Archive for the ‘Political News’ Category

Texas County Ordered to Catch Up With The Rest of The Country

Monday, November 29th, 2010

Texas attorney general Greg Abbott orders Texas county to allow dissemination of public records on USB drives.I recently ran across a story about county court records dilemma in Texas that had the Attorny General, Greg Abbott involved. Basically, a county courthouse was reluctant to allow certain access to property records and Attorney General Greg Abbott order them to update their systems so their technology is current and on par with the rest of society.

It all started when a company based in Houston, Texas known as Integrity Title Records, tried to obtain land records from Hidalgo County. The company provides access to an online database for its customers and was trying to obtain an electronic index of the county’s title records, digital copies of each physical record, and the associated maps.

The clerk’s office in Hidalgo county initially denied the request. Here’s the funny part: they claimed that the USB ports, necessary for transferring the data onto to Integrity’s drives, were disabled. This was apparently due to the county’s security policy and that of the records vendor for the county, which barred the attachment of additional hardware to the leased computers.

Wait…it gets better. Instead of simply allowing the operation, which would have cost $0.00, and taken about 4 hours, the clerk’s office offered to copy the title records onto more than 1,000 CD’s at a cost of $87,430. That’s a whopping $87 per CD. They must have either been extremely irate at the company or figured, what the heck, let’s give it a shot. By the time I got this far, I was almost rolling on the floor from laughing so hard.

Of course, Integrity became upset and filed a cost complain with Attorney General Abbott’s office in August of 2009. Earlier this month, Abbott ruled that a USB drive is a storage device like a CD or a DVD, also noting that the county did in fact routinely use CD’s. My guess is that they were charging $87 or so per CD, and that most people only needed 1 or 2 CD’s. This way the issue never came up because it just wasn’t worth complaining about, but it was a money maker for the county.

“By refusing to furnish the information to the requestor in the requested medium of a USB drive on the basis of an agreement entered into by the county clerk with ACS, or a security policy adopted by the county clerk that requires disabling of the USB ports on the county clerk’s computers, the county clerk has failed to comply with section 552.268 of the Government Code,” wrote the attorney general.

The long and short is that if the county’s computers do not have USB drives installed, they must take the necessary steps to install them. I have no doubt their computers have USB drives and that they function just fine. What boggles my mind is that they would be so ridiculous about the whole thing. Oh well, we’ll know for next time, that’s all.

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Can a Nation Remain a Superpower If Internal Politics Are Incorrigibly Stupid?

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

Thursday, July 29, 2010

I just came across an article in The Washington Post
By E.J. Dionne Jr.

While this is a blog about background checks, it’s also my personal ranting space and I think the article sums up American politics very well. You comments and feedback would also be appreciated, so let me know what you think. The article is quoted below:

Can a nation remain a superpower if its internal politics are incorrigibly stupid?

Start with taxes. In every other serious democracy, conservative political parties feel at least some obligation to match their tax policies with their spending plans. David Cameron, the new Conservative prime minister in Britain, is a leading example.

He recently offered a rather brutal budget that includes severe cutbacks. I have doubts about some of them, but at least Cameron cared enough about reducing his country’s deficit that alongside the cuts he also proposed an increase in the value-added tax, from 17.5 percent to 20 percent. Imagine: a fiscal conservative who really is a fiscal conservative.

That could never happen here because the fairy tale of supply-side economics insists that taxes are always too high, especially on the rich.

This is why Democrats will be fools if they don’t try to turn the Republicans’ refusal to raise taxes on families earning more than $250,000 a year into an election issue. If Democrats go into a headlong retreat on this, they will have no standing to govern.

The simple truth is that the wealthy in the United States — the people who have made almost all the income gains in recent years — are undertaxed compared with everyone else.

Consider two reports from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. One, issued last month, highlighted findings from the Congressional Budget Office showing that “the gaps in after-tax income between the richest 1 percent of Americans and the middle and poorest fifths of the country more than tripled between 1979 and 2007.”

The other, from February, used Internal Revenue Service data to show that the effective federal income tax rate for the 400 taxpayers with the very highest incomes declined by nearly half in just over a decade, even as their pre-tax incomes have grown five times larger.

The study found that the top 400 households “paid 16.6 percent of their income in federal individual income taxes in 2007, down from 30 percent in 1995.” We are talking here about truly rich people. Using 2007 dollars, it took an adjusted gross income of at least $35 million to make the top 400 in 1992, and $139 million in 2007.

The notion that when we are fighting two wars, we’re not supposed to consider raising taxes on such Americans is one sign of a country that’s no longer serious. Why do so few foreign policy hawks acknowledge that if they lack the gumption to ask taxpayers to finance the projection of American military power, we won’t be able to project it in the long run?

And if we are unwilling to have a full-scale debate over whether nation-building abroad is getting in the way of nation-building at home, we will accomplish neither.

Our discussion of the economic stimulus is another symptom of political irrationality. It’s entirely true that the $787 billion recovery package passed last year was not big enough to keep unemployment from rising above 9 percent.

But this is not actually an argument against the stimulus. On the contrary, studies showing that the stimulus created or saved as many as 3 million jobs are very hard to refute. It’s much easier to pretend that all this money was wasted, although the evidence is overwhelming that we should have stimulated more.

Then there’s the structure of our government. Does any other democracy have a powerful legislative branch as undemocratic as the U.S. Senate?

When our republic was created, the population ratio between the largest and smallest state was 13 to 1. Now, it’s 68 to 1. Because of the abuse of the filibuster, 41 senators representing less than 11 percent of the nation’s population can, in principle, block action supported by 59 senators representing more than 89 percent of our population. And you wonder why it’s so hard to get anything done in Washington?

I’m a chronic optimist about America. But we are letting stupid politics, irrational ideas on fiscal policy and an antiquated political structure undermine our power.

We need a new conservatism in our country that is worthy of the name. We need liberals willing to speak out on the threat our daft politics poses to our influence in the world. We need moderates who do more than stick their fingers in the wind to calculate the halfway point between two political poles.

And, yes, we need to reform a Senate that has become an embarrassment to our democratic claims.