Friday, March 14, 2008
There is no causal link between skin color and HATE.
The Rev. Jeremiah Wright
The Rev. Fred Phelps of Westboro Baptist Church
More here: http://www.signmovies.net/videos/signmovies/index.html
HAMAS Children's Television
Arab Children talk about being a Martyr
La Raza teaching Children how to break the law.
La Raza inciting hate. (Will Tijana become Gaza...?)
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
SC Candidates for Senator offer more of the Same
Abortion
National Security
Immigration
Social Security
With few exceptions mere mention of the above and the typical Republican rhetoric was offered as proof of competence.
The Three candidates were Mark McBride from Horry County, Bobby Witherspoon from Columbia, and Timothy Carnes from the Up-State.
Mark McBride is an overly confident young man who has mayoral experience but has much too simplistic a view of international relations and US foreign policy. His remark that the only thing we would lose if N. Korea took over S. Korea is the Hyundai showed a complete lack of sophistication on how important US projection of strength is. The US and its allies provide the Order and Protection necessary for the world to function as well as it does. The US is the light, and Mark McBride’s suggestion that we pull back our troops from around the world and disengage is not only simplistic but also dangerous. This talk got a lot of attention via Ron Paul. What Ron and Mark fail to see or REFUSE to see is that our globally interconnected economy requires that we project power. The protection of S. Korea from the N. Koreans (Read: CHINA) is as important as securing trade routes and securing energy. It is through the projection of STRENGTH that the US and the World have enjoyed the relative calm we have seen since WWII.
Perhaps what Mr. McBride is suffering from is a lack of perspective. There is less conflict in the world now than there has ever been. More governments practice some form of democracy than ever before. Mark McBride and Ron Paul perhaps need to turn off the sensationalist 24 hour news channels and invest in some real research into what actually goes on in this world and what roll the US plays in it. Basing foreign policy on hyperbole and sensationalism is dangerous. On a scale from one to ten I give McBride a -2-.
Tim Carnes has no previous political experience and I like that! He is an accomplished business man. He also touted that he was active in his Church. I like that but am always cautious of politicians asking for my vote by trying to connect with me on a religious level. Tell me you support the protection of my right to worship and leave it at that. Mr. Carnes has some great ideas but many are unpolished. Calling for less government and then calling for two or three constitutional amendments giving the government more control of our lives is not Conservatism, it’s double talk. We are suffering still from giving the Christian Right too much control over the Conservative movement. We have forsaken the Conservative call for less Federal Government when it benefits an objective like Abortion or Gay Marriage. Mr. Carnes struck me as a brilliant man, so I was disappointed that he had not seen this disconnect in his policy stances. I had occasion to speak with him at length after the meeting and was very impressed with his command of the issues. I think Mr. Carnes could be our next Senator from SC if he runs more as a TRUE CONSERVATIVE and less as a Republican. I give Mr. Carnes -6- out of a possible 10.
Buddy Whitherspoon is sharp and caring candidate from Columbia with a long conservative history. Buddy unfortunately had trouble verbalizing his vision. I have met with Mr. Whiterspoon and discussed Alternative Energy, US foreign policy and Conservatism. I know he “gets it”. The problem is he did not show that he “got it” to the Conservatives gathered in Cheraw this night. He used the check-list approach and merely hit the necessary items to be considered a Republican. I give Buddy a -4- on the night but a -7- based on the fact that I know his stances even if he had trouble that night expressing them.
The voters of the United States and South Carolina are dying to vote for a true Conservative. It was obvious from the three candidates’ presentations of their policies that they either do not care what the voters want, are not aware of what the voters want, or just are not truly conservative enough to give the voters what they want (Mark McBride).
I will be following these candidates and expecting much more in the near future. The Primary is in June. That’s right, June. Most voters don’t even know that it is time to vote again in a few months and incumbent Sen. Lindsey Graham is counting on that! Finally let me say that Graham was represented that night by two ladies from his office in Rock Hill. I found both combative and merely “yes men” that could not answer difficult questions. This is typical of how Lindsey had treated SC. I would vote for two of these three lacking candidates over Senator Graham (Whitherspoon and Carnes). His lack of attentiveness to constituents and his liberal political alliances warrant his immediate removal from office.
Don’t forget to register to vote, be an informed voter! Look for my upcoming column on TRUE CONSERVATISM.
Sunday, February 17, 2008
Fareed Zakaria’s “The End of Conservatism”
I love Fareed and Thomas Friedman not just because they confirm my bias most times but because sometimes they do not, and when they don’t they deny me in a way that is void of party politics and hyperbolic rhetoric. I also have been known to learn a thing or two from them. So… When I saw Fareed’s piece at Newsweek online I had a bit of a start. Certainly Fareed has not sided with the 24 hour cable news pundits. That would be crushing. Or perhaps I was wrong and he was right? Scared of either outcome I read on. It turns out that Fareed’s shorter than normal piece is kind of a musing rather than anything else.
Fareed starts out with the accounts of a Bush insider who is writing a book defending Bush and his policies and makes some good points. But that certainly doesn’t spell the end of Conservatism? He goes on about how “conservatives” are voting for McCain. Hmmm, not really Fareed. They are voting republican and McCain is the most Republican. You see Fareed even a great mind like your own forgets that Republican and Conservative is not interchangeable. He commits this error in the first sentence! “Conservatives are a gloomy bunch at the moment. Many believe that their party—the Republican Party—has lost its way and that it has done so by abandoning its principles.” You see Fareed’s assumption here is that Conservatives own the Republican party. We do not. He also assumes that as GW Bush is the de facto head of the Republican party for a time he is also for a time the head of the Conservative Movement. He is not.
Conservatives have not had a politician as a leader since Reagan. And to be fair, Reagan was not absolutely conservative. Only in hind sight do we see that he was the most important conservative leader of our time but by no means the conservative messiah. He was not the embodiment of conservative principles. But he was close. Certainly the closest of my generation.
So how can Fareed infer that because of McCain and Bush being the head and temporary head of the Republican party that the Conservative Movement is dead? Only by assuming that the Party and the Movement are inextricably linked. Again with much respect, he is wrong.
Conservatives are at a crossroads and we are in effect defining ourselves. (Not “re” defining ourselves. The principles of the movement have always been there. Conservatism is a priori. ) The world is seeing that Conservatives are not just Republicans and that we are not necessarily white Christians. Now, if you are wagering that the next conservative to come through the door will be a white Christian that would still be a good bet. But more and more conservatives are defining what we are and what we are not. We are casting off stereotypes that have haunted us and revising flawed policy. This distinction between us and the Republican Party is what is being confused as “the end.”
You see, the Conservative Movement has pushed the Republican Party for a long time. But it is not the only influence. Christian and Social Conservatives have also done some pushing. And modifying Conservative with “Christian” or “Social” makes one something other than a true Conservative. Your heart may belong to God but when it comes time to render unto Caesar your ass belongs to the Movement. And unfortunately on issues like abortion and gay marriage the opposite has been true. There is no way you can call for less government intrusion and call for a Constitutional ban on gay marriage. There is no way a rights minded conservative that understands the meaning of “slippery slope” will be for any federal mandates or influence on abortion. And don’t even get me started on Federalism and education or immigration!
These issues are being discussed like never before. Conservatives are not coming to an end we are actually streamlining and defining what we are. The next logical step is that we remove from the Movement the modifiers. Modifiers are fine in a political party but you are either a conservative or something else. I welcome with open arms the Social Conservatives and Christian Conservatives and the Security Conservatives, all three legs of Rush Limbaugh flawed conservative stool/table, to the Republican Party but there is only room for true conservatives to lead the Movement. I know this is tough for some to hear. I am sure Rush would call me Judas for my notions on abortion or gay marriage. Or, maybe Rush knows that abortion is a State’s Rights issue and gay marriage was a useful tool for Rove in ‘04 that never had a chance to be law but is ultimately bad for the country. Which ever it is we shall see.
So, Fareed’s eye catching title did its work. I immediately clicked that link and read what he had to say. On this subject however he is off the mark. Conservatism is much broader than any party and is not tied to the failures or successes of that party. Conservatism is what Conservatism is, a movement, an ideology, a values system. And neither McCain nor Bush can do permanent damage to it.
Friday, February 15, 2008
Guns don't kill people... Bombs don't kill people... SUVs don't kill people...
It’s coming. Just wait a bit.
After the obligatory waiting period of a week or two the attack on “Guns” will begin. I was living in
Soon after the
The problems of mental health, youth violence and desensitization will take an unfortunate back-seat to besmearing the availability of lawfully gained guns and accessories. The same ridiculous notion that more regulation of lawfully gained guns will somehow reduce gun crime will be explored and emotion rather than fact and reason will take precedent. The fact that lawfully gained firearms are rarely involved in any crime will not be brought up or will be poorly represented. The fact that outlawing guns will only result in criminals having guns will be ignored or poorly represented. The fact that lawfully carried firearms reduce crime will be ridiculed and belittled with no facts to back up the slighting of these truisms. And most disturbing of all politicians will call for more "gun" regulation, addressing the symptom, rather than more understanding of "people" and the reasons they kill, the problem.
It’s coming…just wait.
Monday, February 11, 2008
Nancy Pelosi goes NEGATIVE
While my mind struggles between a bad choice (McCain) and uneasy choice (Obama) I am once again reminded of the stakes. Nancy Pelosi on CNN’s late edition told Wolf Blitzer that the surge is a “failure.” She sights the same thing we hear from all the liberal candidates that the surge was supposed to provide the time and space necessary for
The surge was never designed to work in six months. It was designed to quell the violence enough for these goals of political change and reconciliation of religious sects to BEGIN. Not to be successful in total. Also mentioned are “benchmarks” that the
A list of benchmarks is great but if unrealistic deadlines are set it is only a list of failures that never had a chance. You can set as a goal loosing twenty pounds this week but you have no realistic chance of achieving it. You can set as a goal losing twenty pounds over the next two months and then only eat bacon cheese burgers and have no realistic chance of achieving it. Setting goals is easy, it’s the achievement of these goals that is hard.
What Pelosi is counting on is that you are stupid or very uninformed or so invested in defeat that you will believe anything to protect that investment. She doesn’t care that “Al-Qaeda in
What Pelosi will do is summarily suggest “failure” and hope that you believe her, or even grow tired of hearing it and elect a leader that just makes it all go away. It is tempting to be that person. It is tempting to be a republican or democrat and just want it all to go away. I know I struggle with it. But it will not go away without the US finishing what it started. The Iraq investment is like a 30 year mortgage on your house. Nancy Pelosi treats it like a five year car loan.
My admonition to you this election cycle is not a particular candidate but rather a particular mindset. A mindset that questions defeatist language and holds political leaders to the truth. Not the truth as we want it to be but the truth as it actually is. You can find this truth by doing your own due dilligence and research. It is not just your civic duty to vote but to be an informed voter. Nancy Pelosi hopes on the other hand that you remain ignorant and accept “failure.”
Monday, January 28, 2008
A dirty little secret and Barack Obama.
At first glance at the title to this piece you might assume this is a hit piece designed to belittle or discount the efforts of Barack Obama. You would be wrong. This is about a secret so damaging that it could rip apart families and friends. A secret so powerful that most dare not speak it for fear it will heap ridicule and shame on the head of the fool that spoke it. I however am going to reveal this secret to you now.
Republicans like Barack Obama.
From Rush Limbaugh to Fred Barns to Benjamin Cook, republicans like Obama. They like the way he campaigns, they like the way he is beating up on the
The question now is, does running an honorable campaign, being an inspiration and standing up to the Clinton Machine mean we will vote for Obama? For some it might. For me it will not. Obama is still a Liberal. That means he doesn’t recognize that Liberal social policy begets Liberal social policy and the never ending flow of money into these entitlements can not stop the social ills they are designed to stop. He doesn’t understand that national security is the most important issue of our time and that threats on our horizon are real. He doesn’t understand that the Federal Government is the second biggest problem in educating our kids and that less government involvement in education is better than more. (The biggest problem in educating our kids is the kid’s family or the lack of one.)
Barack Obama is an inspiring and great man. He moves me when he speaks, at times to the point of tears. I am not willing to say that there is not a scenario where I vote against my own party. There is. That scenario is very unlikely. I will say this. If Obama is running against the candidate of my choice this November and the results are close when I go to bed, I will not go to bed in a state of panic or fear scared that a Liberal will be the next president of the
Thursday, January 24, 2008
American Exceptionalism
It has been interesting watching the international markets react to our economic "troubles". The weak dollar has made foreign investment in the
These foreign markets rely not just on the value of the dollar and performance of our markets but on the predictability and strength of the
As it is, the world leans on us. This phenomenon is part of what is known as American exceptionalism. Most would point to other more tangible variables to explain this exceptionalism, variables like our constitution, republicanism or environmental explanations such as geography, climate, availability of natural resources, social structure, and type of political economy. These variables are not what actually make our country exceptional, rather it is the reaction of other nations to these varibles in action. None of these variables are exclusive to the United States of America. Other nations have similar political economies, more natural resources, friendlier georgraphy and climate. Why then are these nations not exceptional. A better question, why then are these nations not treated exceptionally by other nations?
You see it is not the variables nor the outcome that makes America exceptional, rather it is the fact that we are treated exceptionally by other nations. We are held to different standards and given larger responsibilities, not because we ask to be exceptional but because others ask it of us. So it is the act of others asking and us acting that makes us different from all other nations in world. There is no arrogance nor benevolence to this relationship. We did not ask for this responsibility but neither can we shrink from it. It is just the way it is. So as Dubai, and the United Arab Emirates buy up our resorts, ports and bail out our banks ask yourself what it is they are really investing in? What makes this American investment more attractive than another? The answer? The exceptional security provided by the US in the form of order and predictability, something in short supply in the Middle East.