Posted on 02/25/2009 8:09:40 PM PST by presidio9
if its rumbling, belching smoke, ash, dust, gas or fire; IT’S TIME TO LEAVE AND QUICKLY!!!!! LOL!
The merits of “Volcano Monitoring” aside. How does it stimulate the economy?
To be honest, with so many easy targets in the stimulus, I thought this was a bad choice by Jindal, just because that Alaskan volcano has been threatening lately. Imagine if ther is a city affecting eruption after Jindal singled this out?
The volcanoes are going to do what they do monitored or not, and although a little advanced warning would be good, all that's going to do is save a handful of human lives, not particularly help the economy.
By employing graduate students and ensuring that the education establishment can hang onto young people longer, and perhaps convince them to become climatologists after stringing them along for a number of years hiking out to remote volcanoes and installing equipment to monitor them.
But yes, the point you’re making is valid, it’s not a stimulus item, it should be part of the normal budget.
I’m not defending the funding, but if you are curious go to usgs.gov to check out what it is about.
He should have stated that; instead, he sounded like he was proud to be ignorant.
Don’t worry gevernor Jindal. America invented the automobile!
You can only put so much into a speech. In this case the point was OBVIOUS. No doubt it was entirely too subtle for Democrats ~ they didn’t even want to read their own bill.
Imagine if the entire $1,000,0000,0000,000 was investeted in volcano monitoring. Our nation would be up to it’s armpits in debt, the economy would still suck, and the volcano would still erupt. That’s what volcanos do sometimes, even if you decide to build a city next to them.
Meanwhile, earmarks like volcano monitoring have zero to do with stimulating the economy. A better use of the money would be on military spending, because obviously Palin will have to call the troops in after the volcano erupts.
I can see Mt Rainier from my front room window. I have been monitoring it for years. It is a volcano, but inactive. WHERE’S MY MONEY??????????????????????????????????
Doesn’t sound “shovel ready” ;-)
Doesn’t sound “shovel ready” ;-)
I like Jindal, and I consider myself conservative, but arguing over which program is proper and which is not is a waste of time.
The real question: Is this Constitutional? Is the spending part of Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution?
By focusing on this program and that, we concede the larger point to the left - that the government should have the power to do whatever it wants to do, instead of living in a country with a limited government and strictly enumerated powers.
I’m sure that other people who live up here in Alaska can argue that a decent volcano watch program is a reasonable use of the federal government (I’m looking at all those clauses having to do with protecting commerce and promoting science - large numbers of volcanos in Alaska are right in the path of air cargo flights from Asia.)
However, I’m off topic. Is it Constitutional? That’s the question.
Karl had, of course, earlier invented the German Army command motorcycle with sidecar ~ which some people still believe to be an automobile!
I was one of the first people to post that Jindal did not have a good night. That I feel is acceptable.
But what is not acceptable is to continue the venom for another day. Let’s move on and focus on Obama.
Surprise. Ranier is NOT inactive. It’s just not spewing lava and smoke at the moment, but it could shimmy and shake and send a vast landslide down towards Seattle and destroy most of the Eastern suburbs.
I think Jindal’s point is why is it in a stimulus package.
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