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Put the Economy Back Where It Belongs

Everybody is talking about the economy nowadays, and in these uncertain times, there are a lot of opinions as to what to do about it, and who should be doing it. In order to get some perspective, it might be a good idea to look at the definition (and especially origins) of the word "economy" courtesy of Merriam Webster.

Despite the origins of the word, most people tend not to answer according to the first definition when asked, "How's the economy these days?" They may even be inclined to tell the person asking the question to check GDP, unemployment statistics, inflation and other factors at the national or even international level. Most people wouldn't discuss their own household or private affairs in that case, with the exception of perhaps saying they're cutting back on certain expenditures "because the economy's bad."

This could in fact lead to the "thrifty and efficient use of material sources" in order to save more for a rainy day or plan for the future. Little do most people realize, by adjusting their own spending, saving or investing habits, they are in fact taking control over the economy, THEIR economy. According to an April 2009 Rasmussen poll, increasing numbers believe that socialism is better than capitalism, with a slim majority of 53% opting for capitalism.

Even in everyday water cooler talk among employees of private sector companies,it's not unusual to hear the question,"what is the government going to do about (insert issue here)?" Health care is one of those issues these days, but certainly not the only one. That this can occur in a country whose success was built on private sector innovation is disturbing.

Before we as a nation add health care to the list of industries we allow our government to nationalize, making another unelected bureaucracy responsible for the "arrangement or mode of operation" of medicine, we need to ask ourselves a very important question, perhaps two.

First, how thrifty and efficient has our federal government been in the use of material sources, namely our taxes? With the national debtat over $11 trillion and unfunded obligations at over $57 trillion, I would think even the least informed citizen would agree with my answer - not very! State and local governments haven't done much better, but that's worthy of a separate article entirely.

Second, given those figures, how much do we trust government to handle our household and private affairs? This would be the same government that recently released the locations of all its nuclear sites and lost a number of laptops containing information on its citizens.

Are these the people we want handling our health care? Are these the people we want handling our retirement? It's time to get the management of the economy out of the hands of government and back in the hands of households, families and individuals.

Does capitalism have its imperfections. Yes, every economic system does. Yet people can make decisions that steer the ship of capitalism in the direction they want from the grassroots by changing their spending, saving and investing habits. Individuals and families can take control of their own personal economies that way.

No such choice exists in government run economies, whether they are called socialist, communist or fascist. Under those systems, towards which we are rapidly headed, one's personal economy is what government says it is, like it or not. Now if you'll excuse me, I have to go take care of MY economy, while I still have one to call my own.

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New Jersey - SHUT UP!

New Jerseyans, much like residents of the other 49 states in the union, have a tendency to complain very loudly and very frequently about the condition of government in their state. While the complaints may be different depending on the individual, one thing is certain: New Jersey is in horrible shape.


Yet somehow, all the voter discontent never seems to translate into more voters showing up to make a difference. Based on 2008 voter registration information, a total of 5,351,669 New Jersey residents were registered to vote. [1] Out of those numbers, their party affiliation breaks down as:


Democrat – 33.3%

Republican – 19.7%

Unaffiliated – 46.9%


Based on the assumption that percentages haven't changed much since last year, that would mean there were approximately 2,836,385 voters affiliated with a party, with 1,782,106 Democrats and 1,054,279 Republicans (totals may be off due to rounding). You may ask, where is the problem?


In the 2009 Democratic and Republican gubernatorial primaries combined yesterday, with 99% of precincts reporting, all of 524,057 people showed up to vote. [2] That's less than 10% of the population of registered voters in New Jersey, and less than 20% of people affiliated with either party.


In a Democratic primary that saw a very unpopular Governor Corzine facing multiple opponents, fewer people showed up to vote in that primary than the top Republican candidate alone, and only 10,000 more than their second biggest vote getter. To put this in perspective, there are about 69% more voters registered Democrat than Republican in New Jersey. It's not as though New Jersey Democrats didn't have many choices this cycle. When all was said and done, the number of people who voted in the Democratic primary totaled less than 11% of the party's total numbers.


I have to give Republicans a little bit of credit in this primary, my last as a registered Republican. A total of 330,012 voters, equal to over 31% of registered Republicans, showed up after what was an intense primary between Chris Christie and Steve Lonegan. I can't give them much credit for their decision to go with the “me too” wing of the party, but the total numbers are more than I would have expected from New Jersey. THAT is the problem.


Since even unaffiliated voters can show up on primary day to vote in one party's primary, and since New Jersey allows voters to request an absentee ballot for any reason at all [3], what is the problem? When 31% is a good turnout in a state that bends over backwards to make it possible for its residents to vote, that's pretty pathetic.


New Jersey was one of the states that got on board with Obama's “Change We Can Believe In” mantra in the 2008 Presidential election, but how much of a change was there in New Jersey's voting habits? We supported the same party we supported in the last four previous elections. Senator Frank Lautenberg, the incumbent, won re-election. Every House seat that had an incumbent re-elected him or her. Every House seat that didn't have an incumbent elected someone from the same party as the departing Representative. You haven't changed a bit!


I used to answer any complaints about government with the question, “do you vote?” I believe it's time to amend that question. When a fellow Jerseyan complains about the condition of our state, my response will be, “did you vote in the last state/local election?” If you're from my state, and the answer is no, it's just as much your fault as it is the fault of the politicians in office.


  1. http://www.njvoterinfo.org/

  2. http://www.nj.com/

  3. http://www.nj.gov/

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Liberty and Tyranny - A Great Read

Good political writing, whether the reader agrees or disagrees, should make the reader thirst to read more. It makes the reader not content with what is on the pages of one single book, regardless of how well written it is. It makes the reader either question some of his convictions or makes him stronger in them, sometimes both at the same time. “Liberty and Tyranny: A Conservative Manifesto” by Mark R. Levin is one of those books.


Among friends and family, many of whom are nowhere near as interested in politics as I am, I'm considered very knowledgeable by those who agree with me, and probably insane by those who disagree. To both those groups, I humbly admit I am little more than a “back bencher” at best and a “big dope” at worst. For those who don't listen to Mark's show, those are two terms he frequently uses.


Throughout his book, Levin refers to America's founding documents (the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution), the Federalist and Anti-Federalist papers, as well as such great thinkers as Adam Smith, Edmund Burke, Alexis de Tocqueville et al to discuss the type of government our system was intended to be. To illustrate how we got to where we are now, he quotes Karl Marx, Saul Alinsky and even several of our Presidents and other officials of both Democratic and Republican stripes, showing the steps that destroyed the firewalls of the Constitution.


Levin calls to task many politicians for their role in promoting “Statism” and the “soft tyranny” that exists in today's government. He lashes out at Democrats for their role in growing the bureaucracy, but also calls many Republicans to task for the same. Many of his ideas challenge the status quo that has been promoted by both major parties – the “progressive” income tax and federal involvement in education just to name two – in an attempt to get people to think independently.


As I read, I found myself checking out the bibliography at every single footnote with the thought, “I definitely have a lot more reading to do.” I've read, listened to and watched people of various opinions in the media talk about how things ought to be, but few if any have delved as deeply in my opinion as Mark Levin.


I found myself more convinced than ever before of the dangers of the ever growing federal government, and of the constant surrender of states' rights that has transformed them from the entities that created and should be the biggest check on federal power to mere appendages of the bloated administrative state in DC.


I found myself in disagreement with some of the finer points of his arguments on foreign policy, but believing more firmly in the damage we have done to ourselves as a nation by swinging between three extremes of isolationism, interventionism and globalism. All have, in one way or another, weakened us as a nation.


This big dope enthusiastically recommends “Liberty and Tyranny” to all, not as a be all and end all of political thought, but as a springboard to greater knowledge of government as it is and as it was meant to be. As for me, I have a great deal more reading to do.

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Last Chance for the GOP?

It seems in the near constant media coverage of President Obama's administration and the Pelosi/Reid Congress, there is not much discussion outside of local programming of the upcoming gubernatorial elections coming up this year in New Jersey and Virginia, as well as several mayoral elections in other states. This is not surprising, given the non-stop growth of the federal government and increasing usurpation of states' rights.

On the surface, it would seem there is little to no reason for one to pay much attention to the gubernatorial elections. After all, even if a state legislature and/or governor should talk about states' rights or even secession, federal government aid has recently become the number one source of revenue for the states. [1] It would seem sadly unlikely that any assertions of state sovereignty would last long when the federal government could cut off aid to any state that doesn't fall in line.

Still, the elections the year after the Presidential election usually serve as an indication of public approval concerning the ruling party, or at least its policies. They also tend to serve as a sign of things to come in the mid-term elections. In 1993, Bill Clinton found himself in the enviable position of being President when his own party held the majority in both houses of Congress. The tide abruptly changed in that year's gubernatorial elections.

In Virginia, George Allen took the governorship in a near 20-point landslide, [2] while Christine Todd Whitman edged out James Florio in New Jersey. [3] One short year later, the Republicans swept into power in both houses of Congress for the first time in over 40 years. While Clinton won re-election in 1996, it was against a very weak candidate, Bob Dole.

George W. Bush found himself in a similar situation in 2005, having just won re-election the year before and having expanded his party's power base in Congress. In Virginia, it was Tim Kaine beating out Jerry Kilgore by almost six points, [4] while Jon Corzine won with a double-digit landslide in New Jersey. [5] One would need to have a very short memory not to know what followed in 2006 and 2008.

As a New Jerseyan, which I am not thrilled to be, I personally take great interest in my state's gubernatorial elections, and am even volunteering on one candidate's campaign (I won't say whose). On the Republican side, Chris Christie and Steve Lonegan are daring to battle it out in a state where even their party tends to shy away from conservative values and limited government ideas, yet they each boast of their conservative credentials. Time will tell if they are true to their claims of limited government and cutting taxes.

Both candidates, according to the latest Rasmussen poll, could beat Corzine if the election were held today. [6] Only one, however, can win the primary in just a couple short weeks (the last time I will be voting as a registered Republican).

If the Republicans can actually put up a real fiscal conservative and win in a state like New Jersey, there is the possibility they can retain some of their significance on the national stage, and even regain the appearance of an being alternative to the Democrats. If not, look for the Democrats to hold or expand their majorities in both houses of Congress, and for a period of one-party rule similar to when the Federalists and the Whigs disappeared. At that point, perhaps the Libertarian or Constitution Party (or both) will rise to national prominence from the ashes of the once Grand Old Party.
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Anti-Obama and Anti-CNN? You Bet!

When checking my e-mail this morning, I received a message with footage of yesterday's TEA Party protests, courtesy of CNN. As I watched the video, I couldn't help thinking that even if I were rabidly opposed to the TEA Parties, I would be amazed at the lack of professionalism exhibited by the reporter on the scene, Susan Roesgen. I consider myself a rather pathetic public speaker, but I'm forced to believe even I could do better.

The first man she interviewed was, admittedly, quite inarticulate, and kept referring to Mr. Obama as a fascist. A little advice for that man, if you're going to use such a strong label, have some information to back it up. The difference was, he wasn't being paid by a major news network to give his opinion. A little advice for Ms. Roesgen, if you're speaking to someone who calls your President a fascist, have something a little more coherent to say in reply than, “Yeah, ok, uh, fascist.” You're a media personality watched by millions of people. Be prepared for it.

Personally, given the increasing interweaving of federal government and corporate power in our government, the demands for a more wealth-redistributing income tax, the tightening of the reins on the First and Second Amendments (not to mention the Ninth and Tenth), and the constant talk of nationalizing this industry or that industry, I agree with the fascist label for our current government. But that's better discussed in a separate article.

The second man to speak with Ms. Roesgen was much better spoken, that is when he wasn't being interrupted. He spoke of the belief in liberty and of the right to enjoy the fruits of one's labor, until Ms. Roesgen interrupted with the dismissive question, “What does that have to do with taxes?” It has everything to do with taxes! In an era when government can arbitrarily decide how much of YOUR hard-earned pay YOU are worthy to keep, at a time when government can tell you after busting your hindquarters to get where you are that you have earned the right to pay more confiscatory taxes, that is not liberty.

If the interrupting and degrading questioning were not enough, Ms. Roesgen had the nerve to point out that the man brought his little boy (cute as can be by the way), and that the man was getting a $400 tax credit because of that child. Wow, $400? That's so generous of a government that has run up a tab so immense that every child in the United States is now born owing over $30,000 because of the massive spending of Bush and Obama. If I saved $400 for 75 years, I'd have enough to pay the debt load of one child at the end of those 75 years. Of course, that's not taking into account future budgets, wars and stimuli. But go ahead, Ms. Roesgen, and insult the parents of this country by referring to their beloved offspring as a $400 tax credit. How did you ever get into the media?

Finally, Ms. Roesgen, having had enough, decided to send it back to the news room, given the “anti-Obama and anti-CNN” atmosphere at the TEA Parties. Let me make one thing clear, Ms. Roesgen. I was anti-Obama before the 2008 election because of his previous actions as Senator, State Senator and community organizer. His actions as President have just made me more anti-Obama than before. Similarly, I've been anti-CNN since the beginning, as it has consistently been the mouthpiece of the Democrats (just as Fox News is that of the Republicans). Your actions have simply made me more anti-CNN than before. Congratulations, Susan! You've strengthened my beliefs.

Tags: tea   Media   Taxes  
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What's Government Giving Up for Lent?

Today is Ash Wednesday, and for millions of Catholics worldwide, that means the beginning of Lent. That also means a lot of complaining about not being allowed to eat meat today and for the next six Fridays, and yes, guilty as charged, I did a lot of that in my younger years. There is a certain irony to that, as Lenten discipline used to have more strict guidelines centuries or even decades ago, and there was a lot less complaining.

Many of my Protestant friends years ago used to wonder why Catholics were so hard on themselves these forty days. In recent years, many of them have put my Catholic brethren to shame by getting in on sacrifice during Lent, and doing so with zeal. Several of my Jewish friends, many of whom are not particularly religious, nonetheless abstain from all food and drink on certain high holy days without a grumble nor a whine. I don't live in an area with a high Muslim population, but the few I do know are faithful to the sunrise to sunset fasting provisions during Ramadan. I attempted a similar thing one year during Lent, and I failed miserably.

Even completely separated from any religion, there are certain physical and psychological benefits to fasting and sacrifice. A friend of mine who studied nutrition told me once how an occasional fast helps cleanse the body. Going without certain things from time to time, even when we don't have to, helps us learn to live with less, just in case we ever do have to. It helps detach us from some of the less healthy foods we put in our bodies. Such discipline can also be fiscally beneficial, as it can cut a little from our grocery bills. Sacrificing other things that entertain us can, for a time, remove certain distractions and allow us to use our time more productively.

Government could stand to learn a little bit about sacrifice, especially when politicians of both major parties lecture us about it on a regular basis. Ever since the New Deal and even before, government programs have been introduced to get us out of economic downturns. The problem is, once those programs are in place, they usually prove to be permanent, though any perceived economic benefits are not. We are told we need this program or that agency in place to keep the economy strong.

Yet, America has had several recessions, hyperinflation, stagflation, stock bubbles, housing bubbles, and a host of other economic problems since the New Deal. With every challenge that has come to our economy, another costly program is introduced on top of the older ones. When the economy picks up again, there's never any cutting back on the bloated administrative state.

The most recent example is Barack Obama's “stimulus” package, passed just one year after George W. Bush's $700 billion bailout package. Though I'm no economist, I'm often kept up at night by the thought that those two items may have pushed our nation to the point of no return, and scores of generations won't be able to pay if off. Should the economy recover, government's track record indicates what is now “new” spending will become standard.

In periods of downsizing and restructuring, companies often become leaner and more efficient. If not, they tend to go out of business. One could look at it as a sort of “fasting” period. Government, however, continues to grow in good economies and bad.

Perhaps if government learned to make sacrifices the way businesses and individuals do, to “fast” if you will, it too would become leaner and more efficient. If government cut back to levels that are sustainable (we hear them tell us about that word all the time), not to mention Constitutional, it could manage a balanced budget in a slow economy, when taxable revenue is lower. When the economy is more prosperous, government would even be capable of running a surplus as a result.

Of course, the best thing to do if that should miraculously occur would be to start applying that to our debt. With the national debt and unfunded entitlement programs exceeding total world economic output, the government needs a lot of “fasting” to turn things around.

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Where Did We Go Wrong?

So President Obama's stimulus package has been passed, rushed without adequate debate, with no one getting the chance to read it (as admitted by New Jersey Senator Frank Lautenberg) until it was too late.

This package will be the death of a Republic that was on life support. It will spawn cross-generational warfare, with the older generations declaring that having fewer children reduces costs. Those who survive will leave the older generations in shock when they euthanize their grandparents and parents for the same exact reason.

The beneficiaries of this legislation – ACORN, the National Council of the Race (a.k.a. La Raza), Planned Parenthood, big corporations, just to name a few – are all cheering it, while many Americans dread the consequences of what will be the biggest expansion of the federal government and ponder, where did we go wrong as a nation? When did a nation with a brilliant Constitution that called for strict limits on the power of the federal government become a place where government was all-powerful?

One possible answer is that when government is of the people, by the people and for the people, it reflects the morals and values of the people, sometimes more perfectly than even they intend. When the people become immoral, government becomes that much more so. So the real question perhaps should be, where did we go wrong as a people?

When we decided we no longer needed God, we started playing god ourselves.

When we decided religion was no longer important, whatever we felt was important (money, food, entertainment, pleasure, sex, the newest celebrity, the next government handout) became our religion.

When we abandoned faith in favor of reason, we soon wound up with neither.

When we decided there were no absolute truths, absolutely anything was truly permissible.

When we decided to live however we wanted to, it became too inconvenient for others (the unborn, the elderly, the disabled) to live.

When we decreed we didn't have the right to tell others their actions were wrong, the greatest of wrongs became our right.

Many Americans decided that God wasn't “real” or “concrete” enough, yet at the same time, facts and statistics became irrelevant if they “didn't feel that way” about an issue. Sadly, those same Americans, your neighbors and mine, will be shocked when the nations and banks holding our ballooning national debt cut off our credit and call our loans. China, the Saudis, the Federal Reserve and the other international banks – none of them will care how we “feel” about them taking that action.


Shockingly enough, those who forgot God will sit in wonder about how God could allow such a thing. But it was We the People who allowed it. We took the greatest, most powerful nation ever to exist, and hit the self-destruct button. People, how could you allow such a thing?
 
Thank you for you time, and I hope to be back again.  God Bless!
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Woe to You Pharisees

Then Jesus spoke to the multitudes and to his disciples, Saying: The scribes and the Pharisees have sitten on the chair of Moses. All things therefore whatsoever they shall say to you, observe and do: but according to their works do yet not; for they say, and to no. For they bind heavy and insupportable burdens, and lay them on men's shoulders; but with a finger of their own they will not move them. And all their works they do for to be seen of men. For they make their phylacteries broad, and enlarge their fringes. And they love the first places at feasts, and the first chairs in the synagogues, And salutations in the market place, and to be called by men, Rabbi. But be not you called Rabbi. For one is your master; and all you are brethren. And call none your father upon earth; for one is your father, who is in heaven. Neither be ye called masters; for one is your master, Christ. He that is the greatest among you shall be your servant. And whosoever shall exalt himself shall be humbled; and he that shall humble himself shall be exalted.

But woe to you scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites; because you shut the kingdom of heaven against men, for you yourselves do not enter in; and those that are going in, you suffer not to enter. Woe to you scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites: because you devour the houses of widows, praying long prayers. For this you shall receive the greater judgment.” (Matthew 23: 1-14, Douay-Rheims Bible)

Enter the modern-day scribes, the secular Pharisees of America, our “esteemed” Congress. Yes, definitely obey the laws they pass, for we are a nation of laws. But do not follow their works, indeed.

They bind up heavy and insupportable burdens – confiscatory taxes, crippling regulations – but will not lift a finger to move them. Throw in the additional books of rules imposed upon us by the bureaucrats, who were never elected and whose rules were never voted upon in Congress, and it's a wonder this country can even operate. Yet, for all the dictating about cutting water usage, cutting energy usage, reducing our carbon footprint or paying our taxes, let's take a look at the secular Pharisees of the day.

Al Gore, the master scam artist who has made a nine-figure income off of environmental alarmism, doesn't seem too concerned about his own carbon footprint. It seems, dare I use the cliché, hypocritical to ride around in his jumbo jet with a fleet of SUVs telling us WE are melting the ice-caps by our overconsumption. This is coming from the man who has a larger carbon footprint in one day than the average American will have in a year.

Former Senator Tom Daschle, one of President Obama's cabinet picks until recently, has had very harsh words for those who cheat on their taxes. Yet he had over $100,000 in back taxes, forcing him to withdraw from the running. The list of tax cheats seems to grow on a daily basis. Throw in several members of Congress, most notably career Representative Charles Rangel of New York, Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee. Of course, it was a simple “mistake” when it came to his non-payment of taxes. I can understand that. After all, he only helps write our tax laws; how is he supposed to know them? That's the job of ordinary serfs like you and me.

Still, we can't come down too hard on our beloved Congress, nor on our Executive Branch. They are so generous with government money (aka the taxpayers' money) to “stimulate” the economy. They can't stop talking about their generosity. Too bad it doesn't translate into their personal giving. Take a look at our Vice-President, Joe Biden. He's all too willing to tell us it's our patriotic duty to pay higher taxes in order to pay for this massive “stimulus” bill, which will get the American serfs...I mean, people...twenty-five cents back on each dollar if we're lucky. But this same man, after making a seven figure income, gave only $3,000 to charity.

They love the places of honor at banquets. They love titles of honor. As a matter of fact, they demand it. Should anybody dare to oppose them, should anybody dare to criticize them, retribution will arrive swiftly. Personally, I use the titles Congressman, Senator or President not out of any respect for the individuals. I use those titles as a reminder to THEM of the job they were elected to do, of the service THEY owe to the people who put them in office. George Washington didn't want a title of honor or royalty. “Mr. President” was meant to be a title of service, not of grandeur. He that is greatest shall be your servant.

The modern Pharisees also certainly do their fair job of devouring the homes of widows, and everyone else for that matter. They force banks to lend to those who can't afford it in order to end discriminatory lending practices, and then blame the same banks for predatory lending practices. They tax the heart and souls out of families, forcing one parent to work to feed the family, while the other works to feed the government. They spend the money of future generations, stealing the bread out of the Social Security trust fund, running up a $53 trillion unfunded liability that will destroy this country and leave our great-grandchildren broke.

As a Christian, I believe God will judge a great many politicians very harshly in the afterlife. However, even in the absence of that, secular history will damn you for generations. You powerful political dynasties – be they named Clinton, Bush, Kennedy – your once revered names will go down in history as the ones who destroyed the greatness America once knew.

Thank you for your time, and I hope to be back again. God Bless!

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A Requiem for America?

In a move seemingly unlikely to come out of anywhere in the Northeast, the New Hampshire state legislature has made a bold gesture, a dare to the federal government if you will. HCR 6, a bill before the New Hampshire legislature, would effectively declare New Hampshire independent of the United States of America if any branch of the federal government should perform any further action in violation of the U.S. Constitution. The entire text of the bill can be found at http://www.gencourt.state.nh.us/legislation/2009/HCR0006.html

This move comes at a time when, after last year's unconstitutional bailout under President Bush, our Congress and President are working to hammer out a new, pork-laden, and blatantly unconstitutional “stimulus” package worth nearly a trillion dollars. President Obama and Congress have vastly expanded funding for SCHIP, and have promised to pass the Freedom of Choice Act (FOCA), which opponents say would violate the religious freedom of Catholic hospitals by requiring them to either provide abortions or provide referrals to those who do.

What would happen, hypothetically, if New Hampshire were to follow through on their secession proposal? Would it inspire other states to follow suit? Could it mean the end of America as we know it?

Scoffers, hold your tongues. If someone had told you in 1988 that Poland and most of Eastern Europe would have free elections within the next two years, would you have believed it? If someone had told you in 1990 that the Soviet Union would be no more within a year, would you have believed it?

President Obama's cabinet and members of Congress want to reinstate the moratorium on offshore drilling after their stunt of letting it expire before the elections, and impose more taxes and regulations on energy. Texas and Alaska could possibly secede over that.

The President and Congress don't want any increase in coal mining, and our own President has threatened to “bankrupt” the coal industry. Do you think the “bitter Americans” who “cling to their guns, religion and Bibles” in Pennsylvania and West Virginia, already suffering from current economic conditions, will take that lying down? It would be ironic to see the state that was formed by splitting from Virginia to stay in the Union wind up being one that secedes.

Throw in the taxation of farm animals, and America could see mayhem in the Midwest, as well as New Hampshire and her sister state, Vermont.

The speculation could go on as to which states may or may not decide to secede, but if this comes to pass, President Obama will be faced with a dilemma. The man who has practically fashioned himself as a Lincoln reincarnated would, of course, be under immense pressure to preserve the Union. There was a difference between then and now, however.

Many Southern states seceded before the Civil War over tariffs. Congress does, however, have the Constitutional authority to levy taxes, so Lincoln keeping the Union together at the time may have had some legitimacy.

There is no Constitutional authority for the bailouts, the stimulus, FOCA, the Obama Youth or the 600,000-member “civilian defense corps” President Obama mentioned in the campaigns. It has been said that the Revolutionary War was started over lesser offenses than this.

Many of President's own supporters on the left were those who said America should pull its troops out of Iraq, claiming the Iraqi people didn't want us there. If that's the case, and the elected government of New Hampshire says they don't want the United States there anymore, what justification can our federal government have for forcing them to remain part of the country?

Don't mistake me. I love America. I have no desire to see America split up into several smaller nations.  I have no desire to see going to another state to visit family turn into going to another country to visit family when nobody has moved. I have no desire to see America die. But an America whose government will not obey its own Constitution, and whose President was quoted as calling the Constitution a “flaw” is no longer America. An America whose previous President referred to the Constitution as a “g**d*** piece of paper” is nearly dead.
 
It will take electing an entirely new set of officials who will make protecting the Constitution a priority, and decades of relentless effort to undo the damage of previous administrations and whatever this one will add. It will take voting out nearly all of the people in office, most of whom have either no clue or otherwise no regard for what the Constitution means. It will take seriously looking at ALL parties, and not just the Republicans and Democrats. It will take Americans waking up and realizing their house is on fire!
 
If we fail in the 2010 and 2012 elections, the Republic that the Founding Fathers gave us will be gone because we did not keep it. The United States of America, founded on liberty, will breathe her last breath, and I will be one of many weeping by her grave.
 
Thank you for your time, and I hope to be back again.  God Bless!
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Conceived without Sin

It may be just me, as a devout Catholic, but I'm offended when I see street gangs out there using symbols and holy objects of my religion as some sort of good luck charm before going out and killing innocents. As offended as I am over gang violence and using religious articles and symbols for justification, you can imagine my shock and horror upon hearing that our President, Barack Obama, carries a Miraculous Medal in his pocket.

For any non-Catholics or any Catholics that are not familiar with the Miraculous Medal, I'd like to give a little background on it. The Miraculous Medal, also known as the Medal of the Immaculate Conception (not to be confused with the Virginal Conception which occurred at the Anunciation), originated as a result of a vision given to St. Catherine Laboure. It has an image of the Blessed Mother, with the inscription, “O Mary, Conceived without Sin, Pray for Us Who Have Recourse to Thee.”

The doctrine of the Immaculate Conception does not explain how Jesus was conceived. It is the Catholic doctrine that Mary, from the moment SHE was conceived in her mother's womb, was without the mark of Original Sin. She enjoyed the benefits of redemption in advance, so that Jesus Christ our Redeemer, Who is not limited by time, would dwell for the first nine months of His life in a sinless environment. Mary still needed a Redeemer, just like all of us, but gained those benefits in advance.

What does this have to do with our President, who keeps a Miraculous Medal in his pocket, although he is not a Catholic? I'm not even sure President Obama understands. You see, this is the man who, when asked when life began, stated that the question was, “above my pay grade.” Let's just assume for a moment that from a biological standpoint, life doesn't begin at conception (although it does). Let's assume it begins either at birth or at some point between conception and birth. What would be the point of saying, “O Mary, Conceived without Sin” if that were the case?

If we're not alive at the moment of conception, then we can have no sin, personal or inherited, until we are alive. After all, a non-living or even non-human thing cannot have sin. Therefore, wouldn't we ALL be conceived without sin? What would be so special about that doctrine? The Miraculous Medal does not say, “O Mary, Born without Sin,” or “Quickened without Sin,” a la Nancy Pelosi's attempts to distort St. Augustine's writings on when life begins. I have another quote from St. Augustine for Madame Pelosi, “Rome has spoken. The discussion is over.” But I digress.

Mr. President, I find it offensive that you would carry a symbol of my Faith, which states that life begins at conception, while you fight for abortion rights the full nine months of pregnancy, and while you attempt to spin your vote in the Illinois State Senate in favor of legalized infanticide. Far more babies are aborted in this country annually than the number of deaths from gang violence, as abhorrent as both are. There is far more blood on far more hands over abortion than on the hands of any Crip, Blood or Latin King, as much as the mention of those groups makes the bile rise in my throat.

Still, I am inspired to pray, not that Barack Obama will stop carrying the Miraculous Medal with him. I will ask for the Blessed Mother's prayers for him. I will pray that the words, “Conceived without Sin” will echo in his heart and mind and bring about a conversion of heart for him. Crazier things have happened when we have faith. Saul of Tarsus, dedicated to destroying Christianity, became its most successful early missionary, St. Paul. Simon bar-Jonah, who denied Jesus three times, became our first Pope, St. Peter. And so, with millions of Catholics around the world, I echo the words, “O Mary, Conceived without Sin, Pray for Us Who Have Recourse to Thee.”

Thank you for your time, and I hope to be back again. God Bless!

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You Can't Just Listen to Whom?

I was going to talk about President Obama's Alinsky-esque tactics of singling out his opponents and critics and attempting to marginalize them as a way of intimidating people away from them, as demonstrated by his recent attacks on Rush Limbaugh. I was going to talk about the need, rather than allowing ourselves to be intimidated, to provide more conservative voices in opposition to President Obama's policies, so we'd be too numerous to silence. But I decided against it because 1) I just showed I could cover that in one paragraph; 2) I found a much more important issue to discuss.

We have a President who recently, on Arabic television, apologized to the entire Muslim world for America being the great nation that it is. This is a scary time for a truly patriotic American, who has been proud of his country since age seven, when he heard the hostages were coming home from Iran (more on that later). A large segment of the American population was not proud of this country until Obama was elected President.

Our media-fed, pop-culture mentality tells us we have to follow along with everything President Obama says. After all, he's a history-making, post-racial, post-partisan uniter, right? I hate to be a great divider, but you can't just listen to Barack Obama and get things done! You can't listen to apologies for America going unquestioned and have any faith that this nation can accomplish any good in the world. Mr. President, don't tell me words don't matter!

Let's take a look at some of these words. “America was not born as a colonial power, and the same respect and partnership that America had with the Muslim world as recently as 20 or 30 years ago, there's no reason why we can't restore that.” The same respect and partnership that America had with the Muslim world as recently as 20 or 30 years ago? What respect and partnership?

I may have only been six at the time, but I do know that 30 years ago, Iran's government under the shah fell, and the incoming Ayatollah Khomeini declared a “holy war” against the West. This “holy war” resulted in Americans being held hostage and subjected to abuse for over a year. Where's the respect there?

What sense of partnership was the Arab world showing with us when they imposed an oil embargo against us in the mid-1970s? Where was the respect when terrorists in Lebanon crashed a truck loaded with explosives into an American Marine barracks in Beirut? Where was the respect when Libyan-sponsored terrorists blew up a plane carrying Americans in 1988?

How about when Muslim warlords in Somalia were shooting at American soldiers who were trying to get food to the starving Muslim citizens in that country? Was the first World Trade Center attack respectful? The bombing of U.S. Embassies throughout Africa during the 1990s? The attempted assassination of George H.W. Bush (for which Bill Clinton should've taken out Saddam Hussein)? 9/11?

I'm sorry, Mr. President, but I don't see much of a track record of respect or partnership, and it wasn't due to any lack of effort on America's part. I'm proud that we went the extra mile to help the Muslim world better itself. I'm more proud that when the Muslim world (or anyone else) attempted to push us around, we hit back hard. President Obama, please remember that aspect of our history. My love of this country didn't begin on 1/20/09; it didn't end on that date, either.

Thank you for your time, and I hope to be back again. God Bless!

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Salutes at the Local and Federal Levels

I've often found myself having a huge problem with federal and state government the past several years, and have found much that is worthy of criticism.  Recent days have proven no different, but perhaps a different tactic is in order.  I'd like to give some positive reinforcement to 188 Congressional Representatives, and to my own Assemblyman in New Jersey.
 
First, I'll discuss Congress.  If you know anything about national politics, the House of Representatives voted to pass the stimulus, or as I affectionately call it, the scamulus package.  It should be noted, however, that ALL Republican Representatives, as well as eleven Democrats, voted against the bill, making the opposition to the bill bi-partisan, while the support for it was single-party.  I salute the House Republicans and the 11 Democrats, and if you are in their district, I urge you to call your Representative to offer your thanks.  The Democrats that opposed the pork-barrel bill are:
 
1 Boyd  FL 2
2 Bright  Alabama 2
3 Cooper  Tennessee 5
4 Ellsworth  Indiana 8
5 Griffith  Alabama 5
6 Kanjorski  PA 11
7 Kratovil  Maryland 1
8 Minnick  Idaho 1
9 Peterson  Minnesota 7
10 Shuler  N C 11
11 Taylor  Mississippi 4
 
Now to salute my Assemblyman Jon Bramnick, who is the first politician ever to give me a truly personalized response to an e-mail I had sent.  It was technically his Chief of Staff, Scott Mersereau, who had e-mailed me, asking me to call him personally regarding legislation I had suggested.
 
The idea I had presented was a product of DownsizeDC.org, called the Read the Bills Act, as well as a companion bill, the Write the Laws Act, which I suggested Trenton needed just as much as DC.  We spoke for about fifteen minutes, and Mr. Mersereau seemed genuinely excited about such legislation, and said he would follow up with me in a couple weeks regarding whether there were any parts of those acts on the books on the New Jersey state level or in any of the other states.

Assemblyman Bramnick and Chief of Staff Mersereau, I salute you as well.  If Trenton had more people like you running the show, New Jersey would be the jewel of the U.S., instead of the butt of jokes.
 
Thank you for your time, and I hope to be back again.  God Bless!
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Introductions are in order

I started up this blog, not because I'm a learned expert on any particular topics.  I assure you, I hold no Ivy League degrees in political science, law, economics or anything of the sort.  I have, however, been interested in politics and the direction of our nation since the second grade, when Ronald Reagan was first elected President.
 
I have found that many times, the experts we have had in office throughout the years, perhaps due to their advanced learning, have forgotten some very simple logic in their decision making.  I look at what's going on, and often wonder, is it just me that has a problem with this?  I don't wish to be too specific in my first entry, as this is an introduction, but one example is the number of bail...I mean, stimulus and financial rescue packages our politicians are trying to pass.  This is at a time when our national debt is roughly ten trillion dollars, and our unfunded liabilities for entitlement programs are estimated to be about fifty-three trillion dollars.
 
Constitution Party candidate from 2008, Chuck Baldwin, put it best at one of the third party debates, "If your outgo exceeds your income, then your upkeep will be your downfall."  He learned that from his father, who, if I heard the radio correctly, only had an eighth grade education.  I'm sure many others have said it before, but unfortunately nobody is saying that in government.
 
Thank you for your time, and I hope to be back again.  God bless!
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