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Location: Lexington, KY
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Crisis Management

Quite an eventful week last week, wouldn't you agree?
 
Iran nearly imploded, Waxman-Markey passed the House after much wheeling and dealing, North Korea threatened us a number of times, we killed a number of Taliban in Predator strikes in Pakistan, and Obama tried to sell us some health insurance on network TV.
 
Ask most people what happened last week, and the first answer will most likely be "Michael Jackson died." You may get a few people that say "Farrah Fawcett died", or "Ed McMahon died", but I would bet my last dollar on MJ.
 
While all of these deaths are tragic in their own right, I have to wonder if any of them outrank what is really going on in this country? Jackson is certainly one of the more popular entertainers of this generation. But he was just that, an entertainer. Apparently he was more than just an entertainer... a seriously ill, drug-addled, homosexual, pedophile, with criminal handlers and enablers, according to Ian Halperin of the Daily Mail Online. A washed up, possibly suicidal entertainer who had long ago ceased being an entertainer.  Certainly, his death is newsworthy, but 24/7 coverage all day, every day? I think not.
 
And now comes sad truth from AP that his death may have helped to drive the Iranian revolution back into the underground-

"As the protests dwindle amid intensifying official pressure, the opposition may suffer from a decline in international attention. The protests and violence dominated Western news broadcasts for nearly two weeks, with the reports substantially bolstered by videos gleaned from Internet sites and by commentary from social networking sites.

Such sites were a key pipeline for the opposition amid the tight restrictions on foreign media in the country.

But along with the diminished action on the streets in Iran, other stories have arisen to siphon away attention - especially the death of pop star Michael Jackson. Television coverage of Iran's turmoil has fallen since Jackson's death Thursday; on the Twitter micro-blogging site, Iran remained among the most discussed topics, but fell below Jackson and comments about the movie "Transformers 2.""
 
What else is the media missing while being distracted by the Jackson feeding frenzy? The Honduran military has ousted and exiled President Manuel Zelaya after he alienated the Army, the courts, and Congress with efforts to extend his term. Zelaya is an avowed leftist, and counts Hugo Chavez as one of his staunchest allies. Chavez has threatened military action, and the coup presents another foreign policy challenge for Obama. Most interesting to note is that Barry tried to intercede on Zelaya's behalf. Sounds like meddling to me, although I could've sworn he was against that. I guess when it's a leftist he is willing to lend the weight of the office of POTUS, but when it's for freedom-seeking revolutionaries in Iran, not so much.  
 
Speaking of freedom, the Obama administration is considering "an executive order that would reassert presidential authority to incarcerate terrorism suspects indefinitely, according to three senior government officials with knowledge of White House deliberations" according to the Washington Post. Good thing Jacko kicked, or else a good portion of the "blame America first/we are a terrible country" portion of Obama's base would be throwing a hissy fit. Just another case of Bush having been right. And another case of Barry's mouth writing a check his rear end can't cash. I'm thinking the executive order closing Gitmo may ultimately be rescinded by the end of the year. Look for that to happen on a friday night or a holiday weekend.
 
The ridiculous over-reach by this administration and a complicit Congress continues, with plans to take up health care and immigration, as well as the Senate debate on cap and trade, each vying for passage under the radar and away from the bright light of truth and scrutiny.
 
Who knows who and how many will have to die to cover up all of these items? 
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Evil Incarnate

Barry GU-Damien?
   Ok, ok, I'll stipulate that the title is extreme, maybe even over-the-top. But after my most recent visit to the dentist, I'm not so sure.
   
   I've been going to my dentist for 15 years and most of my visits are pretty non-descript. I usually go twice a year for cleanings, and haven't had occasion to go more often for anything severe (cut to me knocking on wood). The same crew has been there all along, and most of the conversations are pleasant, but strictly business. Every one is personable, but it's hard to talk when you have your mouth stretched wide open and any number of instruments doing things that would make Torquemada proud. I've noticed that everyone that works there seems to have an evangelical bent, but they aren't preachy, which is fine with me. I'd rather listen to something besides the local Christian radio station while my teeth are getting scraped, but no matter. Every visit is pretty routine, and I like it like that. Don't need drama at the dentist office when the potential for drama is already inherently high.
 
   The recent visit was a little different, though. Connie, the receptionist, asked me to fill out a new medical history, since the one on file was the one I filled out back in '94. We got to talking about insurance (I have a new carrier as well), and that conversation quickly turned to the possibility of universal healthcare. If looks could kill...sweet Connie, the evangelical receptionist, adopted a countenance, which, truth be told, scared the bejesus out of me. "They better not pass that", she said. I concurred... and quickly.
 
  "What are they thinking? They couldn't sell it back when Clinton tried, how can they think now will be any different?"  I asked.
She looked at me-"Bryan" she said, "I've been a Democrat my whole life. I've never voted for a Republican. But this guy, Obama, he scares me. I think he might be..." Long pause. She was trying to decide if she trusted me enough to let me hear her deepest thoughts.
  
    I dove right in, knowing exactly where she was going. "The anti-Christ?" I said, only half-joking. The look on Connie's face was priceless. "Oh, my God" she said. "I can't believe you read my mind!!" as she reached out to high-five me.
   
   "Well, we probably aren't the only two people in the world that have thought that," I told her.
 
   "He's got to go, and soon, before he wipes us out," she said. "If he's not evil, I don't know who is."
 
   "Amen to that, sister."
 
   I got called in by the hygenist shortly after, but the whole episode set me to thinking...could a case be made that this political novice who ascended to the office of POTUS on a wafer-thin resume may have had supernatural assistance, and might indeed be the "anti-Christ" from John's Revelations? 
 
 Let's look at some of the evidence.
 
   First of all, the issue surrounding Barry's speech at Georgetown University, in which the WH requested that the "IHS" symbol over the stage and other religious symbols be covered up presents an interesting possibility in and of itself. Under what scenario would these symbols be problematic for the President? In a country founded on Judeo-Christian principles, at a university rooted in Catholicism/Christianity, what else would he expect to be on the premises? Even more curious, why not just move to a more secular setting on the campus? I believe the gesture of the WH asking (and the school acceding to the request) is the real story here. The level of disrespect and contempt shown by this POTUS to religion in general is unbelievable. I believe he was very deliberate in his process, and he knows this was a sharp stick in the eye to Catholics specifically and Christians in general. His ex-pastor, Jeremiah Wright, warned us..."Politicians say what they say and do what they do because of electability," he said. "He has to distance himself because he's a politician …Especially a politician that counts among his supporters a vast number of secular types, nearly all the gays in this country, and the Glitterazi from Hollyweird and NYC, as well as academia. Most of these folks are agnostic at best, fervently anti-religion at worst.  The rest of us are still clinging to our guns and our religion. Unlike the anti-Christs.
 
   Another item to consider is the president addressing Notre Dame. Even though he has been called the "Obamessiah", it is beyond me as to why a Catholic university would invite an ardent abortionist to speak to their graduating class. Unless, of course, the abortionist-in-chief had some type of sway over a left-leaning administrator or a mis-guided priest at the institution. If the address itself is not egregious enough, Notre Dame is awarding "the one" with an honorary degree, a position that is indefensible in most people's minds. I can't imagine why this bastion of Catholic thought would believe this is a good idea.    
 
   The more obvious case-in-point is Obama's deliberate choice of pro-abortion cabinet members and his actions expanding funding for abortion in the US and worldwide, and his federal funding of embryonic stem cell research.  The Cloakroom, the blog page for the Family Research Council, has this list of all of the pro-abortion activities undertaken by Barry since he was elected. The list is fairly exhaustive, and truly depressing.  Two of the most telling examples occurred as soon as Obama took office. On January 22nd, he issued a statement commemorating the anniversary of Roe v. Wade. The very next day, he overturned the Mexico City Policy, so that  "now millions ($461 million in the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2008) of dollars are taken away from family planning groups that do not promote abortion, and delivered into the hands of organizations that are the most militant in promoting abortion as a population-control method - especially in countries that find abortion objectionable on moral grounds." Likewise, on April 22, " President Obama’s Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, testifies in a House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing that the Obama Administration believes that “reproductive health” includes a right to abortion and that the policy of the Obama Administration is to work to overturn pro-life laws in other countries." Sebelius, Koh, Kagan, Clinton...a Murderer's Row of Abortionists and Eugenicists, all political appointees of  "the one" (no caps intended). Likewise, judicial nominees like David Hamilton, enthusiastically supported by NARAL, or Sonia Sotomayor, will undoubtedly be anti-life. Nothing like promoting a culture of death worldwide when you hold the office of POTUS, the most powerful man in the world...fitting behavior for an anti-Christ.
 
   Likewise, the Freedom Of Choice Act (FOCA) is especially outrageous. Again, any person that calls themself a Christian that advocates policies that engender a culture of death is acting in direct contradiction to Christian teaching. Maybe this is one of the reasons Barry and Michelle have yet to pick a DC church. If they have, it's not been made public to my knowledge. And how else do we explain his decision to privately observe National Prayer Day? Seems to me, aside from his attendance at Wright's South Chicago church (which we all know was a politically expedient choice as opposed to a religious choice), Obama has purposely and literally distanced himself from all things religious. Again, typical anti-Christ behavior.
 
   With regards to the rest of his policies, his embrace of Chavez and Aqua-velvajad, his bow to King Abdullah, and his lack of backing for Israel, when taken in this context, all belie a true understanding of the juxtaposition of  Judeo-Christian thought and American history. Or a willful ignorance. Or, possibly, a conscious choice. In any case, none of these options are acceptable for the POTUS. And if these are truly conscious decisions by Obama (or by some outside force i.e. Soros), the insidiousness is obvious, and the potential consequences are indeed grave. 
   
   Now, let me state for the record, I've always been spiritual and religious, without being a zealot. That's not to say I've never sinned. I'm as guilty as the next man of many transgressions. That's why I go to church, to pray and ask forgiveness. Truth be told, in some ways I wish my passion for politics was more directed at my religion.  I do read a lot of religious philosophy (Merton, Lewis, Chesterton etc), but unfortunately I seem to be more interested in the philosophical angle than I am in the Bible itself. I have read the Bible, but I don't claim any vast understanding of all of the nuance or to be a scholar of any sort. I do understand enough to know what is right and wrong, however. That being said, Wikipedia's definition and discussion about the Anti-Christ is certainly instructive, and I have to say, there are a number of items there that pique my interest. Of particular interest is this statement from theolgian William Barkley in the Daily Study Bible: "antichrist is not so much a person as a principle, the principle which is actively opposed to God and which may well be thought of as incarnating itself in those in every generation who have seemed to be blatant opponents of God.""
   
   I will leave the interpretation to you, the reader, as to what all of this means. Personally, I believe it's possible that Barry, with his many issues that would make Freud proud (fathered out of wedlock, abandoned by his father, mother, and stepfather, mentored by a pedophile, the heavily guarded secrecy surrounding aspects of his past, and his socialistic/communistic policies, etc etc), could indeed be at least an anti-Christ, if not THE Anti-Christ. The evil is plain to see, and not really debatable. For us, the readers and posters here at TH, we need to remember what Burke said- "All that is necessary for evil to succeed is that good men do nothing." 
Obantichrist
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Ball Of Confusion

   Even though I was only 7 years old when this song came out, "Ball Of Confusion" ranks as one of my favorite songs ("Papa Was A Rolling Stone" was first on my list) from The Temptations. The interplay of the bass and the high tenor vocals was fascinating to my young, potentially attention-deficited mind, and I'm still kind of surprised that my dad didn't turn the station when it came on, given the racial tension that was prevalent back in the day.
   
   To my larger point, I've wondered whether or not the underlying theme of the song was to blame Nixon and the GOP for many of the issues mentioned, but, it may have just been a purely anti-government rant. That would certainly have been more accurate, given the previous 2 administrations were democratic...and we all know the Democrats have made a living under-serving minorities.
 
   Here's the lyrics (although most of you know them well enough to sing along)...I thought it would be interesting to plug the complaints listed in the song into present day US of A and see just how relevant the themes still are. "Vote for me and I'll set you free". Once again, it seems past is prologue. Not sure who the great googalooga is...any guesses?
 
BALL OF CONFUSION (THAT'S WHAT THE WORLD IS TODAY
WRITERS NORMAN WHITFIELD, BARRETT STRONG

1, 2... 1, 2, 3, 4, Ow!
Eddie: People moving out, people moving in. Why, because of the color of their skin.
Run, run, run but you sure can't hide. An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth.
Vote for me and I'll set you free. Rap on, brother, rap on.
Dennis: Well, the only person talking about love thy brother is the...(preacher.)
And it seems nobody's interested in learning but the...(teacher.)
Segregation, determination, demonstration, integration, Aggravation, humiliation, obligation to our nation.
Ball of confusion. Oh yeah, that's what the world is today. Woo, hey, hey.
Paul:
The sale of pills are at an all time high.
Young folks walking round with their heads in the sky.
The cities ablaze in the summer time.
And oh, the beat goes on.
Dennis:
Evolution, revolution, gun control, sound of soul.
Shooting rockets to the moon, kids growing up too soon.
Politicians say more taxes will solve everything.
Melvin:
And the band played on.
So, round and around and around we go.
Where the world's headed, nobody knows.
[Instrumental]
Oh, great googalooga, can't you hear me talking to you.
Just a ball of confusion.
Oh yeah, that's what the world is today.
Woo, hey, hey.
Eddie:
Fear in the air, tension everywhere.
Unemployment rising fast, the Beatles new record's a gas.
Dennis:
And the only safe place to live is on an Indian reservation.
Melvin:
And the band played on.
Eve of destruction, tax deduction, city inspectors, bill collectors,
Mod clothes in demand, population out of hand, suicide, too many bills,
Hippies moving to the hills. People all over the world are shouting, 'End the war.'
Melvin:
And the band played on.
[Instrumental]
Great googalooga, can't you hear me talking to you.
Sayin'... ball of confusion.
That's what the world is today, hey, hey.
Let me hear ya, let me hear ya, let me hear ya.
Sayin'... ball of confusion.
That's what the world is today, hey, hey.
Let me hear ya, let me hear ya, let me hear ya, let me hear ya, let me hear ya.
Sayin'... ball of confusion.
 
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A Great Day For Freedom!

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What a fantastic day! I feel so invigorated and energized, better than I do after I have put pen to paper (figuratively speaking) to vent here at TH. I went to the Tea Party in Lexington, KY today, and it did my soul good to see so many like-minded people there, from so many different backgrounds, with so many worldviews, uniting behind a common cause. I'm pretty sure there were more than 400 people there, and the news that we are having another rally in Applebees Park (home of the Lexington Legends  AA baseball team) on April 18th was especially encouraging. What an accomplishment it would be to fill the 6,500 seat stadium. Of course, the fact that my wife called me a "radical" helped get me fired up as well.
 
Our local rabble-rouser, Leland Conway, did a great job of getting the word out through his daily radio show and his web-site, The Conservative Edge. For those of you that may not have heard, Leland sent over 1500 bags of donated pork rinds to Chuckie Schumer after his "chattering classes" remark. I have a feeling Schumer didn't eat any (just a guess)...but Leland is now officially my local hero.
 
There were also folks there from The Bluegrass Institute For Public Policy Solutions, including board chair Kathy Gornik, who will be appearing on C-Span this coming monday (3/23/09 at 3 pm EST) as part of a business roundtable discussion relating to the economy and how it's impacting businesses. She gave a truly heartfelt and inspirational speech, even though she said she hates public speaking. On a side note, I found it interesting that she was recently named the first-ever recipient of the Bastiat in Business Award in recognition of her distinguished effort to promote free-market ideas. The Bastiat Society is a nonprofit foundation created to spread free-market ideas among business people. She will also be speaking to the Bastiat Society (where I linked to her above) on April 1st. You may remember that my last piece was about Bastiat's "The Law". I got some goosebumps when I found that out (cue "The Twilight Zone" theme).
 
One of our state representatives, Stan Lee (not to be confused with the comic book artist/creator) spoke as well...I'm sure his ears were burning throughout the other speeches, as everyone was railing against DC pols specifically, and politicians in general.
 
The only relatively sour moment(s) occurred when Gatewood Galbraith went off the reservation during his speech, advocating for Kentucky's legalization of marijuana. Most of the crowd may have been ok with that 20 years ago, but now...not so much. Those of us who follow Lexington politics knew this was coming as soon as we saw him, so it wasn't much of a surprise. I will say, his mention that California has already opened up this Pandora's box only begs the question, will Kentucky be second to do it, or last? The fact that so much drug money goes to terrorists and drug cartels, and could be taxed, is certainly intriguing. But, as Bastiat would caution, we have to explore the unintended consequences. And I personally believe we can't go down that road.
 
The other low point occurred when I spotted two "Obamabots" who looked to be "spying". They actually had the nerve to show up wearing their "Obama/Biden" shirts and buttons. Young, twenty-something artist looking types, they were busily texting on their Blackberries, standing well back of the crowd. I approached them very casually, and tried to hand one of them a 912 Project flyer. He looked up from his texting, and said "you better take your smug self somewhere else." My, they are a testy lot. I looked at the other guy, and said "here ya' go, this is a copy of the Constitution. You might want to try reading it." All he could say is "we support the President." I told him to take the copy, it was free. He says "we are the majority, and we won." Snarky. I told him that he was quite the minority where we stood...then I decided that a scene was probably not what the group needed. I left him with a "good luck with that whole majority thing" and a smile. I seem to remember W had a majority,  and we all know how that turned out.
 
The high point of the day was Leland's speech, when he exhorted the crowd with his directive to DC-"Fear This!!" Our elected representatives as well as the "Administration" would be wise to follow his advice. Smaller government, less spending, transparency...all of the speakers hit these subjects hard and often. Leland was very articulate, however, and very dynamic. One point he made was that "we're not angry, yet." A subtle, but powerful  point that was. There is quite a bit of upside to this movement. The anger has yet to boil over, but it won't take much more.
 
Interestingly enough, the event was scheduled to end at 2 pm, and right on cue, the power to Leland's mike went out. He was wrapping his speech up with no sound, and astutely gave credit where it was due (to the government for cutting him off, right on time), before the tech folks kicked on the generator for his finale.
 
For all you folks that haven't been to one of these events, I highly recommend it. Washington is noticing, and it won't take many more of these before the moderates realize they are on the wrong side of these issues. We did it to the Immigration bill, and we can sidetrack this budget/bailout insanity as well, if we stay on message and stay united behind the cause. Here is the link for the National Tea Party Day. Sign up, attend, and call and write your representatives. The spark has ignited the tinder, and the flames are spreading. Keep adding your fuel to this wildfire. It's now or never...
 
If you're interested, there are a number of great photos (many that I've uploaded) at Meetup.com on their "Lexington, KY-We Surround Them" page. Some great signs and costumes, and I want to personally thank all the folks for being so willing to pose for pictures.
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Breaking The Law

Not long ago, I read a fascinating bit about Frederic Bastiat's Parable Of The Broken Window. It was used to explain why increased government spending was a bad thing and why the stimulus would not work, due to adverse unintended consequences. While an examination of the parable may be a worthwhile debate on TH, my purpose here is to discuss something even more intrinsic to our current economic situation.
 
Bastiat, for those who aren't familiar with his work, was a brilliant 19th century French economist and political philosopher. Ultimately, his work focused heavily on the benefits of capitalism and the deleterious effects of statism. After reading about the Parable of the Broken Window, I was intrigued to the point of searching out his works, at first in local book stores and libraries (I'm still old-school like that), but those attempts were fruitless. I ended up getting on Amazon and securing a few of Bastiat's books, as well as some Friederich Hayek and Milton Friedman. In retrospect, I wonder why none of these fabulously talented economists were taught in my university Econ classes (oh, yeah, state school...never mind). Keynes certainly was...but I digress. I can't wait to read all of these works, and a more in-depth post will certainly follow. In the meantime...
 
The first book I received was Bastiat's "The Law", an 80 page treatise which sought to define concepts such as "justice", "the law", and "plunder". Now, while I don't want to do a book review/report per se, I do think it is instructive to examine some of Bastiat's writings on these subjects, as they relate directly to our current plight.
 
First and foremost is the concept of "law".  Bastiat says it is "the collective organization of the individual right to lawful defence." (4) He goes on to state that the law has been perverted by some in government and society, to the point that they have "converted plunder into a right, that it may protect it, and lawful defence into a crime, that it may punish it." (7) Furthermore, this perversion has occurred "through the influence of two very different causes-bare egotism and false philanthropy." (8)  The origin of property and man's tendency towards acquiring it comes "from a perpetual application of his faculties to objects, or from labour." More importantly, the origin of plunder comes from someone "seizing and appropriating the productions of the faculties of his fellow-men." (9) Ultimately, "Law is Justice." (72)
 
Follow along with me, now...
 
We elect politicians to create and enforce laws, and we expect these laws to protect us from plunder while allowing us to operate freely in pursuit of our aspirations. However, egotists and false philanthropists in politics believe that they are the sole arbiters of who benefits from their decided application of the law. They believe that "mankind itself tends towards degradation, and is only arrested in its tendency by the mysterious hand of the legislator." (36)  They also believe that mankind need only be passive, and this unseen hand of the law, "moves, animates, enriches, and regenerates mankind." (37)  Under state control and  state planning, one can never escape the influence, and therefore, the plunder, of the state. But, in a just and free society, one can always choose to participate to any degree they desire in a free market...this notion is fundamental to the whole equation. The law, when wielded by statists, compels people to act against their natural condition, one of free will and liberty.
 
While all of these ideas have already been explored by any number of political philosophers, including the Founding Fathers, this examination causes me to wonder...do statists ultimately believe that they'll never run out of people to tax? Surely they must know that in guaranteeing their potential voting bloc by making everyone "equal" in their dependence on the government, which is inevitable if you destroy people's ability to exercise their free will, they are ultimately forcing the demise of the society as a whole. Diminishing legitimate choices and enforcing plunder can only be viewed as a diminishment of our liberty, and by extension, our natural state. Capitalism and the free market are inextricably linked to this natural state of choice and freedom. Any effort to impede these endeavors must be resisted. 
 
History teaches us that the tyranny of plunder can and does occur. FDR with his 100% tax on earnings over $25,000 (some New Deal), Chavez in Venezuela today, nationalizing industries and resources,  the U.S.S.R. with it's Central Planning, Zimbabwe's failed economy...the list is rife with failed socialist/Marxist/statist governments. They all have one thing in common-a government mandated plundering of private capital and wealth. Yet Obama and his minions are leading us straight down that road. And he's in a big hurry, since the current economic crisis is too good to waste.
 
And we're letting him.
 
Shame on us.
 
But, not all is doom and gloom. I believe that the majority of people in this country, when forced to make a choice, will come down on the right side; the side that doesn't accept socialized health care, or the confiscatory taxes needed to pay for it, or every other form of government plunder that is coming down the pike. The country is getting quite the indoctrination, and will be more educated about the vagaries of the march to statism. I believe we will take back the House in 2010, and the WH and possibly the Senate in 2012.
 
The over-reach from the left has been swift and extreme, and the moderates are moving towards buyer's remorse already. Obama's 60% approval rating has dropped to the mid 50's, and his disapproval rating is nearly up to 50%. (Rasmussen)  It will only get worse, don't worry about that. It always does...Carter certainly proved it. Dick Morris posited on Hannity last night that Obama's favorable rating would be down to 30% within the year.
 
If not, we have only ourselves to blame, because we didn't call the leftists exactly what they are: socialists, communists, Marxists, and statists. Bastiat knew what the potential for harm was over 150 years ago, and our Founding Fathers knew long before that. You can't fight a problem if you can't define it...we have met the enemy, and it is the law.
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Do We Really Even Need A Stimulus?

Ok, Ok, I know times are tough. My office has seen layoffs, and I feel like I have a target on my back (again), just by virtue of being in management. Our main customer announced today that they are cutting executive pay by 5% and killing all bonuses. They have already let most of their 500 temps go, and they have cancelled a number of production days and all overtime. The automotive business, like banking and housing, is poison right now. People are hurting all over, and Barry and his sidekicks Nancy and Harry believe they are in charge of the cavalry that is going to save the day.
 
Meanwhile, this massive "stimulus" bill was done in stealth mode. The opposition Republicans had very little, if any, input in crafting it, and they were locked out of the conference meetings after the Senate sent the bill back to the House. It appears that there is very little stimulus in the bill at all, and no one had the time to digest the 11100-plus pages before they put it up to a vote. Word is there is lots of pork, and some tax cuts, but not much in the way of immediate relief or money directed at the root of the problem, the toxic mortgage market.
 
What is particularly galling is that Obama, Reid et al were claiming that there were "no earmarks". Technically, they were right, since the bill hadn't come out yet, and an earmark is a provision slipped into the bill at the last minute, but, in truth, the bill was one giant earmark, full of pet projects, payback to loyal constituents, and unnecessary spending.
 
As if the earmark issue is the only criteria we want to use to measure the quality of the bill. How about the pork? Where is the real cost/benefit analysis? Once again, the left gives us the straw man of doing this potentially destructive action versus doing nothing. While I hope it works, it looks like nothing's changed. (Yeah, I love working the hopey/changey thing in every chance I get). Politics as usual, but potentially much more destructive.
 
So, let's frame this monstrosity in the context of thursday's news.
 
First, we saw that retail sales were actually UP last month. Then, we saw that foreclosures were DOWN last month. And while this is great news (on the same day, no less), it's certainly no guarantee that things are turning around.
 
But, what if they are? What if these are little "green shoots" of a return to prosperity? The "spendulus" could nip those in the bud and bury us in debt for generations to come. And to what end? For $13 a week in my check and a new "health czar" telling me I'm not worth the potential treatment for whatever illness I might get? For some weather stripping and bridge repairs and a high-speed train between LA and Vegas? I guess there's no need to do the budget, since every member of the left has got their fingers in this pie, and there's no money left to budget. Higher taxes and diminished Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid won't be far behind. One thing is for sure. Whatever needs to be done to "fix" the economy (something free markets generally don't take kindly to), this was an incredibly ham-fisted attempt that has little chance to actually work.
 
 
We know that some recessions are actually cyclical. And while we also know the housing bust was set up for us back in the '70's with the Community Reinvestment Act, the two combined for a particularly virulent strain of recession. But the housing problem is the one thing no one has really tackled yet. TARP I was a boondoggle beyond belief. It's disappeared down the rabbit hole with no accountability and no concrete result. TARP II will probably be more of the same. What happened to the line-by-line scrutiny of all spending bills that Barry promised, the laser as opposed to the ax? Wouldn't the prudent thing be to help the banks and the housing markets get back towards equilibrium, then see how those approaches work, before throwing unheard of amounts of money that we don't have at issues that have nothing to do with the root cause of the problem?? Condoms?? Sod for the Mall? Green energy?? Please. The over-reach is so plain to see, and the polls show the waning support for Congress and this spend-fest.
 
Thanks to all of the Repulicans who stayed off this express train to bankruptcy, and a pox on the houses of Collins, Specter, and Snowe. If I lived in their districts, I'd be asking for a re-call.
 
Unfortunately, there is some genius behind the whole mess, since it's very difficult to measure any success or failure against an unknown potential competing outcome. The left will be able to claim, no matter how many more jobs we lose, that we could have lost more. The way they framed the argument, with the goal of saving jobs, is very subjective. And the precedent is set now for them to come back to the trough whenever they want looking for more handouts, of any amount. Put me on the  record congratulating these pigs for a million "bridges to nowhere".
 
We must make these  charlatans and ne'er-do-wells pay, and pay dearly in '10. If we make it that far...
 
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Cool Thoughts on Warming/Change

Well, here I am, looking out the window from my office at the 2 inches of snow in central Kentucky. I think this is our 4th snowfall already, and we've had a number of days where the high temps didn't get out of the 'teens. I am guessing my bass boat is (regrettably) in dry dock for the next couple months. The northeast has already been pounded by an ice storm, with millions of people suffering from loss of power.  The temps around the rest of the Northern Hemisphere have been brutal, with numerous locales reporting lows in the 20 and 30 below 0 range. I think it may be safe to say Global Warming is on hiatus this year. Evidently, the folks at the UN Climate Change Conference in Poland, Hillary Clinton, and Henry Waxman feel otherwise.
 
According to this report from the Business Mirror Online,
 
"The two-week conference on climate change ended on Friday with significant disagreements on an equitable balance of emissions cuts between richer and poorer nations.
Nonetheless, UN officials said the talks kept the world on the path toward a new treaty to be agreed in Copenhagen at the end of 2009 to roll back the threat of global warming."
 
Great...a new, worldwide treaty, managed by the UN, designed to "roll back the threat of global warming." Just what we need, the feckless UN taking more steps to ruin the world's economy. As if "Oil for Food" didn't show the world just how "effective" the UN can be managing major problems/issues.
 
But, hey, wait a minute.  You may have noticed some disparity if you read the whole article linked above. Some of the folks at the conference, including the esteemed "expert" Al Gore (expert at self-promotion, maybe) were speaking about "climate change," not "global warming." Others were speaking about both in the same breath. Even the administrator's titles were ambiguous.
 
"“Rich countries need to demonstrate leadership by making deep, early cuts,” Presidential Adviser on Global Warming and Climate Change Heherson Alvarez, head of the Philippine delegation said."
 
Did you catch that little tidbit? Rich countries need to make deep cuts...that sounds ominous, even if they don't know if it's warming or  just changing outside. Well, maybe if they could decide on the cause, that would help.
 
In the previously mentioned article, they talk about lowering carbon emissions worldwide. But what about methane?  According to Earthsave.com, methane is 21 times more efficient at trapping green-house gases than carbon, and is only one of a multitude of greenhouse gases.  I remember reading somewhere that Saint Al Gore, titular head of the Church of Global Warming/Climate Change, said that he loses people when he starts talking about other greenhouse gases besides carbon (I had actually bookmarked this for the quote in the past, but lost it). So, just because carbon is the lowest-hanging fruit of the greenhouse gases, we are supposed to revamp our whole global carbon-based industry and economy? Pure insanity.
 
How about sunspots? According to Rightside News,
 "the current warming began 300 years ago, at the end of the Maunder Minimum, a 70-year period when there were very few sunspots on the face of the Sun. Between 1700 and 1735, according to the world's oldest instrumental temperature dataset, the temperature in central England rose by 2.2 degrees C, equivalent to 6.3 C/century, or about nine times the warming rate seen in the 20th century.

The warming of the planet parallels the increase in the Sun's activity between the end of the Maunder Minimum 300 years ago and the end of the 70-year solar Grand Maximum in 1998. During the Grand Maximum, the Sun was more active, and for longer, than during almost any similar previous period in the past 11,400 years".
 
During the Dalton Minimum in the early 1800's, Napoleon ran into one of the worst winters in human history during his retreat from Moscow. This period actually qualified as a "mini" ice-age...many believe we may be entering another similar period. So lowering our "carbon footprint" is supposed to do what, exactly??
 
It would be difficult to make any case for Anthropogenic Global Warming (AGW) during  the Grand Maximum, as the Industrial Revolution and carbon-based manufacturing didn't occur until the last century. This evidence seems lost on Saint Al the Goracle and his flock.
 
How about plain, old-fashioned cyclical climate changes?  According to Science Daily,  
"climate shows an appreciable natural variability - and that changes in the sun's output and volcanic eruptions on the earth may be the cause."
 
Even the Russians seem to be off the warming train. Pravda published an article earlier this month, stating that
"Many sources of data which provide our knowledge base of long-term climate change indicate that the warm, twelve thousand year-long Holocene period will rather soon be coming to an end, and then the earth will return to Ice Age conditions for the next 100,000 years."
 
Make no mistake, this is the issue that the UN and the Democratic Congress will use to "even the playing field" between the US and the less fortunate, less developed nations of the world. They are going to screw our economy into the ground with their cap-and-trade, carbon credits, and carbon taxes. Redistribution of the world's wealth is the goal, and the US stands to lose the most.
 
According to this article from Forbes, Henry Waxman, D-CA, head of the House Energy and Commerce Committee,
"Our environment and our economy depend on congressional action to confront the threat of climate change and secure our energy independence".
 
Nothing could be further from the truth, Mr. Waxman. Our very existence depends on Congress staying as far away from this issue as possible. Drilling in the US is what will secure our energy independence. 
 
Similarly, Hillary Clinton, D-NY and our new Secretary of State, has already begun to increase the rhetoric and hyperbole, as noted by The Business and Media Institute, covering her confirmation hearing-
 
You Mr. Chairman [Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass.] were among the very first in a growing chorus from both parties to recognize that climate change is an unambiguous security threat,” Clinton said. “At the extreme it threatens our very existence. But well before that point, it could well incite new wars of an old kind over basic resources – like food, water and arable land.”
 
If you were watching the hearing, I'm sure you could hear the sucking sound while she was kissing Kerry's backside. The only threat to our security is you, Mrs. Clinton, and this leftist administration seeking to undermine our economy with your socialist policies.
 
So, keep your eyes open for the "Change we can believe in." This is just one of the games we can all expect to have to put some skin into.
 
Beware the Greenies, and  WRITE YOUR CONGRESSPEOPLE!!!
 
 
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Why the Left Hates Us

I'm normally not an advocate for lifting other people's posts, but this one from Ace Of Spades really hits home. If this is true, I'll take being hated.
 

Why, Oh Why Do They Hate Us? (D91)

—Open Blog

In 2004, we might have said John Kerry would make a terrible president and his plans would set the nation back 30 years. Rather than evil, we would have called him misguided. He thought he was doing the right thing. His heart was in the right place, even if his policies were wrong. His beliefs were honestly held.

On the other hand, a not insignificant number of liberals thought Bush was evil and should be tried for war crimes. How can some liberals hold such visceral and vitriolic hatred for us and our beliefs? In a 2007 paper, Jonathan Haidt and Jesse Graham, a couple of social justice researchers, managed to come up with an explanation. Brace yourselves: it turns out that our beliefs are immoral.

Well, at least as far as liberals are concerned. These researchers determined that "there are five psychological foundations of morality, which we label as harm/care, fairness/reciprocity, ingroup/loyalty, authority/respect, and purity/sanctity." Conservative morality is based on some combination of all five of these moral foundations. There may not be an exact 20% input from each one, but they are all present. Liberal morality is based on only the harm/care and fairness/reciprocity foundations.

"Conservatives have many moral concerns that liberals simply do not recognize as moral concerns... liberals often find it hard to understand why so many of their fellow citizens do not rally around the cause of social justice, and why many Western nations have elected conservative governments in recent years."

Liberals are only concerned about harm/care and fairness/reciprocity. When we talk about patriotism, or respect for the country, or abortion, we are speaking from a set of morals and values that liberals simply do not see as being moral at all. In fact, liberals often believe that we have "non-moral motivations—such as selfishness, existential fear, or blind prejudice."

In 2004, "political liberals in the United States were shocked, outraged, and unable to understand how 'moral values' drove people to vote for a man who, as they saw it, tricked America into an unwinnable war, cut taxes for the rich and benefits for the poor, and seemed to have a personal animosity toward mother nature." They couldn't understand it because unlike conservatives, liberals don't believe that ingroup/loyalty, authority/respect, and purity/sanctity are actual moral foundations.

Take abortion. For conservatives, abortion is mainly a religious issue, and relates to the purity/sanctity moral foundation. For liberals, purity/sanctity is not a moral foundation. Instead, they may argue that from the fairness/reciprocity moral foundation, having an abortion allows the mother to avoid the unfairness of being burdened with a child she doesn't want. For liberals, those who are pro-life have no moral foundation to stand on, and the pro-lifers are attacking a very moral position. No wonder they think we're evil.

Patriotism? Forget it. There's no moral foundation to ingroup/loyalty as far as liberals are concerned.

Want to make a movie mocking a sitting president, or write a book about assassinating him? Who cares? Believing in authority and having respect for tradition is so old-fashioned, and not moral at all. If you're a liberal.

Gay marriage? "Conservatives and many moderates are opposed to gay marriage in part due to moral intuitions related to ingroup, authority, and purity, and these concerns should be addressed, rather than dismissed contemptuously."

I think they have a point. I voted against prop 8 in California (for gay marriage), but after seeing how the protesters have behaved since the election, if another proposition comes up next time around, I might vote the other way. When the behaviors of gays are behind closed doors, or even when openly displayed in public, at least ignored and hushed up by the media, it's very easy for me to tell myself that gay marriage is a harmless little thing and no big deal. But when the public face of gay rights is this protest movement, well, completely apart from gayness, I have a hard time feeling like these are the sorts of people I want to support, and this is definitely not the sort of behavior I want to reward and encourage with my vote.

The authors argue that liberals have a huge blind spot when it comes to analyzing conservative motivations. This blind spot limits their ability to reach out to us and convince at least some of us to agree with and vote for some of their ideas. They ask: "Will moral appeals for liberal causes that press emotional buttons related to ingroup, authority, and purity persuade political moderates, who make up most of the electorate, where more traditional liberal appeals have failed?" Sounds like the sort of idea you'd hear at a marketing seminar on how to be a better salesman. If nothing else, we definitely got outsold in this last election.

Obama's success may or may not have been aided by pushing the emotional buttons of moderates and conservatives, but when people perceive the Democrat nominee as the tax cutter in a presidential race, that has to be a wake-up call for us. Cutting taxes is our issue, and he got votes for it.

Going forward, we need to figure out what we stand for and what we believe in, and we need to figure out how to communicate our beliefs to the electorate. We bailed on both counts in this last election. Haidt and Graham wrote a paper claiming that understanding how conservatives think will help liberals advocate positions and win elections.

The reverse may also be true. If we want liberals to accept and even vote for some of our ideas, maybe we need to get better at expressing how our ideas fit in with their two moral foundations of harm/care and fairness/reciprocity.

Tags: Politics  
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Lowering Expectations

As usual, Barry gets a pass from the  MSM. This from the UK Daily Mail
 
"In recent days the Obama team have admitted they are nervous that people will end up feeling disappointed by an Obama presidency because their expectations of what he can do may have been driven sky-high by his soaring rhetoric."    
 
If this had come out of the McCain camp, there would be hell to pay from the NY Times et al.
 
Could it be the Obambi campaign is nervous because they realize they have dissembled, backtracked, and renegged on nearly every promise they have been making since the beginning of the campaign?
 
For example, the issue of who is "rich". First, it was $250,000, then 200, now it is down to $125,000, according to Bill Richardson. Now there is supposedly a tape  that says people making $80,000 should pay more taxes. I'll believe that one when I see it, but for now, what we've all seen and heard tells enough of the story. Soaring rhetoric? I call it outright lying.
 
Likewise, Barry's promise to end the Iraq War as soon as he takes office. Aside from the fact that the war is already essentially over, how exactly does he propose to do this?  Anyone with an ounce of sense who has been paying attention knows that the Iraqis want the US in country for up to 3 more years according to the SOFA that is being negotiated.  There are other details to hash out, including the treatment of US soldiers accused of crimes while they are off duty, but, for the most part, we will most likely be there in some capacity through the next president's first term. Unless, of course, Barry decides to unilaterally renegotiate that agreement like he said he would do with NAFTA.  
 
I know that most of you can add other examples, but I am getting tired of this whole rotten business. You can fill in the blanks in the comment section if you wish. Personally, I feel like I am preaching to the choir.
 
Better get used to the parsing, it comes with the territory when there is a lawyer in the White House. Can you say "Bill Clinton Redux"?
 
What is the definition of "is"?
 
                                         
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An Open Letter to the SCDS

Hail to my fellow vets and other like-minded (and quasi-like minded) righties. I hope this letter finds you well and in good spirits, all things considered. It's been a tough couple of weeks for everyone, considering the economic rollercoaster, North Korea announcing their intention to re-start their nuke program, and McCain giving up his lead in the polls. 
 
I'm writing this letter to address the proposal set forth here in the TH blogatorium by the Saint Crispian's Day Society (SCDS) regarding the undermining of the McCain campaign in order to allow an Obama presidency, which will then (supposedly) guarantee a Republican victory in the 2010 congressional elections and the subsequent hope of reclaiming the White House in 2012. 
 
I certainly have to agree that McCain is a flawed candidate. He has crossed the aisle so many times, it's a wonder the dems haven't asked him outright to caucus with them. His positions on ANWR, cap-and-trade, immigration and global warming are just downright frustrating and misdirected. I am sure some, if not most of you, can add any number of items to this list, which is not meant to be exhaustive. Obviously, you have enough grievances to consider his candidacy a deal-breaker if you are ready to vote third party, sit out, or, heaven forbid, cast a ballot for Barry. I have to say, I've read some pretty compelling arguments. Just the fact that Juan Hernandez is anywhere near McCain makes the bile rise in my throat. I was a big fan of Hunter and Romney early, but apparently the timing just wasn't right for those guys. 
 
However, I think we need to take a deep breath and check ourselves before we wreck ourselves.
 
First, I have to ask, why should we concede anything? It is mid-september, and, given the notion that the Democrats were supposed to be winning this thing in a rout, it is shocking that Mac is within the MOE in most national polls. Furthermore, the conventional wisdom and polling shows the Republican brand has improved dramatically over the last few months. Fred Barnes at the Weekly Standard says
 
"As recently as last June, an NBC/Wall Street Journal poll found voters with a 28 percent positive/47 percent negative attitude toward Republicans. By September, after the Republican convention, that had changed to 40 percent positive/43 percent negative.
 
Other polls have registered a similar improvement. "
 
See the rest of the article here.
 
If Dubya keeps a low profile, this trend may very well continue. Imagine the effect of the economy improving (even marginally), gas prices dropping, and Iraq becoming a more obvious fait accomplit. What does Obama have left to run against?? We're still 45 days out...anything can happen on the foreign policy front, and Obambi will get the deer-in-the-headlights look again.
 
The Obiden ticket continues to step in it. Witness the terrible ad that puts Rush right in the middle of the fray, and Biden's call to pay higher taxes as a sign of patriotism, for example. I expect that trend to accelerate due to the pressures of the campaign and the debates. There certainly isn't any signal that the gaffe machine is being turned off. And, speaking of the debates, does anyone really believe Obama can hold this tenuous lead, given his inability to work sans teleprompter
 
Also, I believe Mac is waiting for the perfect time to unload the big guns on Obama and FORCE the LSM  to examine the good Senator's associations, affiliations, and "job performance" with Annenberg et al  more fully and publicly. There certainly has not been any due dilligence to this point, especially compared to the wringer Sarah has been put thru in her few weeks on the ticket. Obiden will not be able to withstand that degree of scrutiny on the alphabet channels,in front of the nation, and come out intact. Frank Marshall Davis, Saul Alinsky, the nutty Reverends, Rezko, and Obama's own voting record and statements are all incredibly heavy albatrosses to be hung around his neck in a public forum, with him in the room. He will not be able to get out from under them without looking desperate and exposed. 
 
We also need to consider the potential for the "Bradley Effect". I can see no reason why we should consider sandbagging ourselves if we may actually already be in the lead. It's one thing to give up when you are losing badly, withdraw, and live to fight another day. I know of no strategist worth their salt that would recommend throwing the election when you are in striking distance or actually winning.
 
With that fact in mind, it seems to me that this would not be the time to talk about bagging the whole thing. I understand the strategy is to try to gain a few more seats in Congress so the Dems can't have a veto-proof majority, but that looks like it may happen regardless. Why can't we have our cake and eat it too? I believe we may be best served to line-up behind Johnny AND work to improve our stead in Congress, thereby giving us some allies to work with in trying to keep Johnny in line on some of these more contentious issues. Throwing out the baby with the bathwater seems like an incredibly risky (and defeatist) tack.
 
When it's all said and done, I believe we are best served with opposing executive and legislative branches. I know for a fact that we are ill served with one party running both, regardless of who that may be.
 
Now, if you really have that big of an axe to grind against Mac, I get it. I'm not questioning anyone's patriotism or motive or anything remotely resembling that.  I'm probably not intelligent enough, or astute enough, or informed enough to change your minds. All I would ask is this: wait til the end of October, and let's see where we are. If the electoral map is obviously blue, then this strategy may have some merit and I'll be on board as well. But, from where I sit, it is way to early to be considering something as radical as what the SCDS is proposing.
 
I'm going to grab my flak jacket and steel pot now.
 
 
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Let's Talk Judgement

     Now that the polls seem to have settled down a bit, it appears that John Sidney McCain has seized the momentum from Barack Hussein Obama, but there are still nearly two months until the election, and one never knows what types of issues or gaffes may turn the tide. With that fact in mind, I believe it is prudent to keep up the pressure on Barry and keep him on the defensive.
    It's looking like his campaign is on the verge of imploding...he has just blamed McCain for his "lipstick on a pig" comment , as if he didn't actually utter the words himself. Then he decried the fact that this is another "made-up" controversy and he blamed the media. It sounded as if he wanted to just take his ball and go home. This may be a gift that keeps on giving.
 
   But what of the fact that he had to come out and personally address this, when it was a comment he made? The choice to use the "lipstick on a pig" reference when others were available had obvious potential for harm, and was a not-so-subtle jab at Palin's earlier joke. Either he used poor judgement in choosing that phrase, or he is not informed enough to understand the potential for harm and backlash. Just as bad, why did his "handlers" let this slip through? Again, poor judgement about who he surrounds himself with, and if it was calculated, poor judgement on the impact. He will be paying dearly for this one. 
 
    Obama also did a terrible job recently of "explaining" his abortion/beginning of life answer from Saddleback in this video with George Stephanopolous. In that same interview, he mangled his retort about accusations that the McCain camp is questioning his religious upbringing. While all of this is good fun, and some of these items may just be signs of fatigue (he has been running for 2 years straight, after all), we need to try to limit the debate to issues of judgement, character, and performance.
 
Up until this point, we have a whole list of activities that Barry has admitted (or are matters of public record) were poor judgement:
  •  his "teen" drug use (just teen? really??)
  •  his decision to stay in Jeremiah Wright's church for 20 years
  •  his associations with Rezko
  • and Ayres
  •  the fact that he has not called to order one single meeting of his Senate Foreign Relations Commitee's Subcommitee on European Affairs
  • his opposition to the surge in Iraq, which he only just recently conceded had succeeded 
  •  his choice to snub Hillary Clinton on his ticket, and choose Biden instead
   Biden, who is antipathetic to Obama's signature message of "hope and change", can hardly be characterized as a change agent. Biden was supposed to shore up Obama's foreign policy credentials (as he has NONE), but where is the crediblity in his misguided proposal to partition Iraq according to ethnic lines? The two of them can't muster half of McCain's foreign policy gravitas between them, surge position notwithstanding. While Biden may not be hurting the ticket, he certainly did nothing to help. Barack's supreme intelligence and judgement gained him exactly... nothing.
 
   Regarding Obama's performance, we have been regaled with countless tales of his voting "present" in the Illinois State Senate. I would be interested to see how anyone could characterize these actions as proof of anything. They certainly don't engender any confidence in his ability to make a decision. Apparently there were at least 130-some odd issues above his pay grade.
 
   Similarly, his claims that his "community organizing days" count as some kind of experience ring just as hollow when held up against what type of "change" he bought to the South Side of Chicago. From the sound of it, he got frustrated after accomplishing little, quit, and left for Harvard Law. Certainly not enough on which to base a presidential run. The South Side doesn't look much different after his "efforts" and his "experience".
 
   There has also been news dribbling out of Chicago regarding the "Chicago Annenberg Challenge," one of the boards that Obama sat on with William Ayres. Apparently, this board was tasked with spending over $100 million to improve schools in Chicago and other urban areas. According to Wiki
 
"The project appears to have failed to achieve any of its stated, measurable educational goals. For example, a comprehensive study by the Consortium on Chicago School Research concludes:
"Results suggest that among the schools it supported, the Challenge had little impact on school improvement and student outcomes, with no statistically significant differences between Annenberg and non-Annenberg schools in rates of achievement gain, classroom behavior, student self-efficacy, and social competence."[
 
Another feather in BHO's hat, to be sure. Once again, where is the excellence?
 
There will be more to come out, either through the blogs or, heaven forbid, through the MSM, exposing some of the other issues still pending, including, but not limited to;
  • Obama's association with Mike Klonsky, a friend of Ayres who "traveled to Beijing to seek the endorsement of Communist China for a political party he had helped establish in the United States, the Communist Party (Marxist-Leninist)." (Wiki
  • Obama's relationship with Dr. Khalid Al-Mansour, aka Donald Warden, who was a mentor for Bobby Seale and Black Panther founder Huey Newton (H/T to IBD) 
  • Biden's relations with Joseph Cari, Jr., a convicted associate of Tony Rezko...this one goes deep

On one hand, we have a pro-life, pro-military, pro-America, bona fide war hero. On the other hand, the guy who has to keep denouncing things he has said and people he has known, and about whom we know only what he chose to tell us in his "autobiographies".
 
This one is in my pay grade.
 
 
 
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The Catholic Vote

The conventions are nearly upon us, and as I reflect on some of the more interesting political conversations I've had with friends and family (all of whom tend to be shocked by my candor), I can't seem to shake one statement made by my friend Mickey.
 
It was still early in the primary season, so the nominees were still anyone's guess, and we were in the process of de-constructing each individual candidate and his/her positions on various issues. Funny how these things get rolling, considering how we had started out talking about our sons' basketball team. It was becoming apparent that Mickey and I shared many of the same political concerns (for the Bush tax cuts, supporting the war effort, worries about Islamo-fascism/terrorism, etc) when, very abruptly, he says "you know what? None of this matters. I'm a one issue voter. If a candidate is pro-choice, I can't vote for him."  
 
Mickey and I attend the same Catholic church, and we also went through the "Why Catholic" classes together with our wives, so I should not have been surprised at all by his comment, but what was surprising was the quality of something almost militant, defiant, in his voice. More importantly, there was conviction, the kind of conviction I heard in John McCain's voice at Saddleback when he answered "at the time of conception,"  and the type of conviction that was completely lacking when Barack Obama dithered about and equivocated about his pay grade (or lack thereof) when trying to come up with some type of non-committal tripe.
 
Upon finishing G.K. Chesterton's "The Everlasting Man", I came upon a quote that fit this situation perfectly (funny how that happens, too):
 
"All that is condemned in Catholic tradition, authority, and dogmatism and the refusal to retract and modify, are but the natural human attributes of a man with a message relating to a fact." (pp 267-268)
 
And the fact is, abortion is the taking of a human life. Mickey certainly has this message, which he obviously refuses to retract or modify. And I would have to agree.
 
Now, there are any number of excellent pieces debating this subject, and my purpose here is not to tread over well-trod ground. I think we all know the arguments. Does a woman's "choice" trump a child's right to life? The Pope and the American Bishops have made their case quite plain. 40 million aborted fetuses would certainly make the same case, if they had been allowed to grow up and join the debate and realize what their fate could have been.
 
 If  you are curious to see other views on this subject as it relates to the election, check Michael Novak's piece "Catholic's For Obama?" on his blog, or this piece from Carl Anderson at National Review.  Both do more justice to the subject than I could ever hope to do.
 
 I'm left with a couple thoughts...
 
First...I was an E-4 (enlisted man, fourth from the bottom) when I was in the Army so many years ago. That means I was below all of the NCOs and all of the officers as far as "pay grade" goes, and yet, I find the question of "when the rights of a child begin" to be, amazingly enough, within my pay grade to answer. I don't have a degree in genetics, or theology, or law...but since when is any of this necessary to form a cohesive opinion on the subject? For a man that wants to become Commander-In-Chief of our military, Obama's answer leaves him with NO pay grade. Is this what they teach at Columbia and Harvard Law? Obama is supposedly soooo intelligent...sooooo articulate. Is this what we can expect if/when he has to answer other, more difficult questions? At this rate, I would say we know all we need to know.
 
Second...why is this such a "Catholic" issue? Where are the rest of the other "Christian's" voices? I refuse to believe that Obama's support is made up solely of agnostics, atheists and other non-Christians. This tells me that his supporters are putting the question of abortion somewhere behind other temporary, small-picture issues like the economy or the war.  We don't want the government making any choices for us, but we are ok with the government making this one?
 
We are a country based on Judeo-Christian principles. No one should be afraid to believe in the engendering of a (Christian?) culture of life in our society.  Now, it's not for me to judge anyone, but, certainly judgement awaits those who tacitly or overtly support the infanticide that now exists. If you say you believe in God, why choose this issue to put man's law above God's law?
 
I challenge all Catholics, Christians and all who claim to be "religious" to really decide if they want the status quo of Roe v Wade to stand as a testament to the corruption of our morality. After all, you survived where 40 million others haven't.
 
Vote Pro-Life.
 
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Obama and the Middle East

   I have long maintained that invading Iraq was strategically important in the war against Islamo-fascism. Having pseudo-democratic regimes allied with the west in Afghanistan and Iraq helps keep Iran's nuclear ambitions in check and gives moderates across the region hope that many of the illegitimate regimes in the area will behave responsibly. Ultimately, this also helps keep the world's oil markets more stable, which in turn, has a beneficial impact on the global economy. Certainly, the liberation of 12 million Iraqis was serendipitous at the least.
   While it's much to early to be putting up "mission accomplished" signs, I feel somewhat vindicated and very hopeful after reading Reuel Marc Gerecht's piece in the Weekly Standard ( see here ). Here is an excerpt, pointing out the untenable position Obama and the left have taken.
 
"When do we get to start asking whether the Iraq war, with its hard-won-however-imperfect democracy, might actually be a good thing, worth the American blood and treasure? If 85 percent of the Iraqis say it was worth the hellacious voyage, and the unelected Sunni Arab rulers of the region say it was not, might we not think with the former? If millions of Sunni, Shiite, and Kurdish Iraqis vote in the provincial elections, will Obama really want to say, one month before the U.S. presidential elections, that America's sojourn in Iraq has failed? If Iraq contributes to the current intellectual debates in the Muslim Middle East that seem to be diminishing the ideological appeal of bin Ladenism in Arab lands, might that mean that the bloodshed in Mesopotamia hasn't been a waste?
And speaking of Iran, Obama constantly asserts that the Islamic Republic has been the great beneficiary of America's invasion of Iraq, that things in the region would be so much better if Saddam Hussein were still in power. Leaving aside the issues of intra-Shiite friction and competition and the Muslim soul-searching partly provoked by the Iraq war, is Obama suggesting that the Middle East would be a safer place if Saddam were still with us and he, too, were again developing nuclear and biochemical weapons and could thereby "check" Iranian adventurism?"
 
Read this and keep some of this in mind next time the left starts talking about withdrawal. The stakes are enormous.
 
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It's Time to Stand Up to Congress

Their 17% approval rate notwithstanding, I believe there are a number of noble and well-intentioned people working in our best interests in Congress. However, the level of incompetence, short-sightedness and sheer fecklessness regarding US Energy policy is beyond belief. Congress (both parties are complicit) has continually blocked efforts to expand our supply domestically, while bowing to the "Green Energy/Environmental/Global Warming" lobbies (aren't they all the same?), and filling the coffers of governments worldwide who wish to bring us down (i.e. Venezuela, Iran, Russia, etc). The best they could do? To sue OPEC. We should all expect better than that.
 
Salvation may be at hand. Newt Gingrich, ex-Speaker of the House, spoke to Congress recently, and made a number of great points, most significantly to "drill here, drill now". Jed Babbin,  deputy undersecretary of defense under Bush Sr, and editor for Human Events, interviewed Gingrich here on this topic. Gingrich makes a number of compelling arguments, all of which I have stated in earlier posts. Best of all, Gingrich is presenting Congress with a petition which will hopefully awake them from their stupor. The link to the petition is here.
Please take the time to sign it, and email all of your elected representatives. This is a matter of great national urgency, and if the thwarting of the "comprehensive immigration" legislation they tried to shove down our throats last year is any sign of what we can do, we will succeed.
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McClellan's Dirty Laundry

    I'm sure I never thought we had moved on from the Iraq war, but the dearth of any news coming out of there was giving me some degree of hope that we had secured the peace.  Scott McClellan's accusations regarding the run up to the Iraq war have re-opened a slightly-healing wound for no good reason and sound like pure pandering to the worst degree. His assertions sound like half-truths and opinion based on a simple lack of capacity to be in the loop at all times with everyone in the Cabinet. From what I am hearing the only new information contained in the book has to do with who outed Valerie Plame (asked and answered!!), which is earning McClellan a trip to see the House Judiciary Committe, under oath, no doubt. It's way past time for the left to let the war go to it's natural conclusion, which will be victory for the US and a repudiation by the Iraqis of Iranian and Syrian meddling.
   
   O'Reilly had a few callers today who aptly made the case for the war in a very logical way. In fact, the logic is the same as that discussed by my friend Sean and I over the course of the last four-plus years. That is, given the timing and the information available at the time, moving on Iraq was logical, warranted, and even necessary. Even though we found out after the fact that WMDs were not physically present, Saddam's refusal to comply with the UN inspection teams was legal justification, and Saddam knew all along this could be the final result. What good are consequences if there is no real threat to use them? Sounds like all carrot and no stick is what the left would have preferred.  The liberation of millions of Iraqis from a torturous despot was morally correct. The seventeen violations of the UN cease fire were legitimate grounds to resume hostilities, especially given how many times Saddam fired on Coalition jets patrolling the UN mandated No Fly Zone. To be honest, we gave him more than sufficient opportunity to comply; he simply would not.
   
   Now, if we broaden the context a bit, and take into account the fact that Saddam was exploiting the UN Oil-for Food program to circumvent the UN sanctions (see Claudia Rossett's work here), we see that his intransigence was far deeper and insidious. Combine with that the fact that he was openly supporting Hamas and paying suicide bomber's families after they went to their martyrdom, it is hard for me to imagine what else was necessary to justify the use of force. Certainly, 30 other sovereign nations agreed, notably Great Britain, Australia and Poland. So, Congress buys what the administration is selling and votes to authorize the use of force. That was a good thing. Bi-partisan support, and a military coalition that should be more than up to the task, especially given our relatively strong showing in Afghanistan, were additional pluses. At this point, the actual presence of any WMDs is not necessarily the most important issue. The statement from the administration that Iraq provided an "imminent threat" was believed by most in the UN Security Council, and more accurately was the prevailing wisdom, which  was simply relayed to the country and Congress by Bush through McClellan et al. Additionally, Saddam was not going to be able to provide the bulwark against Iran any longer, but that was  due solely to Saddam's miscalculation when he invaded Kuwait. A stable, democratic Iraq to the west of Iran, with a like-minded Afghanistan on the other side, had to look so tempting, given all of these other issues. And oh, so strategically important.
   
   Sean and I have both stated for years that Bush ultimately didn't need the WMD/immediate threat aspect to sell the argument, he only needed to state that hostilities were resuming based on all of these other items that we know to be true.  And the fact that we took Baghdad in such a short time would have certainly justified the investment aimed at deposing Saddam as well. It is absolutely true that things were mis-managed from that point on, and there were mis-calculations regarding the dissolution of the Iraqi army and the strength of the counter-insurgency. None of these items invalidates the reasons to go in the first place. General Petraeus and his surge are bearing the fruit of the determination of Bush to see this through, and I have to certainly agree with the statement I heard early on...
"you broke it, you bought it".
 
   Let me also say it is an abject embarassment that we have a media so willing to take the side of those who wish to see us harmed from this, those who would sacrifice a noble cause fought by noble men and women simply to damage the President. Page A6 in today's local paper was the first mention of Iraq, and of course it was a negative headline ("Possible split in al-Sadr ranks could threaten Baghdad calm"). Surprising they even admitted the "calm". The surge has worked, we are drawing down, just like Bush has said we would over and over again. If I remember correctly, he has also said all along that it would be a long, tough battle, and the involvement of Al Qaeda proves the importance of Iraq in the Global War on Terror ( I wish they would find a new name, as terrorism is a tactic, and terror is a feeling, not an enemy per se, and as such, cannot actually be defeated).
 
   I must also say that McCain is the only one who gets this, and the news I heard the other day regarding the democrat's promises to get us out of Iraq further illustrates my point (see video here, hat tip to CJ at soldiersperspective.com). Pure and calculated politicization of the war effort to the detriment of our nation and our soldiers, how pathetic. Hillary and Obama both "promising" to set a withdrawal date is unadulterated pandering...how desperate is that? And Obama's lone qualification regarding concrete foreign policy experience is that he spoke out against the war when he didn't  even have to vote on the subject. This is simply inadequate. Either he didn't know the facts, or he ignored them. I'm not sure which is worse, but the fact that he continually uses this in his stump speech is almost comical. Unfortunately, it appears many are willing to be deceived by this charlatan.
 
   While I am ex-military, I am not a "war-monger", let me be clear about that, but I must also reiterate that we embarked on a committed journey together on 9/11, as a nation, red and blue alike, and Saddam drove his country directly into our path.  I don't know anyone who thinks it is a good idea to continue in the current state of affairs, and those who continue to take McCain's "100 years" remark out of context are either misinformed, ignorant or partisan.  For McClellan to come back now and put this book out with these scurrilous allegations is contemptible and beyond the pale. The fact that he participated willingly in what he characterizes as less-than-noble pursuits with the facts that were available shows him for what he is, complicit in any potential wrongdoing, a coward and an opportunistic profiteer, and nothing more. McClellan is appearing with Olberman tonight on Countdown. I, for one, will not be watching, but I'm sure the soundtrack will be Morrisey's "There's a Place in Hell (For Me and My Friends)".
 
Tags: Politics   Iraq  
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