion aluminum rolling plant in Greenup County, near the Kentucky-West Virginia border. The facility will hire 550 employees with average salary of $70,000. Another 1,000 workers will be needed to build the factory.
    More: Hits and misses
    In January, Amazon announced that its $1.4 billion expansion at the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport (CVG) airport will result in 2,700 jobs. That’s the largest single investment in Northern Kentucky ever.
    Toyota – which supports 30,000 jobs in Kentucky – last month announced that it is investing an additional $1.3 billion in its Georgetown, Kentucky plant.
    It’s a refreshing and dramatic change from past announcements of plants closing and Kentucky losing out to neighboring states year after year when Democrats controlled Frankfort.
    ADVERTISING
    The Bevin administration and the Republicans in the legislature deserve credit. This January marked the first time in nearly a century that Republicans have controlled the House. Republicans immediately passed right to work as well as other legislation to make the Commonwealth more business friendly. Tax reform is slated to follow.
    Right to work laws allow employees to join a union if they so desire but prevent unions from forcing them to join. Kentucky was the last state in the South, and 27th in the country to pass right to work.
    The importance of these legislative initiatives cannot be overstated. Braidy Industries CEO Craig Bouchard said that Kentucky’s passage of right to work contributed to the decision to build the Greenup County facility.
    “If Kentucky was not a right-to-work state, you wouldn’t have gotten on the list because it’s so important to us,” Bouchard said.
    More Bridget Bush columns
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    The Braidy Industries facility, in particular, is an answer to prayer. Those jobs pay, on average, $70,000 in a county where the median income is $45,400. The new facility would have been good news anywhere, but the fact that it is locating in an area so desperate for jobs is cause for rejoicing. That part of Appalachia has twice the unemployment rate of the rest of the state.
    Five hundred Kentuckians in Eastern Kentucky now will have an opportunity to work. Moreover, Bouchard envisions an employee-friendly facility with daycare, a fitness center, and healthy dining services. And Braidy is coordinating with local community colleges to arrange the training and internships that will transition to a career.
    The Braidy Industries announcement makes me think of J.D. Vance’s powerful book "Hillbilly Elegy: a Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis." Vance traces his family’s migration from Breathitt County, Kentucky to Middletown, Ohio, in pursuit of factory jobs in what eventually became the rust belt. He portrays poverty and addiction with a rawness that is almost painful to read.
    The saddest part of "Hillbilly Elegy" is the sense of hopelessness and helplessness – the feeling that nothing can improve.
    Vance’s family grappled with substance abuse and divorce. Although a job is no guarantee of happiness, to the unemployed, it at least offers hope that life can get better, that hard work can be rewarded and lead to independence. It’s a way to provide the most basic needs for those we love.  A job confers dignity.
    All the recent announcements about economic development represent much more than an increase in tax revenue. Lives will change as a result of these new jobs. The ripple effect will be more than economic.
    Kentucky is still a poor state with many problems. However, passage of right to work and other laws to improve the business climate (plus strategic use of tax incentives) has allowed Kentucky to compete for jobs that previously would have gone to other states. Case in point:  Braidy Industries picked Kentucky over Indiana.
    Kentucky Republicans ran on a specific platform. They are following through on their campaign promises with a sense of urgency and focus.  Announcements of new jobs are becoming commonplace. Some will say it’s a coincidence. No matter; let’s keep those coincidences coming.
    Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 11:28 AM No comments:

    Thursday, April 27, 2017

    My C-J Column on Campus Free Speech


    Reprinted with permission of the Courier-Journal

    Here's the link   Previous efforts to cut and paste it ran in to formatting issues -- I will try to fix later.

    Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 12:45 PM No comments:

    Monday, April 24, 2017

    POTUS's Kind Surprise


    One of my childhood friends, Claudia Tenney, was recently elected to Congress for NY-22.  Claudia is a strong constitutional conservative.

    She was at the White House last week as part of an Executive Order signing ceremony, and had a few minutes to visit with President Donald Trump.

    Claudia's son, Trey, is an Annapolis graduate scheduled to deploy to Iraq, yesterday I believe. When Trump heard this, he called Trey to thank him for his service and wish him Godspeed.

    It was so unexpected. It's true that his mother is a Congresswoman. But she is just one of 435, and a freshman.

    Trump's thoughtfulness reveals a side of him not normally portrayed in the mainstream media. There is so much more to him as a person than the left understands. Thankfully, however, the American people get it.

    God bless you both, Trey and President Trump.
    Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 1:36 PM No comments:

    Wednesday, April 19, 2017

    Good For Trump on Syria Strike and MOAB



    There has been some anxiety on the right about President Donald Trump's surprise bombing of Syria and then using the Mother of All Bombs ("MOAB" on Isis strongholds in Afghanistan.

    I was relieved to see an American president acting like an American president again. Trump said he'd bomb the sh** out of Isis, and he kept his promised.

    The Syrians lied to the Obama administration. As recent horrific pictures showed, the Assad regime did not get rid of its chemical weapons. That was a blatant, repeated lie to among others, America's secretary of state. We have a national security interest in countries not lying to our government about their possession of chemical weapons.

    The pictures of the children dying from exposure to chemical gas called for a response on a visceral level. The lies to our government about the destruction of chemical weapons also called for a response. The two wrongs dovetailed into something that Trump was right to address forcefully.

    I take seriously Sen. Rand Paul's concerns about the U.S. waging unconstitutional wars. There is no reason for Congress to fail to decline war in instances like Korea, Vietnam and the Gulf wars. Certainly those conflicts dragged on long enough that there was plenty of time.

    But the strikes in Syria and the MOAB bombing in Afghanistan were in and out -- not protracted wars. A Congressional Declaration of War would have destroyed any element of surprise. And I think the bombings are also distinguishable because we did not send in troops.

    Without analyzing precedents on the war powers act, these limited bombings strike me as constitutional.



    Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 3:30 PM No comments:

    Wednesday, April 12, 2017

    Elaine Chao on Politico Podcast



    Politico has started a new podcast called Women Rule and the latest episode features Secretary of Transportation Elaine Chao. I recommend it -- particularly to young women looking to get ahead in male dominated industries.

    Chao discusses immigrating to America as an eight year old who spoke no English and didn't know how to use a fork. Although I have heard Chao talk about this experience before, I am always struck by how much her family overcame, and their courage in coming here; Chao's mother stayed back in China with Chao and two of her sisters for three years before they were able to join her husband in America.

    It's just extraordinary that Chao rose to serve four different presidents, two as a member of the cabinet. Her family illustrates the American dream. It never fails to encourage me.

    Chao had some interesting insights in working in places where she was the only woman. She didn't like sports and therefore could not participate in the banter that preceded the work of meetings. And she decided that because she really was not interested, she would not try to learn a little something about sports and fake it; she was authentic to her own interests.

    She was able to become included by virtue of her mastery of subjects like transportation and finance. Subject mastery, Chao observed, is empowering. Women tend to prepare more than men, Chao noted, and that has been her style as well.

    Chao advised younger women to not be afraid of making a mistake, particularly misspeaking. In part, that comes from Chao's view of America as a land of second chances. It also reflects her observation that Americans are not like Asians -- who choose words deliberately and listen to others with the expectation they did likewise.  In America, there's a good chance no one will remember the mistake, Chao said.

    In addition to insights about her leadership style, Chao gives some tidbits about her husband, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. Kentuckians will not be surprised to hear what a considerate spouse he is. Still, it's hard to comprehend the Senate Majority Leader doing laundry.







    Posted by Bridget M. Bush at 4:45 PM No comments:
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