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Paul Ryan panic: Primary challenger Nehlen SURGES to lead in new poll

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Paul Ryan is becoming more and more disliked throughout the nation, and in his own House district, with voters approving of his challenger by greater and greater margins according to the new poll released by AMP Calypso, showing Mr. Nehlen capturing a jaw dropping amount of support.
AMP POLL:  05/01/2016  452 Voters
Ryan         41%
Nehlen     48%
Should Paul Ryan Endorse Trump?
YES 63%
NO   15%

 
Read More: http://prntly.com/2016/05/07/paul-ryan-panic-primary-challenger-nehlen-surges-to-lead-in-new-poll/

Ryan Is ‘The Next Eric Cantor’

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Ryan Is ‘The Next Eric Cantor’
by Ian Hanchett6 May 2016
Columnist and author of “Adios, America,” Ann Coulter declared House Speaker Representative Paul Ryan (R-WI) “the next Eric Cantor” on Friday’s broadcast of HBO’s “Real Time.”
Coulter said of Ryan, “He is so hated by the base. … He’s the next Eric Cantor, who was the highest member leadership ever to lose in a primary.”
Read More: http://www.breitbart.com/video/2016/05/06/coulter-ryan-is-the-next-eric-cantor/
 

Will County Center for Economic Development Receives Grant from the Three Rivers Association of REALTORS

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For Immediate Release
Media Contact:
John Greuling
President & CEO
Phone:815-774-6060
Email: John.Greuling@WillCountyCED.com
Will County Center for Economic Development Receives Grant from the Three Rivers
Association of REALTORS
$15,000 Grant to Provide Seed Money for Will County Freight Mobility Study
Will County, Illinois (May 3, 2016) – The Will County Center for Economic Development (CED) has received a $15,000 Smart Growth Action Grant from the Three Rivers Association of REALTORS®. The grant will be used to develop a scope of work for a Will County Freight Mobility Study, to be completed later this year, and represents the highest funding level of the Smart Growth Action Grant Program.
“This grant gives us the seed money that will lead to completing the freight study,” explained John Greuling, President and CEO of the CED. “We need better information on freight movement in the county to plan for the future – the study will provide that.”
The funding was awarded locally by the Three Rivers Association of REALTORS®, through the National Association of REALTORS®’s Smart Growth Action Grant program, which supports a wide range of land-use related activities. The grant program was created to support REALTOR® engagement in land-use related issues with the primary goals of affecting public policies that support a more sustainable development paradigm, while raising the profile of REALTORS® as community leaders and enhancing REALTOR® relationships with elected officials. Smart Growth Grants approved at the highest funding level are made to support in-depth projects with multiple funding sources and partners, or to sustain a previously initiated effort that has been fruitful enough to warrant further investment.
“Local REALTORS® have a vested interest in supporting economic development and livable communities,” added David McClintock, CEO of the Three Rivers Association of REALTORS®. “Job growth should translate to homeownership growth. This grant in support of a Community Friendly Freight Plan supports the important work of the Will County CED to attract jobs to our market.”
To receive updates and notifications about CED activities, events and services, emailcontactus@willcountyced.com, visit http://www.willcountyced.com/, or follow us on Facebook, LinkedIn or Twitter.
END
About the Three Rivers Association of REALTORS®
The Three Rivers Association of REALTORS® (TRAR) is a non-profit organization that serves more than 950 REALTOR® and Affiliate members. Three Rivers is affiliated with the Illinois Association of REALTORS® and the National Association of REALTORS®, and works to provide our members with the tools they need to remain successful. The purpose of the Three Rivers Association of REALTORS® is to enhance the ability and opportunity of its members to conduct their business successfully and ethically, and to promote the preservation of the right to own, transfer and use real property.
About Will County Freight Advisory Council
The Will County Freight Advisory Council was created by the CED in 2015 to provide a forum to discuss the growing logistics industry in the county, its impact on the regional and local transportation system and identification of infrastructure needs for the safe movement of freight.
About Will County Center for Economic Development
The Will County Center for Economic Development (CED) is a 501(c)6 not-for-profit organization, created by the business community in 1981. Governed by a 50-member board and managed by a professional staff, the CED is responsible for attracting and retaining jobs for Will County; other functions include municipal development, talent development, infrastructure development, coordination of political activity in support of County-wide economic development and infrastructure initiatives and raising awareness of Will County as an innovation location. The CED has spent 35 years fueling the growth of a vibrant and diversified economy within Will County. The CED is excited to celebrate its milestones while continuing to guide economic success in the years to come.
Media Contacts:
John Greuling
john.greuling@willcountyced.com
815-774-6060
Gideon Blustein
gblustein@illinoisrealtors.org
847-899-1873

Where has all your MONEY gone?

Where is Your Money Going?
By Geoffrey Pike | Friday, May 6, 2016
 

stock-photo-pacifier-with-hard-money-in-light-background-167244872
While President Obama complains about not getting enough credit for the economy, we should ask whether we really have that much to celebrate.
Obama says that the unemployment rate is down to 5%, and the economy is growing according to government statistics, even if not as much as some would like. But — according to Obama — it is a recovery from the financial crisis of 2008/2009.
Of course, Obama doesn’t have to worry about paying for his health insurance premiums or the increasing deductibles. Obamacare has succeeded in making health care the second-largest budget item for some families (the largest is taxes).
The GDP can be misleading, as it essentially includes government expenditures. While it can be a somewhat telling statistic over the long run, it may be an inflated figure to a certain degree with an almost $4 trillion federal budget.
Even using the GDP doesn’t give us anything to celebrate in terms of the economy. Obama will go eight years in the White House without having one year that exceeds 3% real GDP growth. This is absolutely terrible.
To be sure, it is not all Obama’s fault that the so-called recovery has been so weak. He did take over the presidency when the economy was a complete mess. Congress and the Federal Reserve share a large part of the blame. The problem is that Obama is trying to take credit for something that isn’t good. He shares part of the blame, not part of the credit.
Meanwhile, the media is trying to figure out this anti-establishment uprising in political circles, particularly with the likely nomination of Donald Trump and the strong challenge by Bernie Sanders.
Political Backlash
Here is some news that may come as a shock: Most Trump supporters do not view building a wall on the Mexican border as the top issue. Maybe it really is the primary concern for a few people. But for most people, it is about their wallets. To famously quote the 1992 Clinton campaign, “It’s the economy, stupid.”
I am not saying Trump and Sanders have all the right answers to our economic problems. In fact, Sanders wants to do the opposite of what needs to be done in terms of his proposals for massive government expansion.
But at least Trump and Sanders have identified that a major problem exists. The American middle class is getting the short end of the stick. It has been a major fault of many conservatives in not acknowledging this.
I am all about hard work and budgeting wisely. But it comes across as either insensitive or naïve when I hear some politician (or anyone else) say Americans just need to work harder and make better spending decisions.
That may be the case for some, but many people who do work hard and do not spend frivolously are still struggling.
Median Income
The latest statistic showing the median annual household income was up 4.5% from a year ago. The median household income is now at $57,263. The problem is that it is slightly below the amount measured at the beginning of 2000 in real terms.
And it doesn’t really matter which statistic you use. Even according to government statistics, real income has remained stagnant or fallen slightly since the end of the last century. It may go back a lot further than this depending on the measure you use.
When it comes down to it, this is the statistic that really matters. Average income doesn’t matter as much because it can go higher based on a small percentage of high-income earners.
Unemployment rates don’t matter that much if productivity and purchasing power are not rising. Unemployment may be reported around 5%, but it doesn’t take into account all of the part-time workers and people who have just given up looking for work.
Unemployment has gone down over the last seven years, but that is because it had spiked up from the recession. You can always eliminate unemployment at some price, if wages are allowed to fall.
This is why unemployment remained high during the Great Depression. The government tried to prop up wages, which did not allow the market to clear the excess supply of labor. It doesn’t matter if it is a consumer product or labor; the price has to be able to adjust to clear the market. It is basic supply and demand.
So perhaps we are better off than in the Great Depression because wages have been allowed to fall (if you don’t count minimum wage laws). Still, it is understandable that Americans would not be happy with stagnant wages over such a long period of time.
Inflation: A Hidden Culprit
If you are a middle-aged adult right now, you may look back and say that you make a lot more money now than you did around the year 2000. In nominal terms, this is true.
But many people can’t figure out where all of their money is going. Their paycheck is higher than it used to be, yet they seem to be more financially strapped.
If your income has increased considerably over the last 16 years, consider that price inflation has also gone up almost 40% over the last 16 years. And this is according to government statistics, which are likely understated. This is during a time of supposedly low price inflation.
Let’s get back to Obamacare. Some people have seen their health insurance premiums double within just a couple of years, and that is usually coupled with a drastic reduction in coverage (higher deductibles).
The Federal Reserve can keep claiming that consumer price inflation is coming in below its target of 2% annually, but this is likely very misleading. And even if it were true, our purchasing power is still being reduced as wages lag behind.
Again, the real median household income is the statistic that matters the most to people.
A Needed Correction
As the economy has been mostly stagnant, technology has continued to advance in spite of weak economic growth. This is our great advantage.
While the economy is weaker today than it was in the 1950s, it doesn’t mean we want to trade places. We love our big-screen televisions, our smartphones, and our various gadgets. We should expect to enjoy these things without life becoming more expensive for basic needs. This is part of an increasing standard of living.
Right now, we are smothered by government at all levels. We fork over about 40% of our incomes to various levels of government. Some people pay over 50%. And after all of the taxes and inflation, we are still smothered with laws and regulations that stifle business and economic activity.
We need a correction that results in a significant reduction in government spending, particularly at the federal level. The problem is that the Federal Reserve steps in and creates money out of thin air to enable the federal government to keep spending at high levels. It was done from 2008 to 2014, and we should expect it again when the next recession hits.
Until there is a significant reduction in government spending, we should not expect a raise for the American middle class.
If you are going to get a raise, then you will have to leave your fellow Americans behind. This means being creative and providing great value to others. And yes, it also means working hard and budgeting wisely.
You also want to preserve and grow the wealth you already have. This means avoiding the sectors that go bust after being blown up by easy money and government spending. It means investing in individual stocks that will perform better than the S&P 500. It means investing in hard assets to protect yourself from the continued inflation of the Fed.
If you want a true raise, you will have to become a statistical aberration.
Until next time,
Geoffrey Pike for Wealth Daily

Families have less money money at the end of the month

 
These Charts say it all
image1.JPG
(All data courtesy of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis)
Have a good day….if you can.

Muslims Seize Power in London England

Things are about to get interesting in London:

Labour candidate Sadiq Khan was set on Thursday to become the first Muslim to be elected mayor of London, loosening the ruling Conservatives’ hold on Britain’s financial center after a campaign marred by charges of anti-Semitism and extremism.
His expected victory may be a lone bright spot for Labour on a day of local elections in England, Scotland and Wales. Opinion polls suggested the main opposition party would lose seats in some traditional strongholds, testing the authority of its new left-wing leader, Jeremy Corbyn.
In bright sunshine, Britons trickled in to voting stations to cast their ballots in elections which some campaigners fear could fail to attract many voters, as the contests have been overshadowed by next month’s referendum on whether Britain should leave the European Union.
The fight to run London – the top prize in the local elections – has pitted Labour’s Khan, 45, the son of an immigrant bus driver, against Conservative Zac Goldsmith, 41, the elite-educated son of a billionaire financier.
The winner will replace Conservative Boris Johnson, who has run the city of 8.6 million people for the past eight years and is seen as a leading contender to succeed David Cameron as party leader and prime minister.

We’re not nearly as excited as Yahoo. As the website YoungCons noted, Khan’s family has serious ties to Islamic radicals:

While countries of Europe are confronted with the problem of responding to the millions of Middle East refugees seeking asylum, the great city of London is about to elect a Muslim mayor.
And not just any Muslim mayor but a man who has faced a string of claims about his past dealings with Muslim extremists.
His name is Sadiq Khan.  And he is a bad dude.
From Breitbart:
Polling suggests some people are nervous about having someone like Mr. Khan near an office that wields so much power, responsibility, and cash.
In fact one third of Londoners remain suspicious of having a Muslim Mayor, and the likes of Sajid Javid or Syed Kamall suffer because of their co-religionists’ insistence on fellow-travelling with extremists, if not holding extremist views themselves.
Apart from his somewhat threatening statements about not voting for him while claiming that “he is the West”, Mr. Khan’s own track record is perhaps one of the most sour of all Muslim politicians in the Western world.
In 2001 he was the lawyer for the Nation of Islam in its successful High Court bid to overturn the 15-year-ban on its leader, Louis Farrakhan.
In 2005 and 2006 he visited terror-charged Babar Ahmad in Woodhill Prison. Mr. Ahmed was extradited to the U.S. in 2012, serving time in prison before being returned to the UK in 2015. Mr. Ahmed pleaded guilty to the terrorist offences of conspiracy, and providing material support to the Taliban.
 

– See more at: http://americanactionnews.com/articles/breaking-muslims-seize-power-in-this-major-city#sthash.EO87p2Ar.dpuf
Read more at http://americanactionnews.com/articles/breaking-muslims-seize-power-in-this-major-city#OBxrs7dqkPtSgZpu.99

Madigan muzzles Illinoisans on term limits

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Madigan muzzles Illinoisans on term limits

Austin Berg
When Mike Madigan first took his seat in the Illinois House of Representatives, the wide-eyed youths of the world were proclaiming the virtues of Coca-Cola.
“I’d like to teach the world to sing, in perfect harmony,” they sang on an Italian hilltop.
Peace. Unity. Democracy. It was 1971.
More than four decades into Madigan’s tenure, Illinois couldn’t be much further from those ideals.

In fact, Madigan has muffled one of the few common choruses among Illinoisans of all political stripes — support for term limits. For yet another year, Illinoisans will be deprived of a referendum on the ballot to vote on this matter.
Nearly four out of five Illinois residents support term limits, according to polling from the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute at Southern Illinois University Carbondale. It’s no wonder Madigan doesn’t want to give voters the choice to restrict political staying power.
Strong demand for term limits in Illinois should come as no surprise.
Only 25 percent of Illinoisans are confident in their state government, according to poll numbers released Feb. 17 by Gallup. This stands as the lowest rate in the nation by an eight-point margin, and is far lower than that of any other Midwestern state.
The best case for term limits in Illinois might be the fight surrounding, well, term limits. Only the strongest of political machines could so effectively deny Illinoisans their voice on an issue with such widespread support.
In a 2014 fight to put legislative redistricting to a popular vote, that same political machine provided a prime example of why Illinoisans feel a need to end the status quo in the first place.
A citizens group wanted a vote on its plan to take redistricting out of the politicians’ hands and make the process nonpartisan. The group collected nearly double the 300,000 signatures required by law to get the measure on the November 2014 ballot. But a lawsuit filed by a longtime associate of Madigan prevented voters from being heard on the matter.

Instead, the ballot saw three nonbinding survey questions, one of which Madigan later admitted was placed purely to boost Democratic turnout for then-Gov. Pat Quinn.
It’s no wonder so many Illinoisans see state politics as a power trip and not a public service.
Opponents of term limits often argue they restrict the voice of voters. If constituents put a politician in office for decades, doesn’t that mean he or she is doing a good job?
Perhaps, but tenures stretching across generations have led to un-democratic outcomes for voters across the state. Madigan has consolidated his power through decades of fundraising, redistricting and scare tactics, to the point where nothing can become Illinois law without his approval.
How’s that for democracy?
With more than 80 years of combined experience between Madigan and Senate President John Cullerton, entrenched political figures run the show in Illinois. The same is true in cities across the state — especially the Windy City. Of the top 10 biggest cities in the U.S., Chicago is the only one without term limits for its mayor or City Council members.
Chicago Alderman Ed Burke, often dubbed “the real mayor of Chicago,” took office in 1969.
As things stand, Illinois taxpayers are on the hook for politicians who use the system to earn a paycheck at all costs. The average lawmaker salary in the General Assembly is more than $80,000, according to the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability. And that’s for what is legally considered a part-time job.

And don’t forget about politicians’ pensions. A career state lawmaker who retires at age 66 can expect to receive $2.1 million in lifetime pension benefits, according to Illinois Policy Institute research. With that kind of money on the line, it’s not surprising that statehouse stalwarts are fighting to maintain the current system.
Term limits aren’t just a cosmetic change. They aren’t a feel-good Coke commercial. They’re a powerful reform that can make Illinois democracy work again.
Austin Berg is a writer for the Illinois Policy Institute. He wrote this column for the Illinois News Network, a project of the Institute. He can be reached ataberg@illinoispolicy.org.

Tonia Khouri stands up to "Bully Bill" Foster

Tonia Khouri stands up to “Bully Bill” Foster
Tonia Khouri
Bill Foster, the Congressman in Illinois 11th District has a reputation of playing hardball. This time, however, “Bully Bill” took a staggering counter punch from his opponent, Tonia Khouri, at the opening bell of this campaign. Mrs. Khouri, a Dupage County Board member and local businesswoman is Fosters Republican opponent. After winning a hard fought primary, it is clear that Khouri has a lot of fight left to take on Congressman Foster.
Foster threw the first punch in this election campaign with an opening letter describing Khouri as a right wing extremist as well as  inflating her personal wealth to enable the use of the typical Washington D.C. class warfare rhetoric. The irony is Bill has done quite well financially in his own business life. Not that hypocrisy in Washington DC is uncommon. Within hours, Mrs. Khouri challanged his accusations, describing Foster as “Bully Bill.”
Khouri states that “the idea is to go to Washington and make it better, not bring its nastiness back to our home district.” She also reminds us that “Bill Foster is about pitting us against each other because that is what they do in Washington.” Foster vanquished his last two female opponants, Judy Biggert and Darlene Senger in the last two election cycles. However, this may be a race to watch being that Foster is a Washington establishment politician in an anti-establishment election cycle ( on both sides of the isle). Khouri does not look like a candidate that is going to run the stereotypical GOP campaign of the last two Foster opponents. This in itself could lead to some excitement in this race.

Leftist NYC Mayor Wants to Put Christians Out of Business

Leftist NY City Mayor Wants to Put Christians Out of Business

Leftist NYC Mayor Wants to Put Christians Out of Business
Written By Laurie Higgins
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio is urging New Yorkers not to eat at Chick-fil-A because owner Dan Cathy believes that homoerotic acts are not moral and has donated money to organizations that share that belief. Although Mr. Cathy has donated money to charitable organizations that espouse the view that homoerotic acts are immoral and that marriage is an intrinsically male-female union, his beliefs affect neither whom Chick-fil-A franchises hire nor whom they serve.

In de Blasio’s perverse world, people who believe homosexual acts are immoral necessarily hate those who engage in them. Of course that’s an absurd and pernicious charge, but Leftists hurl it often and everywhere. I wonder if de Blasio applies that principle consistently. I wonder if de Blasio hates everyone who engages in acts that he believes are immoral.
Mr. Cathy’s beliefs on the moral status of homoerotic activity and the nature of marriage derive from his Christian faith. Both the Old and New Testaments teach clearly that homoerotic acts are immoral and that marriage is a male-female union, as does, by the way, the Quran. Therefore, it’s not just Mr. Cathy who holds those beliefs. It’s all theologically orthodox Christians, Orthodox Jews, and Muslims.
Does de Blasio seek to shut down every business in America whose owners are theologically orthodox Christians, Orthodox Jews, and Muslims? If so, would this goal comport with the free exercise of religion? Are these groups allowed to freely exercise their religion so long as they don’t own businesses?
Maybe de Blasio can tell all people of faith which religious beliefs they must abandon in order to own a business in America. May people of faith believe that consensual adult incest is immoral and still own a business in America? What about bestiality, adultery, fornication, drunkenness, covetousness, pride, blasphemy, or idolatry?
What if a Christian believes that the only path to eternal life is through Jesus Christ? That would mean Christians think non-believers are destined for eternal damnation. Many Leftists erroneously think such a belief represents the desires of Christians. As a Leftist, de Blasio may think this Christian belief about salvation is downright hateful. Should those who believe that Jesus is the way, the truth and the life be allowed to own a business in America?
Do tell, Mayor de Blasio, which religious beliefs may people of faith hold and still own a business in America?
If you would like to send a message to the New York City mayor, fill out the webform on this website.  And above all, please vote with your wallets and continue to patronize Chick-fil-A restaurants.

Obama Commutes Prison Term for 'New Jack City' Crack Dealer

Obama Commutes Prison Term for ‘New Jack City’ Crack Dealer
Working for a kingpin who terrorized Chicago Heights, Artrez Nyroby Seymour sold crack outside a school for years. He’ll be free on Sept. 2.
Shared from the Chicago Heights, IL Patch
By DENNIS ROBAUGH (Patch National Staff) –  May 6, 2016 12:26 am ET
Socialism Sucks
President Obama on Thursday commuted the prison sentence of a man who was part of a crack-dealing gang that terrorized Chicago Heights, led by a kingpin who modeled himself after the Wesley Snipes character in the 1991 movie “New Jack City.”
Known as “the Organization,” the gang ran a 24-hour-a-day, seven-day-a-week crack distribution center throughout the 1990s in the Claude Court Housing Complex right across from Gavin Elementary School. The children were never allowed outside, according to federal authorities, to shield them from the armed dealers who lurked nearby.
Artrez Nyroby Seymour, 21 at the time of his arrest, was one of 29 associates snared and convicted in a joint crackdown by the DEA and Chicago Heights police in 2002.
Seymour began working in the gang at 18, according to federal prosecutors. “As a packman, Nyroby was at the sales location and had first-hand knowledge of the amount of crack being sold,” according to the federal complaint. The packman would take the money in exchange for the drugs. Seymour later moved up to security for the ring.
The man at the center of the operation, Troy Lawrence, aka “Nino Brown” and “the Don,” was sentenced to life in prison. He was raking in $10,000 to $20,000 a day slinging crack at $10 a bag in the Heights.
After the “Operation New Jack City” bust — the largest in Chicago Heights history — Police Chief Robert F. Pinnow Jr. said: “Today is a proud day.”
Seymour, a Chicago Heights resident, pleaded guilty to narcotics conspiracy. In 2005, he was sentenced to 25 years in prison and 10 years of supervised release. In March, his sentence was reduced to 20 years. U.S. District Court Judge Rebecca Pallmeyer was swayed by a letter of apology Seymour wrote from prison in 2015, acknowledging his “monumental mistakes and horrible choices.”
 

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