Wednesday, December 7, 2011

He Thinks Yer Stupid ...or... Fundamentally Remaking America Part MMCDXXXII

President Obama's "Teddy Roosevelt Speech" accomplished more than he probably thinks it did.  Obviously from the text of it, he thinks it accomplished the goal of re-branding the class warfare message as a fight for fairness.  I'm sure the staffer who wrote it thinks so, but no, not really.  As Obama speeches go, the degree to which it gives us a window into the mind of the speaker is certainly nothing new, yet it's interesting in that what it did accomplish is it makes more clear than ever that, well, he thinks yer stupid...

My grandparents served during World War II. He was a soldier in Patton's army; she was a worker on a bomber assembly line. And together, they shared the optimism of a nation that triumphed over the Great Depression and over fascism. They believed in an America where hard work paid off, and responsibility was rewarded, and anyone could make it if they tried – no matter who you were, no matter where you came from, no matter how you started out.

So far so good, sounds great.  We Americans like that... hard work pays off.

Today, we're still home to the world's most productive workers. We're still home to the world's most innovative companies. But for most Americans, the basic bargain that made this country great has eroded. Long before the recession hit, hard work stopped paying off for too many people. Fewer and fewer of the folks who contributed to the success of our economy actually benefited from that success. Those at the very top grew wealthier from their incomes and their investments – wealthier than ever before. But everybody else struggled with costs that were growing and paycheques that weren't – and too many families found themselves racking up more and more debt just to keep up.

Ok, slow up a little.  I'll let the "basic bargain" thing go.  Ok, no, I can't.  There was never any bargain, there was only capitalism, Mr. President.  You're already making stuff up three paragraphs in.

As for those who contributed, you mean people who worked for an employer according to an agreement to do so for a certain rate of pay?  But wait, when you say fewer and fewer actually benefited, what does this mean? They stopped getting paid according to the agreement they had with their employer?  Then they would have stopped working.  Do you mean that they didn't share equally in the profits the same as the employer?  Well, what exactly is it that would make you think they should?  Was it part of their employment agreement?  If it was not, why would you even say this?  I know, I know, it's NOT class warfare.  The truth of the matter is that income levels have generally kept up with inflation.  (We'll come back to this later.)  In other words, I get paid today the equivalent of what I'd have gotten ten years ago.  Where I'm from, we call that fair.

And the wealthy got wealthier than ever before off their incomes and investments.  I know a really wealthy guy who's gotten crazy wealthy off his income and investments.  He's never had a real job other than being in government, and his entire claim to fame was a few speeches.  Since then he's written a few books and become a millionaire.  He's been surrounded by people involved in shady deals, hard core Chicago politics and the most outrageous crony capitalism seen in my lifetime.  Seems like you really ought to hate that guy...

Now, for many years, credit cards and home equity loans papered over this harsh reality. But in 2008, the house of cards collapsed. We all know the story by now: mortgages sold to people who couldn't afford them, or even sometimes understand them. Banks and investors allowed to keep packaging the risk and selling it off. Huge bets – and huge bonuses – made with other people's money on the line. Regulators who were supposed to warn us about the dangers of all this, but looked the other way or didn't have the authority to look at all.

Uh oh, someone told the truth and tried to make it sound like something else.  We all know the story, Mr. President, but you're not telling the back story.  The reason for what we're going through today has its roots in the policies of one of your ideological predecessors, the second-worst president in modern times, Jimmy Carter.  It is called the Community Reinvestment Act, and it was the beginning of forcing lenders to make loans to people who could not afford them.  Did greed eventually become part of the problem?  Of course.  But the whole thing would never have happened if banks hadn't been forced to create loans they had to hide from their balance sheets by a law created by out of control government.  Like everything progressives do when it comes to money, the idea sounds great (after all, who's for discrimination?), the execution is bad and the results have been onerous.  And the truth is, regulators had little choice but to look the other way when this thing started; the banks had to make the loans, and they also had to get all that bad debt off their books.

It was wrong. It combined the breathtaking greed of a few with irresponsibility all across the system. And it plunged our economy and the world into a crisis from which we're still fighting to recover. It claimed the jobs and the homes and the basic security of millions of people – innocent, hardworking Americans who had met their responsibilities but were still left holding the bag.

Yes sir, it did.  The greed of politicians continuing and worsening these regulations and practices for the sole ultimate purpose of buying votes.  I hope you're all ashamed of yourselves.  Yeah, I know, you're all beyond shame.  Never mind.

But, Osawatomie, this is not just another political debate. This is the defining issue of our time. This is a make-or-break moment for the middle class, and for all those who are fighting to get into the middle class. Because what's at stake is whether this will be a country where working people can earn enough to raise a family, build a modest savings, own a home, secure their retirement. Now, in the midst of this debate, there are some who seem to be suffering from a kind of collective amnesia. After all that's happened, after the worst economic crisis, the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, they want to return to the same practices that got us into this mess. In fact, they want to go back to the same policies that stacked the deck against middle-class Americans for way too many years. And their philosophy is simple: We are better off when everybody is left to fend for themselves and play by their own rules.

Um, what?  You know, it's too bad, Mr. President, that you apparently have never spoken to someone whose beliefs on the matter are different than yours with the intention of actually listening and trying to understand the other side.  You might actually learn something.  By no means whatsoever do we want to go back to what caused this.  The idiotic laws you politicians crafted to cause this mess should be rescinded.  Banks should never be forced, or even allowed, to lend other people's money to anyone who isn't credit worthy.  They should never have to, nor be allowed to repackage debt into instruments whose sole purpose is hiding the toxic nature of their contents.  That's not what we idiot conservatives want at all.  We want responsibility.  And when we say that, we mean that if you can't afford it, you don't get it.  And sometimes, it's just too bad, we don't all get what we want, no matter how cleverly we might think we can decorate police cars with our heinies.

Theodore Roosevelt disagreed. He was the Republican son of a wealthy family. He praised what the titans of industry had done to create jobs and grow the economy. He believed then what we know is true today, that the free market is the greatest force for economic progress in human history. It's led to a prosperity and a standard of living unmatched by the rest of the world.

Ah, Theodore Roosevelt.  When all else fails, assume the mantle of a former president whose name is respectable but most people today don't really know all that much about.  That way you can form the message any way you want.  (One of your advisers thinks this is a brilliant strategy, I bet.  That guy paid too much for his college education.  You got anyone there who's actually had a job outside government and academia?)  But better yet, you're praising the free market.  That must have been really hard.  But that was just what you had to do to get to the next, much more enjoyable paragraph.

But Roosevelt also knew that the free market has never been a free licence to take whatever you can from whomever you can. He understood the free market only works when there are rules of the road that ensure competition is fair and open and honest. And so he busted up monopolies, forcing those companies to compete for consumers with better services and better prices. And today, they still must. He fought to make sure businesses couldn't profit by exploiting children or selling food or medicine that wasn't safe. And today, they still can't.

Yup.  And your point would be?  No, wait, let me guess.  The only way for the free market to be fair is to surround it with rules and regulations so that it's not free to do what you consider the wrong thing, it's only free to do what you consider the right thing.  And since you're the arbiter of right, we should trust you to set everything up in our best interests, even if it puts the companies many of us work for out of business.  Am I warm?  Wanna talk about Obamacare?  And when you say "fair and open and honest", you mean like Solyndra, right?  In other words, it's fair and open and honest if you get to pick the winners and losers...

Today, over 100 years later, our economy has gone through another transformation. Over the last few decades, huge advances in technology have allowed businesses to do more with less, and it's made it easier for them to set up shop and hire workers anywhere they want in the world. And many of you know firsthand the painful disruptions this has caused for a lot of Americans.

So it's technology's fault that businesses are streaming out of the US to set up shop in places where it's not so costly and they're not hog-tied by over-reaching regulation?  You're sure it has nothing to do with that or the high wages and benefits that American union workers have demanded that aren't part of the equation in other parts of the world?  What about corporate tax rates, highest in the world, remember?  I mean, I know how evil it is, but the primary purpose of a corporation is to make a profit for its shareholders, it is not for it to be some kind of altruistic vehicle that exists to employ citizens and pay them lavishly for services that can be gotten elsewhere for much less.  You're thinking of national socialism... you know, fascism and its government-owned corporations.  Totally different thing.  What exactly did they teach at those fancy colleges you went to anyway?

Factories where people thought they would retire suddenly picked up and went overseas, where workers were cheaper.

Um, yeah.  You were surprised by that, weren't you?  Or are you just trying to act surprised?  Labor unions have spent decades killing the goose that laid the golden eggs and then acting surprised when it died.  When you kill stuff you don't get to act surprised when it's dead.  I mean, you could, but it's just plain idiotic.  Corporations don't spend the money it takes to move operations overseas for no good reason.  Regardless what you may think sir, it's not about screwing the union workers.  It's about making a profit.  And you can't do that when it costs you more than your overseas competition to produce the same product, meaning you have to charge more for it.  Again, it seems like you would have learned this stuff at those expensive colleges.  I am starting to think you got ripped off.

Steel mills that needed 100 – or 1,000 employees are now able to do the same work with 100 employees, so layoffs too often became permanent, not just a temporary part of the business cycle. And these changes didn't just affect blue-collar workers. If you were a bank teller or a phone operator or a travel agent, you saw many in your profession replaced by ATMs and the internet.

So let me see if I understand this, because it's important.  You're saying that technology is bad because it sometimes replaces workers, so... things would be great if we could have just stayed in the 1970s?  And, help me out here, are you really complaining about the internet?  By orders of magnitude the number of jobs created by the internet outstrips what has been lost in telephone operators and bank tellers (and by the way, I've never been in a bank without tellers, so you're pulling that one out of thin air...)  I really wish Americans were as smart as you think they're stupid, sir.  Even if we could have split it down the middle you'd never have been elected.

Today, even higher-skilled jobs, like accountants and middle management can be outsourced to countries like China or India.

Yes, because they're cheaper.  Is it time to talk about Obamacare yet?

And if you're somebody whose job can be done cheaper by a computer or someone in another country, you don't have a lot of leverage with your employer when it comes to asking for better wages or better benefits, especially since fewer Americans today are part of a union.

Funny that.  It's almost like Americans figured out what unions have generally become in this country, and what they almost inevitably end up doing to the job scene in any sector where they are prominent.  I mean, I technically have nothing against private sector unions.  If corporations will tolerate them, that's up to them; that's capitalism.  But when it costs $150,000 a year for one union employee here and $50,000 for two in India, what is a company's motivation for not outsourcing, altruism?  Altruism looks awful on a balance sheet.  Altruism doesn't pay dividends, and it doesn't convince anyone to invest in a company's stock.

Now, just as there was in Teddy Roosevelt's time, there is a certain crowd in Washington who, for the last few decades, have said, let's respond to this economic challenge with the same old tune. "The market will take care of everything," they tell us. If we just cut more regulations and cut more taxes – especially for the wealthy – our economy will grow stronger.

Ah, but there's the problem.  You and your gang have the free market in a straight jacket of laws and regulations designed to make it "safe" and "fair".  It can't function as a free market.  So then when it fails, you rail about how it's failed.  I (almost) hate to say this, but a six year old can tell you the answer here.  Get the government off the back of the people, and the markets, in this country and maybe things will actually work better.  And as far as your "taxes for the wealthy" routine, there are only about 10,000 people left who don't know that you mean small business, and they all just got kicked out of poo-filled parks around the US.  Why do you hate small business sir?  Most of the employment in this country happens through small business and yet you continue to do your level best to make things harder for small business.  Why is that?  Imagine a country where taxes were lowered for small business, and they had more money available for crazy things like...  hiring more employees.  Yeah, I know, pure insanity.

Remember in those years, in 2001 and 2003, Congress passed two of the most expensive tax cuts for the wealthy in history. And what did it get us? The slowest job growth in half a century. Massive deficits that have made it much harder to pay for the investments that built this country and provided the basic security that helped millions of Americans reach and stay in the middle class – things like education and infrastructure, science and technology, Medicare and social security.

There's a little bit of truth in that.  Ok, wait, no, there isn't, it's completely false and you know it.  Liar, liar, $600 pants on fire.

Look at the statistics. In the last few decades, the average income of the top 1% has gone up by more than 25% to $1.2m per year. I'm not talking about millionaires, people who have a million dollars. I'm saying people who make a million dollars every single year. For the top one hundredth of 1%, the average income is now $27m per year. The typical CEO who used to earn about 30 times more than his or her worker now earns 110 times more. And yet, over the last decade the incomes of most Americans have actually fallen by about 6%.

There actually is some small piece of truth here.  Under your watch, incomes have gone down some for most of us, partly on average due to underemployment but also individually because of the inflation and high fuel prices your administration has caused with its reckless fiscal policies.  And yes, I know, food and fuel aren't counted in inflation calculations, and so by that reckoning there hasn't been much inflation.  But out here where we live, as people who actually pay for food and fuel, I assure you that there is plenty of inflation and it is effectively gutting our income.  So yeah, the incomes of most Americans has effectively dropped at least 6%, seems like more.  Thanks for all you're doing!

But there's an even more fundamental issue at stake. This kind of gaping inequality gives lie to the promise that's at the very heart of America: that this is a place where you can make it if you try.

There's that promise or deal thing again.  Can you please show me that in the founding documents Mr. President?  I'm sure it's there, I just can't remember seeing it.

So what does that mean for restoring middle-class security in today's economy? Well, it starts by making sure that everyone in America gets a fair shot at success. The truth is we'll never be able to compete with other countries when it comes to who's best at letting their businesses pay the lowest wages, who's best at busting unions, who's best at letting companies pollute as much as they want. That's a race to the bottom that we can't win, and we shouldn't want to win that race. Those countries don't have a strong middle class. They don't have our standard of living.

So much fail.  Everyone gets a fair shot at success.  Please define in 25 words or less, the terms "fair", "shot", and "success".  These are all subjective terms.  Obviously you have determined to be the arbiter of fair in the United States, so please define it for us so we know what you have in mind.

The race we want to win, the race we can win is a race to the top – the race for good jobs that pay well and offer middle-class security. 

Make it easier and cheaper to do business here in America than anyplace else, and you'll get exactly that.  It's so simple that you won't consider it, because simple can't be right and sophisticated is the only thing you think makes sense.  Sometimes the answer really is simple.  As hard as it may be to believe, sometimes sophistication can be its own worst enemy.

Today, manufacturers and other companies are setting up shop in the places with the best infrastructure to ship their products, move their workers, communicate with the rest of the world. And that's why the over 1 million construction workers who lost their jobs when the housing market collapsed, they shouldn't be sitting at home with nothing to do. They should be rebuilding our roads and our bridges, laying down faster railroads and broadband, modernizing our schools – all the things other countries are already doing to attract good jobs and businesses to their shores.

Oh no you don't!  Several stimuluses ago you promised us new infrastructure and you lied.  Don't you dare steal another half (or whole) trillion from our children to fund another lie about updating infrastructure!

Today that choice is very clear. To reduce our deficit, I've already signed nearly $1tn of spending cuts into law and I've proposed trillions more, including reforms that would lower the cost of Medicare and Medicaid.

Could we see those please? I respectfully call BS.

Now, so far, most of my Republican friends in Washington have refused under any circumstance to ask the wealthiest Americans to go to the same tax rate they were paying when Bill Clinton was president. So let's just do a trip down memory lane here.

No need sir.  You see, and I know I don't have to tell you, the economy wasn't waffling between stagnant and recession when Clinton did that.  Besides, remember that guy who said, "You don't raise taxes during a recession"?  Now I know, by technical measures, the recession is over.  But the problem is there's no recovery.  Normally when a recession ends there's a strong recovery and accompanying growth.  But this time the business community is so afraid of you and your policies that nothing's happening.  Couple that with seeing Europe flame out and your insistence that we follow them into the flames, and it's no wonder.  Anyway, it's apples and oranges and you know it.

That is the height of unfairness. It is wrong. It's wrong that in the United States of America, a teacher or a nurse or a construction worker, maybe earns $50,000 a year, should pay a higher tax rate than somebody raking in $50m. It's wrong for Warren Buffett's secretary to pay a higher tax rate than Warren Buffett. And by the way, Warren Buffett agrees with me. So do most Americans – Democrats, independents and Republicans. And I know that many of our wealthiest citisens would agree to contribute a little more if it meant reducing the deficit and strengthening the economy that made their success possible.

Oy veh, let me know when you're going to start telling the truth, this was debunked months ago.  Again, they don't, you know it, your own tax return proves it (below).  We need a leader not a liar.

This isn't about class warfare. This is about the nation's welfare. It's about making choices that benefit not just the people who've done fantastically well over the last few decades, but that benefits the middle class, and those fighting to get into the middle class, and the economy as a whole.

Of course it is.  You're the only one who still believes there's someone who doesn't know that.

Finally, a strong middle class can only exist in an economy where everyone plays by the same rules, from Wall Street to Main Street. As infuriating as it was for all of us, we rescued our major banks from collapse, not only because a full-blown financial meltdown would have sent us into a second Depression, but because we need a strong, healthy financial sector in this country.

Er, that first sentence may or may not be true.  I'd love to see something that backs it up other than it's your opinion.  In fact, I'd like to see something that backs up pretty much any of your opinions that are constantly presented as facts...  As far as "rescuing the banks", don't even get me started.  "Too big to fail" is nothing but a license to steal, and steal they have.  Maybe if they were left to fail once in awhile, they'd behave more responsibly and try to avoid it.  Crazy, huh?

Some of you may know, my grandmother worked as a banker for most of her life – worked her way up, started as a secretary, ended up being a vice president of a bank. And I know from her, and I know from all the people that I've come in contact with, that the vast majority of bankers and financial service professionals, they want to do right by their customers. They want to have rules in place that don't put them at a disadvantage for doing the right thing. And yet, Republicans in Congress are fighting as hard as they can to make sure that these rules aren't enforced.

Um, could we please go back to the Community Reinvestment Act of 1977 for a moment?  And while we're here, that statement about Republicans, could you flesh that out with a fact or two please?  I mean, it's fun to blame someone else, but is it actually something that's happening anywhere but in your imagination?

We shouldn't be weakening oversight and accountability. We should be strengthening oversight and accountability.

Lack of oversight and accountability are not the problem; Sarbanes Oxley has more than taken care of this for businesses not run by current or former Goldman Sachs executives.  Onerous, expensive regulations are.  Counter-intuitive laws that force banks to make bad business decisions are.  People like Barney Frank and Chris Dodd who set up a system to fail and then write regulations to punish it when it does, are.

Investing in things like education that give everybody a chance to succeed. A tax code that makes sure everybody pays their fair share. And laws that make sure everybody follows the rules. That's what will transform our economy. That's what will grow our middle class again. In the end, rebuilding this economy based on fair play, a fair shot, and a fair share will require all of us to see that we have a stake in each other's success. And it will require all of us to take some responsibility.

I could spend an entire blog on this one paragraph.  First, education.  We pay more per capita for education in the US than anywhere else in the world.  What's it gotten us?  Spoiled brat teachers unions screaming and protesting every time they're asked to quit treating the taxpayer like a trust fund.  Leftist curricula designed not to teach our youth how to think but what to think and to think that common-sense conservatism is some kind of hell-spawned idiot evil while God-less, amoral leftism is enlightened and sophisticated.  Revisionist history.  Mush-brained youth who think it's noble to "protest" by camping out in public places and demand, well, something.  (Still no one has been able to distill the message of the Occupy foolishness past "we hate people who have more than we do and we want their stuff".  Apparently the irony of this is utterly lost on them, and that's another failure of education.)  That's public education.  And I'm supposed to be excited about the idea of pouring, no wait, "investing" more money in this?!?  Why, I must be a complete idiot, because that sounds just plain stupid to me.  I have a great idea.  Delete the federal Department of Education, and return control to the taxpayers by giving every family a voucher for cost of the child's education to be used at the public or private school of their choice.  Do you really want to see education improve in America Mr. President?  Then put our money where your mouth is and open it up to the free market and watch what happens.

Then there's the tax code that makes sure everybody pays their fair share.  I just love it when a progressive says the word "fair".  You make this so easy.  I mean, you made an adjusted income of $5.5m in 2009 and paid $1.7m in federal income tax.  (Kudos on the charitable giving by the way...  seriously.)  That's very close to 33%.  If you don't mind my saying so, that seems rather high.  And in fact, it would indicate that millionaires such as yourself are already paying higher taxes than the rest of us.  So this idea that millionaires don't pay their fair share has the lie put to it by your own tax return.  Speaking of actually paying taxes, what about the 47% of US households that pay no income tax at all?  Apparently many or all of them even get "refunds", which if we're going to be honest is simply redistribution of wealth; taking money from me and giving it to someone else.  So, in light of all of this, again, please define "fair".  We'll wait.  The bottom line is that you can say the word "fair" a hundred times in a speech, but without a universal definition that all understand, it remains nothing but another pellet gun in your pathetic arsenal of class warfare weapons.  But you'll never define it, because it can't be done; it's utterly subjective and if you have three people you'll have three opinions.  It's a gimmick, and that's all it ever has been or ever will be.

It will require those of us in public service to make government more efficient and more effective, more consumer-friendly, more responsive to people's needs. That's why we're cutting programs that we don't need to pay for those we do. That's why we've made hundreds of regulatory reforms that will save businesses billions of dollars. That's why we're not just throwing money at education, we're challenging schools to come up with the most innovative reforms and the best results.

Dude.  Seriously.  Pull the other one.  I know one of your advisors must have tried to tell you by now that we're not as think as you stupid we are.  You really ought to listen.  Absolutely no one believes a word of that last paragraph.  No one.

That's how America was built. That's why we're the greatest nation on Earth. That's what our greatest companies understand. Our success has never just been about survival of the fittest. It's about building a nation where we're all better off. We pull together. We pitch in. We do our part. We believe that hard work will pay off, that responsibility will be rewarded, and that our children will inherit a nation where those values live on.

Uh, actually, you're thinking of communism, sir.  Capitalism actually does have some aspect of "survival of the fittest" to it, but the great thing about it is that, more than any other system, capitalism affords opportunity to become that survivor.  The thing you don't like about it is that it kind of tends to punish lackluster efforts and abject failure.  No, little Barry, we don't all get a participation trophy for showing up.  You wonder what's wrong with America?  Let's start there... [tangent narrowly averted]

And it is that belief that rallied thousands of Americans to Osawatomie – maybe even some of your ancestors – on a rain-soaked day more than a century ago. By train, by wagon, on buggy, bicycle, on foot, they came to hear the vision of a man who loved this country and was determined to perfect it.

Mr. President, we don't want you to perfect America in your image.  We want you to lead the government to get out of the way so that Americans can prosper by their own hard work and ingenuity.  It's a real shame that you seem to find that impossible to consider.  Yes, there are some who love the government gravy trains your ilk has built at our expense.  But by and large, we really want that stuff cut down to the bare necessities and for you to leave us alone and let us get back to the business of being America.

We still believe that this should be a place where you can make it if you try. And we still believe, in the words of the man who called for a New Nationalism all those years ago, "The fundamental rule of our national life," he said, "the rule which underlies all others – is that, on the whole, and in the long run, we shall go up or down together." And I believe America is on the way up.

A "new nationalism"?  From the guy who's spent three years trying to convince Americans that there's nothing unique and exceptional about America?  You can't have it both ways, sir.  But frankly, some of us have been waiting for you to start with the "nationalism" business for awhile now.  Many of us have thought it was only a matter of time before that kind of thing started.  You do realize that the only thing missing from your general game plan in the definition of "fascism" was nationalism, right?  Probably not.  For what it's worth, I don't think you're an intentional fascist.  I don't think you're scheming fascism.  I just think, in all seriousness, that being you might simply lead to it.  At least, that's my observation thus far.  The Constitution is an annoyance to be ignored, Congress working as it was designed to work is something for you to go around, government should control industry, criticism should be controlled, etc.  In fact, if we substitute class warfare for racism, the definition of fascism could be a definition of your presidency.  I hope you're as concerned about that as some of us are...

The sad thing about this very long post is that I left out so much.  I skipped over easily half the speech, not because those sections were less worthy of scrutiny, but mostly out of a desire not to write something no one could possibly read without falling asleep or stroking out.  I'm afraid I still did that.  Hopefully my point is made by the time the reader collapses, and that point is just that this president can not be re-elected.  He is so divisive, so damaging, so either confused about or simply against what America actually is, that he cannot be allowed four more years to "finish the job".  I don't know about you, but those three words terrify me...

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Concealed Carry and the Knee-Jerk Pro-Criminal Reflex

November 1, 2011 is a pretty special day here in Wisconsin.  Today is the first day that for the first time a resident of Wisconsin can apply for a concealed carry permit and upon receiving it, legally carry a weapon for self-defense.  It's pretty amazing, because up until the Republicans almost miraculously took over the Wisconsin state government in the last election, there were two states left that would never have concealed carry:  Illinois and Wisconsin.  With Wisconsin being the 49th state to return to sanity, that leaves just law-abiding Illinois citizens twisting in the leftist, defenseless breeze.  Sorry Illinoisans, if your life is threatened, you're just going to have to call 911 on your iPhone and hang tight till the police arrive.  Ask the bad guy nicely, I'm sure he'll wait.

So, awesome, now we have the right to carry in Wisconsin, we can feel much safer that finally the bad guys have to really give some thought to who or where they attack, right.  WRONG!  But wait, you say, if people are carrying concealed, how do the bad guys know who is and who isn't?  Well, it's easy.  Just walk up to any number of businesses and today you'll see signs in the windows or by the front doors saying something like:

NO Guns, Knives, or other Weapons allowed on premises

Hmm.  If I'm a bad guy, this is like Christmas early!  Wisconsin business owners you just promised the bad guy that he can enter your business relatively assured that he's the only one who is carrying (because the law-abiding among us will either not enter, or if we happen to work there and have no choice, will have to leave our gun in our car as the law instructs), and if you have anything of value, you just put a target on your business.  If I'm a crook, you know what I'm looking for?  That sign.  Because to me it says, "Welcome, come on in, do whatever you want, no one here is capable of stopping you until you're out of ammo."

I know, you're afraid of the legal ramifications of what could happen if someone did attack in your business and someone else defended.  Have you read the law?  You're protected.  You the business owner have no liability when a licensed concealed-carry weapon owner has to draw or use the gun.  It's in the bill, please read it.  Or maybe you just think guns are icky and only the police and the military should have them.  Hey, in a perfect world I'd be almost willing to go along with that.  But we left perfect in the rear-view mirror a long, long time ago.  Take away the guns of the law-abiding citizen, and only three groups have guns:  the police, the military, and criminals.  The police can't protect you, and it's foolish to think they can.  The military are busy with other things.  And the criminals, well, you know.

It's dangerously naive to think that criminals are going to abide by gun laws or restrictions.  Frankly, I've yet to have someone explain that expectation to me in a way that makes a lick of sense.  You see, we call them "criminals" because they don't abide by the law.  So what makes you think that your little sign is going to change that?

I am frankly very nervous about this whole thing.  I am going to be rather anxious about being in a place that has this kind of sign posted, much in the same way I'd be nervous about being in a neighborhood where I thought the people around me might be carrying illegally when I had no gun.  By posting these signs, you have not made us safer, you have actually potentially put us (and yourself) in more danger.  You haven't taken the time to understand concealed carry, to learn the facts and understand that it's not the gun but the person carrying it that makes it dangerous.  It's not the law-abiding concealed carry permit holder you should be worrying about.  If no life and death situation ever happens in your business, you'd never even know who we are anyway.

You can't put the genie back in the bottle; as much as you might like there to be no guns, the bad guys have them.  And if you make it so only the bad guys have them, then guess what?  They're going to be even more bold because they know they have nothing to worry about for the 20 minutes it takes the police to arrive.

I don't have a choice.  When I got to work this morning, I saw that sign.  I have to go there.  (Let me be clear:  I am extremely grateful for my job and I will comply because, like I said, I am a law-abiding citizen.)  But I will not be taking my family to any place of business that posts this kind of sign because I am not going to put them in danger just to assuage some business-owner's conscience about something where they're apparently not going to let the facts and evidence get in the way of a good opinion.

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Sol Bloom on the Constitution


Q. What is meant by the term “constitution”? 
A. A constitution embodies the fundamental principles of a government. Our constitution, adopted by the sovereign power, is amendable by that power only. To the constitution all laws, executive actions, and judicial decisions must conform, as it is the creator of the powers exercised by the departments of government. 
Q. Why has our Constitution been classed as “rigid”? 
A. The term “rigid” is used in opposition to “flexible” because the provisions are in a written document which cannot be legally changed with the same ease and in the same manner as ordinary laws. The British constitution, which is unwritten, can, on the other hand be changed overnight by an act of Parliament.
Q. Where, in the Constitution, is there mention of education? 
A. There is none; education is a matter reserved for the States. ... 
Q. Does the Constitution give us our rights and liberties? 
A. No, it does not, it only guarantees them. The people had all their rights and liberties before they made the Constitution. The Constitution was formed, among other purposes, to make the people’s liberties secure -- secure not only as against foreign attack but against oppression by their own government. They set specific limits upon their national government and upon the States, and reserved to themselves all powers that they did not grant. The Ninth Amendment declares: “The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.”
-- Sol Bloom
Director General of the United States Constitution Sesquicentennial Commission
Source: The Story Of The Constitution 1787 - We The People - 1937, copyrighted to The United States Constitutional Sesquicentennial Commission, July 28, 1937, Pg. 168, 169, 177.

Monday, September 26, 2011

Herman Cain, Captain Mumblebug and the Stand-up Chameleon

Ok, now, before I start, I am well aware that by this time next month it's more than likely that things will be completely different. But for right now, I am thoroughly enjoying seeing Herman Cain take the FL CPAC straw poll and the latest Zogby poll. Mostly for no other reason that it seems to be confounding the pundits who want us to accept their choice of candidates. Well sorry, but Romney is our John Kerry; everything he's "for" now he was against when it was necessary to be so to get elected governor of Massachusetts. In case you've never been there, no governor of Massachusetts could ever truly be a conservative, so forget it. No matter what you say, or what he says, Romney is a conservative like the Dalai Lama is a break dancer.   You'll convince me Obama loves America before you convince me Romney is a conservative.  And Rick Perry, who I really wanted to like... what was THAT?!?  He has no one on his staff who thought to tell him that a GOP debate isn't something you "wing"?  For crying out loud, Merriam-Webster is thinking of putting his picture next to "Deer-In-The-Headlights" and "Oops" in their next edition. 

I love Gingrich's snappy retorts.  I think I speak for a lot of conservatives when I say it's about bloody time someone on our side sprouted a spine and started calling BS when they hear it.  The problem for Gingrich is his little eco-issue.  It troubles me that such a brilliant guy was sucked in so badly on that, and it makes me wonder where else his discernment needs a little shoring up.  If Newt Gingrich would really work hard to convince me that he's truly and fully conservative, no more Mr. Nice Guy and it's time to get down to real solutions vs. the compromises that make up every single Republican final position ever, maybe we can talk.  But this is the last chance, Newt; burn me here and I don't care if you channel Ronald Reagan and Charleton Heston at the same time, we're done.

I really wanted to like Michelle Bachmann.  But she blew it so badly with the Gardisil thing.  I technically agreed with her position, but to learn that the program was opt out and that other parts of the story were kind of squishy, well, making points only works when you get to keep the points.  Those didn't last long.  Either your message and your positions get you to the top or they don't.  Stretching the truth to nail someone, even if what they did wrong, will always backfire.  Well, at least unless you're a Democrat.  Ah, but I digress...

Gary Johnson makes me scratch my head.  For the life of me I can't figure out what he's doing there.  At least with Ron Paul you can understand that he knows he's not going to be president, but that he has a real opportunity to shape the discussion.  Unfortunately, when it comes to foreign policy, the shape he makes of the discussion is something of a pink fluffy bunny in a soundproof Lucite box ignoring everything going on around it.  But on money he's making the right noises.

Why is Herman Cain leading right now?  Because he calls it like he sees it.  When you've been where he's been and you have nothing to lose, you can talk like it, and I think people really appreciate it.  I for one would much rather have the truth even if it's a hard truth than the mosaic of lies, demagoguery and agenda that we've dealt with the past three years.  I want someone with a real plan to fix real problems even if maybe it is a little simplistic sounding than someone who beats the country into the ground jamming false solutions to secondary problems down our throats while Rome burns.  I want someone who actually cares about America more than about what he can turn it into.  And I don't think I'm alone.  Herman Cain resonates with conservatives if only because he has the nerve to look at the camera and tell you the president is lying.  It's about time. 

So you there at Fox News, quit trying to sell me Rick Perry and Mitt Romney.  Captain Mumblebug ain't doin' it for me, and neither is the standup chameleon, I mean comedian, from the second left coast.  Them buses already left the station...

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Don Burgett

I saw part two of the interview with WWII paratrooper Don Burgett on American Rifleman tonight.  According to Wikipedia:

Donald R. Burgett (born April 5, 1925) is a writer and former paratrooper. He was among the Airborne troopers who landed in Normandy early in the morning of D-Day. He was a member of the 101st Airborne Division, ("The Screaming Eagles"), and the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment. Burgett served in 'A' Company, 1st Battalion, 506th PIR as both a rifleman and a machine-gunner.
Burgett parachuted into Holland as part of Operation Market-Garden[1] with the 1st Allied Airborne Army, fighting for 72 days behind enemy lines. With just a few weeks rest, he was sent into combat at the Battle of the Bulge, where the 101st, along with Combat Command B of the U.S. 10th Armored Division and the all African American 969th Field Artillery Battalion successfully held out against nine German armored divisions during the siege of Bastogne. He went on to fight through Operation Nordwind, on into Germany to the Ruhr Valley, the Rhineland, and Bavaria, where he helped capture Hitler's mountain retreat in southern Germany. While in action with the 101st, Burgett survived numerous battle wounds and had his M1 rifle shot out of his hands at least twice. He was one of only eleven men out of two hundred in his company to survive from D-Day Normandy all the way to the war's end.
I'm going to try to repeat from memory some of the last things he said in the interview because they were so powerful.

He was talking about the end of the war.  He and his group were moving through Germany and came to a place with a concentration camp.  I didn't hear the name but he said it was near the Lecht river.  He said that when he arrived there, he entered the building with the ovens and saw several Jews carrying other Jews into the ovens on metal stretchers.  (I hope those were already dead, he didn't say.)  He told them to stop.  They said they could not.  He asked why.  They said, "They told us that if we don't do it, they will put us in there alive."  Burgett said to them, "I am an American, and America says stop!"  They talked amongst themselves for a moment and then said they would stop.

The next day he said that he saw four of them barely able to walk carrying one of those stretchers covered with a purple cloth toward the river.  He asked them what they were doing.  He pulled back the cloth and the stretcher was carrying yellow bars of soap that he compared to something called "Fels-Naptha".  He asked them what they were doing with the soap.  They said, "We're burying them.  They're people."  He said they told him the Nazis rendered people to make soap.  He said they did much worse things as well but then he stopped talking as if it would be wrong to go on.  I was grateful.

At this point he lost his composure a little and mumbled something about the second amendment.  Then he said, "The people who want to take our guns away need to remember that it's only Americans like me with guns who stand between them and the ovens.  I've seen the ovens."

Could it happen again?  Who knows?  It's hard to guess, although I sincerely doubt that the basics of human nature have changed much since 1940.  You want to say no, but then similar things happen in Africa with regularity and the rest of the world looks the other way and whistles.  I just hope that if it does get close to happening again, there are still Americans with guns ready to say, "I am an American and America says stop!"

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Stigma? Why yes, thank you...

So the completely unexpected headline of the day is that food stamp recipients should be able to use them in restaurants.  Food stamps.  In restaurants.

Let me take you back, back to a time and place long ago and far away.  I call it the 1970s.  The 1970s seem like a magical fairy land compared to the time in which we currently live.  In the 1970s, people were unemployed too, not unlike today.  And back then we also had a feckless president, a man not so unlike our current president in that everything he touched turned to offal.  In fact, the similarities only end when you consider that the president back then seemed truly not to understand why his mojo didn't have no go.  The current iteration seems perhaps to be aware that it's not going to work, but there's an ideology to satisfy come hell or high water.

Something else that was different in the 1970s was the people.  Back then, you were ashamed if you were unemployed.  Heck, I was unemployed for nearly a year in 1992-1993 after I got out of the USAF and it ate me up.  But something happened between that time and today.  Somewhere around 2000 I think, shame was lost.  The United States fell for the "it's all about me" advertising drive in a way it never had before, and suddenly the only thing that had a stigma anymore was the concept of the stigma itself.  And hey, why not?  We had everyone from Oprah and her army of new age writers to Robert Schuller and Joel Osteen in the Sales and Marketing wing of the evangelical Church assuring us that self-esteem was of paramount importance and that we were meant to live our best life now.  And hey, if that means you have to charge it, or even better, get someone else to pay for it, so what?  It's all about feeling good now, damn the torpedoes!

It's taken me a long time to come around, but here I am.  And here is my list of demands.

Number one:  You holdouts are buying me a bigger house.  This one is too small and I want a bigger yard.  So you'd better give me a tractor with it.

Number two:  I want free health care and a pension.  Since I'm not a member of a public sector union, I don't get either.  In fact, my health care is costing me so much right now that I can't afford the pension.  And that ain't right, so you all need to make it right!  If my neighbor is getting it for working for the government, then I wants mines!

Number three:  Some of my friends have Ford F-150 pickups.  I can't afford one.  I think you know where this is going.  Get cracking, I expect to see my truck in my driveway when I leave for work in the morning.

Number four:  Why should I have to work anyway?  I have a better idea.  I want all this stuff and I want to not have to work.  I mean, why not?  I've lived 46 years without entitlements, it's time all you rich people started paying your fair share and floating my boat some.  A boat!  Yeah, I want a boat too!

Listen.  Food stamps are for survival, not Red Lobster.  If you're on food stamps and you want to go to a restaurant, I'm sorry.  I'm also sorry I don't have a brand new truck, but as they say, that's life.  Suck it up, buttercup.  Think of it as motivation.  Yeah, I know, here you go:  http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/motivation

Monday, July 11, 2011

Some Quotes

"We can't spend more than we have. ... This is no longer a matter of right versus left, liberal versus conservative, we can prove our conclusion on this by basic mathematics. The United States Federal Government from all sources, for all purposes, takes in $2.2 trillion a year. Keep that number in mind. $2.2 trillion a year. We have total unfunded liabilities of $65 trillion, $2.2 trillion in revenue, $65 trillion in total unfunded liabilities. That is more than 30 to 1 leverage. If the United States Federal Government were a bank regulated by itself, they would shut themselves down. We live in a nation where not long ago our United States Secretary of State [Hillary Clinton] was on rhetorical bended knee in communist China pleading with the Chinese to continue to buy our debt, because if they don’t buy our debt and other foreign sovereign wealth funds don’t buy our debt our beloved United States of America can’t pay its bills. The United States of America my friends is not a beggar nation."
-- Gov. Tim Pawlenty
(1960-) 39th Governor of Minnesota (2003–2011)

"In the 1950’s [America was] the richest nation, the richest city on earth was Detroit. They voted for change and so now it is the poorest city in America. At the same time, the nation of South Korea, of all the nations on earth, was third from the bottom. Virtually the poorest nation on earth. It is now tenth from the top. If you understand the principle, the greater freedom, the greater the wealth, you can then put any nation [on this chart]. Now you can go to Tagusagopos, you can go to Buenos Aires, you can go to Cairo, you can go to Philadelphia and all you need to know is what percentage of the Gross Domestic Product is controlled by government, and the greater the government, the greater the poverty, and that’s all politics is about. Every day politicians say, “I can make a better decision for you than you can for yourself, and let me take your money away from you and make it on your behalf” and thus make the nation poorer."
-- Bob McEwen
(1950-) US Congressman (OH-R) (1981-1993)

"The people have always some champion whom they set over them and nurse into greatness...  This and no other is the root from which a tyrant springs, when he first appears he is a protector."
-- Plato
(429-347 BC)
Source: The Republic

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

A Hypothetical Question About The "Right" To Choose

A hypothetical question for those who say women have the "right" to choose abortion.  Suppose someone announces at some point that there really is a "gay gene", and that they have developed a test for it.  Does a woman have the right to abort a child solely because it's going to be gay?

Monday, July 4, 2011

One Nation, Under God... Or Not


We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. That whenever any form of government becomes destructive to these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security.

This text is from the American Declaration of Independence.  I make that Captain Obvious statement because it is entirely likely that it is unrecognizable to many people today in America.  Most people would probably recognize and be able to recite part or all of the first sentence, at least those older among us who were taught this in school.  I don't honestly know if they teach it in school anymore, but since it refers to a "Creator" with a capital "C", I'll go out on a limb and guess probably not, or that perhaps it's taught as some quaint throwback to a more ignorant era.  That line is a cause for alarm for the left-leaning concerns that run the public education system in America as they are unwilling to allow the Judeo-Christian God into any discussion except for how to remove His influence from our society and culture.  Allah, not a big problem, but Yahweh is apparently unacceptable.  (Nota bene, leftist infidels:  When the enemy of your enemy is your friend, what happens when your mutual enemy is defeated?  If you on the left are expecting a peaceful co-existence with fundamentalist Islam in a post-Christian America, I have a Qu'ran to sell you... don't believe me, read it for yourself.)

This, then, leaves us with a problem.  If you remove the Creator of the rights the founders held self-evident, then along with Him go the equality and inalienable rights with which He endowed us.  Put another way, strike the whole sentence.  Obviously you have to replace it with something.  With what does the left replace God?  Man, of course.  In this case, not just Man in general, but only a ruling elite governmental granting of rights will fit the bill.  What we end up with has to resemble the following:

We declare that all men should receive the same rights,privileges, compensation and goods, and that these are granted to them by the Government, a Government whose purpose and concern is the furthering of collective society through social justice and the implementation of an egalitarian regulatory structure to ensure that fairness can be properly enforced.

Either God or Man.  Either endowed or granted.  Either permanent or subject to governmental policy changes.  Personal responsibility or Big Brother.

The political left (democrats, liberals, socialists, progressives, whatever they are calling themselves today) ideologically believe that Man is all there is, that Man is evolving and improving, and that freed from the shackles of religion and superstition, will one day become "good", and you simply have to lie to yourself to believe otherwise.  The left believes this despite the evidence proving this theory to be 100% wrong 100% of the time.  Where I'm from, we call that blind faith.  The truth is that freed from moral influence, Man is naturally and unrestrainedly immoral.  The left loves to talk about the Crusades as evidence that religion (meaning Christianity) is a corrupting influence.  Evil was done in the name of a brand of Christian-based religion in the Crusades, yes, but learn the history and the facts before you trumpet it.  Man without Christianity is better?  Mao Zedong: 40-70 million dead.  Pol Pot:  1.7-2.5 million dead.  Josef Stalin:  3 million documented dead (note that ethnic victims were not documented), if you include famine victims it's 20 million.  (The numbers are probably higher but sources vary.)  Adolf Hitler:  17 million dead including 6 million Jews in an attempt at genocide.  The list goes on.

The American left ought to think carefully and move slowly on the whole idea of removing the influence of God from our society, unless this is exactly what they want.  There are good reasons to think that what has made America good and great was the influence and blessing of God, and without God nothing but a piece of paper separates us from the godless regimes that kill millions for arbitrary political or racist reasons.  When you see a wall, before you take it down it is only wise to consider why it was put there in the first place...  Before rebuilding our nation in your secular humanist image, consider the history of Man and what the founding of a nation on biblical principles actually accomplished.  
If you wish to thumb your nose at God on a personal basis, you have that choice, and He gave you a free country in which to do it.  But don't speak for the rest of us by forcing the secularization of the nation when so many more of us don't want it than do.  In other words, if you wish to bring condemnation on yourself, no one can stop you, but have the compassion not to bring it on the nation.

The next two sentences of the quote from the Declaration also have a problem in today's America.  It's "the consent of the governed".  For decades now the courts, Congresses and presidents have been blurring the line between governing and ruling, perhaps never before like what has happened in the past two years.  It's as if some previously imperceptible restraint has been removed.  The fact of the matter is that the present government barely, if at all, has the actual consent of the governed; it's more that the governed feel helpless to do anything about it.  The majority in America today is beholden to and ideologically enslaved by the vocal minorities who hold elected officials hostage to the threat of losing their special-interest voting block.  Non-traditional marriage is decreed by activist courts despite the clear voice of the majority of the people.  Wars are declared (or "non-wars" are undeclared) and troops sent to die for unclear reasons without the legally-required consent of Congress.  Congress and the president collude to force through major unconstitutional legislation an overwhelming majority of the governed oppose... and the courts uphold it.  This is not governing, this is ruling.  And ruling is what the Godless do.  

But look at what else the quote says:  "it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government".  Why is gun control so popular with the ideological left?  Isoroku Yamamoto, Japanese Fleet Admiral and Commander-In-Chief during World War II, has probably been wrongly quoted as saying, "You cannot invade the mainland United States. There would be a rifle behind every blade of grass."  Whether he said this or not, the point is that in a nation where the citizenry is armed, invasion and oppression is much more difficult.  The founders knew exactly what they were doing with the second amendment; they were cementing the possibilities outlined in the Declaration of Independence; they were putting the future government on notice.  There are certainly people on the left who want law-abiding civilians to have no guns because they've been snowed into thinking that would somehow cut down on gun violence, but the ideological reason is to remove the possibility of resistance to out-of-control government. (Please note, I am not personally advocating armed resistance, I'm just pointing out the facts.)  The leftists want your guns because they think they can't afford for you to have them if they're going to succeed at their agenda.

And as to the last part of the quote, well, it remains to the reader to determine how close or not we currently are to the situation described:

Prudence, indeed, will dictate that governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security.

One could certainly argue the case that a "long train of abuses and usurpations" has occurred and is underway.  Not so long ago some of the people rose up and created the Tea Party...  which appears to have been subsumed and defanged by the establishment Republican party.  It forces one to wonder if the current government can be reformed at all.

Happy Independence Day, America.  Take some time between the hot dogs and fireworks to remember who you are, and consider how not to become just another chapter in the history of failed states.  There's a huge difference between independence from Britain and independence from the Creator of your rights.  You're at a crossroads.  Consider carefully and decide wisely.  

There has never been a time for vigilance in America as today.  Stand and be counted... or sit and be ruled.