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The LooneyDuff to Connecticut taxpayers: “Yes, we can spend our way to Prosperity”

The LooneyDuff to Connecticut taxpayers: “Yes, we can spend our way to Prosperity”   The headline in the Hartford Courant – “ Lamont confronts spending cap ” -- was slightly and unintentionally misleading. Actually, Lamont is, and has been for his whole term in office, confronting Democrat gatekeepers in the General Assembly, two of whom, President Pro Tempore of the State Senate Martin Looney and Majority Leader Bob Duff, are arch progressives. House leader Matt Ridder is more cautious than Looney, whose largely urban district has been in Democrat hands for decades.   Perhaps operating under the false pretenses of British economist John Maynard Keynes who famously suggested that states needn’t worry overmuch about their national debt because “It is a debt we owe to ourselves,” Connecticut’s debt lovers have been in the business for decades of boosting the state’s accumulative deficit. Under the direction of dominant state Democrats, Connecticut has managed to compile...
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The Murphy Thingy

It’s the New York Post , and so there are pictures. One shows Connecticut Senator Chris Murphy canoodling with “Courier Newsroom publisher Tara McGowan, 39, last Monday by the bar at the Red Hen, located just one mile north of Capitol Hill.”   The canoodle occurred one day or night prior to Murphy’s well-advertised absence from President Donald Trump’s recent Joint Address to Congress.   Murphy has said attendance at what was essentially a “campaign rally” involving the whole U.S. Congress – though Democrat congresspersons signaled their displeasure at the event by stonily sitting on their hands during the applause lines – was inconsistent with his dignity as a significant part of the permanent opposition to Trump.   Reaching for his moral Glock Murphy recently told the Hartford Courant that Democrat Party opposition to President Donald Trump should be unrelenting and unforgiving: “I think people won’t trust you if you run a campaign saying that if Donald Trump is ...

The Awesome Power of the Single Party State, and Murphy’s Socialist Itch

It should come as no surprise to political watchers in Connecticut, including reporters and political columnists, that Connecticut has been for some time a one-party state.   U.S. Senator from Connecticut Chris Murphy has been swimming in a warm one party state pool for his entire tenure in office.   Democrats in Connecticut control 1) both houses of the state’s General Assembly by nearly a two to one majority, 2) all Connecticut’s U.S. Congressional Offices, 3) the gubernatorial office, 4) Connecticut’s semi-independent court system, and 5) the State Supreme Court. Justices on the court owe their appointments to Democrats, who have not hesitated to use courts as a prop and launching pad for the promulgation of leftwing ideas.   The one-party state, history buffs will have noticed, is boringly similar wherever it has raised its horned head above the political horizon. In the blood soaked 20 th century, significant socialist/communist dictatorships in Germany ...

Tong the Magnificent

Tong Connecticut Attorney General William Tong, we are told by Hartford Courant political reporter Chris Keating and Tong himself, is on a mission.   He has been putting in the hours, “working seven days a week as he battles executive orders and federal spending freezes by President Donald J. Trump in cases both locally and nationally.”   Tong is mandated by his position as Attorney General of Connecticut, he believes, to serve as a “check and balance” against President Donald Trump and efforts within his administration to oversee the spending of tax dollars. “The lawsuits we [Tong and other attorneys general] have filed, particularly against Elon Musk and DOGE, are really important as a check on these guys,” Tong has said. “If there is no one checking these guys, there are no checks and balances, then they are unrestricted with unchecked, unrestricted power, and they can do whatever they want to hurt the people they don’t like who are their political, and I should s...

Briefs

  Briefs, January 24, 2025   Pope Francis   Pope Francis is moving closer to his maker.  We will not know until death has put a period on Francis’ pontificate whether the current pope has been a faithful messenger of God’s word.   The quickest way of disposing of popes politically is to point out their attachments to worldly pursuits. When the highly political Cardinal Richelieu of France died, the pope of the day was asked to comment. He said, “If there is no God, Richelieu will have lived a successful life. And if there is a God, he will have much to answer for.”   Indeed, there is a space between God’s world and the world of men that is in some instances unbridgeable. The accounting is different in both spheres. Soren Kierkegaard used to say, “Between God’s purposes in eternity and man’s purposes in time, there is an infinite qualitative difference.”   Trump and the uses of hyperbole   It has been (55) day...

Lamont’s Pillow Talk

Lamont and Gillett PURA, Connecticut’s Public Utilities Regulatory Authority, was instituted to regulate the state’s energy sector, principally two companies – Eversource and United Illuminating – neither of which are energy producers.   The head of PURA, Marissa Gillett, has secured her reappointment, but her job specs have been changed.   We were told in a recent Hartford Courant story, “Gillett has been at the center of a firestorm as the utilities have filed lawsuits in a contentious atmosphere for an agency that in the past was known for being low key and not making headlines… Eversource and United Illuminating filed a lawsuit against PURA, saying that Gillett was deciding issues unilaterally by freezing her two fellow commissioners out of the decision-making process, an allegation PURA and Gillett’s political supporters deny.”   Some Gillett supporters in the General Assembly had inadvertently dotted the “i” and crossed the “t” of the suit’s claim by pr...

Donna

I am writing this for members of my family, and for others who may be interested.   My twin sister Donna died a few hours ago of stage three lung cancer. The end came quickly and somewhat unexpectedly.   She was preceded in death by Lisa Pesci, my brother’s daughter, a woman of great courage who died still full of years, and my sister’s husband Craig Tobey Senior, who left her at a young age with a great gift: her accomplished son, Craig Tobey Jr.   My sister was a woman of great strength, persistence and humor. To the end, she loved life and those who loved her.   Her son Craig, a mere sapling when his father died, has grown up strong and straight. There is no crookedness in him. Thanks to Donna’s persistence and his own native talents, he graduated from Yale, taught school in Japan, there married Miyuki, a blessing from God. They moved to California – when that state, I may add, was yet full of opportunity – and both began to carve a living for them...