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Government's Plea for Ignorance

Congress has always been pompous and elitist, but until dealing with the current Republican opposition, I've never seen such ridiculous demands.  Imagine, being forced to read the actual laws that you are passing that other Americans must follow.  Such impudence.  After all, what are aides for, except to read the actual legislation and tell you what your position on it should be?  And to be subject to the laws we pass?  Totally unacceptable.

Why should I have to know the exact ramifications of the bill I am endorsing?  Isn't it enough that I know that my party's leadership endorses it?  After all, this is yet another "crisis" and if this isn't dealt with immediately, the sky will fall and tyranny will reign supreme.  Plus, if I don't support this legislation, those special interest groups like the unions might not support my next bid for Congress.  And then where would you be?  You wouldn't have me representing your interests.  You might end up with a Republican, who won't consider all your individual circumstances when deciding how to allocate funds, just the overall greater good.  We can't have that, can we?

An emergency requires immediate response (not thoughtful consideration of all ramifications of the course of action).  Of course, the definition of what constitutes an emergency is entirely up to me, but that is beside the point.  As long as the media is willing to follow my lead, the emergency is here.  And we need to do something, anything.

So please panic, and let us do things that are totally unconstitutional.  They need to be done to avert this crisis.  The ends justify the means.  Never mind that they set an entirely new precedent for governance. Never mind that like they overturn centuries of settled law and give benefits to unsecured creditors rather than secured ones (Chrysler).  Never mind that they preempt the Constitution's checks and balances by allowing unelected, unaccountable people unprecedented control over private industry (the Czars).  This is all just a temporary measure, like the New Deal reforms (which seem to still exist), to try to keep us out of another Depression.

We are the Government, and therefore we know what's best for you.  You are totally incapable of managing your own lives, so we need to step in and do it for you.  After all, what good is an Ivy-League education, political connections, and money if you can't tell everyone else how they should live their lives?  If you were allowed to do whatever you wanted, you might compete with our media and education monopoly and start having young people question our ideas.  That might imply that we don't know as much as we think.  And we can't have that, can we?
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Thump

When I was a young teen in middle school (I'm only 36, so this isn't that long ago), we played a game we called Thump.  The rules were simple.  We played on those giant concrete outdoor handball courts.  The game was played with two racquetballs.  You threw the balls at the wall, and had to catch them in one bounce or less.  If you didn't, you had to run and touch the wall.  Meanwhile, everyone else could throw the racquetballs at you as hard as they could.  Hence the name of the game.

This was not a school-supervised activity.  In fact, school officials would probably have objected to it if they had known about it.  But, the thing was, everyone that played (and a lot of kids did) did so voluntarily.  We enjoyed it, even though some of us ended up with some huge welts from being hit with the ball.  In fact, I think I played this every lunch period of my seventh and eighth grade years, as did many of my peers.  And yes, I did end up with my fair share of welts.

The reason I bring this up is the increasing wussification of our society.  We have become so risk-adverse that we seek to blame someone else for every unpleasant thing that we experience.  Schools have outlawed "Tag" because it presents a risk of injury (read: a risk of a lawsuit).  Playground equipment like monkey bars and see-saws have been removed as "unsafe" (I grew up playing, alone with no adult supervision, on a play element made entirely from giant old tires and was never irreparably harmed).  This is insane.  If this had been implemented when I was a child, we would have laughed at the ridiculousness of the whole thing. 

You know what, kids will do things that a reasonable adult wouldn't do.  This is because they are discovering boundaries.  Not adult-imposed restrictions, but what they can actually do and what they can't.  They need this time to learn what is a reasonable risk and what isn't.  By eliminating all risk from childhood, we are on the verge of destroying the entire benefit of childhood.

I walked home from school by myself my entire life.  From kindergarten to senior year, I walked home from my school.  Alone.  I was never afraid of doing this and that distance ranged from two blocks to three miles.  I once came home with a piece of cactus stuck in my leg after jumping my BMX bike over a jump intended for motorcycles and crashing (oh, and I never wore a helmet).  I had pomegranate fights with other kids in the neighborhood (if you've never been hit with a pomegranate, think a rock or grenade that splatters red juice on you).  I learned that if you stick your foot in the front fork of your bike, you go right over the handlebars, but if you do it right, you can land on your feet.  But, of all these stories, one especially comes to mind.

One of the neighbors had a big tree in their front yard.  The dad cut the tree down, because it was a danger to the house.  Then he pulled the stump, and asked his son to get all the other neighbor children over.  We were given the opportunity to rip the stump into little pieces that could be used as kindling.  Every kid was sent home to get a tool to rip this stump apart.  I went home, and since I was denied access to a hatchet or chainsaw (I was six), I grabbed the first tool I found.  But while other kids returned with screwdrivers, picks, and claw hammers, I had grabbed a ball-peen hammer.  I immediately took a two-handed swing at the stump's edge, and had the hammer bounce back and hit me in the center of my forehead.  I was knocked out and my parents were summoned.  They took me to the hospital, and I was fine.  So, did my parents sue the other family?  No, instead they laughed at me.  They knew I should have understood the results of my actions when I started them.  I was at fault, not anyone else, and I needed to learn the lesson presented.  Apparently, I did.  I have not used a blunt instrument to dismantle anything since.

The concept of personal responsibility has disappeared in recent years.  Everything that happens has become someone else's fault.  Moreover, anything that bothers us is now regarded as legally actionable.  People sue neighbors who put up basketball nets over their own garages (because the noise of the bouncing ball is disturbing).  We need to return to the era where litigation was a last resort, a governmentally-imposed solution to a problem, and stigmatized as a failure of common sense.  Until that happens, we will live more and more in fear of everyone around us.  Because they might just object to some aspect of our lives and sue.


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CEOs Vs. Congress

It's amazing, the difference between a CEO of a major company and a member of Congress.  Congress has managed to insulate themselves from criticism of their actions.  But CEOs have not.  They remain responsible to the shareholders and to the tides of public opinion. 
 
Imagine if members of  Congress were held to their previous statements.  All the statements claiming Saddam had weapons of mass destruction (back into the '90s and beyond).  An inconvinient truth, to say the least.  But where is the media in showing that?  Nowhere, because it conflicts with their own core beliefs.  But CEOs are responsible to shareholders, who do not forget earlier statements, because each of these statements affects their bottom line.  These statements affect the overall value of their company, and cannot be spun to satisfy a certain constituancy. 
 
Imagine the outcry if a CEO let a policy be implemented, without his or her personal review, throughout the company.  Imagine that he knew nothing of the unintended consequences of that policy.  Imagine the outrage.  Would those nameless staffers who promulgated the policy be held responsible?  Of course not.  The CEO would be chastised by his Board of Directors, and possibly punished by the government.  Yet, nationwide policy is allowed to be dictated by unelected assistants that "read" and paraphrase a bill to their representative before Congress.
 
This is madness.  Every "legislator" should read every bit of "legislation" that comes before the "legislative body."  If they choose to pass this off onto someone else, they have relinquished their title of "legislator" and gained the title of "pawn."  I understand that some of our legislators wouldn't mind being called "pawns," because they believe that the overall goal of unending government control is worth anything.  But you cannot call a "legislature" that does not read its' own bills "representation of the people, by the people, and for the people."  What is going on here is unconstitutional.  It is taxation without representation.  It is everything that the Founders fought against.
 
If a CEO said "to hell with the Board, I'm doing what I think is best for the company," the board or the government (depending on the size of the company in question) would shut him down and fire him.   Yet Obama is allowed to ignore settled law and award unsecured debt holders more than secured ones.  And he is not held responsible by the media.  This is an abdication of the responsibility that the media has been given.  But, like every left-wing vocalization, the responsibility has given way to the rights.  Say anything, and to hell with the consequences, because we are just exercising our right to free speech.
 
The media has lost its moral high ground.  They forget that they are given the right to speak freely in order to behave as a check on government itself.  They love the right to say whatever they like, to destroy anyone they choose.  But they ignore the responsibility that comes with that freedom.  They need to be reminded that they are the guardians of our personal freedom, not directors of it.  They need to remember that they are our voice, not our interpreters.  And they need to remember, at the end of the day, they do not dictate policy, but report on it.
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Reply to "I, Statist"

I read this article today and had intended to leave a comment, but I found that I had more to say than could be adequately addressed.  So I decided to write a full-fledged post responding to these arguments.  Let's start off with what the author and I can absolutely agree upon.
 
Government is a necessary evil.  Until all human beings are saints, government will always be necessary.  It provides the ground rules for the game of life, and deters those who would pervert the game to their own ends by providing guidelines and sanctions for ignoring those guidelines.
 
I can also agree with your point that character and results do not go hand in hand.  A high character individual may promulgate inefficient, wasteful, or just plain stupid policies just as easily as someone with very little character (many Republicans with their abstinence-only sex education policies fall into this category).  Conversely, responsible policy can come from a very flawed person (take Ted Kennedy who, though I disagree with him on many things, has generated good policy at times).  You are absolutely correct, character does not always yield results.
 
Now, on your thesis that government and the state are two different things, I'd say you're indulging in wordplay and hairsplitting.  You are also deliberately misuderstanding the criticism levied in your direction.  The Oxford English Dictionary defines "statism" as "a political system in which the state has substantial central control over social and economic affairs."  Therefore, calling you a statist is saying you want more government control over social and economic affairs.  Your digression on character and results is a complete non sequitur, as is your questionable assertion that morality is derived from civics.  It is an attempt to deflect and redefine the label, not defend against it.
 
On to the size of government.  You state that "The recurring theme in these parts is that government is evil, and the difference between the left and right in America is the difference between big government and small government."  Let's take this in two parts.  First, we've already agreed that government is a necessary evil, but in that very definition we find that government is an evil.  Never mind that it is necessary.  The question then boils down to how much government intervention is necessary to protect everyone's liberty.  Thomas Paine said, "That government is best which governs least."  Why?  Because every law that is promulgated by the government is, by its very definition, a check on someone's liberty.  Taxes also fall into this category, because every additional layer of taxation on an activity punishes those who would participate in that activity.  Are some laws and taxes necessary?  Of course, but they should be narrowly crafted to limit the social and economic harm they do while maximizing the good.  Oh, and much as you say we are confusing government and state, I say you are confusing conservatives and politicians when you state that not much shows that Republicans are really the party of smaller government.  Conservatives constantly rail against overreaching government, no matter what party the perpetrators represent.
 
You then go on to say, in a long-winded manner, "We won, you lost, get over it."  You also complain at the label of "facists."  Well, what would you call it when a government can overstep centuries of settled business law and dictate that unsecured creditors who are politically favored should take precedence over secured ones who aren't (Chrysler)?  What would you call it when unelected Czars can control executive pay in private companies?  What would you call it when the government tries to mandate universal health care despite an unknown total cost and dubious assertions of continued private options?  What would you call it when free speech is stifled in the name of "political correctness" and moral relativism (note, only speech with which you disagree.  See the difference in treatment between Imus and Letterman, or Prejean and Girofalo.)?  Your "clinching argument" paragraph is true to some degree (smaller government may not be any more efficient but it sure is less abusive, simply because it doesn't have the power to BE abusive), but has absolutely nothing to do with the fascist label you attempt to reject. 
 
The left wants to control everyone's lives, in the belief that they know what's best for everyone.  They want cradle-to-grave protection from every possible harsh reality of life.  They believe they have the right to say anything they want, but not the duty to allow things to be said that might offend or anger them personally.  They continually subdivide us into "protected" groups so that more and more people will adopt the victim mentality and rely on the government for help.  They are intent on creating, not a representative state, but a ruling class that will use its "benevolent wisdom" to direct the lives of everyone else.
 
The title of your article is correct.  You are a statist.  You are a fascist.  And you are a threat to the principles and beliefs that made this country uniquely great.  The thing is, I know you're sincere in saying you're a patriot and want what's best for the country.  But by advocating stifling the individual in favor of the collective, you merit both the labels above.
 
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"Make Mine Freedom"

Glenn Beck had a link to this video on his site.  It's an animated short from 1948 that still rings true today.  Pay particular attention to the statement near the end: "When anybody preaches disunity, tries to pit one of us against the other, through class warfare, race hatred or religious intolerance, you know that person seeks to rob us of our freedom and destroy our very lives..."  That is probably the most succinct assessment of the liberal agenda I've ever heard.
 
I'm a big animation fan, but I'd never seen this one before.  Thanks, Glenn, for digging out a little treasure from the past!
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Obama's Czars and the Legend of the Chaos Orb

When I was younger, I was a huge fan of the collectable trading card game Magic: The GatheringÔ (for those of you unfamiliar with the game, think Pokemon, or Dungeons and Dragons with specialized playing cards).  Its huge number of cards allowed for all different kinds of strategies, which of course brought on tournaments where players could test their own ideas and abilities against other players.  But a few of those strategies were seen as so destabilizing to the integrity of the game itself they were banned from tournament play, and one of those reached the status of legend.  In fact, I don't even know if this alleged story happened, but almost anyone who has ever played the game knows the basics of the tale.
 
A tournament was held, with the grand prize being a complete set of one of each card produced to that point, well over fifteen hundred cards at the time.  As some of these cards were individually selling as high as $200 or more if you could even find someone willing to sell them, this was quite a prize.  The story goes that at one point in the final round, a player called the judge over and asked him a question about the rules concerning a rare card, the Chaos Orb.  This card's ability was to be held over the other players cards and dropped from a certain height.  Any cards it landed on were immediately removed from the game entirely.  A powerful ability, but limited in scope and only usable once.  The judge paused at the question, then finally reluctantly agreed with the player that the plan the player had concocted was within the rules as currently defined on the card, although not really within the spirit of the rules of the game.  The player smiled and then tore his extremely rare Chaos Orb into tiny bits, held them up, and dusted all of his opponent's cards with a pile of confetti, removing them all from the game in one shot and winning the tournament (including a new Chaos Orb).  This tactic (in fact, the card itself) was one of the first banned from use in any future tournaments.
 
Many of you are now asking yourselves, what could this possibly have to do with current politics?  I'll answer that with a discussion of the position of Czar.  Many presidents have had Czars for various reasons.  One of the best known is the Drug Czar, so that makes it a useful case in point.  There has been a Drug Czar almost as long as I can remember.  But his duties were as a focus for administration policy, and as an advisor.  He helped direct anti-drug advertising, coordinated such national programs as "Just Say No!" and DARE, and served as a point man for discussing the administration's stance on the War on Drugs with the media.  But he had no regulatory power.  He could not dictate that all employers must drug test new hires.  He could suggest it as desirable, but there was no mandate that had to be followed.  He could not overrule the FDA or the DEA on policy or enforcement.  They held the regulatory reins, overseen by congressionally-approved bureaucrats who were themselves subject to Congress' many oversight committees.
 
Now let's take a look at what the Obama administration has done.  He has created an unknown number of Czars (most estimates range from 16-23), who are accountable only to the president.  The mere fact that we don't know how many exactly have been created is itself frightening, since most presidents manage to get along with one or two czars, and those usually have very public profiles.  He has also given many of them regulatory power.  Two prime examples of this are the Car Czar, who is able to dictate  business practices like board membership and even bankrupcy terms to GM and Chrysler, and the Pay Czar, who (for now) is able to dictate executive compensation at any company which received federal bailout money, even those that were forced to take it against their will or prevented from paying it back.
 
These people are not spokesmen for administration policy.  In fact, I don't believe either of these men I specifically mentioned above have ever spoken publicly to any media organization.  They are not subject to oversight by any federal bureaucracy.  In fact, they can't even be subpoena'd by Congress, as they are entitled as so-called " Presidential advisors" to Executive Privilege.  So these unelected and unchecked individuals are able to wield massive power without any scrutiny whatsoever.  They can dictate their terms at will to private enterprise, without any recourse given to the businesses in question.  No public outrage, no congressional  oversight, no media scrutiny.  Nothing.  And who will be willing to invest in large companies, when one of these Czars can leap out at any time and change the rules at their whim?
 
My point is that Team Obama has so twisted the rules of the game that the game itself is compromised.  The position of Czar as an administration point man on a pressing issue is understandable.  But creating a shadow government answerable to no one but the president, with regulatory power and no obligation to explain their actions, is an unaccepable abuse of Executive Branch power.  This legendary overreach has been allowed by a compliant Congress, but should be stopped immediately, and safeguards put in place so that this can never happen again.  Loopholes in the rules that allow such an abuse of power cry out to be closed, much as those alleged Magic tournament organizers discovered years ago.
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A Stealth Approach to Nationalized Health Care

One thing that has not been addressed by the administration in this health care debate is the reason for the so-called "Government Option."  My understanding of the proposal is that individuals will be free to choose from any private plan or the government plan, but they must have some kind of coverage.  Employers may continue to offer health care, and may also choose from any available plan.
 
We are assured that the government plan will be competitive with the private insurance plans, but if that is the case, why is it necessary?  If it is a level playing field, then the plan that provides the best care for the least cost will be more successful.  The government does not need to be in the picture.  The only justification for a government option is to be cheaper than all the other plans so that those who cannot afford insurance otherwise will have a choice.  But what will this lead to?
 
In California, you are required to have auto insurance to drive.  Since I drive an inexpensive used car, I only carry the minimum insurance to comply with the law, liability insurance.  That way, if I get into an accident, the other person's damages (which would probably be greater than mine) are covered.  I'm sure I'm not alone in this.  Most people want to save money if they can, and won't get more insurance than they require.
 
This is what will happen in health care as well.  Since anyone can select the government plan regardless of income, many will choose to do so simply as a cost saving measure.  Employers will also favor the government plan, since it will cost them less to provide health care to their employees.  Private plans will not be able to compete because the playing field won't be level.  The government-subsidized program will always be cheaper, no matter how far they drop their own price, because they have to deal with actual costs and profits, which gives them a limit to how inexpensive they can be.
 
So, between Medicare and the new "Government Option," most people will be covered by the government.  Private insurers will move to other types of insurance and the pool to select from will become smaller and smaller.  Finally, we will find ourselves with no other options but turning to the government for our health care, which would mean we would have arrived at that liberal dream, nationalized care.
 
Words are important.  Politicians and left-leaning thinkers know that the American people by and large do not want socialized medicine.  But by presenting the government as just one option among many, they hope to fool everyone into accepting their stealth program to nationalize health care.  Let's hope the average citizen can see through this deliberate misdirection and raise a resounding "NO!" that even those politicians in Washington will hear loud and clear. 
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Is California "Too Big To Fail?"

California is a state in crisis.  With a projected budget deficit of $21 billion for this fiscal year alone, coupled with what are already some of the highest individual and corporate tax rates in the nation (not to mention onerous environmental regulations), there doesn't seem to be anywhere for the state to turn for additional financing.  And with California's bond rating now the lowest in the nation, the Democratic-controlled Legislature is going to have a difficult time persuading private investors to purchase bonds to raise capital.  Those that are purchased will have to be guaranteed at ruinous interest rates and terms to entice potential buyers to take the risk that the state will end up defaulting on its obligations, rates and terms that will be provided at the expense of  the average California taxpayer.  Five of the six budget initiatives on the ballot yesterday were soundly defeated (and rightly so), and the one that did pass involved preventing some state officials from receiving pay increases while there is a budget deficit.  So what is the state going to do?

I predict that within the next couple months, California will be requesting a bailout from the Federal government.  I can't think of any other politically viable option for the state government officials to take.  And I believe that the Fed will decide, as it has with certain banks, insurers and the auto makers, that the state is "too big to fail."  Think about it.  California produced an estimated 13% of the entire GNP of the United States in 2006.  If considered alone, it would rank as approximately the 7th largest economy in the world.  If the government can claim that the failure of AIG could have catastrophic consequences, surely this would dwarf those repercussions.  By the standards they have already put forth during these bailouts, it would be impossible for them not to step in.

Note that in the previous paragraph, I stated that I could not think of any other "politically viable" options.  That's not to say that there isn't something that can be done.   The best answer in my mind is to simply let it go into bankruptcy, if that's where it's headed.  I don't believe California is "too big to fail."  I believe that if it is going to crash and burn, let it.  California is often cited as a bellwether state, and rightly so.  Let it continue to serve this role.  Let's let California be an example of what happens when a Democrat-controlled Legislature spends far beyond its means, both in good economic times and bad.  An example of what happens when companies and wealthy individuals flee the state to escape punitive taxation and excessive regulation and litigation.  An example of what happens when government is beholden to unions and continually panders to their demands, at the expense of the rest of its constituents.  An example of what happens when the state mandates increased government services at taxpayer expense.  Maybe, just maybe, the people of the other 49 states will start to wake up and see that California is once again leading the nation, by showing exactly where the Obama administration's current policies are leading us.
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I WANT a Do Nothing Congress

People always assume that one of the worst things that can be said about a legislator is that they have not sponsored any successful legislation.  I disagree.  In fact, I am here to cry out for an entire session of any legislature that does not produce one single new law or regulation.  Sound crazy?  Let's see if I can clarify this position.

The best government to increase personal liberties and protect individual rights is limited government.  The framers of the original U.S. Constitution understood that.  In under 5000 words, not including the amendments such as the Bill of Rights, that original body of lawmakers set out a workable framework that would allow its citizens maximum liberty with minimum governmental interference.  The most remarkable thing about it is the emphasis on negation; it spends as much time telling the government what it is not permitted to do as it does listing its mandates.  That's because those that drafted the Constitution understood something fundamental about both laws and human nature.

Laws, by their very definition, must proscribe the liberty of some portion of the citizenry.  The more laws on the books, the less free every member of the society becomes.  Of course, some laws are necessary, to insure the rights and freedoms of all against the tyranny of the few, and some might be judged to produce desirable outcomes (for example, the creation of OSHA) that outweigh their intrusiveness.  But neither of these statements change the fact that laws by their very nature restrict and constrain those subject to them.

Human nature, however, is to try to use government to right perceived wrongs and eliminate undesirable practices.  While admirable in theory, most often in practice this comes down to limiting the freedom of all for the benefit of few.  It is also human nature to try to ban through force of law an idea or behavior that the person promoting the new law dislikes.  Think about it, how often do you see Congresspeople and Senators arguing passionately for a law that would only limit their own freedom?  When we say "there ought to be a law..." we are almost always motivated by the actions of another.

Also a part of human nature is the desire to be seen as doing something positive.  Everyone wants their representative or senator to fight for their best interests.  These legislators, in turn, want to be able to show the people back home that they are fighting.  Unfortunately, the primary bellweather of success in this area is number of laws passed that benefit their home district and the amount of money they can get routed to their home state.  People can see laws, they can see money, and lawmakers can point to these things when the time comes to get reelected.  "See," they say, "I'm working for you."  The problem is that for every law that helps one area, another is harmed.  For every dollar one state gets, another state loses out on that dollar.  Plus, every law must be backed by enforcement, or it is worthless.  This ends up costing the taxpayer more of his freedom, in the form of more money from his or her pocket spent by the government.

That is why I'd like to see, just once, at any level, a legislature that was committed to passing absolutely nothing.  In fact, my ideal would be a legislature that would take up the set of esablished laws and commit to abolishing or revising all of the outdated, duplicated, vague, wasteful or pointless laws currently on the books.  It may not be glamourous, but if they really want to help the people they represent, this step back could presage a huge leap forward.

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On Limited Government

What's the best way to see if a government has too much power over the lives of the governed?  Simple.  Look at the lengths to which members of that government will go to stay in power.  The recent defection of Sen. Arlen Specter and the current troubles of Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi are good examples of this principle.

Senator Specter, a thirty year GOP veteran from Pennsylvania, decided to switch parties.  While the senator has always been a moderate (to put it kindly) Republican, his primary motivation for the switch had nothing to do with his feeling unwelcome in the Republican party, as he claimed in his speech announcing the change of alligiance.  It had much more to do with former Congressman Pat Toomey's decision to challenge him in the Republican primary.  You see, Toomey was leading Specter in the polls by a fairly wide margin.  Specter made his switch because he felt he stood a greater chance at reelection if he switched parties and only had to face Toomey in the general election.  Rather than make his case to the Republican party that had supported him all those years, and let the chips fall where they may, he chose to follow the course of his own self-interest. 

Now Speaker Pelosi, after loudly calling for investigations on enhanced interrogation techniques, finds herself on the defensive about what she knew about these techniques and when she knew about them.  In a desperate attempt to salvage her own position, she has gone from the bald faced lie that she knew nothing about them, to tortured word twisting about being briefed but not being told the techniques were actually being used, to blaming the Bush administration (always a favorite tactic).  Finally, she blamed the CIA for intentionally misleading her and the American public.  Which didn't sit well with Cia Director Leon Panetta, newly appointed by the Obama Administration, who fired back refuting the charges.  In her zeal to demonize the previous administration, and her quest to retain her own power, she may end up losing her position as Speaker.  But to her it was worth being possibly branded a liar to continue holding the reins of power in the House.

Power is something that almost everyone wants to some degree.  Even the desire for wealth is ultimately about power, the power to control your own life.  In a system with limited government interference, as the Founding Fathers intended for our nation, this quest is what drives people to work toward their dreams, whether those be fame, money, or the betterment of society as a whole.  Government service was a necessary sacrifice that people of good conscience had to make to allow their fellow citizens the liberty of pursue their goals.  It was not intended to be an end unto itself.  But the more intrusion by government, the further from that original ideal we stray.  Then staying in power becomes more important than actually serving the people.  Does anyone really believe that anyone in Washington regards their position in government as a sacrifice?

We need to push back against this trend toward more intrusive government.  We need to remind the politicians that they are not entitled to their positions.  They are making a sacrifice to insure the well-being of the nation as a whole, not creating their own little fiefdom in Washington.  If they can't see this, vote them out, no matter how long they've "served."  Otherwise, much like what has happened with the unions and the auto industry, we both end up losing.

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Hugging People, Not Trees

In an earlier post, I discussed the impact of a ruling by a judge effectively shutting off the water to California's Central Valley, affecting thousands of farmers and farm workers, ostensibly to save the habitat of a small fish.  In that article, I discussed this ruling mainly from the perspective of unions.  Here, I would like to deal with the other disturbing actor in this ridiculous charade: radical environmentalists.

Let me be clear.  I believe in protecting the environment.  I fondly remember being taken on camping trips to Yosemite as a child, enjoying the beauty of the scenery, the abundant wildlife, and the flourishing plant life.  I recycle, because why waste resources if it isn't necessary.  But when it comes down to impact on a single species, endangered or not, against the lives of hundreds or thousands of human beings, I'll side with humanity almost every time.  These radical environmentalists, however, are against the construction of anything that might have any sort of adverse impact on anything else in the world.

 This leads to some ridiculous contradictions when one of their goals runs face first into another.  My favorite example of this is wind power.  We are constantly being lectured that we need to reduce our carbon footprint and use more renewable resources, like solar or wind power.  Yet, just a few years ago, when a wind farm was being proposed offshore in the Gulf of Mexico, environmentalists were in opposition, as the blades of the wind turbines posed a risk to birds.  Another is nuclear power, undoubtedly the lowest emission way to generate large-scale power.  But how many new nuclear power plants have been approved in the last 25 years in the U.S.?  None, due to environmentalists concerns over safety and disposal of spent fuel.  Never mind that France, so often admired by the left, generates almost 90% of its domestic power requirements through nuclear power.

The problem is, every single action a person takes impacts the overall environment in some way.  A balance must be achieved that weighs the benefits to people to impact on the local environment.  A great example of this is the proposed Carlsbad, California desalination plant.  This plant will be able to supply almost 10% of San Diego's water needs once it is up and running.  It has achieved California Coastal Commission approval (not an easy thing to do here in California).  It will do such things as use solar power to reduce its electricity demands from other sources, and preserve and restore 55.4 acres of wetland habitat surrounding the plant (among the 22 conditions required by the Coastal Commission prior to approval).  Yet it is still facing lawsuits by such groups as Surfrider Foundation for the amount of fish that will be killed by the plant's water intake system.  Not rare or endangered fish, either, just fish.

In this case, and the Central Valley case, the choice is clear.  The lives and livelihood of thousands of people balanced against a fairly unconvincing environmental concern.  Sorry to disappoint all you radical environmentalists out there.  In these cases, I'd rather hug people than trees. 

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Seizing the Internet

Senate Bills 773 and 778, which comprise the so called "Cybersecurity Act of 2009," amount to yet another attempted power grab by the current liberal administration.  These bills would have the effect of creating a new bureaucracy, reporting directly to the president, with sweeping powers to monitor and control usage of the Internet in any vaguely-defined emergency.   This new "Office of  National Cybersecurity Advisor," in conjunction with the Department of Commerce would have wide latitude to shut down "critical infrastucture" by disconnecting them from the Internet, if they are deemed to be vulnerable to cyber attack.  They would also be able to monitor private networks of these "critical infrastructure" companies.  Oh, and these companies are defined as things like power grids, banks, and telecommunications.

This kind of broad authority to monitor the habits of Americans by the government is astounding in its audacity.  What does "telecommunications" mean, for example?  Are we talking about the phone and cable company's internal networks, or the people that use their services?  What about VOIP (Voice Over Internet Protocol)?  What about email or instant messaging?  Yet this is something that is not being discussed on every news outlet.  Can you imagine if a Republican president authorized some kind of intrusive spying on the actions of ordinary Americans?  Oh, wait.  That's right, the Bush administration allowed monitoring of certain phone calls under certain strict limits and was bashed for it all over the MSM for weeks.  That these were suspected terrorists, and that the calls were going overseas, didn't seem to matter.  Now we have an administration proposing that we allow widespread domestic monitoring, under no limits except the ability to twist the wording of the law, at any time, for any reason.  Where is the outcry from those same networks bashing Bush for "domestic spying?"

Of course it doesn't exist.  Once again the liberal double standard rears its ugly head.  If done by a liberal administration, it is only in the best interest of the people.  The possibility of abuse (probability in this case, given the broad mandate) is dismissed out of hand.  The liberal elitist belief that only they know what's best for everyone else is all that matters.  This is also just the first step on the slippery slope to controlling yet another outlet of free speech.  Incremental losses of liberty like this need to be fought, before they become fundamental losses of liberty.

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Hate Crimes Legislation is Unnecessary

I read a brief article on the new hate crimes legislation and decided to present a more detailed analysis of why I think they are pointless and even counterproductive to society.  First, I will delve into why they were ever thought to be necessary.  Then I will discuss why the left is enamored with this kind of legislation.

Hate crimes laws originated during the Civil Rights movement.  They were put into place as a way for ensuring justice was being done.  There were many areas, particularly in the South, where local law enforcement (all white) would simply ignore crimes against blacks by whites.  Obviously, this is a miscarriage of justice.  There needed to be a way for federal law enforcement to intervene in these cases, and hate crimes legislation was the vehicle chosen.  A better choice would have been a federal law mandating investigation and arrest of local law enforcement for not equally applying the law, but unfortunately hate crimes legislation was used.

The problem with hate crimes laws is that they are effectively thought crimes.  To be convicted under a "hate crimes" statute, the prosecutor must prove that the primary motivation for the crime is that the victim was targeted because he or she was a member of a special "protected group."  But this sort of bias is fairly hard to prove conclusively.  Unless the perpetrator is a card-carrying member of the KKK, and the victim was black, the argument will all boil down to psychological analysis of the criminal in question.

But even more important than that, the conditions that may once have provided the impetus to create these laws no longer exists.  A single cop might be a racist, or a group of cops homophobes, but an entire police department as well as the district attorney's office?  I find that hard to accept.  Plus, police departments are now integrated, with people of both sexes and every race, creed, and belief system.  Can you imagine a police department ignoring a crime because they disapproved of the victim?  That would be national news and the weight of every government agency, plus public opinion, would fall on those officers like a ton of bricks.

So what do these laws do?  Nothing.  Look at the name of this new proposed legislation, the "Matthew Shepard Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2009."  This would seem to imply that somehow this legislation would have helped in the Matthew Shepard case.  What it doesn't say is that the perpetrators of that crime are serving life sentences in prison, without any sort of "hate crimes" law needed.  So where is the driving need for this type of law?

That driving need is in the core of the liberal ideology.   By enacting this type of legislation, you create protected groups.  By their very nature, protected groups will then see themselves as victims.  Liberals need people to feel like victims so they can justify further intrusion into people's lives by government.  It also divides people by reinforcing the differences between groups.  Liberals need that so they can appear to be helping one group against another.  We would be much closer to Dr. King's dream that people "will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character" if the type of liberal arrogance exemplified in hate crimes legislation were stopped.
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Speaking Your Mind

I've been fascinated by the storm of controversy and liberal invective surrounding Miss California Carrie Prejean.  Now that Trump has stepped in and said she can keep her crown, I'd like to take a moment to discuss the whole issue of free speech and why the left needs a reminder of just what it means.

The right to free speech is perhaps the most important right guaranteed to the American people by the Bill of Rights.  It is essential to our discourse on the path our society will take.  And it has been under assault for a long time.  The nature of that attack is the movement known as political correctness, which is what Miss Prejean ran afoul of with her comment on gay marriage.  Never mind that her answer reflected the beliefs of the president, the majority of voters in California, or the majority of people nationwide.  A small, vocal minority decided it was offended and immediately moved to penalize her for speaking her mind.

The problem is that we do not have a Constitutional right to not be offended.  In fact, the reason for the provision is so that people who say offensive things are protected.  If a statement offends no one, there really is no basis for protecting it.  Only speech that someone might find offensive needs to be backed with the force of law.  But the law of political correctness demands that anyone who deviates from a specific group's defined position must be punished (for another example of this, remember NOW's reaction to Sarah Palin?).

There is a tendency on the left to want all of the rights but none of the responsibilities or consequences.  This is the case with free speech.  They believe that they should be allowed to say anything they like, but they do not want to hear anything that may run counter to their own beliefs.  They label anyone who doesn't believe as they do as a racist, or a bigot, or a homophobe, and try to personally destroy that person.  They shout down opposing views in an effort to silence the message.  This is a classic intimidation tactic directed not so much at the person involved, but at the rest of us.  "Don't speak out if your opinion might be unpopular in some quarters, or you'll be next" is the message that they want to send.  And it often works because, at heart, Americans in general are a kindhearted people, who do not want to harm or offend others and so many of them go along with the liberals and censor their own speech.

I have to say, the gay community wasted a golden PR opportunity.  If one gay rights group had stood up and said, "While we disagree with her position, we absolutely stand by her in support of her right to speak her mind and we condemn those personally attacking her," they would have won some friends among those kindhearted Americans out there.  But instead, they either stayed silent or allowed Perez Hilton and his ilk to be their de facto mouthpiece, spewing his hateful vitriol to anyone who would listen.  That will damage their movement by turning more mainstream Americans against them.  It's also worth noting that almost no one on the right called for punishment of Perez for the hateful things he said.  Same goes for Janeane Garofalo, with her comments on the Tea Parties.  There was disagreement, and disapproval, but not the kind of personal attacks we see from the left.

This bullying tactic of the left only continues to work when people are afraid to speak out against it.  We need to come together as a nation and remember the words of Voltaire, "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it."  We need to stand up to the bullies, tell them we won't be silent, and speak our minds without fear.  We need to marginalize them and stop giving in to their tactics.  That's why Prejean's answer was so important.  It reminds people that we must say what is in our hearts and minds and not self-censor for fear of hurting someone's feelings.

Just speaking my mind.
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The Party of No

It's fascinating how successfully the left has branded the Republicans "the party of no."  They've managed to change the focus from what we are for to what we are against, and in economically difficult times, being labeled an obstructionist is naturally a detriment.  It gives the appearance of not wanting to help those who are truly struggling.  This accusation of uncaring indifference is then further contrasted with the sweeping changes already implemented in the Obama administration's first 100 days and the proposals and policies still to come.  Obama and his cronies come off as good guys ("At least they're trying something!"), while we are portrayed as obstacles to be overcome.  This could partially explain the president's still fairly acceptable approval ratings, even in the face of increasing public discontent with his individual policies.  But this situation also reminds me of a couple of instances from my childhood.

When I was five, my family and I went to the nearby department store (I can't remember which store; it's been a long time since I was five).  I, of course, very quickly managed to break away from my parents and head directly for the toy section.  While I was basking in this wonderous monument to my unadulterated greed, I came across a bag of marbles that had broken open and spilled onto the base of the counter.  They were beautiful, clear glass with multicolored spirals right through the center.  I sorted through them for awhile, looking at the varied colors and patterns, until I heard my parents walking along the toy aisles, calling my name.

I got up and just couldn't resist taking a handful of marbles and putting them in my pocket.  After all, the bag was broken.  The store couldn't sell these, so why shouldn't I just take them?  I was sure it wouldn't be any problem.  But as we climbed into the car to head home, my parents heard the marbles in my pocket clinking against each other.  They made me show them what I had taken, and then almost immediadely decided what to do.

I was walked back into the store between my parents, straight to the Customer Service desk, where my father asked to speak to the manager.  When the manager came over, I was terrified.  My father turned to me and told me, "I want you to explain to the manager what you did, return those marbles and apologize...right this minute."  Crying, I did as I was told.  As we walked out, my father turned and also apologized to the manager, and told him this would never happen again.  He was right; it never did.

The other story happened when I was six.  I was walking home from school, and saw my mom walking up the street to meet me.  I rushed over to see her, not paying any attention to the fact that I had to cross the street.  Not bothering to wait for the crossing guards, I ran across the street.  Luckily, there were no cars coming and I made it across alright.  But before I could rush down to walk home with my mother, the crossing guard, a girl in fifth or sixth grade I guess, grabbed my arm.  She proceded to lecture me about how dangerous what I had just done was and told me not to ever do it again.  Then, she waited (still holding my arm) until my mom got to the corner so she could explain what happened.  Needless to say, I was in trouble again and heard about it the rest of the way home.

This may sound odd, but we in the Republican party need to take a page from the gay rights activists.  They took an insult and made it their own.  We should do the same.  Take pride in being "the party of no:" no more government overspending, no more legislative pork, no more punitive taxes penalizing the successful, no more government intrusion into business or personal lives.  We need to explain why "no" can help the average person to powerfully transform their own lives.  Because sometimes the more mature person has to tell the spoiled child, who wants everything now, free, and without consequences, "no."  Simply for their own good.

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