Nevada Rep. says she’s not concerned about individual mandate: "Oh, no" Constitution is a flexible document

Libertarian columnist Vin Suprynowicz of the Las Vegas Review-Journal sardonically opined on Sunday, "Please don't call it State Socialism." He mentioned hearing his local Congresswoman on a radio interview interpreting the US Constitution as entirely open to interpretation.

From the LV Review-Journal, March 29:

We're told that for some reason we're not allowed to call the Obama-Reid-Pelosi agenda "socialism," "communism," "Marxism," "state socialism" "fascism," or anything else that might sound unpleasant...

Telling us we're not "allowed" to use an accurate label for something doesn't change what it is.

On the radio this week I heard Congresscritter Titus asked whether she's concerned about state lawsuits challenging the new federal mandate that everyone will have to buy "suitable" health insurance. "Oh, no," she said, "The Constitution has been interpreted all kinds of ways, so I'm not concerned about that."

This from a woman -- a supposedly well-educated college professor -- who swore a solemn oath to "protect and defend the Constitution" 14 months ago.

At least four Republican candidates have filed to run against Rep. Titus, including Constitutionalist and retired Air Force Col. Ed Bridges and Tea Party Patriot Dr. Joe Heck.

Rep. Alan Grayson misfires: Accuses Jewish Republican of lying about Anti-Semitic threats

Says Republicans making stories up for political gain, just like Hitler and the Reichstag Fire

On the Mark Thompson show heard on Sirius/XM radio (transcript via Politico) controversial liberal Congressman Alan Grayson of Florida made the following remarks, regarding recent incidences of violence reported by Democrat congressmen as a result of the Health Care vote, and additional reports by the GOP:

MARK THOMPSON: Yeah, this is crazy. And they’re suggesting ... the Republicans are defending themselves by saying this is happening on both sides. This is not happening on both sides.

REP. GRAYSON: Well, I think that’s what they said about the burning of the Reichstag, if I recall correctly.

And what's being described as a "stray bullet" by Richmond Police, pierced the window of Cong. Cantor's congressional office early last week. In a press conference Cantor further revealed (via Plumline):

I received threatening emails. But I will not release them, because I believe such actions will only encourage more to be sent.

Other reports suggest the emails received were of an Anti-Semitic nature. Congressman Cantor is Jewish.

He has confirmed to Politico that:

he has received threats because he is Jewish.

Note - Congressman Cantor's district includes Richmond and surrounding areas. The Congressman also serves as Minority Whip in the House.

IMPORTANT UPDATE!!!

Our friends at JammieWearingFool and GatewayPundit are just now breaking this story...

A Muslim Man in Philadelphia is charged with threatening to Kill Rep. Eric Cantor and his family. The announcement just came from the US Attorney General's office.

A YouTube video from the suspect shows him saying, "You receive my bullets in your office. Remember they will be placed in your heads. You and your children..."

Liberty in Action! Florida RLC meets with Lt. Gov., Legislators in Tallahassee

Health Care Repeal Act on top of the Agenda

by Eric Dondero

The Republican Libety Caucus was founded in Tallahassee, Florida in June of 1990. The Florida RLC is the oldest of all of the groups' chapters. In many ways it was the FL RLC that launched the nationwide Republican Liberty movement. It took than many years, and a great deal of hard work to gain influence in state politics. But they have now arrived to the point that top elected officials in Tallahasee virtually roll out the red carpet for the yearly visit of Libertarian Republicans.

Lt. Governor Jeff Kottcamp of the Melbourne area, has long identified himself as a "free marketeer" GOPer. The Palm Beach Post even labeled him "libertarian." It was Kottcamp who served as host for visiting RLCers last weekend.

Longtime RLCer Phil Blumel who was actually there at the founding of the organization in 1990, reports:

About 35 RLCers from around the state attended this week the 2010 Liberty Days at the Capitol, the RLC's annual grassroots lobbying trek to Tallahassee, in the midst of the national battle against ObamaCare.

The timing was perfect. The RLC's first event was a hearing before the House Healthcare Regulation Policy Committee, in which Rep. Scott Plakon - sponsor of the Healthcare Freedom Act - made his case for protecting Floridians from the individual mandates included in the national bill. His bill (HJR 37) to do that passed the committee 10-3 amid cheers from the RLCers present.

"It is our duty to step up and reassert the rights of Floridians, in this case protecting our citizen's rights and freedoms to make appropriate decisions as it relates to their own health care," said Plakon.
The next day, RLCers met with more legislators and aides, including Lt. Governor Jeff Kottkamp who met with both the RLCers as a group and privately with RLCFL Chair Will Pitts.

Several RLCers attended the press conference of Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum who announced his intention to be one of the nine or so state attorney generals to sue the federal government as soon as the ObamaCare bill was signed by the president.

"There are two basic principles here," McCollum said. "Number one that Congress has exceeded its powers in terms of its requiring the individual mandate that anybody has to buy a health care policy or suffer a penalty of some sort, a fine or a tax. And number two that it violates the 10th Amendment rights of the states in that it goes far beyond an unfunded mandate and literally would cost the State of Florida alone billions of dollars."

Note - Rep. Plakon is a frequent attendee of libertarian meetings, such as the Florida Liberty Summit sponsored by Campaign For Liberty.

Blumel commented on the success of the trip:

[Sovereignty and Health Care Act repeal] is the primary message the RLC sought to voice in Tallahassee this year and it was gratifying to hear many of our Republican leaders join in the chorus.

Join today! FLRLC.org

Democrat support in Florida takes a nosedive

Tight Congressional races may now swing to the GOP

From Eric Dondero:

Obama won Florida with 50.9% of the vote in 2008. His popularity in the State has plummeted since.

A new poll by Mason-Dixon (via TampaBay.com) shows ObamaCare's popularity now at 34% with 54% opposed. And more specifically:

Seniors disfavor the bill by a 65-25 percent margin, while independents oppose the law 62-34.

And the news is just as bad for Obama himself:

It shows that Floridians have a more negative than positive view of Obama by a margin of 15 percentage points. And they oppose his so-called "cap-and-trade" global warming legislation as well.

The news is having a great affect on Democrat elected officials in the State. Senator Bill Nelson, considered a relatively centrist Democrat, now stands at 34% popularity. What's more for his race in 2012 he's way behind likely GOP challengers.

Since his 2006 re-election, Nelson's popularity has nose-dived 18 percentage points, the poll shows... The poll shows Nelson would lose to Republicans in theoretical match-ups against former Gov. Jeb Bush, Gov. Charlie Crist and current U.S. Senate opponent Marco Rubio.

Jeb Bush (R) 50%
Bill Nelson (D-inc) 35%

Charlie Crist (R) 47%
Bill Nelson (D-inc) 37%

The pollster Brad Corker commented:

"If Bill Nelson's getting hurt by this, you can imagine what damage there is to other Democrats across the country..."

And yet another poll by Mason-Dixon shows expected Democrat candidate for Senate against either Rubio or Crist, getting clobbered in the general. Rubio would beat Kendrick Meek comfortably44% to 29%. Crist over Meek by an astounding 50% to 26%.

In the aftermath of the 2008 elections, Democrats were giddy at the prospects of turning reliably Republican Red Florida into a leaning Blue State. Those hopes have seemed to diminish, and quite dramatically. All of which could have a huge impact on tight congressional races in 2010, such as Allen West in Broward County against incumbent Democrat Rep. Ron Klein, along with potential GOP challengers to controversial Dem Rep. Alan Grayson in Central Florida, and to blue dogger Rep. Allen Boyd of Tallahassee who voted for the Health Care act.

That's a potential pick up of 3, 4, maybe even 5 Congressional seats for the GOP out of Florida. And heading into 2012, with a Romney, Palin, or even Jeb Bush on the ticket, there's now an increasing certainty that Florida will be solidly in the GOP column.

The uncomfortable truth on Gays in the Military: Heterosexual Servicemen have Privacy Rights too

by Eric Dondero

Finally, a senior officer is speaking up about the fundamental question as to why Gays in the Military is an unworkable idea: Discrimination against straight males and femals in uniform.

From Military.com (via Memeo):

The Marine Corps' top officer said March 25 that even if the ban on openly-serving gays in the services is lifted, he would draw the line at forcing heterosexual Marines to bunk with gays on base.

"We want to continue [two-person rooms], but I would not ask our Marines to live with someone who is homosexual if we can possibly avoid it," Marine Commandant Gen. James Conway told Military.com during an exclusive interview at the Pentagon. "And to me that means we have to build BEQs [bachelor enlisted quarters] and have single rooms."

Conway's comments came the same day that Defense Secretary Robert Gates reprimanded the Army's Pacific commander for publicly exhorting servicemembers and civilians to write to Congress to oppose repeal of the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy. Army Lt. Gen. Benjamin Mixon made his views known in a letter published in Stars and Stripes on March 8.

Conway then gets right to the crux of the matter:

"In this case, I would want to reserve the right of a Marine that thinks he or she wouldn't want to [share a room with a homosexual]. And again that's the overwhelming … number of people that say that they wouldn't like to do so." Conway said the Corps billets two-to-a-room -- unique today among the services -- because it believes it's good for unit cohesion. But if a gay Marine sharing a room with a straight one has the opposite effect, the Corps will adopt the single-room standard of the other services.

Gays in the Military advocates cannot escape the practicality issue of berthing spaces and cohabitation. Simply put, if a gay male has a right to bunk with a straight guy, shouldn't that straight male have the same right to share berthing spaces with a straight female?

Conway is correct in this regard. This is not an issue of exclusion. He even trumps their card. If some reasonable accomadation is found for separate berthing spaces that will eliminate reverse discrimination, he might go along with it.

Conway, quite cleverly, has now put the advocates in an uncomfortable position of defending discrimination and predjudice against straights.

The Real Cost of An Employee

CNN.com has posted this great article on their website that discusses in no uncertain terms the true cost of an employee to a business.  When all of the hidden costs of an employee are taken into account, the “loaded rate” (or wage) of an employee is in true dollars anywhere from 35-40% higher than that employee’s base salary.  These hidden costs will only rise in the future as businesses strain beneath the weight of growing government programs.  It is nice to see a major media outlet interview small business owners for a change to get the real straight talk on how these new programs will directly impact their bottom line.

Episode 37 Dr Modder Radiosynoviorthesis (Radiation Synovectomy)

Episode 37 Dr Modder Radiosynoviorthesis (Radiation Synovectomy)
This podcast an interview with Dr Modder discussing Radiosynoviorthesis (Radiation Synovectomy).

Direct link to itunes ??
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Also I have updated our links and you can get the podcast page at both http://nuccast.com
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Please pass on information about this podcast to your colleagues and to your CPD provider.
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Floating Islands in the Maldives

Floating Island in Maldives

Floating Island in Maldives

A low lying island nation, the Maldives is at the front line in the fight against global warming. Already facing damage from rising sea levels, the Maldives is facing a grim future if action is not taken immediately.

Refusing to go gently into the good night, Maldives is fighting back with plans to build a series of man-made artificial islands.  Maldives government and Dutch Docklands/Dutch Watervalley recently signed an agreement to develop several floating facilities for the islands, including a convention center and golf courses.

Designed by architect Koen Olthuis or Waterstudio.NL, the renderings for the amphibious mini-cities appear depict star-shaped, tiered islands with indoor spaces hidden under lush green-roof terraces, complete with interior pools and beaches. While exact design details of these new floating islands are still unavailable, Dutch Docklands does have a history of creating water developments using methods and procedures that reduce impact on underwater life and minimize changes to coastal morphology.

koen-olthuis-maldives-island

Interesting Battle Brewing Over Eminent Domain

The government practice of eminent domain, the forceful seizure of land by the government under the auspices of “highest and best use”, has been  the bane of many Libertarians and property rights activists over the last few decades.  Recently in Utah, however, we are seeing a newly emerging front in the debate.

Utah Governor Gary Herbert (R) has suggested recently that the state of Utah could seize Federally-owned land under the justification of eminent domain.  To most legal scholars, this seems to be a possible violation of McCulloch v. Maryland. What do you think?  Should a state’s right to apply eminent domain trump the federal government’s right?  Or vice versa?  Or should the whole practice of eminent domain go the way of the dinosaurs?

Demonstration of Marine InVEST by Anne Guerry of the Natural Capital Project

Date: 
Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Demonstration of Marine InVEST by Anne Guerry of the Natural Capital Project (October 12, 2010 at 3 pm US EDT/Noon US PDT).  The Marine Team of the Natural Capital Project is developing and applying the Marine InVEST tool (Integrated Valuation of Ecosystem Services and Trade-offs), a suite of spatially-explicit ecosystem service models.  Marine InVEST is used to map and model ecosystem service flows and their changes under alternative management scenarios to elucidate the true costs and benefits of natural resource management options.  The tool is applicable across multiple scales in coastal and marine regions with diverse habitats, policy questions, and stakeholders. To ensure maximum flexibility, ecosystem services are modeled individually, and the complexity of the model is determined by the questions to be answered and the availability of data. Examples of questions that Marine InVEST can help answer are “what kinds of coastal management and fisheries policies will give the best return for sustainable fisheries, shoreline, protection, and tourism?”, “are revenues from activities such as recreational fishing or scuba diving likely to rise or fall under a new fisheries management program?”, and “what benefits does marine spatial planning provide to society in addition to food from fishing and aquaculture and secure locations for wind or wave-energy facilities?”  This presentation will demonstrate the tool, the validation process, its initial application in a spatial planning process on the West Coast of Vancouver Island, British Columbia, and a new application in Belize.  Learn more about Marine InVEST at http://www.naturalcapitalproject.orgNote: This webinar will build on a first InVEST webinar to be held May 19, 2010.

The Rich Can’t Pay For ObamaCare

Alan Reynolds at The Cato Institute launched this scathing attack on the funding mechanism for Obama’s new health care legislation in the New York Times.  The article is well-worth the read and can be read here.

The president intends to squeeze an extra $1.2 trillion over 10 years from a tiny sliver of taxpayers who already pay more than half of all individual taxes. It won’t work.

President Barack Obama’s new health-care legislation aims to raise $210 billion over 10 years to pay for the extensive new entitlements. How? By slapping a 3.8% “Medicare tax” on interest and rental income, dividends and capital gains of couples earning more than $250,000, or singles with more than $200,000.

The president also hopes to raise $364 billion over 10 years from the same taxpayers by raising the top two tax rates to 36%-39.6% from 33%-35%, plus another $105 billion by raising the tax on dividends and capital gains to 20% from 15%, and another $500 billion by capping and phasing out exemptions and deductions.

Add it up and the government is counting on squeezing an extra $1.2 trillion over 10 years from a tiny sliver of taxpayers who already pay more than half of all individual taxes.

It won’t work. It never works.

Russell doctor, Salina foundation donate to new medical school program – Salina.com

Russell doctor, Salina foundation donate to new medical school program
Salina.com
For years, Merkel and his wife, Kathleen, have endowed a scholarship at the University of Kansas, especially for medical students from western Kansas, ...
School of Medicine to open site in SalinaUniversity Daily Kansan
New gifts total $300000 for KU Med's Salina expansionLawrence Journal World

all 5 news articles »

Kitt Nightmare

Jason leads the rescue of adult Kittiwakes
Battered but alive - an adult Kittiwake in a bag

Tuesday 30th March comments:
Mother Nature wasn’t messing today – she threw everything at us including the kitchen sink. Backed by the highest spring tide (at a whopping 5.2 metres – we normally have tides of 4 metres), it was dramatic. The easterly gale battered us all day long and the rain never stopped. There were areas of the island under water which have never been underwater and its been an interesting introduction to island life for the new lads amongst the team.

The breeding birds were present all day – Puffins were on the islands in vast numbers – probably escaping the brutal storm that was raging out to sea, whilst Shags were clinging onto whatever nest structures remained. However its been a difficult day for Kittiwakes. The shear strength of the storm and brutal driving rain appeared to have weakened the condition of a lot of adults (and probably prevented them from feeding) but up step the warden team – led by Senior Warden Jason Moss.

A total of eight adult Kittiwakes, battered and bruised by the raging north sea were rescued from a narrow gut on Inner Farne. The birds were literally dragged from the surf where they were being battered and placed in boxes to dry and preen. The birds have remained with us overnight in the Pele Tower and fingers crossed for a safe outcome tomorrow morning. For everyone rescued, its frightening to think how many have been lost. Its been a deadly storm and we may be counting the cost for some time to come.

On a positive note, news was breaking that the first Shag eggs were discovered on the very early date of 28th March – although I'm not sure if they have survived the storm today. We’ll wait for conditions to calm and then we’ll pick up the pieces or what is left. Until then, we'll just wait and help where we can.

Highlights: Shoveler 2 pairs in the Kettle, Snipe 2, Sandwich Tern 3, Dunnock 2, Robin 16+ - major influx – this is just an Inner Farne count, Black Redstart 2, Ring Ouzel male, Fieldfare 2, Song Thrush 2, Chiffchaff 5, Goldcrest 2, Chaffinch 2, Common Redpoll male showed well all day.

Indiana’s 5th District Republican Primary – Brose McVey and a Constitutional Convention Should Scare You

The Republican Primary is coming up and there are some interesting candidates in the field who desire to unseat long-serving 5th District Congressman Dan Burton. Certainly, many would say he has served far too long, has a tarnished image and maybe isn’t the kind of leader they would like to see.

Those people may have some points; but, at the end of the day Burton’s voting record is far better than most other members of Congress and he often gets credited with having a pretty decent staff. Perhaps there is room for improvement; but, for those who are looking for another option, there MAY be a good choice in that race but Brose McVey does not appear to be it.

Here are the main things that have led me to have concerns about McVey’s candidacy:

Strike I:

I had the opportunity to meet Brose McVey at a Washington Township GOP Club Meeting and asked him about his stance on restructuring the tax code from one based on income to one based more on consumption like The FairTax would do. I was told that he (Brose) was concerned that the government might not have enough power to tax in that circumstance so he would support keeping some kind of income taxes while ALSO empowering the Federal Government to levy sales taxes. Seriously? Grant the government an additional power of taxation?

The presumption here is that there would be some way to prevent the combination of these from being just as, or more, oppressive as the current system. Think about that, granting the government a power to tax your purchases without ensuring that its power to tax your income was taken away. Brose, a lawyer, feels his idea is better than the one some Ivy League economists and $20 million in research developed leading to the sales to tax reform advocates of millions of books? I believe a sarcastic Dr. Evil, “Riiiiigggghhhhttt…..” is appropriate here.

When pressed, his concern is for the government’s ability to forcibly extract revenue regardless of economic conditions with no consideration for ensuring that people have a right to their property and the fruits of their labors. So in essence, although he might not see it this way, he believes government has a “first claim” on what you trade your life for (wages after all are exchanging the best hours of the best years of your life in exchange for money). We need politicians who are on the side of the people not government.

Strike II:

A friend of mine is at a Carmel, Indiana business gathering and Brose McVey is there shaking hands and campaigning. My friend, who is in the real estate business, is engaged in a serious conversation when McVey interjects himself into their space and discussion to introduce himself while shoving his campaign card at my friend. I’m told the card was immediately handed back with the admonition of, “Hey, I’m having a conversation here buddy!”

My friend was incensed and felt that it was rude and arrogant to not wait until an appropriate stopping point in his conversation to have a business card and handshake shoved at him.

Strike III:

Apparently, Brose supports the idea of a Constitutional Convention. He actually wants each state to pluck political appointees out of their partisan ranks and send them somewhere to open up, alter and re-write our Constitution? We have a process for this. It’s called “amendments” and at least a few of them like the 16th, 17th, 18th and 23rd were really bad ideas.

He posted this on a social networking site for professionals:

“It’s time for a Constitutional Convention, called by THE STATES. Balanced Budget Amendment, Term Limits, reaffirmation of limits on federal” [the message ended there but presume he meant "power"?]

Now, as a member of and participant in numerous political discussion and e-mail groups I can tell you that a lot of people in the conservative and libertarian political community are terrified by that idea. No one believes that very many wise men of great pro-liberty conviction like Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, George Mason or James Madison would be sent to alter our founding documents in appropriate ways. Anyone appropriately plugged in to the pro-liberty movement in any number of libertarian or conservative forums would have already been privy to and able to engage in the arguments for and against this over the past year or two.

A Constitutional Convention does not mean that just people you agree with would be showing up to participate! In Indiana, with the Democrats in charge of the State House what kind of representative do you think would get selected to represent us at such a Convention? In fact, many believe we’d end up with the same kind of circus we currently see in Congress and it would result in something granting the federal government near unlimited power to do whatever it wants. Sure, there are a few things that could be changed in the document (see below*) but for the most part, the document itself is fine – it is the courts, bureaucrats and the politicians that are the problem.

I responded to Mr. McVey that opening up the Constitution to the current crop of big government Democrats and Republicans that stock our halls of government might not be the best idea. He responded with:

“The risk of opening this sacred document to the people is now much less that allowing the tireless march of Washington politicians to continue unchecked. I regret that we may disagree on this critical point, but you can bet that my position will remain firm.”

Instead of engaging in a discussion, instead of asking questions about why or what the concerns are, how he perceives it would really be okay and that our rights would be safe, I got a rather arrogant, “…my position will remain firm.” Really? No new facts, no input from others, no discussion on the subject could possibly alter your position? We may give politicians grief when they do a John Kerry “flip flop” but I don’t know many people who believe the exact same things at 40 that they did at 20. Being open to new ideas, information, wisdom and debate is what shapes and hones our understandings.

The whole idea that a Constitutional Convention would end up with government more securely restrained than it was supposed to be in the original document is unbelievably naive. It’s kind of like folks who are increasingly calling for their state to secede from the Union. I understand where they are coming from; but, to assume that your state legislators and governor would suddenly put together some kind of libertarian government is also a little naive. Doesn’t mean it might not be a whole heck of a lot better than being under the thumb of the Feds (how could it not be better?) but don’t be deluded into thinking you’d get something you’re really probably not gonna.

So, on the whole, in Mr. McVey I see no firm grounding in any kind of ideology that concerns itself with protecting the natural rights of individuals or restoring the rule of law under our current Constitution. Even if his intentions are good, the lack of consideration for the impact, potential harm caused by or likely future abuse of some of the things he would seem to support is frightening. We’ve got enough know-it-all bozos in Washington with bad, short-sighted, misinformed or under-informed opinions – we don’t need more.

Oh, and on this you can bet that my position will remain firm. ;-)

*A few things in the Constitution that might be worth altering (by no means an exhaustive list):

The commerce clause could be more specifically defined to meaning only what was originally intended, “making regular the free trade between the states”. (research: 1942 Wickard vs. Filburn Supreme Court case)

We should just nuke the welfare clause out completely to avoid it being construed as an excuse to steal from one group of people on behalf of another. (significant usurpation especially the 1937 Steward Machine Company vs. Davis court decision)

The power to raise armies should be strictly limited to ensure only voluntary induction to the military (as anything else is involuntary servitude and presumes that you are the property of the government to dispose with as they see fit).

A requirement to use zero-based budgeting might not be a bad idea.

Penalties for government agents (elected or otherwise) who pass laws, regulations or act in ways that violate the natural rights of people should be in place – otherwise the document itself has no power over those who would ignore it. The document needs claws. Congress will pass unconstitutional laws and then let the courts sort it out. But, the courts are partisan so what’s the point?

Absolutely we would scratch the phrase, “A well regulated militia,” from the 2nd Amendment since the anti-self defense folks like to try and use that to disarm people.

Congress should be equally subject to all laws, regulations, restrictions and programs that get passed and never allowed to exclude themselves. (this has been previously proposed over the years as one possible 28th Amendment)

So, sure, there are some things that could be adjusted but the document really is not the problem. Politicians, judges and an apathetic population are really the problem when they have no respect for the natural rights of people and will interpret any document to mean whatever they want it to mean to serve their own agendas. Does anyone think if we have Constitutional Convention any of the above listed things are likely to make it through? Doubtful at best.

Libertarian Party of Indiana Leadership Appears on Abdul in the Morning

State Chairman Sam Goldstein, Executive Director Chris Spangle, and Hamilton County Chairman Mike Kole appeared recently on Abdul in the Morning to discuss the importance of third parties and the growth of the Libertarian Party in the last year. Spangle used to serve as producer to Abdul’s show before taking on his role Executive Director.

Listen Here:

Indiana Libertarian Party

Get to Know Your Visitors

Mark RichmondEvery day, we spend countless hours visiting Web sites. What you may not realize is that the pages you see — updates to them, new pages on related topics, etc. — are determined by how often you use them. This follows the commonly known law of supply and demand: If someone wants it, someone else will be there to supply it. When you’re creating content, the question becomes, “What do visitors want?” Knowing what to supply is a matter for sophisticated programs to turn into simple graphs and pretty charts for us. That information makes up what we call Web stats.

Why Are Web Stats Important?

Countless Web sites, blogs and books are dedicated to Web stats, so instead of spending hours on a comprehensive review of the topic, the answer to the question of importance can best be summed up via the following sentence:

“If you spend time or money promoting your Web site, and if your business decisions are influenced by your Web site’s performance, you need to arm yourself with the most accurate and useful data available.”

There are a multitude of choices in the world of Web stats, also referred to as the “Web analytics industry.” You may have heard names like Omniture, Webtrends, Coremetrics, Urchin, Google Analytics, AWStats, Webalizer and IndexTools … Those are only the tip of the iceberg. They are some of the more popular stats packages in the market today, and each has its own distinct feature set and price point.

Note: Every single stats package on the market is a log file analyzer. SaaS/ASP/hosted stats programs like Omniture and Google Analytics create a log file of special tracking gifs, whereas standalone software programs like Urchin store the tracking gif directly in the Web server log file.

What Is Urchin?

In April of 2005, Google acquired San Diego-based Urchin Software Corp. At the time, Urchin had two main products:

  1. Urchin Software – downloaded and installed on customers’ servers
  2. Urchin On Demand – a SaaS version of Urchin

Google added some features to Urchin On Demand shortly after the acquisition, and the product was relaunched as Google Analytics a few months later. In the meantime, the Urchin Software project was shelved for approximately two years while development resources were obtained. Finally in April 2008, Google launched a new version – Urchin 6.

Urchin 6 is a software package. You download and install it on one of your servers, and the software generates reports by reading your Web server log files. Urchin can be scheduled to provide new reports whenever you choose – daily, hourly, weekly or at a custom interval – and you view reports with any Web browser.

Hardware & Software Requirements

Urchin 6 is designed to play nicely with other applications. Because Urchin is a database-driven application, you can improve performance by throwing hardware at it. Here are some rough guidelines for Urchin’s hardware and software needs:

  • RAM: From 100 MB (with geolocation disabled) to 2 GB (geolocation enabled)
  • CPU: The most common bottleneck, Urchin is not multi-processor aware and will only use one processor when processing data. This is one of the reasons why Urchin plays nicely with other applications. Starting with v6.601, both 64-bit and 32-bit processors are supported.
  • Disk: Urchin needs 5 percent of the raw Web log file size for storage, and the app files are approximately 200 MB (800 MB if you’re using the geolocation feature)
  • Operating System: Urchin runs on Windows, Linux and BSD
  • Database: The application config settings are stored in mySQL or PostgreSQL, one of which must be present prior to installing Urchin.

Urchin can run directly on your Web server when it’s only tracking a few sites. If you have several Web sites or are running frequent reports on high-traffic sites, you may want to consider putting Urchin on another server. Obviously, you don’t want to impact your site’s performance in the name of getting Web stats for that site.

Urchin 6 Features

Urchin 6 has a TON of features, the most impressive of which are listed below:

  • Data Privacy: Urchin runs on your server and doesn’t send report data back to Google. The only people who can see your stats are those who are explicitly granted access.
  • Full Visitor Clickpaths: See the full clickpath for each visit to your site, as well as historical clickpaths for return visitors.
  • Marketing Campaigns: Track search engine keywords, banner ads, emails, text links, press releases, offline campaigns, and more.
  • AdWords & YSM Integration: Automatically download cost data from your Google AdWords and Yahoo! Search Marketing accounts.
  • ROI Reports: Import cost data from anywhere and Urchin will calculate an ROI for that marketing initiative.
  • Conversion Goals & Funnels: Ensure you’re attracting the right type of traffic to your Web site by examining aggregate behavior for specific activities like e-commerce transactions, lead form completions and file downloads.
  • Historical Data Import: If you have five years of historical Web server log files, Urchin can read them and generate reports.
  • Geolocation: View the country, state/province and city of each Web site visitor.
  • IT Reports: See page errors, robot and spider crawl patterns, “non-standard” user agents and every file delivered by your Web site.
  • Data API: The Urchin 6.6 release includes a powerful API that allows you to access the underlying profile datamap from the command line.
  • Heavily Customizable: Advanced users can automate setup and customize reports, edit the user interface and process operations.

How to Buy and Where to Learn More

Urchin 6 is available in a 1000-profile package on all of The Planet’s dedicated hosting servers for only $10 per month. You can select the Web Analytics option in our shopping cart or contact a sales representative via ticket, live chat or phone to get it added to your account.

Some Urchin-related Web sites you might want to check out:

A free 30-minute Urchin 6 webinar is run a few times a month by an authorized Urchin partner called ActualMetrics. Dates and times of upcoming Urchin 6 webinars can be found here:

http://www.actualmetrics.com/products/urchin-6-software/demo/

Take a little time to get to know your visitors. Urchin 6 can be a great way to start that process.

-Mark

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