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Is it possible that just 6,200 signups were processed through the main Obamacare website on day one, and only 51,000 after the entire week?

According to MailOnline, two sources inside the Department of Health and Human Services who gave them an exclusive look at the earliest enrollment numbers, provided the evidence that this is the case. If it is, then the law is in far more seruous trouble than previously expected.

Open enrollment for Obamacare coverage is set to last for six months. If the first week’s totals were any indication of how many Americans will sign up during that period on the Obamacare website, its final tally would reach a measly 1.32 million. Furthermore, if the state-run exchanges were to have a similar response rate for 6 months, the national enrollment total would be approximately 2 million, which would represent just 4 percent of the overall number eligible to participate.

That would be a huge problem for the Obama administration and other proponents of statism, because that number is less than 29 percent of the 7 million the government would need in order to balance the new health insurance system’s books and keep it from inevitable financial collapse, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.

“These numbers reflect what we all know. Obamacare is a disaster,” said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn when asked by MailOnline. “It is time for the president to admit Obamacare is not working and that the American people deserve better,” he added.

The administration hoped that the Obamacare website exchanges would enroll at least 2.7 million young, healthy people between 18 – 35, whom of which have to pay monthly premiums in order to offset the cost of Obamacare for older, sicker Americans. The information supposedly provided to MailOnline did not specify how many of the early enrollees fall in this age group.

The administration has been stonewalling talk show hosts on the question of the total amount of enrollees, repeatedly claiming that figures are not yet known, and that millions have visited the site to “explore their options,” as Treasury Sec. Jack Lew said on Fox News Sunday last week. White House Press Secretary, Jay Carney, was equally non-forthcoming.

After Carney said on Monday that the administration would “release enrollment data on regularly, monthly intervals,” the White House Press Core called him on the lack of transparency and pushed the administration for an actual date. “I’m not sure when that begins,” he told press core reporters, “but I’m sure we’ll let you know in plenty of time so you can plan and put it on your calendar.”

Comedy Central host Jon Stewart, asked Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius on “The Daily Show” what the figures of those who enrolled in Obamacare stood at.
“I can’t tell you because I don’t know,” she said.

After interview — when the show returned from commercial break — Jon Stewart straightup accused Sec. Sebelius of lying.

Whether or not the administration continues to stonewall ro for how long at least, still remains to be seen. Many lawmakers have noted that they should be eager to shoot down the report if it is untrue, but one thing is certain, they won’t be able to continue this forever.

Is it possible that just 6,200 signups

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Advocates for illegal immigrant must have interrupted Sen. Ted Cruz’s speech to the Values Voters Summit on Friday more than a dozen times. The hecklers were calling on the Hispanic Texas Republican and potential presidential candidate to support a pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants.

In true Cruz fashion, he wittingly and repeatedly deflected the criticism, turning it into an attack against President Obama.

“How scared is the president?” Mr. Cruz said. “Oh, they don’t want the truth to be heard. They definitely don’t want the truth to be heard.”

The junior senator and magnet for controversy received some unsolicited help from the crowd, who attempted to drown out the protestors with chants of “USA! USA!”

Eventually, the protesters were drug out of the summit by security guards.

Sen. Cruz opposed the immigration reform bill that GOP Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, who also spoke at the summit on Friday. Rubio’s support gave life to the bill in the Senate, where it passed on a 68-32 vote, enjoying the support of 14 Republicans.

The GOP-controlled House has not yet taken up the bill, which would grant quick legal status and work permits to most illegal immigrants. But it would withhold a full path to citizenship until a number of border security benchmarks are met.

“The message we were trying to get to the Republican Party was that if they want to get Latino vote once again, they need to support immigration reform,” said Salvador Cervantes, who refused to give his group’s name to the press. “An immigration reform bill that gives legal status to people who are living without documents — good people.”

Carolina Canizales, 23, a member of United We Dream, who admitted to coming into the country illegally, but received legal status courtesy of President Obama’s non-deportation policies, said that Mr. Cruz has refused to listen to advocates of immigration reform.

“There is one reality that we are always having: There are 1,400 people being deported every day,” Ms. Canizales said. “Sen. Cruz is a Latino and should champion our population of Latinos.”

Advocates for illegal immigrant must have interrupted

The Bronx Museum of the Arts announced the opening of the Tony Feher Exhibition. The artist Feher came to fame in the 1990s, inspired by the minimalists that preceded him. Feher pioneered using materials with a new focus on the sculptural qualities of the everyday. Taking advantage of the generally overlooked and discarded, he highlights their formal qualities while simultaneously imbuing them with personal meaning.

The artist’s affection for non-precious, commonly available materials has been very influential with the younger, hip generations. Tony Feher also engages site-determined, architecturally-based installations that are often of large-scale.

Tony Feher’s recent commissions include the Ulrich Museum of Art in Wichita, Kanas, a public artwork for the Federal Courthouse in Rockford, Illinois, and the Hudson (Show) Room at Artpace in San Antonio. The exhibit opened first at the Des Moines Art Center in the Spring of 2012, Houston in October of 2012, subsequently to the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum in Lincoln, Massachusetts, then finally terminating at the Bronx Museum for the arts in the fall of 2013.

 

Contact Information:
Bronx Museum of the Arts
1040 Grand Concourse
Bronx, New York
Opening Hours: Thursday, Saturday, Sunday 11am-6pm and Friday 11am-8pm
Phone & website: 718-681-6000/ bronxmuseum.org 

The Bronx Museum of the Arts announced

With the government shutdown ensuing, Americans are now more likely to name dysfunctional government over the economy as the most important problem facing the country, with grave implications for both parties. A majority of Americans — 60 percent — say the Democratic and Republicans parties do such a poor job of representing the American people that a third major party is needed.

This measurement is the highest Gallup has seen in the 10-year history of this question. A new low of 26% believe the two major parties adequately represent Americans. But that is not the only first in Gallup history, either. A new high — 33 percent — name dysfunctional government as the nation’s top issue, which is also the highest percentage in Gallup’s trend dating back to 1939.

Sadly, the data does suggest that Americans had already to begun to give up on the economic outlook, resolving to the fact that perhaps the economy will just not improve. Americans’ likelihood to say that the economy in general or jobs in particular was the nation’s top problem had already been declining in 2013.

Likewise, during the last government shutdown in January of 1996, Americans also began to increasingly report that dysfunctional government was the nation’s top problem, but it rose only to 17 percent, which is roughly half the level we see now.

In both measurements we see a divide among partisan preference, with Democrats — 36 percent — being more inclined to name government dysfunction as the nation’s top issue, to just 23 percent of Republicans. On the other hand, Republicans and independents are more likely to say there is a need for a third party.

Aside from the American people giving up on the economic outlook, which is currently a bleak one under President Obama, none of this seems to be particularly surprising considering two factors. First, party favorables are at all-time lows.

The Republican Party has seen its favorables fall to an all-time low, with just 28 percent viewing the Grand Ole Party in a good light. Furthermore, independents are typically closer in line with Republicans on issues and concerns for a reason, because many of them are — or were — Republicans who are now fed up with the party. The party, itself, is clearing undergoing a change, which will have a far-reaching impact on perception for both parties.

For the time, more than 6 in 10 Americans — 62 percent — now view the Republican Party unfavorably, which again, is a record high. Comparatively, nearly half of Americans — 49 percent — view the Democratic Party unfavorably.

Second, right-track/wrong-track or direction of country polling, was never especially impressive during Obama’s tenure. However, we are seeing a real plummet recently in public opinion. Consider the table below, and I will let it speak for itself.

Poll Date Right Direction Wrong Track Spread
PPD Average 9/20 – 10/9 18.5 73.5 -55.0
NBC News/Wall St. Jrnl 10/7 – 10/9 14 78 -64
Reuters/Ipsos 10/4 – 10/8 15 68 -53
The Economist/YouGov 10/5 – 10/7 18 73 -55
Associated Press/GfK 10/3 – 10/7 22 78 -56
Rasmussen Reports 9/30 – 10/6 17 76 -59
Reuters/Ipsos 9/27 – 10/1 24 60 -36
The Economist/YouGov 9/28 – 9/30 25 65 -40
Rasmussen Reports 9/23 – 9/29 28 63 -35

As the economy is surpassed by government

A reading on consumer sentiment from Thomson Reuters and the University of Michigan for the month of October came in at 75.2, the lowest level since January, slightly missing expectations of 76, also lower than a September reading of 77.5.

The Rasmussen Consumer Index, which measures consumer confidence daily, dropped another point on Friday to 89.7, now at its lowest index level this year. Consumer confidence is down 7 points from a week ago, 13 points from a month ago and 8 points from 3 months ago.

The Rasmussen Investor Index gained four points on Friday after falling for a week to reach 104.2, which mirrors banking optimism. However, investor confidence is still down 8 points from a week ago and 12 points from a month ago and 3 months ago.

Gallup measured economic confidence at -35 yesterday, and consumer spending was down $12 to $69.

Meanwhile, Wells Fargo reported third-quarter profits of 99 cents per share, beating estimates by two cents. The bank posted revenues of $20.5 billion, just shy of the $20.97 billion analysts expected. Shares were little changed in pre-market trading.

Banking giant JP Morgan Chase revealed third-quarter profits of $1.42 a share, excluding a litigation expense and a reserve release, compared to expectations of $1.17 a share. Revenues of $23.9 billion matched estimates. Shares of the biggest U.S. bank by assets climbed 1% in pre-market trading.

As of 10:00 a.m. ET, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 50.9 points, or 0.33%, to 15175, the S&P 500 gained 3.3 points, or 0.19%, to 1696 and the Nasdaq Composite advanced 6.5 points, or 0.17%, to 3767.

In commodities, U.S. crude oil futures slid $1.36, or 1.3%, to $101.65 a barrel. Wholesale New York Harbor gasoline dipped 0.38% to $2.688 a gallon. Gold dropped $10.20, or 0.79%, to $1,287 a troy ounce.

A reading on consumer sentiment from Thomson

WASHINGTON — For all the hyped indignation over GOP “anarchism,” there has been remarkable media reticence about the president’s intransigence. He has refused to negotiate anything unless the Republicans fully fund the government and raise the debt ceiling — unconditionally.

For all his protestations about protecting the full faith and credit of the United States — jittery markets are showing that his brinkmanship could have precisely the opposite effect — the president’s real intent is to score a humiliating victory over the GOP.

So far, so good. Republicans have fallen to 28 percent approval, the lowest level ever for either party in 21 years of polling and a staggering 10-point drop in the last month. Democrats have also declined, but only four points and, in the end, partisan politics is a zero-sum game. If you lose less than the other guy, you win — because every seat in Congress will be allocated to one party or the other, no matter how disgusted the country is with both.

To be sure, the administration has, as always, overplayed a good hand, with punitive shutdowns — such as of the World War II Memorial — clearly intended to be blamed on the GOP.

People aren’t that stupid. They know a gratuitous abuse of government (lockout) power when they see it. Moreover, Republicans have been passing partial funding bills for such things as national monuments and cancer research, forcing Harry Reid’s Democratic Senate to kill them with a stone cold heart.

Even worse for Democrats, their current partisan advantage is a wasting asset. The rule is simple: shutdown good, debt ceiling bad. Every day the debt ceiling approaches, President Obama’s leverage diminishes.

Obama insists he won’t negotiate on the debt ceiling as a matter of principle. It’s never been used as leverage for extraneous (i.e., non-budgetary) demands, he claims.

Nonsense. It’s been so used dozens of times going back at least to 1973 when Ted Kennedy and Walter Mondale tried to force campaign finance reform on President Nixon. Obama himself voted against raising the debt ceiling when he was a senator in 2006.

So much for principle. Moreover, should Obama miscalculate the brinkmanship, he’ll become the first president to ever allow a default. Precisely opposite to the principle he pretends to be espousing — and ruinous to what’s left of his presidency. Breaching the debt ceiling would indeed, as he claims, be an economic disaster, aborting an already historically anemic recovery. As president, he would take the blame. He can’t allow it.

It’s a bluff. He will blink.

That’s why, as the debt ceiling approaches, the initiative will increasingly swing to House Speaker John Boehner. The real question is: What will Boehner do with it?

His answer thus far has been peculiar: He simply wants the president to sit down and negotiate.

Negotiate what? “There’s nothing on the table,” said Boehner on Tuesday. “There’s nothing off the table.”

Stranger still. You cannot negotiate if you don’t know what you want. The Republicans need to present a simple, broadly popular set of demands to attach to the debt ceiling. The president will deal. In his Tuesday press conference, he’d already abandoned his original ultimatum of give me a long-term extension or I don’t budge. Now it’s: Give me an extension of any length and I’ll come to the table.

On Thursday, Boehner took that exit ramp, offering Obama a six-week debt-ceiling extension during which negotiations would be conducted. Unless Obama reverses himself and refuses, his “no negotiations” posture evaporates.

What, then, to ask for? Paul Ryan, as usual, points the way with a suggestion that would turn the partial and imperfect success of the last debt-ceiling fight — the automatic spending cuts (“sequester”) that seriously reduced discretionary spending — into the larger success of curbing entitlements, which is where the real money is.

After all, Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and other health programs (plus interest payments) already claim more than half the federal budget. And they are poised to explode, eating up (estimates the Congressional Budget Office) 97 percent of revenues within 25 years.

Raising (and indexing) the retirement age while changing the inflation measure for entitlements would alone be major achievements. Democrats could be offered relief on the sequester — which everyone agrees needs restructuring anyway, since it cuts agency budgets indiscriminately, often illogically, by formula.

It’s win-win. A serious attack on the deficit — good. Refiguring sequestration to restore some defense spending and some logic to discretionary spending — also good. Forcing the president off Mount Olympus — priceless.

Charles Krauthammer’s email address is [email protected].

Award-winning columnist, Charles Krauthammer, says that "the

Truckers Ride For The Constitution website has been shutdown for a supposed violation of the BlueHost terms of use policy.

Pete Santilli called into BlueHost with his primary site — pizzablogger.net — being shutdown, as well. Initially, Pete Santilli believed it to be the latest in a long list of Internet attacks on the organization.

The agent said that the account was deactivated for a performance issue, which was that the CPU usage was through the roof and left the site vulnerable for attack. In other words, the traffic was so great, the site crashed.

The agent suggested that the site be upgraded to a VPS and Santilli agreed. He said that they needed to get the sites back up as soon as possible, which would require the organization to get upgraded to VPS to ensure that the usage would no longer exceed allowable limits.

The site issues is indicative of the amount of traffic and potentially high turnout to be seen at the Ride For The Constitution D.C. protest. Beginning Friday, the organization Truckers Ride For the Constitution will be attempting to shutdown the Beltway in protest of a number of issues. Among the grievances, the drivers are complaining about wages, gas prices, federal regulations on their industry, the debt and the National Security Agency’s anti-Fourth Amendment surveillance policies.

A spokeswoman for the group, Zeeta Andrews said, “If anyone can help save the country, it’s truckers,” said Andrews. “Just like the truckers, Americans are sick and tired of what’s going on in this country. It’s time to get up there and make a change. If something happens, it’s because we all let it. We have a right to address these issues and bring them to Washington, D.C. in a peaceful manner.”

BlueHost is working on getting their site back up and running, which will most likely take about 4 – 6 hours, according to the BlueHost agent. We will certainly be covering this event as the morning rolls in with the trucks.

 

 

 

Truckers Ride For The Constitution website has

The Democratic candidate for Virginia governor, Terry McAuliffe, was named as one of dozens who invested in a Rhode Island estate planner, who is now charged with defrauding insurers.

The estate planning firm defrauded insurers by using the stolen identities of terminally ill people, according to court documents filed by federal prosecutors in Providence. McAuliffe’s name appeared on a long list, including a former Rhode Island Supreme Court justice, a Roman Catholic monsignor, a former Cranston, R.I. police chief, a bookmaker and Joseph A. Caramadre, who is the attorney and accountant who obtained the identities of dying people to set up annuities that ultimately cost insurance companies millions of dollars.

Even though McAuliffe spokesman Josh Schwerin said he was a “passive investor” who was deceived, McAuliffe received approximately $74,000 from his investment in the scam and also accepted a campaign contribution from Joseph Caramadre. Federal authorities say Caramadre, through his firm Estate Planning Resources, began developing products in the 1990s that used the identities of terminally ill people to purchase variable annuities from insurance companies. The annuities offered death benefits when those annuitants died.

Caramadre located terminally ill people by visiting AIDS patients at a hospice, locating relatives of terminally ill people, and placing an ad in a local Catholic newspaper offering $2,000 cash to people with a terminal illness.

In 2009, Caramadre gave McAuliffe’s campaign a $26,599 contribution, including an in-kind event donation of $1,599, according to records kept by the Virginia Public Access Project.

“Terry was one of hundreds of passive investors several years ago and had no idea about the allegations against the defendant — who, at the time, was widely respected by business leaders and elected officials,” Schwerin said. “The allegations are horrible and he never would have invested if he knew he was being deceived.”

McAuliffe has maintained a consistent lead over his Republican challenger Ken Cuccinelli, after watching his polling lead get sliced in half over the month of September. It is unclear whether or not this will hurt McAuliffe’s electoral prospects going forward. At best, Terry McAuliffe was clearly incompetent and seemingly okay with keeping such bad company. At worst, this is a continuation of a disturbing pattern that began with revelations of McAuliffe’s former company Green Tech, which reveals a man who frequently engages in unethical business practices using his less than honest business connections.

Democratic candidate for Virginia governor, Terry McAuliffe,

JERUSALEM –  In what was a clear message to Iran, an IAF video has been released showing a tanker refueling a fighter jet in mid-flight. The Israeli military says it has carried a “special long-range flight exercise” and posted rare footage of the drill online.

The military said Thursday that its squadrons practiced refueling planes in midair this week and tested the air force’s ability. The release of the video comes just days before Western powers are to open new nuclear talks with Iran.

Israeli officials said the drill took place over Greece, who is a key regional ally. The Israeli military has done similar drills in the past, however, never before has footage of the exercise been released and so publicly displayed. The footage aims to send a message to Iran before the talks that is two-fold: first, a credible military options remains, and a doable military option remains.

The second message is crucial, because many experts have said that Israel does not have the capacity to strike Iranian nuclear targets alone. With the U.S. engaging in talk with the regime for the first time in 30 years, Israelis have been pushed on the fringe of the world community, isolated in the latest move by an American leader with a habit of giving allies reason to doubt our nation’s resolve.

The exercise took place in the area of Greece, with the participation of dozens of IAF jets, demonstrating a powerful airstrike could be delivered thousands of miles from Israeli borders. They rehearsed midair refueling and attacks against remote targets.

The documentation is being published just as the so-called P 5+1 powers are preparing to resume talks with Iran — not regarding Iran — over its nuclear program next month.

The IAF website wrote that “When people say that ‘all options are on the table,’ one understands that they are also talking about military options. The IAF – the long arm of the IDF – is responsible for implementing this option if need be, and to this end, the squadrons are rehearsing and strengthening their capabilities.

“In this field, the IAF has to develop the relevant abilities for operations, from a focused operation to a wide-ranging one,” the site stated.

Jerusalem fully intents to make sure that the upcoming talks are accompanied by credible military threats, making crystal clear that — as far as Israeli leadership is concerned — should talks be a failure it will be a green light for military action.

JERUSALEM – In what was a

Thursday at the White House meeting, House Speaker John Boehner pitched the idea of a short-term increase in the debt ceiling. This is the Speaker’s attempt to evade what the administration officials had been claiming will be an economic catastrophe.

The plan that Boehner and his colleagues agreed upon would allow for a six-week extension to the debt ceiling, provided that the president and the Democratic Party truly commit to a real negotiation. The House Speaker and the Republican Party have extended their hands across the isle trying to meet Democrats half way in regards to the government shutdown and a longer term extension to the debt ceiling.

House Speaker John Boehner and key Republican negotiators are headed to the White House Thursday afternoon, even though there seemed to be conflicting feelings in the GOP caucus. With the Treasury officials alerting the nation that they will be unable to pay all its bills by October 17 if an agreement is not met, pressure on all sides is coming in from all angles.

Evidently, this new plan does not undertake the ongoing partial government shutdown, leaving the government at an impasse. GOP leaders wish for a short-term debt ceiling raise that would entice the president to start real negotiations on a new spending bill. The White House issued a statement that was evasive in regard to the new plan, though Obama had implied that he would consider signing a short-term deal.

A White House official said:

We are willing to look at any proposal Congress puts forward to end these manufactured crises but will not allow a faction of the Republicans in the House to hold the economy hostage to its extraneous and extreme political demands. Obama still wants the House to pass a spending bill first, and raise the debt ceiling, before Obama will negotiate. Obama would prefer a longer-term debt-ceiling increase, like the one-year extension the Senate is considering.

Apparently, the White House officials feel no accountability for the partial government shutdown, pointing the finger at the “faction” of Republicans. The official also stated that Obama would prefer a longer-term debt-ceiling increase, like the one-year extension the Senate is considering.

It would seem that the White House and administration officials are trying to avoid the task at hand, by attempting to over exert the GOP’s generous offer. A source said that the GOP proposal would increase the debt ceiling with a hard deadline of Nov. 22, with the stipulation to call negotiators to discuss the budget. It would also require that President Obama work with them on both the budget and debt limit.

The treasury secretary fore warned the consequences of not raising the debt ceiling, he said payments encompassing Medicare reimbursements of military salaries to Social Security checks could be halted by the end of the month. Lew said the consequences would be unpredictable being that we are in “uncharted territory” and “it would be chaos.” However, Moody’s Investor Services released a memo yesterday clarifying that a default had “no direct connection” to the debt limit.

Some lawmakers in the Republican Party have accused the White House administration of exaggerating, yet they still do not want to dally with breaching the debt-ceiling deadline. On Friday morning, Senate Republicans are set to meet with President Obama at the White House. Hopefully, President Obama will truly sit down to negotiate and show true leadership to get the U.S back on track.

Negotiating does not mean that the Republican Party must fold to every demand by the White House administration, if there has to be an increase in the debt limit, then we must have a strict spending budget to ensure our future generations will not be subjugated in all aspects of the word.

Thursday at the White House meeting, House

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