About Me

Name: Pscyclone
Biography
Loading...

Create Your Own Blog Find Other Townhall Blogs

Comments

Archives

Team Obama: A Company of Cowards

I really hate to say, “I told you so.” So I won’t.

Attorney General Eric Holder revealed Team Obama’s cowardice today when he spoke of reinstating the Assault Weapons Ban, this time making it permanent.  Verbally slapping the country in the face in the process he added, “I think it will have a positive impact in Mexico, at a minimum.”

If I follow Mr. Holder’s logic correctly, it doesn’t matter that an AWB is already deemed un-Constitutional by D.C. v. Heller, what matters is that we infringe upon an American’s Second Amendment right to self-preservation and freedom from tyranny in order to “have a positive impact” on a foreign nation.

Too, it seems that the Attorney General, speaking for Team Obama, has affirmed what common sense has been telling us for decades; gun control fails to save lives.  We have a history (actual and ‘revised’) filled with examples of what happens to a people when a government disarms them.  We have contemporary, ‘mature’ nations that are living petri dishes of gun-grab consequences; the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia.  In those three countries, the government grabbed all its citizen’s guns and violent crime skyrocketed.

These are right-wing “neocon” talking points.  Facts are facts.

So, since gun bans fail to save lives, Mr. Holder tries to invoke the compassion of every day America, “Can’t you just give up your guns – if not for yourself then think of the children in Mexico!”

But more than this, the Attorney General’s remarks demonstrate the cowardice that plagues modern Democrats, “progressive” liberals and apparently Team Obama.  An armed society is a polite society, a free society.

John Adams said, “Arms in the hands of the citizens may be used at individual discretion for the defense of the country, the overthrow of tyranny or private self-defense.”

Now what would Team Obama have to be afraid of?
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

List of Women Who’ve Had an Abortion

For a couple of years now it’s been rather en vogue for a liberal or otherwise anti-gun media outlet to find and publish a list of private citizens with a concealed weapons carry permit.  The latest organization succumbing to this infringement on a person’s right to privacy is out of Memphis, Tennessee.  NRAILA.org reports that CommercialAppeal.com listed Tennessee’s citizens who maintain a right-to-carry permit.

It would be bad enough if the list stopped with a simple first and last name.

Instead, CommercialAppeal.com decided to really violate a person’s right to privacy by listing full name, home address, city, zip code, date of birth, when the permit was issued, and when it will expire.

I won’t touch on the ramifications of such private data listed on the internet; identity theft is so rampant that even the mainstream media acknowledges it’s a huge problem.  There are a number of privacy laws from the local municipality all the way to the U.S. Constitution that CommercialAppeal.com has violated; I won’t speak to this because the laws are well known and should be applied to every law-abiding citizen of Tennessee, and the United States.

The main purpose behind exposing a law-abiding citizen to such a violation of his or her privacy has nothing to do with the citizen and everything to do with the guns.  We are told that guns kill people and should be taken out of our nation’s economy.  It’s a difficult thing to do, really; banning guns in the same country that has relied on guns for its own independence has met with fierce resistance from folk who despise the NRA.  

Hence the recent attempt by various legally-challenged media outlets to shame the law-abiding citizen into giving up his or her Second Amendment rights to self-preservation.

And I think this is a great idea.

Let me throw my whole-hearted support behind such a tactic, in fact, I think there should be more lists like this on the internet.

For instance, we should have a list of every woman who’s ever had an abortion; we should tabulate the list with her full name (married and maiden), home address, city, zip code, date of birth, when the abortion(s) were performed and at what facility.

I mean, guns kill people, right?  And we need to shame the gun owners into stopping their guns from killing people by violating his or her right to privacy to do so.  Or at least that’s what CommercialAppeal.com believes.

Abortions kill people, right?  Last time I checked, abortions killed orders of magnitude more people than guns.  We should have such a detailed list on the internet to help prevent those deaths, too.

What’s a little privacy infringement in the name of social justice?  This list would save lives.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (1) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Obama: I Will Lower Your Standard Of Living

So the election is tomorrow.  Tomorrow the American people will decide if they want their way of life, or if they want the way of life Barak Obama proposes; high taxes, high unemployment, high welfare, highly vulnerable national security, high barriers between the citizen and Bill of Rights, and now, high utility bills.

Imagine - a warning from me about Barak Obama that doesn't include his intent to take away our guns.  Personal saftey is not the only thing Mr. Obama wants to deny everyday Americans, he would also deny us our personal prosperity.

“If somebody wants to build a coal-powered plant, they can," Obama opined to the San Francisco Chronicle in January 2008, "It's just that it will bankrupt them because they're going to be charged a huge sum for all that greenhouse gas that's being emitted.”

On the surface, that sounds all feel-goody and Kum-by-yah’ish to some, but the reality is devastating. 

According to the National Mining Association website:

  • Half of U.S. electricity is generated from coal.
  • Each person in the U.S. uses 7,539 pounds of coal annually.
  • There are approximately 600 power plants (1,600 units) and 1,100 manufacturing facilities using coal in the U.S., according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA).
  • Coal accounts for about 33 percent of U.S. total energy production and 22 percent of total energy consumption.
  • The U.S. has nearly 268 billion tons of recoverable coal reserves, according to the Energy Information Administration (that's a 240-year supply at current rates of use).
  • Coal accounts for 94 percent of the nation's fossil energy reserve.
  • U.S. coal mining directly employs nearly 120,000 people; for each coal mining job, an additional 3.5 jobs are created elsewhere in the economy (that's 420,000 jobs related to coal).
  • An estimated 50,000 new employees will be needed in coal mining (not the overall coal industry - just mining) over the next 10 years to meet increasing demand and to replace retiring workers.
  • Railroads moved two-thirds of U.S. coal shipments.
  • Coal is the largest freight commodity moved by barges on the nation's inland waterways.
  • Mining (all mining, not just coal) has touched less than one-half of one percent of all the land in the United States.
  • Only 3 million acres of public land have gone into private ownership from mining, while 94 million acres have been granted to railroads and 288 million acres privatized as agricultural homesteads.
  • Since 1978, more than 2.5 million acres of mined lands have been restored to their original or better condition, as well as more than 285,000 acres of coal mines abandoned long ago.

So think about these statistics for a moment in respect to Obama’s intent to bankrupt the coal industry.  It’s not just the miners and the “rich” mine owners that will lose their jobs.  We’re talking about railroad employees, barge operators and tug boat pilots among others, not to mention all the manufacturing jobs that will be lost as plants either layoff workers to compensate for much higher energy costs or flat ship their processes overseas.

But what will affect you and I most directly, our power bills will go up.  They will go way up.  Half of our electricity depends on coal.  Your electric bills are what they are because coal is so plentiful, so cheap to extract and refine, and cheap to transport.  Without coal to power our infrastructure, everyone - everyone will have to pay much more for electricity.

The world's infrastructure is lubricated with oil and powered by coal.

Think about how that will affect you in your life, and I mean more than just your personal power bill going up.  I’m talking about some things like; your grocery bills will go up because the store is paying more for lights, AC and refrigeration; it will take more to top of the fuel tank in your vehicle – the gas station is powered by electricity from the attendant’s post inside the building to the pumps that pull the gas from underground tanks into your car; your stay in a hospital or getting dental work done will skyrocket – nearly every modern medical device is powered by electricity; your ISP will charge you more – those internet switches and routers all consume electricity 24x7; your phone bill will go up because the switches and computers managing our communications infrastructure are electrical devices; your water bill will go up – water pumps are electrically driven; every business that uses electricity in some capacity will pass the extra expense to the consumer in addition to reducing its workforce as it tries to keep up with punishing energy bills.

Now here’s something a bit harder to fathom because it deals with the nebulous ‘future’; Obama doesn’t want Americans to be energy-independent from the rest of the world. 

In our latest energy “crisis” a lot of folk were looking around for alternatives to foreign oil.  One of the ideas that got a lot of traction was the coal-to-liquid solution; basically the thought is to tap the vast, vast coal deposits in this country and turn it into gasoline.  It is not nearly as efficient as oil-to-gas (because coal is first converted to oil which is then turned to gas and diesel), but it would break the strangle-hold our enemies have on us via our consumption of oil.  Taking coal off the table means there is no coal-to-liquid solution, leaving us in the same mess we’ve been in since Jimmy Carter was president; way too dependent on others for our livelihood.  If Obama were less selfish, he’d see that coal is probably the best short-to-mid-term solution we have as we transition from oil to something else.  Instead, he wants to take that away.

In looking at this latest “take things away from Americans” attitude from the Democrat Nominee, I have to wonder just how bad our economy, and our lives, will become.  His proposals stifle innovation, punish success, and create a welfare system second to none, surpassing even Social Security in its socialistic / communistic impositions.  This is the sort of change nobody needs.

I’m not sure how Barak Obama thinks regular Americans (that is, those of us bitter, clingy folk) are going to afford all this.  Mr. “Can’t Afford John McCain” seems to be lying to me again.  The truth is, we can’t afford Barak Obama.

And neither can our grandchildren.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Google’s America; Land of the Fee, Home of the Knave.

It’s no surprise to the folk who read my articles that I am waging something of a campaign against Google.  I would imagine there are those who believe my campaign is borne from jealousy or envy; really, who wouldn’t want Google’s money “problems”, eh?  In truth, I don’t envy it its successes though what it has done, on the surface, is what the American Dream is all about.  From the lofty height atop its mountains of treasure Google could inspire many to dream, to greatly dream, and doggedly pursue that dream.

Google does not, however, represent the American Dream.  From where I stand, it represents all that is immature, selfish, and hubristic about success; it is a greedy behemoth seeking to shape the world in its own image instead of working for the world’s benefit.  Propping itself as a neutral conduit of data it is anything but; for when facts are no longer conveyed, but shaped, they become something less than information and something more like propaganda.  Propaganda is a tools used by despots and tyrants to deceive, manipulate, and control.

It is because of these things that I no longer use any of Google’s services and encourage everyone I know to do the same.  Google cannot be trusted and it should not be rewarded for violating the trust of its customers, subscribers, and the world.

I’ve premised this thought before in these posts (here and here) and have recently come across more evidence supporting my thesis.  The first item, an article by Chelsea Schilling posted on WorldNetDaily describing the dichotomy in Google’s YouTube policies.  The second item is Google’s demonstrated disrespect for the American soldier from every generation.  Oddly, the first and second items are twined, together illustrating a Google more sinister than either item alone.

Sure, did Google or any of its “fanbois” deign to notice my single voice, I’d be dismissed as a right-wing, religious zealot who’s raving diatribes are best to be ignored lest I be given legitimacy.  To be certain, Google grants legitimacy to those who support its agenda -- like terrorists.

In Schilling’s article, she explains how Google enforces a ban on animal cruelty on YouTube, but it will allow the videos showing American soldiers being shot and blown up by IED’s in Iraq and Afghanistan under the guise of “free speech”.

I am an ardent supporter of the U.S. Constitution and will be among the first to defend anyone’s right to free speech, American or not.  Google is not defending anyone’s right to “free speech”, nor is it defending its own.  It is using the First Amendment as a shield to defend its nefarious purposes, among them is the anti-U.S. and anti-U.S. military policies which it pushes at every turn.

If it is a “free speech” issue to show American military personnel suffering at the hands of our enemies, then how is it not “free speech” to show a dog, cat, horse, or any other animal suffering at the hands of the emotionally decrepit?  If it is “free speech” to show a terrorist’s film showing an IED detonating under a Humvee killing all the soldiers within, how is it not free speech to show a cat with a firecracker tied to its tail or a dog being fed a lit M-80?

Is Google really saying that the rights of animals are more precious than the rights of the American G.I. giving the last full measure of devotion to his or her country?

Let’s not forget, (most of) those men and women in uniform are Americans.  So when Google says it’s ok to injure, maim, and kill soldiers, it’s also saying, in effect, it’s ok to injure, maim, and kill Americans.

By allowing such material on its website, Google is doing nothing short of supporting terrorists and abetting terror’s efforts by publishing, defending – and let’s not forget profiting from – these videos.  Aiding and abetting an enemy of the U.S. during a time of war is called …

Did I slice that item fine enough?  My second postulate is somewhat less sensational but underscores the first dramatically.

Monday, May 26, 2008 was Memorial Day in the U.S.  Americans have three days on which to celebrate the men, women, and families of its armed services; Memorial Day, to honor those who have died; Armed Forces Day, to honor those who are currently serving; and Veterans Day, to honor those living who have served.

Irrespective of how one feels about the current U.S. military engagements in the world, it would be foolish to forget those who have come before and died to ensure this country’s freedom.  Without such brave men and women who cared less for themselves and more for their families and countrymen, there would be no United States of America.  Without the U.S., the world would be a vastly different, vastly darker place.  For all its mistakes, inconsistencies, and travesties, consider a world ruled by Stalin, Mao Tse Tung, Hitler, Saddam Hussein, or Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.  Show me someone who’d rather live under one of these tyrants instead of any U.S. President and I’ll show you someone terrified of earning one’s way, personal accountability, and freedom.

Before I stray too far from my thesis, let me get back on track by pointing out that Google did not acknowledge Memorial Day with a customized logo.

It is Google’s practice to recognize certain events by changing its standard logo to an image customized for the particular occurrence.  We’ve seen Google logos for Valentine’s Day, Madam Curie’s, Picasso’s, Andy Warhol’s and Martin Luther King’s birthdays, the fiftieth anniversary of Lego, Shichi-go-san and Children’s Day (Japanese holidays), Groundhog Day, National Teacher Day, National Library Week, International Women’s Day, and many, many others.

For Memorial Day, Google did – nothing.  In my research, when I found all the things for which Google has changed its logo over the span of its existence (1999 forward), I’m left wondering why Memorial Day was ignored – but I don’t wonder for long.

Google would rather expend its resources defending the rights and life of an animal than defending the rights and life of an American by banning videos infringing on the former’s rights and allowing videos celebrating the deaths of the latter.  Further, it defends those deaths by purposely misapplying the principles of free speech.  When Google treasonously allows videos showing the assassination of Americans and then refuses to tribute the slain on the single day set aside for just such an observance, it shows just how little regard it has for the conviction and sacrifice executed on its behalf every single day, world-wide, by those better than it will ever be.  It will “benevolently” and “conscientiously” regard an animal while indifferently and callously disregard Americans stalwartly defending its right to choose whom it regards.

An Earth Day logo but no Memorial Day logo?  “Save the animals” but kill American soldiers?  Is this some upside-down world where fiction has supplanted fact?

Nope; it’s just how Google makes a buck.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (2) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Gay Marriage Rescues Heterosexual Divorce

First, let me get the full disclosure out of the way; I believe marriage should be defined as the union between heterosexual partners – that is, one man and one woman; I’m against gay marriage; I think gay marriage is an overt attack on the sanctity of the family. Since the family unit is the bedrock and smallest cohesive unit of society, I view gay marriage as an attack on the American way of life. Now, I don’t care if a gay couple wants to cohabitate and do whatever it is gay couples do; what happens in the privacy of a home should remain private. That privacy does not extend to birthing (in the case of lesbians) or adopting (either gender) children; children are the fruits of a heterosexual union and should remain that way; so you could say I’m against gay couples having children, too. 

Basically, I’ve always felt that each should be true to him or herself; I’ve only asked for that same courtesy in return. But we’ve gone beyond that now. Gays not only want me to tolerate them in their aberrance, but they are demanding I approve of their lifestyle and choices. This I will never do. 

So we have another gross miscarriage of justice in California this week. Voters in California decided that gay marriage was not for them; in 2000 61% of them voted to ban the practice. This week, the California Supreme Court decided to ignore the will of the voters. Instead of sending the law back to the Legislature to be rewritten, four of the seven justices took it upon themselves to not only overturn the ban, but to legalize gay marriage.

Guess those judges were asleep during the civics classes describing the separation of powers. But I stray.

In thinking about this news and discussing it with my girl, it occurred to me that gay marriage, as ugly and disgusting as it is, will actually be a boon to heterosexual divorce. Follow along with me, reader, and you’ll see where I’m headed in a moment.

Traditionally, when heterosexual couples marry and divorce, the wife is given preferential treatment. The treatment is so preferential that some fathers never get to see their children again. But, in the less extreme, courts have forced fathers to give up the majority of their pay to support the children and ex-wife, subjected the father to supervised visitation if the ex-wife even hints there’s something improper about his relationship with his children, and the list goes on. I challenge you to do a little research into it and read with the dismay of millions of fathers who are being treated like criminals – because they are male.

But now, gay marriage will save all that; it will right the justice system in a way that the men’s movement never could; it will end the prejudice against men and fathers and force a judge to award custody and support based on merit instead of gender roles.

How is gay marriage going to do all this? Easy – gay divorce.

It is a sad fact of our society that over half of all marriages end in divorce. I don’t think gay divorce statistics will be much different (not the honest ones, anyway). So when a gay couple stands before a judge to divvy up the estate, custody, who pays how much in child support, he or she will be forced to view the partners based on merit. Merit here means the ability to contribute to the support of the children. In a male gay couple divorce, there is no woman to automatically prefer with ridiculous child support requirements and draconian visitation rules imposed upon the father. The judge will have to drop this blatant sexism in favor of something more fair; from each according to his ability.

Similarly, in female gay divorces, a judge can’t automatically favor one female over the other – he or she will again be forced to view the case based on the merit of each partner.

We have in our judicial system a preference for previous decisions. The term used is stare decisis, in effect, ‘let the decision stand’. For example, if it was decided in 1967 that ‘separate but equal’ was not Constitutional, any other case that was similar would consider the judge’s decision and usually rule in a comparable manner. 

This is where I bring the tractor-trailer all the way around. Given that merit will be the requirement in gay divorce, it will only be fair and just for heterosexual divorce. No longer will men be treated as a criminal, as nothing more than the gene donor and pocketbook, as nothing more than a dalliance from which the ex-wife can be supported for the rest of her life. True justice will finally – finally – be granted to fathers and ex-husbands, justice that has previously been withheld for a myriad of reasons ranging from prejudice to outright disdain for the male gender. 

I don’t think gay marriage is right for our country or its future and I oppose it in any form it takes. If we are to have this travesty in our society perhaps there’ll be something good borne out of this evil; fathers will once again be respected, sought for more than his paycheck, and put on equal ground as mothers.

It’s about time.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (5) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Clinton and Obama: Personal Integrity No Requirement for Presidency

This one will probably be short because I don’t need a lot of space to make this point. 
If you haven’t heard of the ‘debate about the debate’ I guess you’re pretty uninterested in national politics at the moment; I can’t say that I blame you – Options C or O look about the same and it looks like neither care for you, your family, or your country. All either want is power.  
 
On Wednesday’s televised Democrat Debate between Clinton and Obama, there were questions raised about the personal integrity of each candidate. To lesser and greater extents, we got to hear the lie each candidate would have us believe about the weaknesses of his or her own character. And, unashamedly, and I would add indignantly, the candidates are now trying to pass off these character flaws as trivial, nonsense, and worthless to the American politic.
 
These are the best and brightest we could find?

A person’s character is at the very core of what we want to hear about because it speaks to who and what they are, how they will approach us as the governed, and whether or not they will make the right decisions at the right time for the right reasons. It’s the driving factor behind every single thought, word, and deed.

My mother used to chide me when I was caught in a lie, “Don’t you want people to believe what you tell them?” It’s a way of saying, “If your word is worthless then you are worthless.”

I’d say both Clinton and Obama are pretty worthless.

And don’t hand me that nonsense that every one lies; an appeal to broad practice is as fallacious as it is insulting. Really – folks jumping off a bridge make it ok to jump from a bridge? Is that how you want to justify the craven’s bald-faced grab for dominion over you, your family, and your country? You want someone like this to represent you to our allies? How seriously do you think our enemies would take us if they knew our leader was simply grandstanding?

How is it that the very folks who claim “Bush lied; soldiers died” can rally around either of these two – liars?

Look; if the candidates are willing to lie to you, to exaggerate their records or positions or well-documented situations, to speak and act hypocritically on the campaign trail, what makes you think they will change and do the right or honorable thing once they are handed the levers of power to the greatest nation in the history of the earth? They are putting their best foot forward now in asking for our votes – if this is their best foot, what do you think lay with their worst?

Someone who lies to you in order to earn your favor does not have your best interests at heart. Someone who exaggerates his or her contribution to something or position speaks of an insecurity that does not have your best interests at heart.

Sure, I want to hear about the issues like capitalism v. socialism, gun-freedom, free speech, free religion, and so on; but before I can trust you to talk about the larger, more important issues that affect billions (because if the U.S. sneezes the entire world catches a cold), I want to know if you’re capable of telling the truth, of meaning what you say when said, and if you’re really – millions of dollars per year aside – just like me. So far, they’ve shown me they can’t and aren’t.

And that tells me neither Clinton nor Obama are qualified to be President. Ever.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (1) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

I Have a Plan to Destroy America

As with any person who has an email address, I am on the receiving end of a lot of chain letters, scams, and jokes, all forwarded from well meaning people.  Every once in awhile I stumble across something that I just have to do more than pass by; the below is just such a thing.  I received a version of this in my email, and verified it on snopes.com.  The version below is the updated notes from Richard D. Lamm.

It is probably old to most who read my blog but it was new to me.

I HAVE A PLAN TO DESTROY AMERICA
RICHARD D. LAMM

I HAVE A SECRET PLAN TO DESTROY AMERICA.  IF YOU BELIEVE, AS MANY DO, THAT AMERICA IS TOO SMUG, TOO WHITE BREAD, TOO SELF-SATISFIED, TOO RICH, LETS DESTROY AMERICA.  IT IS NOT THAT HARD TO DO.  HISTORY SHOWS THAT NATIONS ARE MORE FRAGILE THAN THEIR CITIZENS THINK. NO NATION IN HISTORY HAS SURVIVED THE RAVAGES OF TIME. ARNOLD TOYNBEE OBSERVED THAT ALL GREAT CIVILIZATIONS RISE AND THEY ALL FALL, AND THAT "AN AUTOPSY OF HISTORY WOULD SHOW THAT ALL GREAT NATIONS COMMIT SUICIDE."  HERE IS MY PLAN:

I.  WE MUST FIRST MAKE AMERICA A BILINGUAL-BICULTURAL COUNTRY.  HISTORY SHOWS, IN MY OPINION, THAT NO NATION CAN SURVIVE THE TENSION, CONFLICT, AND ANTAGONISM OF TWO COMPETING LANGUAGES AND CULTURES.  IT IS A BLESSING FOR AN INDIVIDUAL TO BE BILINGUAL; IT IS A CURSE FOR A SOCIETY TO BE BILINGUAL.  ONE SCHOLAR, SEYMOUR MARTIN LIPSET, PUT IT THIS WAY:

THE HISTORIES OF BILINGUAL AND BICULTURAL SOCIETIES THAT DO NOT ASSIMILATE ARE HISTORIES OF TURMOIL, TENSION, AND TRAGEDY.  CANADA, BELGIUM, MALAYSIA, LEBANON-ALL FACE CRISES OF NATIONAL EXISTENCE IN WHICH MINORITIES PRESS FOR AUTONOMY, IF NOT INDEPENDENCE.  PAKISTAN AND CYPRUS HAVE DIVIDED.  NIGERIA SUPPRESSED AN ETHNIC REBELLION.  FRANCE FACES DIFFICULTIES WITH ITS BASQUES, BRETONS, AND CORSICANS.

II.  I WOULD THEN INVENT "MULTICULTURALISM" AND ENCOURAGE IMMIGRANTS TO MAINTAIN THEIR OWN CULTURE. I WOULD MAKE IT AN ARTICLE OF BELIEF THAT ALL CULTURES ARE EQUAL:  THAT THERE ARE NO CULTURAL DIFFERENCES THAT ARE IMPORTANT.  I WOULD DECLARE IT AN ARTICLE OF FAITH THAT THE BLACK AND HISPANIC DROPOUT RATE IS ONLY DUE TO PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION BY THE MAJORITY.  EVERY OTHER EXPLANATION IS OUT-OF-BOUNDS.

III.  WE CAN MAKE THE UNITED STATES A "HISPANIC QUEBEC" WITHOUT MUCH EFFORT.  THE KEY IS TO CELEBRATE DIVERSITY RATHER THAN UNITY.  AS BENJAMIN SCHWARZ SAID IN THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY RECENTLY:

...THE APPARENT SUCCESS OF OUR OWN MULTIETHNIC AND MULTICULTURAL EXPERIMENT MIGHT HAVE BEEN ACHIEVED NOT BY TOLERANCE BUT BY HEGEMONY.  WITHOUT THE DOMINANCE THAT ONCE DICTATED ETHNOCENTRICALLY, AND WHAT IT MEANT TO BE AN AMERICAN, WE ARE LEFT WITH ONLY TOLERANCE AND PLURALISM TO HOLD US TOGETHER. 

I WOULD ENCOURAGE ALL IMMIGRANTS TO KEEP THEIR OWN LANGUAGE AND CULTURE.  I WOULD REPLACE THE MELTING POT METAPHOR WITH A SALAD BOWL METAPHOR.  IT IS IMPORTANT TO INSURE THAT WE HAVE VARIOUS CULTURAL SUB-GROUPS LIVING IN AMERICA REINFORCING THEIR DIFFERENCES RATHER THAN AMERICANS, EMPHASIZING THEIR SIMILARITIES.

IV.  HAVING DONE ALL THIS, I WOULD MAKE OUR FASTEST GROWING DEMOGRAPHIC GROUP THE LEAST EDUCATED - I WOULD ADD A SECOND UNDERCLASS, UNASSIMILATED, UNDEREDUCATED, AND ANTAGONISTIC TO OUR POPULATION.  I WOULD HAVE THIS SECOND UNDERCLASS HAVE A 50% DROP OUT RATE FROM SCHOOL.

V.  I WOULD THEN GET THE BIG FOUNDATIONS AND BIG BUSINESS TO GIVE THESE EFFORTS LOTS OF MONEY.  I WOULD INVEST IN ETHNIC IDENTITY, AND I WOULD ESTABLISH THE CULT OF VICTIMOLOGY.  I WOULD GET ALL MINORITIES TO THINK THEIR LACK OF SUCCESS WAS ALL THE FAULT OF THE MAJORITY - I WOULD START A GRIEVANCE INDUSTRY BLAMING ALL MINORITY FAILURE ON THE MAJORITY POPULATION.

VI.  I WOULD ESTABLISH DUAL CITIZENSHIP AND PROMOTE DIVIDED LOYALTIES.  I WOULD "CELEBRATE DIVERSITY." "DIVERSITY" IS A WONDERFULLY SEDUCTIVE WORD.  IT STRESSES DIFFERENCES RATHER THAN COMMONALITIES.   DIVERSE PEOPLE WORLDWIDE ARE MOSTLY ENGAGED IN HATING EACH OTHER-THAT IS, WHEN THEY ARE NOT KILLING EACH OTHER.   A DIVERSE," PEACEFUL, OR STABLE SOCIETY IS AGAINST MOST HISTORICAL PRECEDENT.  PEOPLE UNDERVALUE THE UNITY IT TAKES TO KEEP A NATION TOGETHER, AND WE CAN TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS MYOPIA.  LOOK AT THE ANCIENT GREEKS.  DORF'S WORLD HISTORY TELLS US:

THE GREEKS BELIEVED THAT THEY BELONGED TO THE SAME RACE; THEY POSSESSED A COMMON LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE; AND THEY WORSHIPED THE SAME GODS.  ALL GREECE TOOK PART IN THE OLYMPIC GAMES IN HONOR OF ZEUS AND ALL GREEKS VENERATED THE SHRINE OF APOLLO AT DELPHI.  A COMMON ENEMY PERSIA THREATENED THEIR LIBERTY.  YET, ALL OF THESE BONDS TOGETHER WERE NOT STRONG ENOUGH TO OVERCOME TWO FACTORS . . . (LOCAL PATRIOTISM AND GEOGRAPHICAL CONDITIONS THAT NURTURED POLITICAL DIVISIONS . . .)

IF WE CAN PUT THE EMPHASIS ON THE "PLURIBUS," INSTEAD OF THE "UNUM," WE CAN BALKANIZE AMERICA AS SURELY AS KOSOVO.  

VII.  THEN I WOULD PLACE ALL THESE SUBJECTS OFF LIMITS - MAKE IT TABOO TO TALK ABOUT. I WOULD FIND A WORD SIMILAR TO "HERETIC" IN THE 16TH CENTURY - THAT STOPPED DISCUSSION AND PARALYZED THINKING.  WORDS LIKE "RACIST", "XENOPHOBE" THAT HALTS ARGUMENT AND CONVERSATION.

HAVING MADE AMERICA A BILINGUAL-BICULTURAL COUNTRY, HAVING ESTABLISHED MULTICULTURALISM, HAVING THE LARGE FOUNDATIONS FUND THE DOCTRINE OF "VICTIMOLOGY", I WOULD NEXT MAKE IT IMPOSSIBLE TO ENFORCE OUR IMMIGRATION LAWS.  I WOULD DEVELOP A MANTRA - "THAT BECAUSE IMMIGRATION <U>HAS BEEN</U> GOOD FOR AMERICA, IT MUST ALWAYS BE GOOD." I WOULD MAKE EVERY INDIVIDUAL IMMIGRANT SYMPATRIC AND IGNORE THE CUMULATIVE IMPACT.

VIII.  LASTLY, I WOULD CENSOR VICTOR HANSON DAVIS'S BOOK MEXIFORNIA -- THIS BOOK IS DANGEROUS -- IT EXPOSES MY PLAN TO DESTROY AMERICA.  SO PLEASE, PLEASE -- IF YOU FEEL THAT AMERICA DESERVES TO BE DESTROYED -- PLEASE, PLEASE -- DON'T BUY THIS BOOK! THIS GUY IS ON TO MY PLAN.

"THE SMART WAY TO KEEP PEOPLE PASSIVE AND OBEDIENT IS TO STRICTLY LIMIT THE SPECTRUM OF ACCEPTABLE OPINION, BUT ALLOW VERY LIVELY DEBATE WITHIN THAT SPECTRUM." -- NOAM CHOMSKY, AMERICAN LINGUIST AND US MEDIA AND FOREIGN POLICY CRITIC.

Both Governor Lamm and the writer of the e-mail misidentify the author of the book Mexifornia, whose correct name is Victor Davis Hanson.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Hunting for Sex

This’ll be a short one today – I’m away from my keyboard more nowadays than before and need to get back to it.

I was catching up on the news when I came across this article about a hunters program in West Virginia.  Seems in West Virginia, public schools are required to offer hunter education programs to students in eighth through twelfth grades.  These courses are not mandatory, no one is required to take one of these courses; they are electives.

As I was reading the article and was pleasantly surprised there’s an entire state getting on the right side of this issue, one of the arguments against such a program jumped off my screen and stank up my office.

The odiferous argument against a mandatory hunter training program is that hunting, hunting safety, and so on are all better taught by the student’s parents at home.

This argument may have some familiarity to it because parents have been saying for a couple decades that sex education is best left to them, not the school system.  Hearing none of such an argument, school districts across the country have placed sex education (including the "alternative lifestyle" of the gays and lesbians) as a mandatory course; that is, they are not electives, they are required.

So why’s it ok for parents to teach their children about hunting and firearms at home, but not okay for them to teach their children about sex?

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

What Constitution?

If you haven’t heard already, Washington D.C. is aiming to violate not just the Second Amendment (the right to bear arms) with its draconian laws and attitudes towards its citizens, but also the Amendments supporting an American’s right to privacy. Though there is no explicitly stated ‘right to privacy’ in the U.S. Constitution, the Supreme Court has ruled there is an implication of such a right resident in the First (privacy of belief), Third (private property, or privacy of home), Fourth (as the Third), Fifth (privacy of one’s affairs), Ninth (privacy as a right not specifically enumerated by the Bill of Rights), and Fourteenth (due process) Amendments; the D.C. Mayor and Police Chief seek to violate these as well.

While they’re at it they may as well declare martial law.

What I’m talking about is the “Safe Homes Initiative” (read about it here and here); a program announced by D.C. Mayor Adrian M. Fentry and Police Chief Lanier yesterday (March 13, 2008). In another example of liberal Orwellianism, the program actually renders a home less safe.

“Safe Homes” allows police to search private residences door-to-door for handguns and drugs. That’s right – D.C. is going to send police officers door-to-door to search a home. Without probable cause to search or a warrant signed by a judge. That flickering flame you hear in the background is the U.S. Constitution being consumed by fire.

Sure, officers are supposed to ask for permission to search the premises; liberal thugs and socialist apologists can cite that as a loophole for the program to pass Constitutional muster. But what happens when the officers are not given permission? Am I to expect they would simply walk away without further incident? Clear thinking folk are suspicious of such a tactic; what happens when you’re stopped at a sobriety checkpoint and refuse the officer? It’s not very pretty after that, is it?

Too, there is the sham of amnesty. The plan is touted with an amnesty clause similar to the gun buy-backs wherein if a handgun is found, the officers won’t arrest the property owner (in D.C. it is illegal to even own a handgun – a blatant Second Amendment infringement). The police will investigate the origins, and to the extent possible, the use of the confiscated handgun; if it is found to have been used in a crime, charges will be filed. So the program isn’t really offering amnesty, is it? Oh, and never mind the trivial infringement of the Fifth Amendment with such a plan.

The Fifth Amendment protects an American from self-incrimination. How is filing charges against the property owner not an infringement of this right? Sure, if the property owner wasn’t the one committing the crime, he or she still abetted the criminal by stashing the handgun, right? So the amnesty provision of the program is a lie of omission; we are told that folk who turn over the handguns are immune to prosecution, but not that the immunity covers only the possession of the handgun; it appears the authorities are free to charge whomever they can relative to the firearm’s illegal use.

What isn’t mentioned is one of the other facets of the D.C. gun ban; long gun storage. In D.C., residents who own long guns (rifles and shotguns) are compelled by law to lock the weapon with a trigger lock or in a safe; in either case the weapon is to be unloaded. The “Safe Homes” program doesn’t specify what protections are afforded a citizen should an officer happen to find an unlocked or loaded long gun. In the absence of such direction, I imagine the homeowner will be charged and the firearm confiscated.

This program is vulnerable to the dreaded “racial profiling” argument that is preventing us from safely securing our airports and airlines. D.C. could have an ugly lawsuit on its hands from such a profiling practice. Though in this case it’s not racial profiling, it’s class; only those sections of D.C. where there are a higher proportion of lower class citizens will be searched. The neighborhoods of rich and affluent (such as the neighborhoods where the city council members live?) won’t be searched. So the program is not really about keeping homes safe, it’s about taking away handguns from the folks who need it most for personal and home defense.

Adding to this stinking pile of fascism is the fact that this program begins March 24th, just after the Supreme Court hears oral arguments in D.C. v. Heller. D.C. has tried to legislate handguns out of the hands of private citizens for over thirty years; now that it looks like the legislation will be struck down as un-Constitutional, the mayor and police chief want to physically remove them, forgetting their civics lessons about inalienable human rights.

Let me touch on something less high minded and more insidious; one of the program’s goals seeks to undermine parental authority in addition to the annulment of private property rights. Lanier has the notion parents are not in charge of their own children and cannot control them.

Lanier says, “It [the program] focuses on parents or legal guardians who think their children have a gun in the house and are uncomfortable with searching for it themselves.”

The way I read that statement means that Fentry and Lanier do not believe a parent is capable of running his or her own home or his or her own children. In a fine example of nanny-state interference, Lanier admits she feels like the state can do a better job. Were I a parent, I’d be insulted on so many different levels by her arrogance.

Keep in mind it’s not just D.C., my friends; Boston is conducting a similar program this month and Philadelphia is considering it. Nothing spreads so fast as fascism, eh?

Liberal thought and action in this country stopped surprising me some time ago; I’ve come to expect the most socialist thought and position from our folk on the left and have not been disappointed. It’s been something of a sport for me to watch them twist themselves around questions of personal responsibility, liberty, and freedom in order to explain to Americans how socialism is really just an advanced and more compassionate form of capitalism. But this – this surprised me. Even in my most gloom-and-doom scenarios I never envisioned 2008 as the year openly socialist forces in this country turned openly fascist. I guess we can add the names Fentry and Lanier to those of Clinton, Obama, FDR, Stalin, Mussolini, and Hitler in the annals of history.

To circle this tractor-trailer completely, let me opine a bit further. We must carefully weigh our options for Congress and President this coming election in November 2008. With this program in D.C., Boston, and perhaps Philadelphia it is becoming clear this ballot is not about the economy, the Iraq War, or some ubiquities and unexplained change. This election is about direction, about fundamentals, about the essence of what it is to be an American; do we want to lose our republic to the tyranny threatening at our door, or do we want to keep it?

We can only keep it if we throw off such programs as “Safe Homes”, fire public administrators like Lanier, vote out or impeach public officers like Fentry, reject the notion that socialism is matured capitalism, and demand with the authority of our Founding Fathers that our rights be respected. 

I, for one, want to keep it.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (1) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Tyranny by Any Other Name


There’s a movement in this country to undo all the work of our Founding Fathers, American citizens, and two hundred thirty-one years of sacrifice, liberty and freedom.  This movement seeks to wrest consent and authority away from the individual and place it under the whims of a centralized, tyrannical regime that does not respect natural human rights.  We call that movement socialism which, as I've discovered, is a kindler, gentler label for tyranny.  The group that represents this movement in the United States is the Democratic Party.

As I learn more about the political parties and processes in the U.S., I am repeatedly struck by the stark differences between the two largest groups, the liberals who are primarily represented by the Democratic Party and the conservatives who are primarily represented by the Republican Party.  In this election season there are pundits and cynical bemoaning how there’s no real difference between the parties, that a vote for either does not represent 'change' but more of the same sort of government 'We the People' have come to loathe.  Right or left, red or blue, there are differences separating the two parties, some minute, others huge.  One of the chief differences between the two camps is the interpretation of the U.S. Constitution in general, specifically the Bill of Rights.

The Bill of Rights is not an addendum of suggestions to the federal government; it is a list of rights specifically enumerated to protect citizens from tyranny.  Freedoms of speech, religion, and the press; the rights to bear arms and due process; the rights to be free from unlawful searches and seizures, self-incrimination, and cruel and unusual punishments are all delineated in plain English to construct a border between government and the governed.  This border is not to confine the citizen, it is to confine the government, to keep it at bay and from interfering with individual liberty.

The Bill of Rights is an enumeration of fundamental rights.  A fundamental right in more understandable terms are those considered retained by every person simply because he or she exists; we also call these 'natural human rights'.  A natural human right is one that can neither be granted nor revoked by any government or entity; it is a right that each individual has simply because he or she is alive.  Therefore, these rights cannot be legislated, trivialized, or ignored.  Not every country on the planet believes in fundamental rights, but here in America, that was the intent of our Founding Fathers as established in the Freedom Documents upon which our system of government is based.

There is a difference between a natural human right, a fundamental right, and a privilege.  A privilege is something granted or revoked by higher authority, and used usually as a bargaining tool to keep the subordinate in line; a fundamental or natural human right is irrevocable.  A good example of a privilege is a driver’s license.  If a driver shows his or her incompetence behind the wheel, the State can revoke the license under which driving privileges have been granted.  That person would no longer be recognized as responsible enough to handle a motor vehicle.

Another good example of a privilege versus a right is the teen-ager and the telephone.  A teen ager’s main lifeline to his or her friends (and escape from parents) used to be the telephone (which is now supplanted by email and instant messaging).  One of the first things a parent would take away from a teen-ager not living up to his or her responsibilities is access to the telephone (or computer nowadays). 

To sum up, a privilege can be granted and revoked as deemed necessary by some higher authority while a fundamental right, or natural human right, is endowed upon each individual by virtue of his or her existence and is irrevocable which can only be respected by the government.

I went into such detail and definition because there seems to be confusion about our Constitution and the Bill of Rights it contains.  Liberals and Democrats have it wrong, purposely so, I think; how can we have socialism in this country if the Bill of Rights are fundamental, natural human rights? 

Democrats view the Bill of Rights as a list of suggestions, as a list of privileges, a list to adhere to when speaking about patriotism in order to get elected but not actually respected when the governed consent.  Socialism is a Borg-like collective where there is no room for the individual or individual rights which, at its base, is nothing more than tyranny by a diffrent name.  The written documentation outlining our belief in natural human rights must either be ignored, or have its meaning subverted.  Since ignoring the Bill of Rights outright would not lead a socialist very far, we're seeing subversion of its meaning in the modern Democrat / Socialist movement.

For the sake of brevity, we’ll discuss only three examples underscoring my point about Democrats out of the plethora to be found with a quick ask.com search; Hillary Clinton’s socialist remarks on the campaign trail; John Edward’s remarks on the campaign trail; and published remarks made by the liberal columnist, Susan Estrich.

Anyone who’s been following the horse race to the White House for the last year and change knows that Hillary Clinton represents a radical shift to the left for America.  Her socialist rhetoric started in earnest last year and she has been pounding her message since; universal health care (socialized medicine) works only if participation is mandatory (garnishing wages); it takes a village to raise a child (state rights trump parental rights); windfall taxes on firms making a profit (notably "big oil"); and the most socialist remark I’ve heard on international TV from an American citizen, "We're going to take things away from you on behalf of the common good."  "Things" can take all manner of forms from taxes to natural rights (such as the "fairness doctrine" which she supports).

For as left as Clinton is racing, John Edwards tried to outpace her by going even further to the left.  In a single interview, Edwards made up two rights not in the Constitution, and expressed his belief that one of our fundamental rights is a privilege; health care is a right, an illegal immigrant living in the country for a year has rights, and the Second Amendment is a privilege.  Watch a Socialist at work.

I purposely chose someone not in a leadership capacity for my third example because I want to demonstrate how diluted the Bill of Rights has become to the rank and file Democrats.  Susan Estrich is a syndicated columnist and on my short list of blue authors whom I respect.  I’ll read her columns to feel the "pulse" of "regular" Democrats; though her rhetoric is sometimes as shrill as the most bluely liberal blogger, by and large she writes and expresses herself rationally and succintly.  I honestly believe she loves America and wants to solve its problems but I don’t think her ideas are the right ones for the long-term survival of our country.

In Estrich’s column from Sunday, February 24, 2008, she writes:

"Maybe there should be an asterisk in the First Amendment's protection of the freedom of the press making the point that most of us who are parents of teenagers do on a regular basis: that freedom is not simply a privilege but also a responsibility, that just because you have it doesn't mean you need to push its limits, much less abuse it." (emphasis mine)

While I agree with Estrich that there are responsibilities associated and required of every natural human right (e.g. free speech does not mean a person can yell "fire!" in a crowded theater where there is no fire, nor is a fecal-coated statue of the Virgin Mary considered "free speech"), her words illustrate our difference in understanding; to her, the freedom of the press is a privilege, not a natural right.  One the one hand, I am astonished by her position because she makes at least part of her living under the protections of the very right which she seeks to subvert.  On the other hand, I’m not surprised by her position because, as is apparent, the Bill of Rights is merely a Bill of Suggestions to Democrats, a quaint idea with no basis in human rights, improperly ignored when politically expedient to do so.

This is a dangerous ideology that will only serve to bring about America’s destruction, just as it did Rome’s.  Our Founding Fathers wrote extensively and toiled deliberately against a strong, centralized government that did not respect the individual and his or her natural human rights; they purposely designed a system of government that would reflect the will of ‘the People’, providing the smallest intrusion into a citizen’s life the world has ever seen.

It’s clear to me in this simple review that the Democrats don’t believe in our inalienable human rights because those rights stand as guardian and precipice against the form of tyranny we call socialism.  Socialism and individual liberty and freedom are inversely proportional; the more liberty, the less tyranny; the more tyranny, the less liberty.

In Hurricane Election 2008, which will you vote for?  For now, we have a Republic; if we can keep it.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (1) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

An Arsenal of Guns

I was reading this article on foxnews.com as a follow-up to the shooting at Northern Illinois University (NIU).  The article is part of the Associated Press syndication that is reprinted on foxnews.com’s website, so there’s no author to source.  Something leapt off the screen while I was reading the piece:

"Steven Kazmierczak, the 27-year-old grad student who bought an arsenal of guns in recent months and used them to kill five people and commit suicide, had been on medication and was said to have spent time in a psychiatric center as a teen in the late 1990s." (emphasis mine)

Of course, being pro-Second Amendment and pro-self-defense, I dug into what exactly constitutes an "arsenal of guns".

According to this article on ABCNews.com, Kazmierczak has three pistols and one shotgun; two of the pistols were legally purchased a week before the shootings; the other pistol and shotgun were purchased in August and December of 2007 (which purchased when was not disclosed by the article).  So we have a fellow who own three handguns and one shotgun.  The Associated Press calls this an "arsenal".

In the movie Lord of War, Nicholas Cage’s character convinces a Soviet officer stationed in the Ukraine to sell the weapons cached at a forward deployed base.  As Cage and the officer walk through the bunker, we see rows and rows of AK-47 rifles, some forty thousand of them; this is what we call an "arsenal". 

It’s rather irresponsible to label what Kazmierczak owned as an "arsenal".  By using that standard, any hunter who has more than one rifle (as most do) would be considered owing an "arsenal".  In fact, I have an arsenal myself were I to apply the Associated Press’ standards to my weapons.

Just like the auto mechanic has a myriad of tools at his or her disposal, a hunter does too.  Why use a high-powered rifle for small game?  Why try to fell a deer or moose with a small game caliber?  "The right tool for the job" is a mantra repeated by anyone who uses tools to do any job.  According to the Associated Press, just owning "the right tools" constitutes an arsenal.

This article isn’t really about guns though; it’s about how the press continues to undermine its own validity and integrity by using cheap, ham-fisted methods to scare folk who don’t understand guns and "just want to do something".

Remember all the published rhetoric surrounding the methods Christians use to recruit new Christians and inspire good behavior?  Secular media always paints (unjustly, I might add) the clergy as fear-mongers using elaborate fictions of Hell and eternal punishment to keep the flock in line.  Criticism is heaped on anyone taking up the call to work in the clergy for being nothing more than a purveyor of fear.  The secular media does this as a way to undermine the validity and integrity of the clergy.

In all things political these days, which none of us can escape for more than a moment, accusations from the secular media fly in all directions surrounding any mention of radical Islam or further terrorist attacks.  Mention 9/11 as a valid reason to shore up our defenses and fight the drooling hordes of fascism and the secular media trivializes the speaker by labeling him or her as a fear-monger or alarmist.   The secular media does this as a way to undermine the validity and integrity of those who would act in the defense of our families.

So I’m calling the Associated Press – and all the rest – on the hypocrisy of their behavior.  If being a fear-monger and alarmist is wrong and the person or entity doing so becomes trivial, then you are as wrong and trivial as the clergy and defenders who you have denigrated.  Don’t you owe it to your readers to prevent such things from appearing in your articles, to take the higher road by simply reporting the facts of a story? 

When you label Kazmierczak’s weapons as an "arsenal" you are as guilty as those you accuse of fear-mongering because it is not even close to what one really is.  At least those who you’ve accused are simply trying to save a soul or prevent another terrorist attack on our soil; you appear to be trying to wrest away the best tools for a citizen’s self-defense and keeping tyranny in check by scaring the guns right out of their neighbor's hands.  Further, you’re trying to force the reader to draw the conclusion – your conclusion – that if a person owns guns – even just one! – he or she is a deviant, mentally unstable, and destined to be in the headlines as a mass murderer.  You are not in the business to force a conclusion; you are in the business to discover, and then report, the facts.  Period.

To those that would ask about what words to use when describing his guns, why not just say what was purchased?  Something like:

"Steven Kazmierczak, the 27-year-old grad student who bought three pistols and a shotgun in recent months and used them to kill five people and commit suicide, had been on medication and was said to have spent time in a psychiatric center as a teen in the late 1990s." (emphasis mine to demonstrate the difference)

Isn’t that a more reasonable and responsible way to report on the story? 

The Associated Press and its ilk who peddle in fear-mongering are the least qualified to trivialize or dismiss anyone for doing so (Pot, meet Kettle … ).  The media outlets practicing this hypocrisy don’t seem much interested in reason or responsibility; a fact which makes what they have to say uninteresting to me.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (1) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Google: Culture of Corruption


Imagine walking into a public library and discovering that all the materials were written by one author.  Or imagine that a public library had materials from several authors, but only those which were on an approved readership list.  Would anyone patronize such a library where every single piece of material was tainted with such manipulation and censorship?  Why would anyone patronize an internet search engine that is doing the same?
 
At its beginning, Google changed the face of search on the internet.  It made search fast, ubiquitous, and relevant and has such a commanding lead in internet search that many view it as a global, digital library.  As Google matures and begins to flex its muscle in attempts to influence and shape public policy, we’re beginning to see crimson taint on the white web form.

I don’t expect this article to last very long in Google’s search engine because of its content.  I can say this with reasonable assurance based on recent behavior from the internet search giant; though it commands well over 50% of the search activity on the internet it is showing signs that it is not a neutral entity with the public’s best interest at heart.  To be certain, any firm is in business to turn a profit first and foremost with corporate citizenship somewhere on the Form 10-K; the "public’s best interest" is hardly a fiduciary interest but Google is not a regular firm.

Google’s responsibility to the public is much greater than that of, say, Dodge or Wal-Mart because unlike the latter two which peddle in goods and services related to its goods, the former peddles in information which is a much more important and much more dangerous product.  Information has spawned enlightenment, influenced decisions, enabled education, and sparked revolution; Google wants us to accept it as the global peddler of information and until recently seemed willing to be its neutral provider.

So long as Google remained neutral in the transaction between information and seeker, I had no issue with it, even applauding its technology and successes.  The more we learn about Google the more we find it is not neutral; the less neutral Google is means a concerned public should be ever more skeptical of the services it provides.

The first indication I had Google was not a neutral conduit information and is trying to influence and shape policy was the incident outlined in this blog post.  In short, Google targeted Republican Senator Susan Collins from Maine because she was using MoveOn.org as a talking point in her re-election campaign ads at the same time allowing MoveOn.org to sully General David Patraeus in its ads.  Of course, when called on it, Google cited trademark and copyright policies upon which Madam Senator Collins infringed but MoveOn.org did not.  What Google really said by its actions is that it is ok for a very liberal left-wing organization founded and funded by the Clinton’s to advertise ad-hominem attacks against an Army General charged with implementing the Bush Administration’s Iraq War Policy, but it was not ok for a conservative Senator to use that activity as part of her re-election campaign.  To boil that complicated sentence down to something more palatable, Google allowed an attack on conservatives from liberals but blocked a conservative using that attack as part of her advertising campaign.

Taken by itself one could argue that Google just made a mistake, that it is still a young company experiencing all the growing pains other young companies experience when they have such a sustained period of rapid growth.  I don’t buy it (particularly since Barak Obama was the only presidential candidate invited to speak on the Google campus), but a lot of folk did.  Then today we are met with another clue to the culture of corruption behind the white web form; Google de-listed Inner City Press.

To be honest, I had never heard of Inner City Press before today; had Google not censored the free press I might never have heard of it.  Again, taken by itself, this is not a sign of corruption for Google lists and de-lists as is necessary to maintain its "quality" of service to the public.  If we dig a little deeper, we find an insidious thread that tinges the white web form scarlet.

Inner City Press is an internet news organization that has been reporting on corruption and abuses within the United Nations.  Anyone who knows a whit about the U.N. knows that it is an organization long on rhetoric but short on results because of its incompetence and internal corruption; they also know the U.N. is perhaps the standard bearer for liberalism, socialism and communism in the world.  This is the same organization that seeks to erase the U.S. Constitution and make American liberties something for the history books all the while extolling its own vision for righteousness and humanity.  Clear-thinking folk world-wide know the U.N. for the sham it has become.  Considering its roots and intent, its fall is a terrible shame.

So corruption within the U.N. is not exactly new or unknown and Inner City Press was reporting on every tidbit it could uncover.  Google recently partnered with the U.N. for its anti-poverty initiatives and was called to the carpet for it by Inner City Press’ journalist and editor-in-chief, Matthew Lee.  Lee wondered to a Google representative why it was partnering with the U.N. for anti-poverty initiatives and not human-rights or anti-censorship.  Now, after a single complaint, Inner City Press has been de-listed from Google News.

That’s right, only one complaint was enough to de-list an internet news service from Google News.  I wonder if I complained about MSNBC.com, CNN.com, FOXNews.com, or GOP.com if I could get them de-listed.  I’m sure I couldn’t – in fact, I’m sure Google would ignore my email because I’d be the only complaint.  If it did respond, it would assure me those sources were legitimate news outlets.  Inner City Press is no less legitimate, albeit it is not nearly as large, and has a history of calling corruption where it finds it.  Since Google partnered with a corrupt arm of a corrupt organization one could rightly wonder what sort of corruption would be found within Google.

Again, this singular incident does not a “culture of corruption” make but I cannot help but think there’s more to it.  It seems to me that Google is not just aiming to be the main and best internet search provider in the world; it looks to me like it is actually trying to shape and influence policy.

Part of the reason Google has gained so much ground so rapidly is because it has an aggressive aggregation and indexing algorithm that makes an internet search fast and relevant.  Until this point, we have been able to trust the search results because we believed Google did nothing more than collect and index information, and return it when queried.  It looks like it’s doing more than that when it takes an active part in selective censorship (that is, of conservative outlets or those which could embarrass the firm).  If Google doesn’t already have a culture of corruption its recent activities show us it’s headed in that direction.

Has anyone ever stopped to wonder what will happen if Google becomes so big all other search was rendered irrelevant?  What would stop it from tailoring the news or search results to an [insert singular viewpoint here]?  What would keep it honest enough to provide information impartially without the taint of a political agenda?  Though there are other search providers that can compete (Yahoo’s is very good), Google still opts for heavy-handed censorship of those parties with which it does not ideologically agree; what happens when there are no other players on the field, how much integrity would Google retain? 

Google tells us its search is heavily reliant upon relevance; that is, a site is listed higher or lower in the search results, in part, based on how many other legitimate sites link to it.  How easy would that be to internally manipulate (pretty easy, in fact)?  As a fella that understands databases, indexing, and search, coupled with the way Google has recently been flaunting its power, I am chilled by the implications.

Now, it's fairly obvious from my posts on this blog and elsewhere to which political philosophy I subscribe.  Some of my readers may discount my thoughts in this post simply because my position in political thought.  I submit, however, that it doesn’t matter to which side a firm like Google sways; manipulating and censoring information is dangerous to understanding, liberty, freedom, and life and it should be condemned whenever it occurs.

My mother used to tell me there is always more than one side to every idea; Google would prevent us from hearing any other side but its own.

Trust Google at our own peril.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Citizens to the State of Florida: Do Your Job


Here in Florida, voters passed Amendment One this last Election Day.  The intent of this Amendment was to lower the property tax Floridians paid.  There was a bit to this Amendment so no one would be left out; homeowners would receive a tax break as well as portability for the tax (in essence, Florida is taxing the person now and not the property); business owners would receive a tax break as well as breaks on capital and lease remodeling activities.
 
As a Floridian and homeowner, let me say that Amendment One is a big disappointment.  True, it is better than nothing, but a disappointment nonetheless.  To be certain, I did not expect much from the State politicians and was not surprised.
 
When I bought my home, my property tax was $950.  When my property was "reassessed" it jumped to $2200.  Combined with a similar jump in property insurance, my PITI mortgage payment jumped nearly $250 a month.  With Amendment One, I’m granted a "generous" savings of … $200 this year.
 
What?
 
You’ll note my generous use of quotes around the word generous; any time a politician must give something back to a citizen, whatever the amount, no matter how trivial and insulting, it is always "generous".  The State leaders have been applauding this move and patting each other on the back for their wisdom, "generosity" and benevolence.  We the People of Florida see the sham for what it is.
 
We see it so clearly, in fact, that the Amendment faced real opposition.  In Miami-Dade County, one of the largest in Florida, there was a well-funded and well-run campaign for voters to vote ‘NO’ on Amendment One.  But why would voters not want a tax break?

Simple – the tax-break was not enough.  A mere $200 break on property taxes that have tripled, quadrupled, or exponentially increased is hardly worth praise, hardly worth notice and quite honestly, an insult.  The city, county, and state coffers have overflowed during the last decade because property taxes, as a percentage of property values, have taken a stairway to the heavens.  Seriously, some annual property tax in the county in which I live is as much as the PI mortgage.  And the political hacks want us to praise them for their "generosity"?

Because of this, Amendment One almost never was.  The citizens of Florida are a cynical bunch because we’ve been sold a bill of goods before.  Let me direct your attention to the late 80’s and the fight for the Lotto.  The politicians and other "leaders" promised that any profits made from the Lotto would be applied dollar-for-dollar to Florida’s education system.  Lotto profits inject about $1 billion annually for Florida education.  With numbers like that Florida must have one of the best education systems and well paid teachers in the country!

Wrong.  Every year the budget for Florida’s education is reduced by the amount the State believes it will take in from the Lotto.  So, dollar-for-dollar, the Lotto profits have gone right to the schools and teachers in Florida; dollar-for-dollar, the State has taken an equivalent amount out of the schools and teachers in Florida; net gain -- $0.

Does that $1 billion extracted from education go to something worthwhile like the Hurricane Catastrophe fund?  Who knows?  I can’t tell you where it goes because I’m not smart enough to keep up with the sometimes circular accounting sheets Florida releases to the public.

Keeping the Lotto in mind, it’s no wonder Amendment One almost didn’t pass; Floridians are tired and cranky with their representatives because there is so much double-speak and sleight of hand.

I almost voted NO for Amendment One because of this; I know the State can do better than a mere $200 and it should.  But here’s how it works in Florida:

Politicians:  Do you want a tax break?
Citizens:  Yes!!
Politicians:  Ok.  We’ll give you $200 for something that has gone up 500% in the last two years.  How’s that?
Citizens:  What?!
Politicians:  Hey, that’s a reasonable offer.  You want it or not?
Citizens:  OK!  But you can do much, much better than that!  We’ll take this for now and expect you to do more later.
Politicians:  Ok!  Here’s your check.  Moving on to a bill to protect the Swallow-tail Butterfly from unleashed domestic cats –
Citizens:  Hey!  What about further reducing our taxes?
Politicians:  Look, we reduced your taxes already and generously so, I might add.  You should be happy you got that much or else we'll just take it away.

– or –

Politicians:  Do you want a tax break?
Citizens:  Yes!!
Politicians:  Ok.  We’ll give you $200 for something that has gone up 500% in the last two years.  How’s that?
Citizens:  What?!
Politicians:  Hey, that’s a reasonable offer.  You want it or not?
Citizens:  No!  You can do much, much better than that!
Politicians:  Really?  You don’t want a tax break?  Ok!  Moving on to a bill to protect the Swallow-tail Butterfly from unleashed, domestic cats –
Citizens:  Hey!  What about a <i>real</i> reduction in our taxes?
Politicians:  Look, we asked you already and you said no.  So we’re not going to give you one.  In fact, your ‘NO’ means you must think you don’t pay enough in taxes so we’re going to raise them again next year.

This is why Florida politicians have a bad reputation even among other politicians.  Don’t get me started on the way the State has handled the insurance industry here.  I’m out of a job because of it and still -- still -- insurance rates are going up.

But this is not about insurance, it’s about taxes.  And let me tell you just how childish Florida government has become.

Now that Amendment One is law, every single issue – without exception – is somehow tied to a reduced budget.  Cities are threatening that they can’t hire or keep enough cops or firefighters because of Amendment One and of those that remain, salaries and benefits will be cut.  Counties are doing the same to sheriff departments statewide.  Wild fires in the middle of the State are blamed on Amendment One.  Teachers are facing pay cuts and we’re told there’s not enough money to properly maintain the school grounds because of Amendment One.  It’s all doom and gloom, fire and brimstone, all because the citizens of Florida want greater fiscal responsibility from their leaders.  Instead of doing so, the "leaders" go after those things considered "core"; police, fire, EMS, and education.  The "leaders" did not want to do the work to reduce those frivolous things; instead they will use Amendment One as an excuse for every mishap, every shortfall, and every moment of their own incompetence in order to punish Floridians for passing this bill.  They’ll push and nag, whine and justify all in a vain attempt to blackmail us to capitulate and reverse our will.

Politicians are wily ones and will get revenue out of taxpayers by hook or by crook.  So we now have a reduction in our property taxes but don’t celebrate yet.  To compensate for the "losses" incurred by the property tax relief, watch for the inevitable utility tax increase.  When the State taxes utilities, the expense is naturally passed on to the consumer.  The $200 returned as property-tax relief will be taken away, and then some, by an across-the-board rate increase.  You saw it here, first.

Three years ago or so I was participating in a forum where a challenge was poised; create or expose an insidious conspiracy, true or false, just to see how X-Files-ish we could get.  The one I wrote about was a trifecta of state, local municipalities, and the insurance industry working in tandem to push real estate property values higher so that tax revenues would increase as well as insurance premiums (a portion of which goes back to the State).  This in tandem with cheap debt (because Greenspan was as much a wizard as was the Wizard of Oz) would fuel a bubble in real estate that would make the tech bubble from the late 90’s look tiny.  Citizens would be taxed right out of a living wage while the politicians and insurance industry got rich.

Now, I don’t believe there is or was a conspiracy – there was no collusion between so many different folk; it was a simple, fun creative exercise.  Conspiracy or not, the result is the same.

The State of Florida says it's going to reduce the tax burden and provide tax relief to its citizens but then touts this crepe-thin package and expects accolades and praise?  Voters in Florida have had enough; we have taxation with representation but you representatives are as deaf to us as King George was to the original colonists; we want you to do what we hired you to do; represent us properly, justly, and honestly.

Otherwise, you’re fired.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

NIU Shoots Holes in Gun-Free Zones


My condolences and prayers go out to the kith and kin for those affected by this shooting, as well as to the Kazmierczak family.  The losses this day are unfathomable and life-changing.
 
It’s happened again, this time at Northern Illinois University (NIU).  Once again a gunman, one Steven Kazmierczak of Lakeland, Florida, has opened fire on a group of innocent college students, this time killing six.  Quite frankly – please forgive me for seeming crass – I’m not the least bit surprised.

NIU is, like all college campuses in America, a gun-free zone.  College administrators and faculty nationwide contend that there is no place on campus for a firearm because it quells the "free and open discussion" of the classroom and is "unsafe".  How safe was it for the six dead and fifteen wounded?

If we’d learned anything at all from every mass shooting in this country it should be that gun-free zones are synonymous with killing-free zones.  Did Kazmierczak walk into a gun range and open fire?  Did he walk into a police station or bar?  How about breaking into someone’s home – did he do that?  No; Kazmierczak loaded a shotgun and two handguns and opened fire on a known group of disarmed innocents, fully aware that he was the only one with a firearm from the lecture hall to the edge of campus.  The only way he could be shot is if he did it himself, which is exactly what the coward did.  Sure, campus security was armed but what for good since they were not in the lecture hall and wouldn’t arrive in time to stop him?

As this situation unfolded at NIU, students texted warnings to each other that there was a gunman on the loose.  It took twenty minutes for the campus to issue its own warning and lockdown.  Sure, twenty minutes at NIU is two-thirds better than the hour it took Virginia Tech to respond; how many more could have been injured or died in that twenty minutes?  How long after that before the ATF and FBI responded?  How about the local cops?  Where was campus security?

These questions are not a slam on those agencies, agents, or their honorable professions; rather it serves to contrast the lie that’s been fed to every parent and student.  We’ve been told the college campus is one of the safest places in the country because there are no guns except those provided to the 'highly trained' security detail.  The lie is unraveling with every single campus shooting; gun-free zones, such as NIU and Virginia Tech, are nothing more killing-free zones; our children are not safe because they are disarmed.  And outlaws like Kazmierczak know it.

An armed response is only effective if it’s on scene.  Arming a security detail and spreading them out across the campus is ineffective at least and at worst is falsely secure.  Sure, a security guard could have done much to save lives and prevent further injuries – but where were they?  Security details can only do so much and cover so much ground.  There was no laziness or laxness from campus security; it’s a simple fact they cannot be everywhere at once.  This is why it is imperative that the students and faculty – who are pretty much everywhere at once – be allowed to carry concealed on campus.  The right to self-defense should not stop at the campus gates.

Remember Jeanne Assam in Denver, Colorado, the shooting in Pearl, Mississippi or in Grundy, Virginia where there was an armed response from a lawful citizen?  You may not remember them because they didn’t make the news with as much pomp and repetition as does a "rampage".  Look up the facts for each of those – legal firearms were rightly used to save lives.  Those situations would have been much worse had brave citizens who chose to take the defense of self and others personally not stood against those gunmen.  Similarly, NIU, Virginia Tech and all the rest could have been much, much different had there been legally armed citizens in the lecture hall.

Still the left and other fearful will sit back and cluck their tongues that guns are so readily available and easily obtained, lamenting how this tragedy would never have occurred had there not been so many (fearful tones here) guns in this country.  I have a thought for those folk; take a Malox.  This tragedy and all the others have nothing to do with the availability of guns in our country.  In gun-free countries (United Kingdom and Australia to name a couple) outlaws are still quite heavily armed.  They are so well heeled in fact that the United Kingdom is now spending more money arming its police than ever before (try not to think about how this also makes the lawful "citizen" even more powerless).  The national gun resistry database in Canada cost over sixteen times what the politicians promised "citizens" ($119 million v. over $2 billion) and still, thugs, gangs, and outlaws are as heeled as American thugs, gangs, and outlaws; the difference is in Canada, lawfull citizens are disarmed and defenseless.  The facts show taking guns away from lawful citizens does not reduce crime.

We, and the world, haven’t learned anything from history.  There are dozens of examples of tyranny in the world that started with gun-free countries (Nazi Germany and Communist Russia to name but two; see Firearms in America; Right of the People for a more in-depth discussion) so let me discuss a different example, one that might be less offensive to those not willing to rationally discuss gun-freedom; Prohibition.

In 1919 the U.S. ratified the Eighteenth Amendment to its Constitution prohibiting "intoxicating liquors" (and began enforcement in 1920).  Prohibition showed us that these sorts of laws are not about controlling a substance or item, such as alcohol; it is about controlling people.  Instead of enforcing the laws designed to discourage public drunkenness and driving while intoxicated, politicians and the ruling class banned alcohol.  Who did this Amendment really punish, the lawless and drunkards, or the law-abiding citizen having a nightcap at home?  Did Prohibition actually curtail consumption of alcoholic beverages or did it enrich the outlaws who produced it, shipped it, and sold it?  History provides clear answers; the only thing Prohibition did was further reduce the liberty of law abiding citizens and multiply the power of organized crime to a point which was almost uncontainable.  The federal government in collusion with the several states did nothing with Prohibition but punish the citizen and empower the scofflaw.  It is the same thing with guns.

On a grander scale, think for a moment about the repercussions of a gun-free America.  One wouldn’t have much to think because there are innumerable examples of abuse, harassment, and liberty-infringement world-wide; one only need look in those ‘gun-free’ countries to find it.  The college campus and other gun-free zones are microcosms of how it would be nationwide – only the tyrannical would be armed and everyone else a target.

The saddest lesson from today remains that this could have been avoided and Kazmierczak could have been stopped as soon as he fired the first round had there been a student or faculty member in that lecture hall with a concealed firearm.  Until we allow students and faculty to carry concealed on campus we should expect these sorts of tragedies to continue.

And they will.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (2) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Be Prepared

I’ve mentioned in a couple of other posts (here, here, and here) my opinion about the political climate in this country and, because it is moving in a dangerously socialistic way, why it’s important to arm ourselves now.  This year, I am putting my money where my mouth is.  Though money is going to be tight with all the goals I’ve set for myself, this is something for which I feel is worth sacrificing, something for which is worth rearranging priorities.  I’ve recently purchased my first AR15.

For those of you that know me, you’ll recall I am sold out on a few hunting rifles and of course two particular calibers of pistol and revolver for self-defense (and backup).  One of the best tools a citizen has at the moment is an AR15.  It is a no-nonsense thirty round response to an aggressor who’s trying to steal, maim, murder, or socialize and, in my opinion, worth every penny of security it’ll bring.  In addition to the weapon itself, I purchased one thousand rounds of ammunition (for starters); obviously, I don’t need that many rounds for a single aggressor but will come to find them valuable when the time for preparation has passed.

My girl was as excited about the new weapon in the house as she was the new refrigerator.  When she told her friends of my purchase she was met with varying opinions ranging from fear to outright disdain.  Not a single one of them appreciated the need for such a tool or supported my decision.  I’m ok with that.  One thing the military reinforced was my old Boy Scout training; be prepared.

To that end, I have re-evaluated my decisions and priorities for the year as well as what direction I’m going to take my battery.  Though I intended in an earlier post to keep to two calibers of weapons, I have learned it is unwise to do so; however suited to home and personal defense, neither of the calibers I mentioned are good for hunting or greater than in-your-face defense.  Too, as I’ve done my research, I’ve found the handguns I currently own are not viable because I cannot find spares and parts are more difficult to obtain.  Fortunately, my shotgun is a standard model that is still in production so I’ll be adding to what I already own (in .12 for the heavy work and .20 gauge for the light).  One of the results of that re-evaluation is the decision to add AR15’s to the battery.

For every job there is an appropriate tool and the AR15 is the right tool for preparation-minded folk.  Unfortunately, there are those in this country vying for absolute power which do not want us to prepare ourselves.  Just look to the aftermath from Hurricane Katrina; the local governments did nothing to help its citizens and in fact tried to disarm them!  The folks in charge (especially Ray Nagin and Kathleen Blanco) fully expected the federal government to rescue them (and then, to cover their own incompetence, loudly and repeatedly blamed the federal government for its lack of action).  Why make a plan, live properly, prepare ourselves or community for disaster or collapse when the federal government will be right there with a handout and salvation?  Three days later the country sat rapt as images of military trucks bearing the necessities of life drove through flooded streets; what was the armament of choice for securing those supplies?  The AR15.

I am by no means an expert.  There’s a reason our military and various law enformcement agencies (at all levels from local to federal) use variations of the AR15 – even to this day and after so rocky a start with the original M16 A1’s in Vietnam (the military designation for the AR15 is M-16; the first generation configuration of these weapons is categorized as A1).  Though I don’t know that reason the fact that it’s been our service weapon of choice for nearly forty years speaks highly of its design, reliability, functionality, utility, maintainability, and longevity.  Our soldiers in the Middle East and around the world are using a variable of this weapon with as much success as our do-nothing, fear-citizen Congress has allowed.

For the painfully naïve I am well aware of the responsibility that comes with owning a firearm of any stripe.  This rifle is no exception.  The security an AR15 provides is not in its show but in its use.  I will have ample opportunity to practice such this year; it won’t take too long to brush the cobwebs away from my military training and I’m looking forward to putting this new weapon through its paces.

It is the first of four I will purchase this year.  In my way of figuring, it is worth the expense to have spare parts available should my primary weapon fail; it is worth even more to have a fully functioning spare, ready for service at a moment’s notice.  I’ve chosen four as a sort of magic number; one for me plus spare, one for my girl plus spare.  I’d like to have a total of eight and may have the time to procure them before the democrats try to take them all away.  Unfortunately, there are many like me who share a sense of urgency in this election year; all the front runner candidates from both sides are soft on the Second Amendment (Ron Paul, for as much as I like him, is not considered a front-runner).  With four to begin with I’ll be able to do some of the other things I need to in order to keep my house running, plus fill out my battery with a minimum of ten magazines per weapon, enough ammunition to go around, maintenance kits, tools, and so on.

For those interested, I settled on Smith and Wesson M&P15.  It’s not a Colt (the originator of the AR15), but then it doesn’t have to be.  I went with the base model because I’m not a big fan of weapon-mounted accessories and the encumbrance they bring.  I’m an old fashioned shooter that prefers not to rely on anything more than iron sights and a well placed flashlight to illuminate the bad guy.  I’ve always been this way and probably will (though I am warming up to laser dots).  S&amp;W ranks with the best of them.  Except for the betrayal during the socialist-Clinton years (does that name ring a bell for any of you?) S&amp;W has enabled Americans to preserve the ideals which made this country great; individualism, preparedness, and reverence for the principles of liberty and freedom.

I will close this post with a word of encouragement and a word of warning.  First, the encouragement.  Those of us who would protect and defend the Constitution and Declaration of Independence from the power hungry and tyrannical as well as provide safety and security for our families should go to our local dealers and buy an AR15, train ourselves in its use and maintenance, and prepare ourselves for the coming storm.  Some folk will think you daft and irresponsible to spend your money and time on such things, but then the grasshopper spent a lot of its energy criticizing and mocking the ant?  There is no harm or foul in taking your preparations seriously enough to stop talking, and start doing, irrespective of your family’s or friend’s opinions, the trivializing and sneering from the mainstream media, or the platitudinal assurances from the liars competing to be in charge.  It is the right thing to do.

Now the warning.  I’ll give you the warning in the form of a quote and I hope it hits you as squarely in the jaw as it did me.  On Page 3 of the January 1994 issue of The National Educator, Sara Brady said the following to Senator Howard Metzenbaum; "Our main agenda is to have all guns banned.  We must use whatever means possible.  It doesn’t matter if you have to distort the facts or even lie.  Our task of creating a socialist America can only succeed when those who would resist us have been totally disarmed" (emphasis mine).

Be prepared; go get your AR15.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive
« Previous1234Next »