Friday, November 30, 2012

Really?

Just caught a bit of news about the president's latest "compromise" offer to Republicans on the so-called "Fiscal Cliff" negotiations.

OK, I won't raise the marginal rate above 35 percent on folks who make over $250K.  I'll just charge them 30% on all earnings.

They may have been acting stupid since Romney lost what should have been a slam dunk election.  But seriously!  Even Boehner's not that stupid!

On Unions

It has been rather fascinating to watch the liquidation of Hostess, which is claimed by the company to be directly caused by their unions' refusal to negotiate lower salaries, higher employee contributions to health insurance, and reduced pension benefits.

Sure, it is most likely true that the failure of the company to get those concessions from their unions pushed them over the edge.  But I'd say that ultimately it wasn't the union that was responsible for Hostess' demise.  It was Hostess' management team.

All the same, I found it a bit puzzling that the union chose unemployment for their members over concessions that would have kept them employed.

There's a consistent theme in the business world today.  Globalization means that non-union companies, especially those operating in the far east, can produce goods much more cheaply than their US-based unionized competitors.  So eventually, unless the US company can innovate proprietary technologies or processes that lower their costs in a way that offsets their fixed labor expenses, they will eventually have to close their US-based operations.  Bankruptcy or moving operations offshore become companies' only available options.

So Hostess could have closed their plants, including the local plant here in Columbus, and open new plants in China or Taiwan.  Probably not Mexico, because US companies tried Mexico back in the 90's and mostly had to rethink the decision because of the excessive corruption in the Mexican government that makes it nearly impossible to do business there.

One argument that may hold some water is that the union workers at Hostess should be grateful that the company tried so hard to keep their operations running here in the US, they ended up being bankrupted by lower-cost competitors.  So their union workers kept their jobs much longer than most of their counterparts in other US-based manufacturing businesses.

Strikers picketing outside the Columbus plant were interviewed for The Republic.  They seemed to think the company's threats of business closure were somehow just negotiating tactics.  Even after the liquidation of the company was announced, the picketers kept at it for a few more days.  Were they hoping somehow the company would suddenly announce, "OK, we were just kidding.  Come back and negotiate with us so you can get back to work."

Now jobless union folks are griping about the size of the incentive bonuses being paid to Hostess managers that are staying on to help facilitate the sale and liquidation of company assets.  That's a common practice, and while understandable that the bonuses seem excessive to $10-an-hour production workers, there's really nothing untoward happening there.

For years, whenever I walked past the Hostess rack in convenience stores I would marvel at their high prices.  Usually there's a Little Debbie rack in the same store, where near-equivalent bakery snacks are priced at about half the Hostess offering.  Unless one is addicted to Twinkies or Ho-Ho's, I can't figure out why they wouldn't just pick up the much cheaper Cloud Cakes or Swiss Rolls.  That alone was enough evidence for me that Hostess' days had to be numbered.

So the bottom line for Hostess is that their management team failed to define and execute a strategy that would have kept the company competitive.  But since the most likely result of such a strategy would have been to close the union plants and open replacement plants in places they didn't have to deal with unions, I can't envision a scenario that would have kept those folks employed without having to sacrifice their cadillac health plans or generous defined benefit pensions.

My take on unionism is perhaps a bit different from the typical Conservative Republican.  They seem to despise unions, and view them as communist organizations bent on driving their employers out of business.  I've worked for companies where I've heard management folks actually say out loud that if a union ever took over in their company they would lock the doors the very next day.  Some business owners truly believe that by operating their business they are serving their communities and the workers they employ, so they are shocked and insulted when their workers choose to unionize.

I've had the fortunate opportunity to work inside hundreds of companies.  Lately none of them have been unionized, as unions are mostly gone from everywhere except government and the big automakers. 

Union shops are mostly crazy.  The most visible craziness is found in the ridiculous work rules.  They're so restrictive that companies have to get very creative just to get the job done.  I have an old story about getting a light bulb replaced that I think is one of the best illustrations of the insanity of some union work rules.

Non-Union shops can at times be unfair or almost abusive to their employees.  But even though I observe maltreatment of nonunion employees on occasion, they're generally the exception and not the rule.

Dad's story about how the union saved him from a terribly unfair abuse in his very first teaching job is a nice anecdote in favor of unionism.  He got his public passenger license so he could earn extra money driving a school bus.  But the school superintendent declared that while he would be assigned a bus route, he would not receive any compensation for it, as it would be considered just a part of his teaching responsibilities.  Well, the union stepped in and forced the superintendent to pay him normal school bus driver wages for the additional job.

I also worked in a small cabinet manufacturer that was a union shop, but it was called a "House Union".  The union was formed and organized by the company's management, and the plant General Manager actually led all the union meetings and set the agenda.  Apparently it was a very effective strategy that protected the company from outside union organizers but gave the company a very compliant union.

My direct experiences lead me to these conclusions:

Right-to-Work:  Support
Wisconsin's restrictions on the right of government unions to negotiate wages:  Support
Card Check:  Oppose

The bottom line for me is that I support the concept of employees banding together for the purpose of negotiating favorable compensation and working conditions.  Managers who carp and complain about the union driving them into bankruptcy are a bit disingenuous, because in the end they agreed to the terms of the contract.  It's the company's responsibility to negotiate contracts that do not put their survival at risk.

I also find the mob infiltration into the major unions unacceptable, and can't believe that law enforcement hasn't been able to clean up that corruption.  I also think too many unions are built and managed for the benefit of those mobsters, rather than the members who are supposed to control their own union.  Finally, it's ridiculous that many unions funnel far too much of union dues money into Democrat politicians' campaigns.  If they want to influence legislation, they should do so through a PAC, not providing the primary financing for every Democrat candidate's campaign.

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Who Cares?

After the election I lost interest in politics.  Last night's Indiana blowout of North Carolina was much more interesting to me than any talk radio or blogs or articles.

They're all atwitter about the "Fiscal Cliff". *YAWN*.  So what?  I'd rather see the pre-Bush tax rates come back January 1st and let the Democrats and their media sycophants beat the drum about the nasty Republicans who refused to "compromise".  Their definition of the word means "compromise your principles", not "find common ground".

All Republicans need to do is stand up and tell the truth and let the chips fall where they may.  The House should pass the best possible bill that truly puts us on the path to solving the debt problems while stimulating the economy and tamping down the overreaching federal bureaucracy.  Send it to the Senate and tell them, "Let us know when you want to get serious and talk about our bill".

I know, won't ever happen.  Ergo, why care?

The USA had a chance to rescue ourselves from an incompetent narcissist who wants to be dictator, but there weren't enough informed and responsible voters to accomplish that.  So he continues to shred the Constitution, and commit egregious acts of corruption and lawbreaking (read: Benghazi, Fast & Furious).  And the country doesn't care.

Because it's racist and unpatriotic to point out such things.  Here's a news flash for those of you who think we conservatives oppose the President only because of his race:  No, we oppose him because he's lawless, incompetent, and is pushing hard for policies that have destroyed America as the free and prosperous place we used to know.

So I'll root for my favorite teams and try to make a living despite the government pickpockets.  Unless and until there's a leader who emerges who actually proposes solutions to problems that would actually work and has the courage to step up and force the issue, I'm out.

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Another Good Football Weekend

Notre Dame Football is back!  After knocking off SoCal, they've got a ticket to the National Championship in Miami against whichever team survives the remaining conference championship games.  Alabama seems most likely.

I'm making no predictions for the victor in that game.  But the Irish confirmed that their greatest strength is their defense.  That's a big turnaround, given that defense has been their greatest weakness over the past several years.  The Irish offense is decent, especially with the running game.  Everett Golston's done a good job managing the offense this season.  He's a decent but not great passer and has pretty good speed and elusiveness.  But the real strength of the Irish offense is its offensive line.  Those guys can manhandle just about anybody.

How they'll do against Alabama remains to be seen.

The Colts got to 7-4 today.  Great for them.  It was a dull game against the Bills with neither team able to get much done offensively.  I still believe the Colts don't have the defense or the rushing game to get out of the first round of the playoffs, but that takes nothing away from the fact that they've overachieved impressively this season with their roster full of rookies.

The Indiana High School championships weren't very dramatic.  Not really any surprises.  The Catholics won 4 of 5.  The only reason they didn't win the 5th was because they didn't have any high schools big enough to qualify for the 5A class.  That gets fixed next year, when Cathedral moves up from 4A to 5A.

It was sort of unfortunate for Indiana that they fell apart in the fourth quarter of what was a very competitive Oaken Bucket game against Purdue.  Maybe someday the Hoosiers will field a competitive football team.  In the meantime we'll just enjoy following Cody Zeller and the #1 basketball team in the nation.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

A Good Evening

A fortunate coincidence meant I was able to catch my two favorite college basketball teams back-to-back on ESPN last night.

The Butler Bulldogs caught North Carolina flat-footed and unprepared in the first game.  The Bulldogs dominated well into the second half before the more athletic Tar Heels woke up and took charge.  But the 29 point hole Butler put them in was too much to overcome.  I was nervous when UNC closed the gap to only 6 points, but Butler hit their free throws down the stretch to seal the victory.

Indiana was in a battle against Georgetown in the late game that was close throughout.  The Hoosiers were able to open a 5 point lead late in the game, but the Hoyas chose to foul freshman Yogi Ferrell, who accomodated them by missing his free throws.  That allowed Georgetown to achieve a tie at the end of regulation.  But three Hoya starters fouled out and Indiana cruised to a win in the overtime period.

I can't think of a more entertaining way to spend an evening, except perhaps being able to see the two games from a lower-level seat inside the arena.

Happy Thanksgiving!

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

The Frustration of Powerlessness

The nearest analogy to what I'm feeling these days goes something like this:

I'm a passenger on a train that's leaving the station.  Somehow I have received direct knowledge that the trestle over a canyon about 100 miles ahead has been destroyed.  I know that the train is certain to fall into the canyon when it reaches the missing bridge.  I've tried everything I can to convince my fellow passengers to join me in warning our conductor and chief engineer so they can take steps to avoid the disaster.

But the passengers are partying and don't want to hear my warnings.  They question my source, and tell me there's nothing to worry about - I'm just being a chicken little.  The conductors are deaf to my pleas, and the engineer is isolated up in the engine and unable to hear or understand anything from his trainload of passengers.

So now I'm just riding along, knowing the disaster that's coming but unable to do anything about it.

Likewise we're facing an economic disaster and a major war in the middle east that will do significant harm to everyone.  All the while our engineer (read President) holds extravagant parties in the Ivory Tower where he and his friends are entertained by famous celebrity musicians and actors, all the while implementing his vision of a utopian socialist society where nobody's rich but most everybody else (except him and his friends) is poor.

The fuse is lit in Gaza, the debt is guaranteed to exceed 20 Trillion dollars, and American companies are laying off employees, canceling projects, closing their doors or moving to more welcoming places.  All while the ignorant citizenry loses large chunks of their wealth every year but still worship the charismatic engineer.

My only option for survival is to seek an opportunity to jump off the train before it reaches the canyon.  But then the question will be, "Now What?".

Monday, November 19, 2012

Big Football Weekend

The results weren't what I'd hoped for, but the weekend before Thanksgiving was typically eventful.  High School and Professional games were disappointing, but College was satisfying.

I found the Class 4A Semistate game on the radio while driving home from the Indy airport.    Columbus East was driving toward a touchdown that would have narrowed the deficit to a single touchdown.  But the drive ran into a Cathedral wall, and the possession changed to the visitors.  Cathedral proceeded to drive the other way for a quick touchdown of their own.  By the time I got home, the game was over.  The fourth quarter had only just begun, but Cathedral had already inserted their backup players to play out the clock.

The Columbus East team hadn't been challenged by any opponent since they needed a dramatic fourth quarter comeback to defeat crosstown rival Columbus North the second game of the se.ason. 

But the Cathedral team is simply in another class, a fact recognized by the IHSAA, which has decided to promote the Indianapolis Catholic School to class 5A next season.  That decision will presumably open a clearer path for next year's Columbus East squad, which has most of its key players from this season returning.  Should East make it to Lucas Oil Stadium next Thanksgiving, will the long hoped for accomplishment be somewhat diminished by the knowledge that the championship was obtained without the need to overcome Cathedral.

Notre Dame won easily over Wake Forest on Senior Day, which wasn't unexpected.  Then Oregon and Kansas State both lost, paving the way for the Irish to take over the #1 ranking in College Football.  What makes it most interesting is that Notre Dame must earn a spot in the bowl game for the national championship by defeating their nemesis, USC.  The Irish haven't beaten the west coast school in several years, and have to know they're going to need their best game to do it this year.  If Notre Dame plays for the national championship, everyone will have to acknowledge they certainly earned the bid.

Predicting a blowout of the Colts by the Patriots wasn't something I did casually.  My blowout prediction fell short of reality, as I only figured on a 45-14 score.  My prediction was based on knowledge that the Colts defense isn't really that much improved over the last few years.  The Colt defense was incapable of stopping Tom Brady and Rob Gronkowski last year, and I saw no reason they'd be able to stop them this year.

Even though it's been fun following the overachieving class of Colts rookies this season, clearly they've benefited from a soft schedule.  I don't know if they can beat the Buffalo Bills, but they still have a reasonable shot at a wild-card berth in the playoffs.  Making the playoffs will certainly qualify as a major accomplishment for this group, but getting past that wild-card game is highly unlikely.

Fans should not blame Andrew Luck.  Peyton Manning would likely have had the same result on Sunday.  Neither Luck nor Manning play defense.

Friday, November 16, 2012

Civil Behavior

There is no doubt we've lost a lot of basic civility in my lifetime.  There are many examples I've been thinking about lately that illustrate not just impoliteness and incivility, but also extending to unethical and immoral behavior.

Who hasn't had the experience with rude drivers on the interstate?  The most common is the aggressive driver that speeds to your bumper in the left lane while you're moving past a slower truck or a string of slower vehicles.  The aggressive driver tries to intimidate you by accelerating so close to your rear bumper that you fear she's about to ram you.

As we're wrapping up orange barrel season, I have noticed the behavior of aggressive drivers when the barrels funnel traffic into a single lane.  They pull into the breakdown lane and drive past all of the waiting vehicles to the front of the line.  Some will even pull into the grass to get around everyone else.  These are individuals who believe they're more important than everyone else, and in their self-centered minds making it to their appointment on time is much more vital to the survival of the world than the mundane destinations the rest of us are trying to reach.

McDonalds has a creative new drive-through line designed to speed up service for those who want to grab a meal on the run.  The drive-through line is single-file until it reaches the ordering kiosks, where it splits into 2 lanes.  Some inconsiderate people have discovered that they can jump the line by driving past all the cars in the single-file line, then nosing into the outside ordering lane.  I've seen that behavior result in angry shouts from somone in line who was jumped in front of by the cheating customer, horns blown, and even attempts of some in line to block the line jumper with their car.  The offender's reaction is mostly to ignore the objectors, but a couple of times I've seen a middle finger salute.

Years ago I attended a conference session about recruiting the best people to come to work for your company.  She suggested an interview strategy involving having the candidate drive the interviewer somewhere, preferably in a big city during rush hour.  In her world, the most aggressive driver, one who speeds, violates traffic laws, uses the breakdown lane, cuts people off, or otherwise uses overly aggressive tactics to get to the destination sooner is the best candidate.  Somehow she suggested that you want to hire these kinds of people, because they're hard drivers who will get things done. Needless to say, I was not impressed.

Certain cities are worse than others in these respects.   My worst experiences have been in the NorthEast.  My best experiences with civil and polite folks are always in the south.  Increasingly I get a sense the incivility is spreading.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Twilight Zone

The media loves the Petraeus scandal only for its voyeuristic qualities.  Yet they exhibit no curiosity about how the scandal ties into the Benghazi massacre.  Only a few minutes with CNN this morning showed me the depths of media insanity; The CNN reporter and anchorette spent their segment discussing Benghazi poking fun at, guess who, Republicans!

The CNN folks think it's hilarious that silly Republicans are imagining bizarre conspiracy theories linking the Petraeus sex scandal and Benghazi.  Of course they show not a hint of curiosity about why President Obama sent out Susan Rice to weave the false narrative about Benghazi happening as a spontaneous demonstration. 

They ignore the facts that can't be disputed about the incident, from the fact everybody in government knew the demonstration story was false before Rice ever appeared on the first Sunday show.  That whenever a reporter (never one from CNN) has the gall to ask Obama a question about Benghazi, his only answer is something like:

The perpetrators will be brought to justice

and

An internal investigation will bring all the facts to light.

No disclosure of how the first will be accomplished, nor who's been assigned to run the investigation.  No explanation of why it takes an internal investigation to find out what Obama already knows, considering he's the one giving the orders.

So Charles Krauthammer said that Petraeus repeated the false line about the spontaneous demonstration back in September because the Obama adminstration already knew about his affair and was threatening to make it public and ruin his career if he didn't toe the company line.  But the day after the election they figured they didn't need that leverage anymore and just went ahead and destroyed him anyway.  Did Charles get that information from somebody who knew, or did he merely draw a conclusion from available information?

Theoretically we'll find out when Petraeus shows up to testify in front of Congress.  What I can't figure out is what he's actually going to tell them.  Its hard to believe Obama would allow him to expose the White House's malfeasance - I sort of think he's assassinate Petraeus first.  So either Petraeus is still somehow compromised and unable to testify to the truth, or he'll simply refuse to answer the questions come Friday.

Because there's no other logical explanation for Benghazi than the President ordered the rescuers to stand down, then was the source or at least approved the false narrative on the cause, then sent Susan Rice out to spin the false story, and has been actively suppressing all attempts to learn the truth ever since.  No way does he let Petraeus tell the truth on Friday.

And the media remains clueless and incurious.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Here We Go

68 new regulations per day.

Hundreds of companies announce layoffs.

Stock Market tumbles 300 points day after Obama is re-elected.

Investors dump stocks in anticipation of Tax Increases.

ObamaCare full implementation now assured. Majority of Americans Unaware of How it Will Impact Them.

Obama Administration blocks All Oil Shale projects on Federal Land

Petraeus resignation much larger implications than just an affair?

Debt to exceed 20 Trillion before Obama's second term ends

Agreement unlikely in time to avoid "Fiscal Cliff", taxes to resume Clinton rates for everyone January 1st.

Economists Project Unemployment will exceed 10 percent by Q1 2013. CBO predicts 9.1 percent.

2013 Recession Assured - Only Question is How Severe

Catholic Institutions Face Choice - Stop Offering Health Insurance to Employees or Close Down?

Crime Rate Skyrockets Across America

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Destroying a Political Party

Those folks we like to call the "Establishment" are delusional.  Apparently they look at Romney's loss and decide it's because he wasn't moderate enough.  If only Republicans would embrace amnesty for illegal immigrants, then maybe their candidate would get more Hispanic votes.  If only Republicans would back off the Pro Life thing, maybe more single women would vote for them.  If only Republicans would stress a stronger desire to negotiate peace than go to war, if only ...

As they spout these inanities, all I hear from these people is, "Republicans need to become more like Democrats".  Not surprisingly, lots of this "advice" is coming from (so-called) journalists and Democrats!  It's sort of like the Steelers telling the Patriots before a big game that people will like them better if only Tom Brady stopped passing the ball, and they used only running plays on offense.

Unbelievably, the GOP party "leaders" seem to be falling for it.

Somebody needs to explain something to Boehner, Priebus, McConnell and the gang:  Conservatives know why America has been the greatest nation ever established - freedom.  If your game plan follows the opponents' demands (to run the ball and never pass), then you have the wrong game plan!  You didn't lose because the other side has a better message; you lost because you failed to communicate your own message.

The whole "Fiscal Cliff" argument is happening now.  But you wouldn't know it, since the media's obsessed with David Petraeus' affair (but not at all curious about the reason it was made public the Friday before he was scheduled to testify in Congress about Benghazi).  I think the GOP-controlled House should stick to their guns and pass a bill designed to fix the budget crisis and reform the tax code, then tell Obama and Reid they can take it or leave it.  They can go ahead and pass the bill through the senate and get Obama to sign it, or we'll go ahead and let all the Bush Tax rate cuts expire.  All along the way, go on TV every chance you get to explain how this bill will help solve the problem and challenge Obama and the Democrats to explain why they refuse to support it.

Yes, I know.  The "mainstream" media won't give them the airtime and will actively promote the Democrat's message.  Which as usual will be misleading to false on nearly every point.  And the media will trumpet to the ignorant masses the White House theme that it's the Republicans' fault because they refused to negotiate.  Whatever.

Hinderaker makes a pretty good argument for this idea.

Be bold or go home.

Friday, November 09, 2012

Explanations Abound

for Romney's loss.  I've been mostly ignoring the news and have found my self rather uninterested in Talk Radio lately.  Somehow I still hear people theorizing about the reasons for Mit Romney's loss.  Republicans were so confident about taking over the Senate and regaining control of the White House, because after all, we haven't had such an inept president since Jimmy Carter!

But the people who showed up voted to keep President Inept in the White House.  All that's left is to wonder why.  Let's see if I can recall all the reasons being bandied about:

He's an ideological chamelion

He's a Mormon

He's rich

He doesn't pay taxes

He has Swiss Bank Accounts

He doesn't understand what its like for ordinary people

He's stiff and impersonal

He's too liberal

He's too moderate

He's too conservative

He will outlaw abortion and contraception

He will destroy Medicare and cut Social Security

He will cut Food Stamps

He would be just like George W Bush

He will start another war in the Middle East

He failed to expose Obama's failures and corruption

He failed to aggressively counter the lies spread about him by the Obama campaign

He didn't raise and spend enough money

He couldn't spend money on advertising through the summer while the Obama campaign was running negative ads against him to which he couldn't respond

He failed to explain how his policies would impact the lives of ordinary people

A dishonest press and media were unpaid activists for the Obama Campaign

Obama's photo op trip to the Sandy-ravished Northeast the days before the election pushed him over the top by making him look caring and compassionate

Republicans didn't show up to the polls - something like 3 million fewer votes than McCain got in 2008.

America's demographics have changed. There is now a plurality of people who have discovered they can vote themselves benefits, and they will do so from this point forward.

I suspect that he lost because of a combination of most of the above reasons.  But it no longer matters.  It's over.  The takers have overwhelmed the makers, therefore we makers can only prepare to be looted.

Thursday, November 08, 2012

In Defense of Social Conservatives

I'm weary of the constant drumbeat throughout the media and political classes as they vilify those Social Conservatives.  Especially since I happen to be one - it's not any sort of club where we sign up, pay dues, and have secret meetings.  It's simply a loose coalition of folks who oppose Gay Marriage and abortion and seek to uphold the First Amendment.

Democrats call us extremists.  Republican Establishment types blame us for Romney's loss.  Lies are spread about our motives and objectives.  We're portrayed as bible-thumping bigots and hypocrites.  Somehow we want to force everyone to believe as we do and adhere to our Victorian sexual mores, while we secretly practice our own sexual deviancy.

It's time to speak out for the defense against these terrible charges.

First and foremost, a Christian and Social Conservative does not hate people.  Contrary to the false portrayals believed by millions, we do not want to persecute, imprison, or even harass homosexuals.  Our faith teaches us to love them, but use our own loving example to try convincing them to turn away from self-destructive and immoral behavior.

The idea that faith-based programs designed to help homosexuals learn to change their behavior is somehow kidnapping gay people and indoctrinating them against their will is ridiculous.  There is no force in Christianity, period.  It is not wrong to enroll someone in a behavior modification training class that helps them change negative behaviors into positive ones, whether it's deviant sexuality, alcoholism, or drug addiction. 

Let's be clear - no, homosexuals are not "born that way".  And there are no studies supporting that hypothesis; if anything, honest scientific studies done on that topic have strongly suggested the opposite.  They've found the most predictive factors are single mother households, especially when Mom's boyfriend sexually abuses the children.  It's really a national tragedy tied to the breakdown of the family, not to some "gay gene".

Families are the key to a functioning and prosperous society.  America became great because most of our citizens embraced a simple formula for life success:  Children, behave yourself, get a good education that leads to a decent job (or business venture or career), find and marry the love of your life, build a home and family, and raise your children to understand and carry out those same values. 

Gays marrying each other doesn't fit any of that. Besides, if gay folks want to "marry" each other, nobody's stopping them.  They can go out in the woods and make up any vows they like, say them in front of some wiccan priestess, then build a life together pretending like they're just like a traditional family.  They can even sign contracts that give each other inheritance rights to each other's property when one passes. 

That's the open secret.  Gays don't want to get in front of a Roman Catholic Priest of Methodist Pastor and get married just like everybody else.  They want benefits.  Gay Marriage isn't about the holy sacrament called "Marriage" - most Gay folks are atheists.  Gay Marriage is about getting money and benefits - Social Security Survivor income, Employer-provided Health Insurance, stuff like that.

My personal version of Social Conservatism is that I don't really care if Gays want to pretend to be married, just don't disrespect one of the most important sacrements of my faith by forcing us to honor and support the idea of redefining that sacrament to include those flaunting a seriously sinful lifestyle.

Next we'll talk about abortion.  Science is actually on the side of Social Conservatives on this issue - a fetus is a human baby, not some blob of tissue that can be excised like a cyst.  The issue is typically obscured by the Democrat/Media establishment, who focus on pregnancies resulting from rape and incest.  They always ask that question of social conservative candidates so they can use their answers against them in campaigns.

Missouri's Todd Aken and Indiana's Richard Mourdock are the most recent examples.  Both men were stupid enough to give away what probably would have been certain Senate victories with their answers to that loaded question.  No matter what a social conservative candidate says on this question, it will be used against him.  Aken was the more idiotic of the two, as he came up with some theory bandied about in his church about women being able to avoid pregnancy in cases of "legitimate" rape.  Mourdock was much more innocuous, but his unfortunate phrasing, "That's something God intended to happen", became the television advertisement played on TV incessantly and was probably the phrase that lost him the election.

How about some truth on the issue for a change?

If a candidate being asked that trap question, my first response would be something like this:

Are you suggesting that we can all now agree that abortion is not appropriate in cases where there's no reason to kill the baby other than it represents an inconvenience for its mother?  If so, I'm happy to accept that agreement and move ahead to stop doctors from aborting children for no reason other than the Mother doesn't feel like bringing her into the world.  Now that that's out of the way, we can start talking about rape and incest.

We already agree that rape and incest are horrible things.  They're illegal, immoral, and terribly abusive to the women that are victimized.  What I would like folks to consider is this basic question:  Who should be punished for this crime?  The man who committed it, or the baby that may have resulted?  Why kill the innocent baby - what did she do wrong?  What message do we send to all those who are living happy and productive lives right now, when we say to those victims it's OK to kill your baby if she came about because of a rape or incest?  Are their lives somehow less valuable than the rest of us?

Abortion in the end doesn't need God or Religion's involvement to tell us its wrong.  If we believe it's wrong to kill a healthy infant, then it's wrong whether or not the infant has been born or not.  Science confirms that babies are babies, and from conception through adulthood they're continuously developing.  So its silly to suggest just because a child still lives inside its mother's womb, that makes it OK to kill her.

What this Social Conservative just came to realize on Tuesday is that we're no longer the "Moral Majority" of 20-30 years ago, but have become a marginalized and persecuted minority.  As our ancestors who shared our faith have been for most of the last 2,000 years.  In many ways, we've already been forced underground.  We're no longer allowed to say so many things out loud anywhere but within the walls of our churches - things like abortion is wrong, homosexuality and adultery are sins, envy is a sin, rejecting God forfeits your chance for life after death.  Such ideas are ridiculed and we are called bigots, superstitious, weak-minded, stupid, and racist.  (The racist charge is the wierdest - where is there anything in this post that has anything remotely to do with race?)

In the end, all we're saying is that faith and morals are the foundation of a prosperous, happy society.  We have watched all that slip away through the deliberate efforts of the "Progressives" over our lifetimes.  And we understand that our complacency is partly to be blamed for allowing that to happen.  Now we live in a country that is full of hate, crime, immorality, envy and injustice.  All brought about because we allowed the Progressives to marginalize us and destroy the country in the process while trying to implement what they believed would be some sort of utopia.

Wednesday, November 07, 2012

Revelations

Some conversations I had recently brought to mind the experience I had when I was 17 years old with an OBE (Out-of-Body Experience) or an NDE (Near-Death Experience).  I told the story in a blog post here long ago.

Rather than tell the entire story again, here's a quick summary:

Early morning, I'm asleep in my bed.  I'm still in high school, living with my parents (of course), two sisters and a brother, all younger than me.  I have a dream, but it can't really be a dream because it's too vivid - so vivid I think it's more real than my perception of the world when I'm awake and walking around.

I'm floating, but don't have any sort of sensation of floating.  It feels perfectly natural and ordinary.  I look down at my body lying in my bed, and have a sort of bemused thought, "Hmm, I think I'm dead".  No trauma, no fright, no concern, just a mildly detached sort of curiosity.

I feel the light coming up behind me before I see it.  It feels like a warm, loving embrace.  In that moment I experience a feeling of being enveloped in something that we earthlings have such an inadequate word for: "Love".  But it's really so much more than that.  It's a warm embrace, it's unconditional, it's universal somehow, but it's still personal and inclusive of little old Me.

Anyway, I am turning around to enter the light where I will be embraced by God and so many others who have crossed through the veil into heaven, all of whom love me and can't wait to welcome me into their realm.

But as I'm turning I can somehow see my Mother walking down the hall.  She's either thinking or saying, "I need to get Dan up".  The thought enters my mind something like, "I better not leave now, Mom's coming to wake me up".  Instantaneously I'm returned to my body, where I open my eyes as I hear the knock on my door and my mother saying, "Dan, time to get up".

But that's not what this post is about, at least not the story itself.  This post is really about what I felt as I felt the embrace of the light.  In addition to the feeling of love and supreme contentment, I thought I suddenly understood everything.  Not everything about any specific topic, but everything about, well, everything!

So after I returned to mortality, of course I also returned to my limited human mind and my limited understanding.  But there are some fundamental lessons I think I was able to keep with me from the experience.  Just a few examples:

Our planet is the tiniest speck within the vast universe we can see through telescopes.  But that universe is one small universe within many other universes we can't detect or perceive with our limited human understanding. 

Therefore, time is a human perception based on the movement of our planet through our tiny insignificant little solar system.  Seconds, Minutes, Hours, Days, Weeks, Months, Years, Centuries, Millenia are meaningless measurements of time to God, who transcends time.  Because he lives in his own universe that is very different from almost everything we insignificant earthlings can perceive.

So we've been endowed by God with that spark we like to call a soul that he first gave to Adam.  When we die, that spark is able to escape our physical body and can travel out of our physical universe into God's own universe.  That's what we call "heaven".  It's not a place like we think of like Indianapolis, or Chicago, or the Moon, or even Mars, Venus, Saturn, or Pluto.  It's like another dimension that exists right beside our physical universe, but it's not very much like our universe.  Because all of the sparks that live there don't require our physical attributes to move around or communicate with each other.

Yes, God created our universe.  He created us.  Darwin's evolutionary theories are OK as far as explaining how God's creatures are able to adapt to earth's changing environment over time, but fail miserably to explain the origin of our stars, planets, and life itself.  For that brief instant in the embrace of the light, I really thought I clearly saw and understood precisely how God brought our universe and our ancestors into being.  It seemed as if I could even explain it coherently in a way that even a child would understand.  But when I re-entered the limited shell of my body, I seemed to lose that insight to the limitations of my physical brain and intellect.

Too bad, I might have killed in Engineering, Physics, or Medicine at College if only I could have retained a small piece of that knowledge and insight.  But something that the experience did cause in me was an inner feeling of exasperation whenever I hear people talk authoritatively about almost any subject.  I often find myself wanting to blurt out, "You have no idea what you're talking about!".  I may instinctively know that's true, and even often feel an inkling about what the real truth of the subject may be, but my body's own limitations prevent me from explaining.

My overwhelming sense is that understanding our universe, planet, ourselves and others is simple.  I couldn't believe I hadn't realized it all along, it was so extraordinarily simple and obvious.  But the experience left me with the absolute belief that yes, God made our universe and he created us.  God made us so he could share his love with us and we with him, although again I must point out that the word "love" is so inadequate to describe what it really entails. I think that's probably why most members of our race don't really understand, because they've never experienced love in God's form. All I can say for certain is, we earthlings have no clue what that thing we call "love" really is in its purest, God-given form.  It's so much more than a simple emotion or a physical expression or giving and receiving pleasure, yet somehow at the same time it's none of those things.  Because paradoxically emotion and pleasure are fleeting physical things that only mean something to our inadequate temporal bodies, and they mean nothing when we leave our bodies behind to commune with God and our loved ones who went on before.

What I don't know anything about is Hell.  And I don't know if it's because that knowledge wasn't shared with me or if I lost it when I returned to my earthly shell.  I have nothing to share about the existence or nature of Hell, nor how bad a sinner I'd have to be to be sentenced to live out the rest of eternity there.

There's actually much more I believe I learned from the experience, but the nutshell is about what God wants from us.  It's so very simple, and can be confirmed by Jesus' words:  Matthew 32:26-40.

God wants us to seek him, love him unconditionally (all your heart, soul, and mind), and love your neighbors as yourself.  It is so obvious that these are really the only commandments we humans need to make our universe the best and happiest place.  But of course we fail miserably. 

Simple, but never easy.

Goodbye, America, We Loved You

I was following election returns last night on Fox News, and it appeared that Obama was pulling ahead in Ohio and possibly Virginia while North Carolina and Florida were too tight to call.  Things weren't looking good.  Bill O'Reilly came on the set and his analysis was right on the money.  To paraphrase O'Reilly,

The demographics of the country have changed.  We're not the same America we were 20 years ago.  Democrats now have the numbers to overwhelm Republicans. They're consituencies are the folks who believe government exists to give them stuff.  Obama and the Democrats promise to give them more stuff, and that's how they win.

I turned off the TV right after he finished talking, knowing it was over.  This morning I opened up my hotel copy of USA Today and looked at the county-by-county electoral map and marveled.  It's a sea of red, with small pockets of blue clustered around the big cities.  The big cities are where the Democrats live, and they are establishing a new tyranny that will oppress everyone not like them.

We're officially no longer the Land of the Free, Home of the Brave.  We're no longer Of the People, By the People, For the People, but now we're strictly of, by, and for:

  • Black People
  • Hispanic People
  • Gay People
  • Labor Union People
  • Trial Lawyer People
  • Government Bureaucrat People
  • Socialist and Communist People
  • Welfare People
  • Atheist People
  • People who live on monthly checks from the government
Which is to the exclusion of Christians, intact families, entrepreneurs, productive/skilled/well-educated, and military families.  Which means everyone not in the club as defined above will be oppressed and squeezed for everything we own to support those in the club.  Sort of like the Mob.

Now we're guaranteed expensive healthcare that we'll have difficulty accessing, $5 or $6 gas, further destruction of our hard-earned savings, permanent high unemployment, escalating taxes enacted too late to stave off national bankruptcy, food prices skyrocketing out of reach of middle class families, and an oppressive, tyrannical government that dictates where we may live, what we may eat and drink, what medical treatments we may and may not recieve (if we're lucky enough to get an appointment), and general misery and loss of incentive to achieve.

I've got to remove my Prophecy post, it's no longer relevant.  I'm certainly no Prophet.

To any Democrat who may stumble across this post, congratulations - you know not what you just did.

Tuesday, November 06, 2012

More Fun with Football

The Colts and Irish are both great Indiana stories this fall.  Both had great games over the weekend that entertained me far better than some new blockbuster movie or concert.

I left the Notre Dame game for supper late in the 4th quarter and set the DVR for an extra 30 minutes, thinking that should be enough time to return and catch the end.  But when I returned to my La-Z-Boy recliner expecting to play back that last 30 minutes, I turned on the TV to find the game still underway in the second overtime.

Seeing Cierre Wood fumble away his touchdown run, I thought the game was over.  But astoundingly, Pitt missed the Field Goal that should have given them the victory.  My chin was still laying on the floor when the Irish took their victory in the third overtime.  They stole one for sure, but it still counts in the win column.

I'll happily stay for the ride with Notre Dame through their Bowl Game.  If that happens to be against Alabama for the National Championship, something I think is a long shot, I can't imagine the Irish winning that game.  But I'll be happy to be astounded once again.

I feel very good for Andrew Luck and the Colts.  The inspirational story of coach Pagano and the un-rookie-like performance of Luck against the Dolphins combined for a Sunday that was not just entertaining, but inspiring.

My own preseason prediction for the Colts was that if they somehow managed to end the year 8-8, it would be an impressive overachievement.  I still feel that way.  But looking at the Colts' remaining schedule, I think 9-7 or maybe even 10-6 is realistic.  Which would probably mean the playoffs.  Talk about overachieving with a team full of rookies.

But I'm not building my hopes too high.  The Colts still might end up 8-8, which can still be called overachieving.  But wouldn't it be cool if that record was 10-6 instead?

I'll just go along for the ride and have fun along the way.

Monday, November 05, 2012

Final Election Thoughts

Democrats think they're going to win tomorrow.  Republicans believe they'll win.  Both sides predict the election will be very close, and could go either way.

Democrats think the popular vote will be razor-thin, and could end up favoring Romney, but they believe the key swing states - especially Ohio - will push Obama over the finish line for an electoral college victory.  It's sort of interesting that the party that's pushed hard to eliminate the electoral college since Bush beat Gore is suddenly silent on that issue.

Averaging of polls show a tie or slight edge for Obama.  But the Republicans believe the left-leaning pollsters have skewed the average to make the race look much more favorable for Obama than reality might indicate.  The Republican argument is that liberal pollsters are expecting the same turnout in swing states as 2008, therefore they filter their respondents by party affiliation to oversample Democrats by 9 percentage points more than Republicans.

So if the Republicans are right about the oversampling, it looks like a Romney victory or maybe a Romney blowout.  Democrats understand their success hinges on their constituents showing up and voting in the same or very similar numbers to 2008.

There are little indicators being ignored by the media that aren't guarantees, but suggestive of a Romney advantage.  Romney rallies in the last couple of weeks are drawing tens of thousands of enthusiastic supporters, while Obama events are drawing from a few hundred to a couple of thousand people only, and those crowds are much less enthusiastic.

As would be obvious to anyone who has read my blog, my hope is for a Romney blowout.  The key factor I'm using is mostly ignored by the media and pundits - I believe in the resurgence of the Christian Conservative base.  Obama has stirred up the Christian base with the HHS mandate, his radically pro-abortion policies and rhetoric, cancelling Don't Ask - Don't Tell, and supporting Gay Marriage.  Catholics who actually go to Mass and Evangelicals have joined together in common cause to fire Obama, and I tend to believe they'll make the difference.

If you have an energized Moral Majority and a super-majority of Independents behind you in addition to the rest of the core Conservative base, there aren't enough Democrats in the population to overcome that wave.  That's why I think Romney might win decisively.

What puzzles me is the conflicting reporting on early voting.  USA Today this morning claims that Democrats have an edge among the early voters, but other outlets like Fox News are reporting the oppposite - that Republicans have a significant turnout advantage.  The best explanation I can find for that discrepancy may be that the Fox News turnout advantage refers to nationwide turnout, while USA Today is claiming the Democrat edge for swing states only.  I guess we'll see.

Will the Unions, Trial Lawyers, Blacks, Hispanics, Gays, Illegal Immigrants, College Students & Professors, Welfare Dependents, Dead People, Convicted Felons, Fraudulent Voters and Socialist/Communists turn out in high enough numbers to overcome the energized Christians, Businesspeople, White Middle-to-Upper Classes, Coal Miners, Oil Workers, Intact Families, and Federalists/Capitalists?

Hopefully we will know when we wake up Wednesday morning.  But wouldn't it be nice if we could hear this announcement by 11PM Tuesday?

"(ABC/NBC/CBS/Fox News/CNN) can now call the race for Mitt Romney in a landslide".

Saturday, November 03, 2012

High School Football

It got cold by the fourth quarter last night, so after Columbus East sent in the Junior Varsity after wrapping up their Sectional Championship with a 36-0 score against Franklin County, I trekked back to the parking lot and drove to the Circle K for a cup of hot chocolate before heading home. (The JV backups gave up 2 touchdowns to Franklin County to make the final score 36-14).

East and North both played in Sectional Championship games last night, and both outcomes were in line with expectations.  North was blown out by Center Grove, which was just as much expected as East's easy victory.

East happens to be ranked #1 in their division (4A).  But we know from past years that the ranking doesn't mean much in the state tournament.  They could get surprised next week by Evansville Reitz.  But looming in the bracket is the perennial powerhouse from Indianapolis, Cathedral High School.

Cathedral may have a pedestrian 7-5 record, but nobody, least of all East, will interpret that as the Catholic school being ripe for defeat.  Cathedral wins the State Championship in 4A more often than not, and although I'm sure the Olympians may hope they fall to 11-1 Mount Vernon in the Regional, that might be a faint hope.

Columbus East was challenged this year only by their crosstown rival North early in the season. They closed out a very close match with the northsiders late in the fourth quarter to pull out the victory on their way to a so-far undefeated season. 

Next week's Regional opponent from Indiana's toe is a bit of an unknown, since they had no opposing teams in common with the Olympians.  I think Evansville Reitz is also unbeaten so far this year, so the only way to predict the outcome of next Friday's game is by looking at past history.  I can't analyze the historical record thoroughly, but do know that North and East have both had pretty good success against the teams from Indiana's toe, in football and other sports.  That means little in an individual season or game, though.

So if East can overcome the boys from Evansville, it seems highly likely they'll have to face Cathedral as their final obstacle to the state final in Lucas Oil Stadium.  In Columbus, we can only hope the Olympians can repeat this year's breakthrough year by the North High School boy's soccer team, who finally earned for the 2012 state championship after knocking on the door but falling short in semistate for the last decade, then losing the state championship game on penalty kicks last year.

It's been so long since the Olympians were challenged this season, we can be a little concerned that they're not prepared for a worthy opponent that might force them to be at their best to win.  If they can rise to the occasion over the next 2 games, it will be great to see them playing Thanksgiving weekend at Lucas Oil Stadium.  I'd try to go see the game, except there is probably a family gathering that will take precedence.

Sports is my entertainment.  Life would be terribly dull without the chance to follow teams from local high school to the professionals.

Friday, November 02, 2012

Just When There was a Glimmer of Hope

Comes this article.  A Republican victory on Tuesday will only hold off the inevitable.  The news about the lowest birth rate in history combined with the fact that over 40% of those births are to unwed mothers is proof positive that traditional American values have been successfully destroyed by the Left.

The bastards go to government-funded daycare and preschool, then to government-controlled public schools and Leftist-dominated Universities.  They become narcissistic entitled brats who have been taught there is no God, they themselves are just evolved to be a little bit smarter than the ape, and government is God.  The girls will have babies with boys they don't want to make a family with, and the boys will spread their seed around indiscriminately with no thought of their own responsibilities.

Both the girls and the boys will adopt the attitude that they're owed a living.  They don't care where the housing assistance, food stamps, and medical care comes from, as long as it continues to come.  They are natural Democrat constituents, and will hand over control of their very lives to those who promise to keep the welfare coming.  To them, the most evil people in the world are those who dare suggest they should take responsibility for their own lives and get off the government dole.

A GOP victory this week won't fix this serious problem by itself.  Many Republican politicians don't even recognize the problem, and won't help those who do pass anything that might reverse the trend.  So hope is dim that we'll accomplish anything with this election except perhaps a temporary reprieve over the inexorable march to marxist atheist socialism.

Is the America I grew up in already lost to history?

Thursday, November 01, 2012

What I've Learned About Democrats

Democrats are everywhere around us, and they can't consistently be picked out of a crowd based on their looks or clothing.  I think there are two categories of Democrats; the ideological activists and the generational.

Ideological Democrats are fully versed on their Party's platform.  They firmly believe in and support socialist government that takes as much as possible from the wealthier citizens to provide programs and benefits to the poorer folk.  They believe in protecting abortion on demand and will fight hard to stop any laws that would attempt to restrict or delay what they believe is an inalienable right of women to destroy the baby in her womb at any time and for any reason.  They truly believe that if America would just stop making war, there will be no more war.  That rich white men are the bane of the universe and must be cut down to size.  That corporations are evil faceless entities bent on mistreating their employees and gaining monopoly power that would permit them to mistreat their customers as well.  That no rich person became rich by honest hard work.  They want their government to control people for their own good.  Dictates to citizens about what they may eat and drink, what sort of vehicles they may and may not drive, and bans on tobacco use (but ironically no bans on smoking of illegal substances) are all desirable functions of government.  They hate Christianity and seek to ban it, or at least force it underground.  They think Christians are ignorant superstitious fools who believe crazy stuff like God created us, not the random Evolutionary theory the ideological democrat considers sacrosanct.  Their substitute religion is sort of a hybridized version of Paganism and Eastern Mysticism, which leads them to believe our modern lifestyle is destroying the planet and needs to be stopped.

Generational Democrats are a bit different.  They are ambivalent about issues like abortion and redistribution, and aren't necessarily on board with the idea that government should restrict our personal choices about what we can eat or drive.  They're Democrats because their families have always been Democrats, or they hold jobs in the public sector.  Don't tell them that their salaries are too high and their pensions are overly generous, because they firmly believe they deserve every penny and more.  They will never accept that their compensation is bankrupting the country - rather they believe corrupt government is wasting money elsewhere and can fix the budget if they really want to without touching their pay and benefits.  They've never heard of Fast & Furious or the scandal behind the Benghazi terror attack.  They've heard of Solyndra, but don't know any details and figure it's just a right-wing propaganda story.  They like ObamaCare, even though they know nothing about it beyond that it forces insurers to take on folks with pre-existing conditions and cover adult children under their parents' policies.  They think that the blame for the bad economy lies solely with the Bush Administration, but can't really explain exactly how.

It is disappointing to have discovered firsthand that Democrat voters are voting based on mostly false and misleading beliefs about the critical issues facing the country.  It's sad to see that so many people are casting their vote based on these beliefs, which range from arguably to completely false:

Richard Mourdock believes rape is God's will

The rich aren't paying their fair share, and if they start paying their fair share our budget problems will be solved

Republicans want to outlaw contraception

Republicans will take us back into unnecessary wars in the middle east that bust the budget and kill our young men for no purpose

Oil, Gas, and Coal can be replaced by windmills and there will be no more pollution

Polar Bears are endangered by Global Warming

Republicans are against Education

Republicans want to deny healthcare to people who can't afford insurance

Republicans would have let the American Auto Industry die in bankruptcy

Republicans are bent on destroying labor unions

The only statement on the above list that has even a little bit of truth is the last one, but even that one can be debated.  Who wouldn't vote for the Democrats if the above statements were true?  If those were true, I don't imagine there would be anyone that would call themselves Republican.

This is what makes me sad, and unfortunately it means that several Democrats will be elected on false pretenses, quite possibly including the President.