Wednesday, September 26, 2012

It Must Be ... Peer Pressure?

This week I have been thinking about the irrational behavior of the Hollywood celebrities who continue to support Barack Obama in spite of the fact his policies are in direct conflict with most of their personal interests.

I keep puzzling over why singers and actors and other artists would continue idolizing the President who has promised to confiscate half their income, work against their ability to obtain healthcare for their various diseases (social and other), and tamp down their most treasured of rights - Freedom of Speech? 

Then there's his demonstrated promise to impoverish most Americans and take the profits of companies that presumably would include film and music companies, which further depress the market for these people's artistic expression.

OK, so he promises to pay for their abortions, and provide government freebies for their same-sex bedfellows, but is it really rational for them to support a president who's going to harm their standard of living?

So then it hit me.  The answer is Peer Pressure!  Hollywood types behave just like teenagers, and what's the most important thing in the world to a teenager?

Acceptance.  Being adored by their peers.  Being Cool.

Have you seen those creepy ads put out by Hollywood actors with writing on their hands pledging allegiance to Obama as if he's some sort of god?  It's beyond reason or rationality.

The bane of every parent of a teen is the comman phrase, "Everybody else is doing it!" to justify the latest stupid, crazy thing the kid wants to do.  Certainly in Hollywood, everybody else is panting over the celebrity-in-chief and making absolute fools of themselves as they worship him and make a game of finding the most outrageous libel they can dream against Romney.

It feels sort of like a revelation.  I think I can reasonably extend the theory beyond Hollywood to explain the leftists leanings of people from places like Manhattan and South Beach and Seattle.  It doesn't have to be rational; it just has to feel good and achieve that positive feedback from one's peers.

Perhaps that's why Adolph Hitler managed to be elected Chancellor of Germany so many years ago. (OK, I'm not saying Obama's Hitler.  Maybe a bit more like Vlad Lenin, or perhaps Hugo Chavez, but not exactly Hitler)

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

NFL Officials Contract Dispute

I haven't paid enough attention to the contract dispute to know what the sticking points are between the NFL owners and their referees.  All I know is that the referees want more and the owners know they have the upper hand in negotiations, because people don't buy tickets or tune into NFL games to watch the officials.

Driving to work this morning I heard a brief mention on the radio that the two sides were about 3.5 million dollars apart.  That surprised me, because in the economics of the NFL, that number's pocket change.

So now I'm thinking its about power, not about the money.  The surprisingly small number, along with the lockout, suggests to me that the owners want to make a statement and cow their officials into taking what they're given and never fighting for more again.

I don't know what the refs made in the old contract, but suspect it's a pretty handsome paycheck for a part-time, seasonal job.  Generally, if the refs were being asked to take a cut in the new contract, I'd be pretty sympathetic with their cause.  But if they're asking for full-time status and lots of new benefits like a Cadillac health plan and generous pension, I'd probably lean more toward the owners' side.

But I don't know, and despite last night's debacle in the closing play of the Seahawks/Packers game, don't care too much.  I don't know any NFL referees personally, which is the only way I'd have any interest.  But as a fan, I hope they make a deal soon and get the pros back on the field so we can have a bit more confidence in the quality of officiating.

Monday, September 24, 2012

In Search of a New Frontier

The  media is not outright declaring that the race is over, but they seem to believe it.  They're reporting on polling that shows Obama surging in the "swing" states since the Dem Convention.  Some of those polls stretch believability, as they come back with double-digit leads in some cases in states where Obama won in 2008 by much less a margin.

What I think I know is that most folks are entrenched behind either Obama or Romney.  And it appears that a very small group of folks, somewhere around 6 or 7 percent, will make the final decision for the rest of us.  They can decide by pulling the lever on election day for one or the other, or by staying home.

I think most of Romney supporters aren't terribly excited about Mitt the man, but are highly motivated to replace the current occupant of the White House.  I'm one of those that sees Romney as an almost apolitical moderate, who is unlikely to implement anything bold if he wins the office.  He'll will implement policies that will begin to trim the deficit, but he won't solve the debt problem.  I believe he'll work to repeal or defund or refuse to enforce ObamaCare, but I don't think he'll take the lead on some other, better healthcare plan to replace it.

I know of lots of folks who are thinking of sitting out this election because they're not inspired by either candidate.  Many people share a sort of hopeless feeling, that Washington has become so corrupt and partisan that they're incapable of actually solving any problems. 

I tell them I'm definitely going to vote for Romney for some critically important reasons.  I'm appalled at Obama's disrespect for Christians - especially Catholics and Evangelicals, and his willingness to abridge the First Amendment in favor of secularist policies to prevent babies from surviving to birth.  I'm appalled at his appeasement attitude toward Muslim terrorism alongside a disdain for America's traditional allies, especially Israel. 

I fail to understand how it's possible for a president to win re-election given the disastrous circumstances we're experiencing when his campaign's only messages are, "At least I'm not as bad as the other guy", and "The rich need to pay more taxes".  It's as if the entire country has gone insane, with a significant percentage seeming to worship the president as if he's some sort of demi-god.

We deserve the suffering we got when we elected him, and deserve the suffering to come should we do it again.  If that happens, how can those like me who yearn for freedom go to start over as free people?

Friday, September 21, 2012

Congratulations

To Columbus East's own Stevie Brown for his interception last night.

After the New York Giants had scored another touchdown in the fourth quarter to extend their lead over the Carolina Panthers to 33-7, Cam Newton passed his Panthers down the field into the red zone.  Safety Anrel Rolle successfully defended against a Newton pass attempt in the end zone and was injured after colliding with a sideline cameraman (or woman).

So Stevie Brown took his place for Carolina's 3rd and goal play.  As Newton dropped back to pass, Brown watched him from the goal line.  Seeing that the Carolina quarterback's eyes were locked in on his receiver running a slant or post on the right side toward Brown, the reserve safety cut in front of the receiver and grabbed Newton's pass.  Stevie returned the interception down the sideline for a 44-yard return, then jumped up and celebrated, grinning ear-to-ear.

Congratulations, Stevie, on your first career interception!  It's been a challenging career, being cut by the Raiders and Colts before landing on the Giants' roster this season.

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Tale of Two Videos

What's interesting about this week's campaign distraction is that the Romney video released by Mother Jones was intended to embarrass the candidate, so it was answered by a release of an Obama video where the incumbent made an unequivocal statement about his belief in wealth redistribution.

The videos are both revelations about each candidate's feelings and beliefs.  And both are truthful, which I find most refreshing about the stories.  Finally, the most committed supporters of each will exhort their candidate to stand up and own his statement.

Conservatives widely believe that the country is circling the drain because half the citizens are riding in the wagon while the other half are being forced to pull the wagon.  It's getting harder for the pullers, and it hurts.  Soon the wagon will cease to roll, because there won't be enough folks left to pull.  That's when the country fails.

Romney's point was simply that that famous 47 percent aren't likely to vote for him, out of a belief that he represents a possible obstacle to their monthly check from the federal government.  The media and Obama narrative that he "doesn't care" about 47 percent of the population is a lie.  So all he was saying is that he has to focus on the 6 or 7 percent of the population that might be persuadable. 

Romney supporters strongly approve of his comment, declaring it no gaffe at all but just a statement of fact.  I think there are probably several net beneficiaries that are going to vote for Romney, such as disabled veterans and seniors who live on social security and medicare.  So obviously it's a bit simplistic to group all government dependents into the Obama camp.

Obama supporters strongly approve of his declaration in favor of redistribution, because they also believe in socialism.  These MSNBC types will exhort their president to stand behind his comments, because they think the only way America will ever be "fair" is when the government meets the needs of all of its citizens.

So the only point to the overexposure of these two videos is an attempt to influence anybody that might still be on the fence. 

"Mr. Fence Sitter, which do you prefer?", ask the campaigners.  "The Republican who dismisses all those who are dependent on the government for their lives, or the Democrat who promises more government handouts?".

Mr. Fence Sitter's decision is pretty easy to make, depending on his attitude toward wagon pullers and therefore whether he aspires to be a puller or rider.

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Marriage and Poverty

Mike Pence gave a speech promoting marriage.  Not gay marriage, but traditional, mother and father and two kids nuclear family marriage.  He promised to focus Indiana's policies on promotion and rewarding of those who finish their education, get a job, then get married and have children, then stay together.  Statistically, those who follow that basic life formula are almost guaranteed to avoid poverty.

The snipers on the Left naturally sniffed their disapproval, saying it's not that simple.  And he's some sort of bigot because he doesn't include homosexuals in that marriage promotion message.

The actual truth goes one step further.  The foundation of this model of the committed marital relationship and nuclear family is faith.  Those most likely to fit Mike's model of success are Christians who hold it as their moral obligation to honor their marital vows and take responsibility for their children.  Without faith there isn't much of a hope of restoring the family.

I think Mike most likely agrees with this truth, but he has to be careful about expressing it clearly.  These days that's the surest way to get himself marginalized as a "religious extremist", which despite its unfairness will cost him the Governor's office.

Still, if as governor he encourages churches to join him in promoting family values with consistent positive messages that show everybody why faith and family equals happiness, he could become the most successful governor in history.

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Is Obama Pulling Away?

The polling would seem to suggest that Obama's pulling away from Romney in the campaign.  Putting aside for now the argument that many of those polls grossly oversample Democrats, there is a simple explanation: Romney's a weak candidate.

Per my previous post, Democrats believe most of the narrative being promoted by the Obama campaign and amplified by the compliant media.  Romney will make the rich richer at the expense of the middle class.  Romney will deny healthcare to the uninsured, and especially women.  Romney will kill all regulation and let his corporate brothers run roughshod over people and the environment.  Romney will start a war with Iran.  Everybody knows this narrative, because it's unavoidable for anyone who watches television - we don't even have to watch news programs to be bombarded by these messages.

What's the Romney campaign narrative?  Anybody heard one?  OK, Obama's a failure.  But what's Romney's plan?  Nobody knows unless they take initiative to go to his website to read his 59-point plan.

My sense is the Romney campaign is a poor one, poorly executed.  How is it that these "expert" advisors to the campaign don't know that there has to be a simple, easy-to-understand theme.  Last time around Obama's theme was "Hope and Change".  Nobody really knew what that meant, but Democrat-leaning folks were included to fill in the blanks with their own hopes and desired changes.

But I'm realizing that nobody who barely pays attention actually knows what Romney's plan is.  Debt and deficit is a huge problem, but how's he going to fix it?  Iran is almost ready to launch nukes at Israel, how's Romney going to stop them?  Economists are predicting another recession, and unemployment's going to spike back above 9 percent in 2013.  What's his plan to reverse that trend?

Nobody outside of party activists and Romney's campaign staff knows the answers to those critical questions.

His campaign says, "Don't worry, he'll get his momentum back in the debates".  Not if he debates like McCain.  In that last campaign, Obama won the debates by making it seem like he agreed with McCain on most everything.  So voters came away with the perception that both candidates were essentially the same on the issues, so they voted for the "cool" candidate.  I think he'll do something very similar to Romney, since it worked so well for him last time.

I see Obama ads all the time, but seldom see a Romney ad.  The last Romney ad I saw was just about what a great guy he is, it didn't even mention policy.  It was ineffective.  Why doesn't the Romney campaign run ads that tell the truth about Obama's policies and goals that are already harming Americans?  It may be "going negative", but the truth is the truth regardless of whether it's positive or negative, and people need to know.

It's strange to see Romney so passive at this critical stage of the campaign, after he was so aggressive and even mean when campaigning against Newt and Santorum in the primaries.

Monday, September 17, 2012

Why Isn't Romney Ahead by 50 Points?

The common question these days asked by incredulous conservatives is, with the dismal Obama record, why isn't Romney way ahead in the polls?

I've been wondering that myself, and have been trying to find out.  Hardly a pollster, I can only draw conclusions by listening to Democrats.  So here are some of the reasons I'm picking up:

War Weariness: Some folks are still hung over from the Iraq war, and can't wait for Obama to pull out of Afghanistan.  They see no point in sending our children overseas to be killed in some God-forsaken desert.  Many of them think the Iraq war was initiated only for the benefit of Bush's friends in the Oil industry. And Romney will immediately go to war with Iran if elected.

Monthly Checks: Many seniors have succumbed to the endless drumbeat of the Obama campaign and now (falsely) believe they will lose their Medicare and Social Security if Republicans regain power.  Welfare and Unemployment recipients believe their checks will stop after Republicans regain power.

Union Busting: Union members see Republicans as union busters.  They have their evidence from what happened in Wisconsin and Indiana.  Wisconsin cut back on bargaining priviledges for public unions, while Indiana became a Right to Work state.

Healthcare: Something I find rather shocking is that many Democrats still support Obamacare.  They've convinced themselves that the law was critical to providing healthcare to those who can't afford it.  They believe that without Obamacare, all those millions of uninsured people will die because doctors and hospitals will turn them away when they're sick or injured.

I suppose if I believed all those things I'd be a Democrat too.  I don't know everything, but think at least partially the reason I don't share those beliefs is because I try every day to understand each issue completely and draw my own conclusions.

Rather than voting for the guy who seems to guarantee no war under any circumstances, I think the primary role of the Federal government is to protect us from all enemies, foreign or domestic.  So if Iran builds nukes and points them at Israel, I think we have to protect Israel from annihilation, even if it costs us another middle east war.

Retirees shouldn't and won't lose their benefits under Romney, and the Obama campaign is pushing a false message.  Rather than taking away the monthly checks from the other poor and unemployed, Republicans want to stimulate the private economy so it hires those folks and returns them to self-sufficiency.  To the degree that some of those folks have become dependent on those monthly checks and don't want to rejoin the productive class, we can only restore the Welfare-to-Work policies that nudge them back into the workforce.

Union Busting is definitely a Republican priority, so I don't have much that would refute the union members' belief that Republicans would happily bust unions.  Except in Wisconsin, they only busted public employee unions, which I believe deserve to be busted because of the corruption that's resulted in their rise to power.  I believe workers have the right to band together to form a union for the purpose of negotiating better pay and benefits for themselves, but the mob influences and abuse of union members so rampant in today's big unions is a travesty.  I'm fine with Right-to-Work, because I think forcing people to belong to a union as a prerequisite to making a living for their families is un-American.

Healthcare needs reform, but not the Obamacare Federal kind of reform that will certainly make it harder for all of us to get healthcare and dictate what care we're permitted.  The law is a horrible loss of freedom, and is interfering with our constitutional freedoms of religion and association.  By picking the insurance companies that can participate, then dictating to them what they must cover and at what premiums, there is no longer a free market in healthcare.  I believe the opposite of Democrats, that if Obamacare is allowed to stand, millions will find the treatments they need delayed or denied by the Federal government.

I'm also hearing folks who say they won't vote for Romney because he's a Mormon.  What puzzles me is how they'd answer the question, "But you'll vote for Obama, whose religion can't be determined?"  I've become convinced that Obama's an atheist - he may be sympathetic to Muslims, but his policies are those of an unbeliever.

I only wish those Democrats would do a bit of homework and at least learn the facts behind what Obama has done and is doing in office.  The truth is the best healer for toxic beliefs.

Friday, September 14, 2012

Nauseating Incompetence

As the facts begin to trickle out about the debacles of Islamic invasions into our embassies in the middle east, I'm nauseated over the incompetence.  If we can't explain the stunning incompetence of the State Department in failing to protect their embassies, we'd have to consider that our own leaders were complicit in the disasters.

We can't confirm the latest reports, that the Egyptian ambassador refused to allow those Marine guards to carry live ammunition, and that the State Department received 48 hours advance warning of the attacks in US embassies in the region and failed to do anything at all to protect their own people.  Since the Obama Administration has proven remarkably adept at covering up and suppressing any information that they think could reflect negatively on the President, it will certainly be difficult to confirm these stories.

Even if those stories aren't precisely true, who in the world wouln't have been able to predict that Islamists would mount some sort of attack on the US on 9/11?  It's simply unforgivable that Hillary seems to have treated the security of her department in the region so cavalierly.  It's unforgivable that both Hillary and Barack came out initially with messages that sympathized with the terrorists and bemoaned that inconvenient principle of their own country commonly known as "Freedom of Speech".  It's unforgivable that Obama spoke for a couple of minutes about the incidents as if it irritated him to have to deal with this distraction from his re-election campaign, then ran away from the press to fly out west to Vegas and Colorado for more campaigning.

No word on any actual response to these attacks.  Embassies are considered US soil, and attacks on Embassies are acts of war.  So Obama isn't sure whether Egypt is an enemy or an ally. Maybe somebody could give the so-called leader of the free world a clue?

Wait, Obama did do something.  He had Eric Holder hunt down the filmmaker and expose him to the jihadists with the help of their Pravda-like sycophantic media.  Maybe he hopes the jihadists will find and execute the filmmaker, whose film had previously reached maybe a couple hundred audience members before somebody at al Quaeda found it and brandished it to the faithful to inspire them to riot.  Then he insulted Mitt Romney with some comment about firing then aiming.

Meanwhile the al Quaeda gang celebrates a great victory against the craven idiot Obama and plots their next attack.

Again, what more evidence does anybody need that this guy needs to become a private citizen before he can finish his reign of destruction?

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Sociological Experiment

The purpose of this post has no particular point or statement to make, but instead is just to share some observations about race and diversity in the workplace.

In my capacity as a software consultant, I have the opportunity to visit lots of companies.  While no substitute for a scientific study, my observations over the years do tend to indicate some general conclusions.

If I walk through a lunchroom in a plant, I can observe plenty of interesting social trends.  In some places men tend to sit with men, women with women.  But that's not consistently true - I've seen lunchrooms where there's no discernable division in the associations of men and women.

But there's certainly an observable racial trend.  Here's what I've observed:

Where hispanics are mostly first-generation immigrants who may not have fully developed English language skills, they tend to self-segregate.  But those folks of hispanic origin who may be native to the US are much more likely to be sitting with the white workers.

I notice that Asians are also not completely predictable in their associations, unless you separate them by country of origin.  I observe that, say, Vietnamese are more likely to self-segregate in the lunchroom than those from Japan or Korea.

Black people often self-segregate, but not consistently.  It's very common to see some black people mixing comfortably with the white and hispanic groups, while others continue to self-segregate.  My working theory that's somewhat backed up by observation when I know a bit about the backgrounds of individuals is that the best identifiable factor in this trend is education level.  It seems that college-educated black persons are more likely to feel comfortable interacting with the white and hispanic employees than those with less education.

I haven't observed any self-segregation by Indian immigrants; they generally seem to be making an effort to integrate with their co-workers.  Although the Sikh immigrants may be an exception; but I haven't observed enough of that group to draw any specific conclusions.

White groups I don't find exclusive to their own race.  In fact, they seem quite open and welcoming to anyone who would like to join them, regardless of race or national origin.  Certainly there are exceptions with specific white cliques, but they seem to be exclusive more from a resistance to shuffling long-established relationships than from a racial bias.

Of course, I have never observed any open conflict or hostility between groups.  People tend to hang out with other people with whom they feel comfortable.  It's hard to be comfortable when there's a language barrier and cultural differences, which seems a good explanation for the self-segregation I see with Southeast Asians and first-generation hispanic immigrants.

Certainly the main trend I have noticed over the years is the significant increase in the population of immigrants in nearly all workplaces.  It's fascinating to see the number of employees born in America, regardless of race, shrinking significantly while the population of immigrant employees has exploded.  That trend is commonly celebrated as a virtue by most companies - but I struggle to identify exactly what's virtuous about importing folks from outside the country to fill your open positions while millions of American citizens can't find work.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

What More Evidence Do People Need?

Every single year on the 9/11 anniversary the Islamists have tried to hit us with terrorist strikes.  This year they succeeded. President Obama and his State Department were asleep, and Americans were killed or nearly killed by Islamists in Egypt and Libya.

There must have been credible intelligence warning the president in advance that these attacks might be in the works.  But according to news reports, the president's not really interested in attending intelligence briefings.  We should have had beefed-up security, especially in the Middle East. 

Worse yet, after the attacks finally ended, the president seemingly had no idea how to respond.  So others responded.  Now the White House is scrambling to repair all the mixed messages sent out by the State Department and the Administration.  Either America is sorry for our misguided citizens making films critical of the Prophet, or America condemns the attacks and wants those responsible for killing Ambassador Stevens and his staff brought to justice.

Or maybe a little of both.  Obama seems to have in the same statement offered regrets that American free speech rights gave offense, but at the same time condemns the violence.  Hillary Clinton's remarks sounded as if she is treating the terrorist incident like a political disagreement, praising the Libyan government for trying to help diffuse the situation while other reporting suggests that same government gave the ambassador's location to the terrorists and encouraged them to go get him.

This is what they call the Arab Spring?

What more evidence do voters need to figure out that the child prince Obama must be demoted to "Former President"?

Chuck Norris Told Me to

Go see the movie, 'Last Ounce of Courage'.  Who am I to ignore Chuck Norris?

So I saw it last night.  Sure, it was obviously made on a shoestring, and production values were on par with a made-for-TV movie.  It was sort of like a Hallmark Channel movie in many aspects.  It was over-the-top with melodrama and sub-par acting.

Even so, it succeeded in extracting some liquid excretions from my ocular region.  In its heavy-handed over-dramatized fashion, it delivers an important message about Freedom, Family, and Faith.  The effect of years of ACLU-driven attacks on public displays of religion is depicted in a small town where students might get suspended if caught with a Bible on campus, the Ten Commandments have been torn down from the courthouse, and a Christmas Tree can no longer be erected in the town square.

The movie is about a grieving father of a soldier who lost his life in an overseas war, presumably Iraq or Afghanistan, who is challenged by his teenage grandson to step up against the erosion of freedoms for which he and his son both fought. Grandfather and grandson both step up with the help of others, and are of course persecuted by the Left-Wing PC crowd to the extent that Grandpa actually gets jailed briefly after replacing a cross that had been torn down from a rescue mission in town.

The movie message is valid, even if its presentation is a bit overbearing.  The clear message is that Americans need to step up and be counted to save our most treasured freedoms from destruction by leftist forces.

Do I endorse this film?  Sure.  Everybody should see it.  Christians and Conservatives will love it, while Atheists and Liberals will hate it.  But if nothing else, I hope those who don't like the message at least will form some understanding about how the rest of us feel when they constantly try to drive our faith underground by telling us we're being "offensive" when we publicly celebrate Christmas.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Conspiracy Theories

I've been hearing lots of conspiracy theories from people I know who are completely turned off by the political scene.  It's hard to blame them, and occasionally their theories even seem plausible.  Here are a few recent theories I've been hearing.

The presidential election is meaningless.  The battle between Obama and Romney's all for show.  The fix is in.  Some folks think the election's already been fixed for Obama; that no matter what the voters do, the Obama administration will cheat on the vote counts and claim victory.  With what knowledge I have of the voting process, that theory's hard for me to swallow, since I've not seen any feds around the process that's mostly controlled at the precinct level and the president is elected by the electoral college.

Another theory is that there's no difference between Obama and Romney.  All the arguments about Obama's socialist policies versus Romney's free market policies are window dressing - if Obama gets elected, we'll get more of the same of what we have had the last 4 years.  If Romney gets elected, he won't change anything.  Because the invisible big shots that pull the strings have rigged things to make sure no matter which guy gets elected, he'll be sure to do their bidding.  I'm not sure who exactly the big shots are that are pulling the strings, but there's a sort of chilling plausibility to this theory.

Some think the string-pullers behind the scenes are from places like Goldman Sachs.  They note that despite all the angry accusations against Wall Street for destroying the economy with those real estate derivitaves, not a single person responsible for that destruction has been named or prosecuted.  The only name I've heard who misappropriated investor funds is John Corzine, who is apparently just as bad as Bernie Madoff but doesn't go to jail because he is being protected by the Democrats.  He actually is a financier for Obama, so that theory is pretty true, but I can't say with any certainty that he has a great deal of influence on US policy.

I hear lots from Ron Pauliacs about the Federal Reserve.  Maybe Bernanke and the Fed Reserve board are the string-pullers.  The Fed definitely needs a lot more transparency, but I worry about giving control over their policies over to politicians.  But sometimes I wonder if we've already done so by allowing Obama to seat Bernanke and Geithner, who seem beholden to him.

A theory that worries me the most is the one where Obama has a plan to transform America into a Communist Dictatorship under the same tactics used by Chavez in Venezuela.  All he has to do is get his own supreme court judges seated, then issue more unilateral laws like he has with immigration, energy regulation, and the HHS mandate.  Once he has no court to stop him, who could stop him if in his second term he outlaws conservative talk radio and Fox News, jails prominent conservatives, and either appoints his own sycophants to the House and Senate or simply dissolves congress?

Most people would call that last theory crazy, that can't happen in America!  Why not?  If it can happen in places like Cuba, Venezuela, Russia, China, El Salvador, Korea, etc., why couldn't it happen here?

Personally I think the pollsters are purposely over-sampling Democrats to give the Obama campaign the results they are demanding (based on a story about Gallup, it seems to lend credence to that last theory).  But I actually think there's a decent chance that Romney will win in a landslide, as long as the Obama campaign can be stopped from cheating.

So to put the conspiracists to rest, these things need to happen:

1. Romney has to win in a clear landslide
2. Obama leaves office quietly and graciously
3. Romney actually implements positive policy changes as promised

I hold out hope for number 1 and 2, but can't be sure whether we'll see #3.

Monday, September 10, 2012

Our Choice is For or Against God

The disgusting DNC spectacle that took place when they decided to push through the re-insertion of God and Jerusalem into their platform hit me with the realization that this year our country decides whether we're for or against God.

Republicans represent the "pro" side.

Democrats represent the "anti" side.

There's really no need to get into platforms, because both party platforms are mere details that affirm their attitudes toward God.

Pro-God means fiscal responsibility, personal responsibility, freedom of religion, less oppressive government, honoring and encouraging the family, and honoring work.

Anti-God means abortion and gay marriage, mandates that churches to abandon the core principles of thier faith, redistribution of wealth from those who work to those who don't, rewarding irresponsible behavior at all levels of society, and encouragement to those who openly and even proudly violate all of God's commandments.

The choice has never been more stark.  Certainly in my lifetime.  Most likely in the history of this republic.

And the media is crowing today that the polls show Obama's going to win.  If so, is there anyplace left on earth to which we pro-God folks can escape to live in peace and safety from persecution?

Saturday, September 08, 2012

Brilliant

This brilliant comment about Sandra Fluke at the Democrat Convention comes from Mark Steyn:

"But what's strange is that so many people don't find it strange at all — that at a critical moment in the affairs of the republic the ruling party should assemble to listen to a complacent 31-year old child of privilege peddling the lazy cobwebbed assumptions of myopic narcissism."

The emperor has no clothes.

Thursday, September 06, 2012

Here's to Ignoring the DNC

I haven't heard a single speech.  I haven't watched any network or cable convention coverage.  So how did I still manage to pick up on these little tidbits?

The Dems eliminated all mention of God from their platform.  They also removed a declaration that Jerusalem is the capital of Israel.  Apparently they took a lot of heat on those decisions, so they put them back in - by having their chairman lie about the voice vote results when they asked the delegates to vote on putting those items back into the platform.  This could be the most telling story of the convention about who Democrats really are.

Sandra Fluke is back as a primetime speaker at the convention. The law student who hates Catholics yet attends the Catholic University at Georgetown thinks all employers must be forced by government decree to pay for contraception and abortion for their female employees and their 26-year-old dependents.  But she can't come out and say that, so she has to invent a fantasy world where evil Republicans who hate women won't let them see a doctor or get a mammogram.  Republicans somehow want to force women to have dozens of children against their will.  If American women are buying that fiction, we really are in serious decline.

The single largest block of DNC delegates appears to be Teachers.  I wonder who's teaching their classes back home?  Maybe instead of the DNC we should refer to it as the NEA National Convention.  I wonder if there is a single private small business owner there as a delegate?  Wouldn't that person make for an interesting interview: "So you support the major expansion in your healthcare expenses brought on by Obamacare?  How is your business going to adapt to that and the rest of the federal regulatory costs?"

Democrats everywhere are swooning over Michelle Obama's "wonderful" speech.  Apparently it was so moving they cried.  This might be the confirmation of my consistent theory about Democrats - they're driven by emotion.  All heart and no brains.

Wow, how did I pick up all this stuff while ignoring the convention?

Tuesday, September 04, 2012

Hiding from the News this Week

For the sake of my blood pressure, I'm going to avoid the news this week. The DNC agenda appears to be packed with speakers who will extol modern Democrat party values, which nearly all inspire only nausea for this Christian Conservative.

It's more than I can bear to hear or watch Democrats extolling the virtues of illegal immigration, gay marriage and gay adoption, "free" contraception and abortion on demand, green energy and envy of the wealthy.

I've become weary of seeing Ms. Wasserman-Schultz and Ms. Cutter and Mr. Axelrod appearing every day on the networks spinning nasty lies about their political opponents.  I'm even more weary of those network pundits suggesting that the lies are equally distributed between the campaigns, which is itself a lie.  I can't bear any more of a President who operates under the philosophy that the ends justify the means. 

Instead of "Vote for Me", we have a sitting President running a campaign based on the message, "Hey, at least I'm not George W. Bush".  Or "Don't vote for the other guy, you'll lose your government check!".

For the last 3 and a half years I've been watching as my country circles the drain, barely hanging onto the rim of the toilet with my fingernails.  Down below, I see the rest of the people riding the whirlpool as if it's an amusement park ride.  I keep trying to get their attention to warn them of impending doom, but they just ignore me.  Soon there will be no safe place left to go.

Friday, August 31, 2012

RNC Observations

It was encouraging and uplifting to hear people like Mia Love, Ann Romney, Rick Santorum, Artur Davis, Condoleeza Rice, Chris Christie, Susana Martinez, and some others speak this week.  It was disappointing and discouraging to observe the media as they experienced a desperate meltdown and scrambled to demand that their viewers ignore all those lying people.

Paul Ryan is my superstar among the leading characters in the GOP.  The proof that his speech was pitch-perfect was found in the media attempts to attack him as a liar.  Only the Left-Wing media's manufactured "fact-checkers" turned out to be lying themselves about Ryan's reported whopper about the GM plan closing in Janesville.

MSNBC's "dog whistle" theme was proved to be merely a desperate ploy to paint the entire party as racist, based on ... nothing.  I spent a short time looking in on MSNBC after the speeches just out of curiosity to observe their "analysis".  Rather than analysis, I saw the Obama Campaign volunteer staff members who masquerade as journalists try to stop themselves from screaming in frustration and desperation, because they knew Obama's presidency was being systematically destroyed and they were powerless to stop it.

The MSNBC themes that accused republicans of racism and sexism were soundly refuted simply by the outstanding messages delivered by Love, Martinez, Rice, and Martinez, and Davis.  The party members proved the snarky commentators from Obama's House Network to be fools.  It was so silly and juvenile that the network chose not to televise any of the speeches given by those folks so they could pretend they didn't exist.  As if people wouldn't catch on.

Clint Eastwood's appearance as the convention's mystery guest was interesting.  He was funny and modestly entertaining, but I thought his presentation seemed off-the-cuff and unrehearsed.

Mitt Romney himself delivered an acceptance speech that wasn't terrible, but it certainly was a bit anticlimactic.  That's OK with me;  I'd rather have a solid but non-charismatic president who can get the job done than a soaring speaker who promises to cure disease and lower the sea levels then does nothing but funnel money and goodies to his cronies while our country circles the drain.

Thursday, August 30, 2012

What if the Fact Checkers Lie?

For several weeks now, I've been hearing Democrats and their media sycophants incessant whines that the evil Romney campaign keeps lying about Obama's efforts to single-handedly invalidate the welfare reform law that is a source of pride for republicans from 1996.

It continued at the convention with Rick Santorum's speech.  After the evening's speeches ended with Ann Romney and Chris Christie's impressive performances, I stumbled across Andrea Mitchell getting a microphone into Santorum's face to accuse him of lying in his speech about the welfare work requirements being removed by Obama.  After the ambush of Santorum, she and anchor Rachel Maddow commisserated about the gall of right-wing extremists like Santorum and the rest of the republicans to continue pounding such an outright lie.  For them, "everybody knows" it's not true that Obama removed the work requirements from welfare.

The interesting thing that's happened in this campaign is that the Left has created their own "fact-checkers" who turn out to be partisan crusaders for Obama and publish Obama campaign talking points while calling them "facts", then get quoted as the authorities on who's telling the truth in the campaign.  Of course, somehow actual lies from the Obama campaign team are buried, ignored, or explained away, while mere disagreements with Romney campaign rhetoric are inflated into outrageous and dishonest lies.

Where to go to find the truth about the welfare issue?  I've knocked around the internet now and then in search of facts, but until this morning failed to find any honest account.  Surely, if Obama wants to claim it's a lie, there must be some underlying story that he could point to that explains the misunderstanding or distortion.  But no such defense of fact could be found.

Until today.  The first time I've seen anything that tells the underlying story comes from Ann Coulter.
Sure, Ann's a major partisan figure on the right, and is known for her satirical approach in trying to expose what she sees as Democrat foolishness.  If you follow the link to her article, she explains what happened and why the Left built a very thin cover story through faux fact-checkers in an attempt to mislead the public.

If somebody out there believes they have factual evidence to the contrary of Ann's piece that proves Obama and Sebelius are not destroying the 1996 welfare reform law, I'd love to see it.  Of course, don't bother if your approach is to try to invalidate her by trying to refute her satirical suggestions such as the one about exempting welfare recipients so they can spend their time "playing XBox and eating Doritos".  Nobody thinks that's an actual qualification for receiving a work exemption, so don't even try.

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

2016: Obama's America Reviewed

Last night I decided to go catch the timely bio-documentary on Obama called "2016: Obama's America".  Before settling into my seat in the theater, I resolved to view it with a critical eye, since I could be reasonably considered a member of the choir prepared to receive Dinesh D'Sousa's anti-Obama sermon.

Expecting a partisan hatchet job against the president, I was a bit surprised to find the film had nothing close to a partisan tone.  It treated the president respectfully and approached the narrative more as an attempt to understand who he is and where his policy priorities come from, rather than Michael Moore-style disdain a la Farenheit 911.

The film was compellingly shot and paced, and very well done.  It wasn't too long, and avoided preaching about why Obama's policies have been so destructive to our country.  D'Souza instead introduced the film by explaining that he found himself puzzled by Obama's policy priorities after he achieved office on such a positive platform of unity, "Hope and Change".

D'Souza travels to Hawaii, Kenya, and Indonesia in a quest to understand the roots of Obama's personal philosophy, following the president's own autobiography as a guidebook.  The host concludes through his studies of Obama's history and interviews with his family members that the president is driven by a desire to prove himself worthy of the father that abandoned him by achieving the United States presidency and rolling back the American legacy of colonial exploitation of the third world.

Angry critics from the Left have of course used vicious attacks on D'Souza's motives, some of which were excerpted near the end of the film.  I read an AP review that trashed the film today by picking apart minor theories from D'Souza that tied Obama's attitudes on some specific issues to his father's.  The AP reporter's approach was to try to invalidate the entire documentary by suggesting he made some of those up ("There is no evidence that Obama believes ....").  The story also tries to argue against some of the assertions among the litany of problems that have been created by Obama's administration, such as arguing that his suggestion that Obamacare will cost a trillion dollars over the next decade (a right-wing lie).  It fails to even address the basic message of the film, which is that Obama was raised in a radical family, attracted to radical leftists who became his mentors and supporters, and truly believes he can and must transform America into a less wealthy, unthreatening member of the family of nations.

Personally, I found the brief scene of D'Souza interviewing a psychologist about the effect of parental abandonment on the psyche of children pretty much useless and unnecessary.  Although some of his conclusions about Obama policies based on "Dreams from my Father" are not evident, I tend to believe they are consistent with what we've seen in his first term and the attitudes he has projected throughout the past 3 years.

Ultimately, I don't believe it's accurate to describe this film as "Anti-Obama".  D'Souza never engages in gratuitous partisanship and is never disrespectful to the president.  He actually shows what I took to be sincere empathy for Obama's life experience and understanding about how he reached his adult attitudes and political beliefs.  In the end, he simply suggests that he doesn't believe Obama's attitudes qualify him to serve as the President of the United States.

Of course, I agree.

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Is it a Normal Part of Maturing?

I think about the old caricature of the crotchety old man shaking his cane at the world and declaring, "This country's going to hell in a handbasket!"  Am I becoming that old man because I increasingly hold that sentiment?

My grandparents were scandalized when the Beatles showed up on Ed Sullivan with their floppy hair and wild rock and roll music.  They were also aghast at the increasing depictions and frank discussions of extramarital sex on television during primetime, not to mention the constant pushing of the envelope in the amount of skin displayed.

I'm shocked to find out that the Democrat party considers my views on abortion "extreme".  That nobody under 40 seems to understand that a major factor in the social crisis our country is experiencing is the destruction of the family.  Now they tell me I'm a bigot if I don't celebrate the idea of the government forcing us all to recognize (and celebrate) gays "marrying" each other?

My generation dismissed our grandparents' alarm at loosening sexual mores, but now those of us who managed to grow up are suddenly beginning to understand why they were alarmed.

Truth doesn't change.  God doesn't change.  I suspect every generation experienced a certain level of hubris in believing theimselves to be more enlightened than all the generations of human beings that came before.  It's sort of like a disease that has become pandemic with this current generation.

Mitch Daniels was right in telling our generation at the 2009 Butler commencement that it's our fault.  Absolutely, the current generation is merely a product of ours.  We're the ones that taught them narcissism, the myth of self-image, and the attitude toward everything of "what's in it for me?".

We've doomed the greatest country in the world to a path that ends at anarchy and dictatorship.  We've doomed our grandchildren to lives of hopelessness and want.  Because in our selfishness we failed to honor our parents' values.

My generation created a mess, and somehow we should strive to make it right for our offspring before we die.

Monday, August 20, 2012

Missouri Abortion/Rape Flap

As one who would like to see the Senate flop to the GOP this year, I cringed when I heard the story about Todd Akin in Missouri suggesting that women who are raped are less likely to get pregnant.

Even if he can cite a peer-reviewed scientific study that backs up his suggestion, he was stupid to make such a statement.  He quickly tried to walk it back by claiming he "mis-spoke", but that doesn't really work.  I wonder if he really did hear that from a Doctor.  We'd all like to believe that's true, but even if there are great studies out there backing up the statment, it's probably not a great thing to say when running for a national office.

He was on a radio show and the interviewer was asking him about his views on abortion.  I was able to later hear what he said in context, and it was sort of an aside in a much longer explanation of his conviction about protecting life.  He would have done much better to simply leave out his thoughts about the ability of women to fend off pregnancy in the case of rape.  Obama himself expressed outrage in response to the statement.

His better response was that we should worry more about punishing the rapist than punishing the innocent baby that resulted from the crime.

Of course, in all discussions about abortion we hear the pro-choice folks talking about, "What will you do, outlaw abortions from rape or incest?  Huh?  Huh?"

Reasonable people can have their opinions on that question, but it's a distraction from the core issue, which is abortion as birth control.  I'm a self-control guy who actually holds old-fashioned notions of honor and responsibility.  Plus I'm a Christian who believes such things belong to God, not men.  I think abortion amounts to murder of a developing child, and it's silly to try to suggest a child is somehow less human if it happens to still be in the womb.

For now I have to deal with my disappointment that a single unfortunate sentence uttered by Mr. Akin will send Claire McCaskill back to the senate for 6 more years to continue inflicting terrible damage to the republic.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Fascinating Peek at Voter Demographics

USA Today had a fascinating lead article today by Susan Page.  It's easy to tell she's a Democrat, and it's also easy to tell she's worried about this upcoming election.

The article's fascinating because of the suggestions it makes about voter demographics and the overwhelming proportion of voters who know next to nothing about the candidates they're choosing.

It was striking to read that USA Today's numbers suggested that only 39 percent of voters are able to name the Vice President.  A woman featured in the article as an example of a disaffected voter unlikely to bother showing up at the polls was quoted as follows:

"I really don't know that much about him, but from what I hear, he's all about putting taxes on the middle class people, and I've heard that he's put his money in overseas accounts".

She's disappointed in Obama but has swallowed the false media-amplified narrative so aggressively hammered home about Mitt Romney by the Obama campaign over the summer.  She admits that she doesn't pay much attention to the campaign, or politics for that matter, which supports the idea that the coordinated messaging on behalf of the Democrat candidate is highly effective.

Polls consistently show that Americans are divided approximately in thirds: One third are committed Liberals, one third Comservatives, and the remaining third are in between.  But this article suggests that the true division is inside the approximately 40 percent of voters who are actually paying attention.  I suspect that among those 40 percent, about half are conservative and the other half big-L Liberal.  So the electoral fight is really to find that catchy jingle that will appeal the unwashed and ignorant masses from the other 60 percent.

If Romney wants to overcome the sycophantic media's Obama messaging echo chamber, he needs to find a way to connect to people at the grass roots level.  He needs a different narrative about himself that tells the disconnected and disaffected voters who he really is; rather than the elite rich guy who's going to stick it to the middle class so he can make his rich friends richer, he needs to promote an equally simple message that he stands for prosperity for everybody.  Alongside the message telling the same folks that Obama's objective is to make everybody poor except the government class, who live like kings while everyone else suffers.

Susan, the author, is clearly worried.  She found out that most of these disaffected voters who say they're unlikely to show up to vote this year voted for Obama in 2008.  She tries to make her liberal self feel better by offering the hopeful news that Romney's got only tepid support from the other side, but I think she's missing a very important distinction about that observation.

Although most conservatives, me included, are less than enamored with Mitt Romney, we are all planning to show up at our polling places with bells on to enthusiastically pull the lever for him.  Because we are unified behind the absolute certainty that Obama will destroy America if he's allowed to stay in office beyond January.

What's disappointing about the article is that it seems close to 2/3 of American adults are almost completely ignorant about candidates and their policies, not to mention any notion of how the Left's policies affect their lives.

What's encouraging is the knowledge that millions of people that were so enthusiastically turning out for Obama last time are disappointed and discouraged, and most likely won't bother this time.  I'm pretty sure that adds up to a Romney victory.  Although I also believe if more of those ignorant folks took some time to educate themselves, they would be more likely to be converted to the conservative philosophy.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Subtle and not-so-subtle referees

Factcheck.org was made famous in the previous presidential elections, cited often by both sides as some sort of independent arbiter of campaign claims and counter-claims.

I beg to differ.  Factcheck obviously bends over backwards in sometimes ridiculous attempts to show that both sides lie and distort the facts.  But there are big differences between the lies of the Obama campaign and the sometimes arguable rhetoric of Romney's.

Since they think they must show balance by documenting lies and distortions on both sides, the impression they're going for with their readers is that both sides are liars to some degree or another.  I think that's the strategy used by their fact-checkers who carefully construct their stories to ultimately benefit Obama.

Let's look at one example - Obamacare.

Factcheck says Obama fibbed when he promised Americans can keep their existing plans (ya think?)

But to achieve balance, they accuse Romney of misleading people by claiming that Obamacare will come between the patient and his/her doctor.  They spin like a top in trying to convince the reader that ObamaCare's "Advisory Board" isn't at all going to resemble Sarah Palin's "Death Panel".  Plus they're saying the only thing coming between us and our doctors is going to be the Insurance Company, as if that's going to be the only obstacle between us and the care we may actually need.

I think it's comical how Factcheck can't seem to make the linkage between the insurance companies and the advisory board and the obvious logical extension that the ultimate reason we might be denied the care we need is because our insurance company refuses to cover it because the advisory board told them not to cover it.

So where exactly is Romney's lie in saying, "And perhaps most troubling of all, Obamacare puts the federal government between you and your doctor".

Nearly every example on the website has a similar analysis that can be applied.  The reality is that most of the Obama lies and distortions are truly lies and distortions, while most of the Romney accused lies and distortions are easily argued as truth or at least much less egregious cases of campaign rhetoric or overstatement.

In politics, both sides are definitively not equal when it comes to lies.

Monday, August 13, 2012

Finally the Football Withdrawal Ends

Even though I had to settle for listening on the radio, it was nice to finally catch the NFL on a Sunday afternoon again.

The Colts destroyed St. Louis while I coincidentally was driving from Indianapolis to St. Louis.  It was certainly encouraging to listen while the Colts' rookie quarterback, Andrew Luck, matched Peyton Manning's debut by throwing a short pass to Donald Brown on his first play as an NFL QB that was turned into the first touchdown of the season.

The entire Colts team played well, racking up a 38-3 victory.  It's not enough to gloat or declare the Colts are back.  Because after all, it was the first preseason game and it was against the lowly Rams.

However, Luck seemed poised and effective.  The offensive line seemed solid.  The running backs corps seemed capable.  The defense managed to mostly dominate.

But were these promising signs really showing us that the Colts' new front office and new coaching staff were successful at going out and finding a a bunch of great young players and preparing them to play well at the NFL level?  Or did we just get a preview of how bad the Rams might be this year?

My hope is that the Colts have indeed found the right bunch of draft picks and free agents to give the fans an exciting and competitive season.  My prediction is that the Colts will go about 6-10 and miss the playoffs.  If they end 8-8 on the year, I think that would be an overachievement.

As long as they get better as the season goes along and give us hope for the future.  That might at least ease the pain a little bit in February when we're watching Peyton and the Broncos going against the Packers in the Super Bowl.

Then again, the AFC South doesn't look particularly strong going into the season.  The Texans are ahead of everyone else, while Jacksonville and Tennessee both look beatable.  Who knows, maybe the Colts can steal a playoff berth by sweeping the weaker teams and splitting with Houston?  It's not completely impossible, is it?

Whatever happens, it's all just fun.

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Paul Ryan's a Star

Personally I think Romney made the perfect choice in tapping Paul Ryan as his running mate.  Ryan's young, charismatic, brilliant, energetic - he's a GOP superstar and the model of the ideal conservative candidate.  He's certain to rev up the conservative base, since he's got it all; unapologetic conservative ideology on both sides of the fiscal and social issues.

The old women in the GOP establishment are already wringing their hands and crying;

"The Obama campaign will demonize him for his budget cutting and entitlement reform bills", or
"He'll drive away the independents".

I find it refreshing and a bit of a contrast with the party's Presidential candidate to bring on a Veep candidate who's not afraid to talk out loud about the philosophies of our founders and other conservative icons like Ronald Reagan without apologizing or equivocating.

When the election returns are counted in November, regardless of the outcome, don't try to tell me Romney lost because he picked Ryan.  I must believe it more likely he will win at least partly because he picked Ryan. 

He won't win anything by trying to entice independent voters by pretending to be a more moderate version of Obama.  That strategy's already been tried and it failed.  Remember McCain?  I continue to believe McCain would have been beaten even more severely had he picked a running mate other than Sarah Palin.  He lost because he ran as Obama-lite and failed to fight back when the media set out to destroy Palin in the most misogynist campaign we never could have imagined when he chose her. 

Romney can't win by trying to moderate his message or try to fool moderate-to-liberal voters into thinking he's not as conservative as the Obama campaign would like them to believe.  Misleading voters is what Obama and the Democrats do; it must not be what Conservatives do. 

We must stand or fall fighting for what is best for the country.

Friday, August 03, 2012

Campaign Mythology

The stunning show of support for Chick-Fil-A this week was a very hopeful sign that we still have a chance to stop the Obama project of American Transformation into a Socialist State.

I remain convinced that most of those who steadfastly cling to their support for Obama and the Democrats do so out of willful ignorance driven by fear.  For example, I just read about mass mailings going to public employees in battleground states spreading the false message that a Romney presidency will lead to the destruction of all public employee pensions. 

While it is true that public employee defined benefit pension plans are at or near the top of the list of costs that are bankrupting states and municipalities across the country, it is an outright lie to suggest that a President Romney would or could have the power to simply dictate the cancellation of such plans.   Each state and municipality must make those decisions independently of the Federal government.

The Obama goal is to use Federal dollars (that don't exist) to prop up the budgets of States and Cities across the nation, so they won't have to make those tough decisions they're now facing on how to balance their shrinking budgets.  As far as I know, none have yet cancelled their public employee pension plans, although Wisconsin famously tried to recall their governor for having the gall to require a modest contribution to the pension fund by that state's public workers.  The dominoes now falling in California with cities declaring bankruptcy will force somebody to make very difficult decisions, but even in those cases I doubt pensions will be cancelled in their entirety.

Today's Obama supporters simply reject the facts about his misdeeds, from Solyndra and Green Energy corrupt boondoggles to illegally changing immigration laws to implement amnesty without a single vote by a citizen or citizen representative to using regulation to close down domestic coal and oil production to violating the First Amendment by forcing the Church to provide free abortifacients to their female employees.

They are unwittingly trading away their freedoms of religion and association.  They're giving up their ability to choose what to drive, where to live, what to eat, what to believe, and what to do with their own property.  In return, they hope to get free healthcare and a comfortable retirement from their government without having the freedoms they personally care about taken away.

Somehow all of us need to find a way to get the message to the citizens Ohio, Florida, Colorado, Nevada, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and North Carolina that it's up to them to decide whether we have a chance to save our uniquely free way of life or give up to tyranny.

Wednesday, August 01, 2012

Confession Required

While attending a Catholic Mass out of town last weekend, I was disappointed to hear a political prayer mixed in with the Prayers of the Faithful.  It was not only political, but contrary to the true teachings of Jesus Christ.

Here's the prayer, paraphrased:
May our leaders take action to affect a more equal distribution of wealth among the people

The prayer may as well have been for all Catholics to cast their vote for Obama.

It's time someone took the time to refute this misguided attempt by liberal christians to mislead others about what charity really means.

The idea that Christians should support socialism is horribly wrong.  If Jesus believed that Caesar should confiscate money from his wealthy Roman citizens and give it to the poor throughout the empire, perhaps he would have preached that lesson.  Instead, he was very clear that it is each individual's responsibility to help the poor.  If we encounter someone in need, he challenges us to meet that need - not by demanding someone else take care of them, but by meeting the need personally and immediately.

The major flaws in the philosophy proposed by that prayer are numerous, and helping someone in need on a person-by-person basis is far superior:

Whenever a liberal expounds on the need for government driven social welfare, the source of the money to be redistributed is never them.  Proponents of government redistribution always intend for somebody else's wealth to be redistributed.  Because it makes them feel better to tell themselves that they care, because they helped take care of the poor by voting for candidates who promised to take money from those who deserve to have their money taken from them.  The liberal never considers himself someone who deserves to have his wealth redistributed.

Government socialism is inherently corrupting.  When you give a bureaucrat authority to redistribute other people's money, you are guaranteed that the bureaucrat will stuff as much of that money in his own pocket as he thinks he can get away with.  The less sophisticated bureaucrats just steal it, while the savvy bureaucrat makes sure to write volumes of rules and regulations that will allow him to steal it "legally".

Government socialism fails to recognize that people are individuals, and each individual has his own set of needs.  Government socialism is by definition a "one size fits all" solution.  Therefore, people truly in need will fall through the cracks of the system if they fail to meet some obscure regulation, while others who don't really need the help receive it in excess by simply learning how to exploit those regulations to their own benefit.

The fruits of socialism are corruption, waste, fraud, and failure.  It fails to lift people out of dependence while teaching them how to turn their dependence into a money-making lifestyle.  It fails to deal with people as individuals and solve each needy person's individual problem.

Worst of all, socialism is the last step on the way to dictatorship and authoritarianism.  Because it kills initiative and industry by punishing achievers in order to reward bureaucrats and sloths.

Therefore, the prayer itself is a sin.

Friday, July 27, 2012

Today's Important Stories

There are two stories today about the latest government outrages that should turn the people out with pitchforks to run the corrupt villians out of office.

The first is about an organization called the 'Voter Participation Center', which has been mailing pre-populated voter registration applications to over 200 thousand people who fit the profile of typical Democrat voters.

Despite the typical left-wing spin the story is getting in the so-called "mainstream press", there's a lot more to the story.  Anyone with a curious mind might wonder, where did this database come from, and how did dead people and pets make it into the database?  And why would the organization say they didn't know the database was faulty when it's clear they did and do?

This 'Voter Participation Center' is another one of those left-wing organizations of the same type as most of the others we hear about.  It's run by the Center for American Progress and funded by Soros, of course.  The organization of course has close ties to the Obama campaign.  And it's not just doing this in Virginia, but in all of this year's "battleground" states.

Here's how it works:  While Eric Holder sues all of the states that passed Voter ID laws in hopes he can stop them from being implemented until after November's election, this organization is mass-mailing pre-filled voter registrations to potential Democrat voters, plus convicted felons, illegal immigrants, pets, and dead folks.  The strategy is to get living humans to forge signatures on the forms so they themselves or other operatives can show up at the polls to vote for Obama, either as themselves while being ineligible to vote or impersonating a pet or deceased person.

When Holder rails against GOP voter suppression, what he really means is the suppression of illegal votes. 

The second story is about Chick Fil A.  The mayors of Boston and Chicago have publicly promised to block any attempt of the food chain to open any stores in those cities.  No, the company hasn't done anything wrong.  Those mayors simply don't like the fact that Chick Fil A's Presidnet happens to be a Christian who has spoken out in favor of traditional marriage.

In response to the company president's statement of a personal opinion, these mayors are illegally trying to ruin the company and slandering its president.  He would be more than justified to sue both cities for such fascist policies, whether he actually wants to open stores in those cities or not.

I think being slandered and banned by the Chicago gangster Emanuel is a badge of honor.  If I can find a Chick Fil A near where I'm working next Wednesday, I would be happy to participate in the planned show of support by getting lunch there.  I encourage anyone else who opposes oppressive government suppression by the thought police to do the same.

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

A Sad Week

The whole week makes me sad.  The Colorado movie theater shooting.  The Penn State punishment.  The Obama campaign calling all those opposed to his re-election racists.  Those who try to use Colorado for political gain.  The girl in Chicago who was killed by Planned Parenthood.  Obamacare was upheld in clear violation of constitutional principles.  Obama vilified all entrepreneurs with his "you didn't build that!" speech.

When I was young, no stories like these ever made the news.  I think it's not because the stories were suppressed, but because they just didn't happen.

Faith and religion are under attack.  People who support Christian and family values are ridiculed and called evil.  Americans now call good evil and evil good.  What was formerly the best country in the history of the planet is circling the drain.  We're setting records in entitlements and welfare payments, children without a father, illiteracy, and the chronically unemployed.

It makes me sad.

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Speaking of Truth and Liars

Ironically we've been subjected to the Obama campaign talking points hammering Romney as an outsourcer and perhaps criminal for stashing some money in Swiss and Bermuda banks.

The truth of the outsourcer charge is that it's a lie.  There's no evidence that Romney personally ordered, suggested, or otherwise facilitated the outsourcing of American jobs to foreign countries while with Bain Capital.  And of course, there's also no evidence that Romney broke any laws by opening offshore bank accounts.

But to the Obama campaign, the truth is irrelevant.  The objective for them is never to tell the truth, but rather to create a narrative against Romney that will make him an unacceptable alternative to Obama to occupy the White House.

They understand that the typical voter doesn't pay any attention whatsoever to the campaign.  So all they have to do is saturate the airwaves with simple themes that those uninformed folks can't avoid hearing.

So talk to the average American, and you might hear things like "Romney only cares about his rich friends", or "Romney's policies will destroy the environment", or "Romney wants to outsource even more jobs to China", or "Romney wants to destroy Medicare and Social Security", or "I heard Romney is a tax cheat who has millions of dollars stashed away in Swiss bank accounts".

Those people are Obama voters.  Not one of those sentences is true, but they will believe them all anyway.

If Romney wants to play that game, he could saturate the airwaves with ads putting out his own simple messages against Obama.  Like Obama's a communist who is transforming America into the Soviet Union.  Or Obama's plan is to bankrupt America so he can rise from the rubble as our dictator.  Or Obama will destroy the churches and trample the first amendment to impose a officially secular and atheistic society. Or Obama wants to deny us our home heating, air conditioning and electricity and purposely drive up our pump price for gas to an unaffordable 10 bucks a gallon.

Oh wait, most of those are probably true.

Doesn't matter though, because whatever message Romney wants to put out there is ignored by the press.  What they can't ignore they'll just try to refute as racist propaganda.  Romney can't get anything through the media filter, which is now the functional equivalent of the Soviet Pravda.  Nothing that casts the great leader in less than a positive light will reach the ears of the public.

Word of mouth isn't going to work either.  Obama democrats refuse to listen to anyone who would try to pass on the truth.  Their worldview rejects the possibility that any conservative idea could ever be anything but evil.

It would be nice to be able to believe those few voices on the Right who are convinced Romney will sweep Obama out of office in a landslide on par with Reagan's beatdown of Jimmy Carter.  But it requires more folks to actually start paying attention and begin trying to separate truth from lies.

We have about 4 months left to find out whether the majority chooses the door to slavery and tyranny or the door to continued freedom.

Sunday, July 01, 2012

Living the Crazy Lie Life

It struck me that the average Democrat goes through life under a system of beliefs that are based on a very large compendium of lies.  I was having a conversation this week in which we were discussing the question, are most folks of left-wing persuasion really true-blue believers, or just gullible victims of the false message of the left?

Let's examine a list of lies that most Democrats I know have swallowed, hook, line, and sinker.

9/11 was an inside job
If it wasn't an inside job, Bush parlayed it into an illegal and immoral war against Iraq
There would be no such thing as terrorism if our country just stopped greedily grasping for middle east oil
Bush lied, people died
Deficits and Debt don't really matter
Besides, if the rich just start paying their fair share, the deficits will go away
Voter ID laws disenfranchise voters
Undocumented immigrants (illegal immigrants is such a nasty phrase) only want a better life for their families
Those who want the government to enforce immigration law are racists
Fast & Furious was a failed Bush-era operation
All Eric Holder did was shut it down once he discovered its existence
The only reason Holder and Obama are withholding F&F documents from congress is because it's nothing but a partisan election-year witch hunt
There is no God
Life on Earth evolved from some chemical reactions that turned basic elements into single-celled organisms that over billions of years evolved and mutated into the human race, in gross violation of the theory of Entropy
Education will improve if only the rich pay their fair share in taxes so teachers salaries can be increased
Global Warming will destroy the planet 10 years ago
The only way to save the planet is for everyone to give up their cars, move to a big city and ride mass transit to work
The only solution to environmental disaster is global socialism
ObamaCare is about providing healthcare access to poor people
Healthcare is a basic human right, as is free contraception paid for by Roman Catholics
Catholics and Republicans want to outlaw contraceptives because they hate women
Conservatives oppose Obama because they are inherently racist
Nobody could possibly oppose Obama's policy priorities unless they are racist sexist homophobic bigots
Since Obama has quelled Islamic hatred and improved America's relationship with the rest of the world, we can disband the military and stop making war
When gas prices hit $4 during the Bush era, it was because Bush & Cheney were engaged in a conspiracy to enrich their buddies in the oil industry
This year, when gas hit $4 again under Obama, it was just because of market forces no president can control
Government subsidized windmills and solar panels will free us from awful global warming-causing carbon-based fuels
Unemployment is 8.2 percent
Obama had no other choice than to nationalize General Motors and give Chrysler away to Fiat
Excessive government union benefits have no effect on current federal, state, and local government budget crises
If only the nasty Republicans would stop blocking him, Obama will help us all make more money and no longer have to worry about our mortgages or medical expenses
I'm poor because somebody else is rich
Warren Buffet pays less taxes than his secretary
Democrats care about ordinary middle-class people
Obama's right: The only way the economy can recover is by having the government hand out money and free stuff to people
Easing up on regulatory and tax burdens won't help the economy recover, but will just go back to the evil Bush-era practices of licensing greedy corporate types to mistreat their workers
Republicans care only about rich people

The list goes on and on and on ...

Monday, June 25, 2012

The Course of the Nation is Decided

The long-awaited supreme court decision is due this week, perhaps as early as today.  It's the most consequential decision by the high court in my lifetime, with the possible exception of Roe v Wade.  It's a decision about what sort of country we will have from this point forward; a socialist state with an all-powerful Federal government micromanaging the lives of all citizens, or a mostly free society that permits its citizens to make their own decisions.

The question asked of the government lawyer during the Obamacare hearing that was never clearly answered goes to the heart of the question (I paraphrase): "If the government has the power to force individuals to engage in private commerce for health insurance, is there any private commerce the government cannot force on them?"

As we've seen with the more recent anti-religion mandate dictating contraception, the attitude of the Obama administration is no, there is no limit to what we can force on the people.  The same president just flaunted the law by making his own brand new immigration law without even consulting the other two branches of government.  Dictators act like this, not United States Presidents.

The Supreme Court needs to send a strong message to the president that he's not King Barack, but must govern within the constitution and laws of the country.  The best way to do so is to strike down the entire Obamacare law.

The law was passed against the will of the people.  It was passed in the middle of the night by Democrats without a single Republican vote.  It was passed with considerable arm-twisting, threats to Democrat legislators' careers, and bribes to other Democrat legislators.  It deserves to be thrown out in its entirety.

If the court rules the law constitutional, the grand experiment that was the United States of America ends.  Because that ruling will grant absolute power to the man who would be king.  If our self-appointed king then hangs on to office by any means necessary in November, we'll experience something akin to Venezuela after Chavez took power, or Cuba under Castro.

That's why this decision is so vitally important.  Everyone expects a single justice to make the final decision: Justice Kennedy, the man who hasn't discovered his core convictions yet.

Update: It wasn't Kennedy, but John Roberts who disappointed the nation by changing the law to manufacture a reason to uphold it.  Apparently he was hyper-sensitive to being called a partisan hack by the Left.  He didn't want to be the person responsible for the destruction of the Obama monarchy, so what he did was challenge all of us:  "If you think Obamacare is bad law, fix it at the ballot box. Don't run to me like a child running to Daddy to complain about her brother's misdeeds."

Roberts can partially redeem this horrible precedent (changing a law to make it constitutional rather than simply ruling it unconstitutional) by striking down the Sebelius mandate denying the Catholic Church and other people of faith their first amendment rights.

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Girls Get Equal Outcomes

This weekend I'm seeing lots of articles singing the praises of Title IX.  They universally celebrate the way the law gave the girls equal opportunities with the boys in sports.  In these times it's not cool to suggest there might be any downside to this big government program.

I'm happy that girls have their own chances to play.  But the bottom line to this issue is just like most other issues - the bottom line.  The effect of Title IX was that it told schools that they had to create girls programs using money raised by the boys' programs.  So the boys football and basketball teams bring in huge dollars at schools across the country.  The law forced the schools to steal a big chunk of that money in order to fund a girl's sport.

Colleges around the country were forced to close down some of their men's varsity teams, because another unfortunate outcome of this law was that they had to guarantee equity in the number of varsity programs between the boys and girls.  The schools couldn't figure out a way to add 2 or 3 or 4 more girls' teams to balance the number of boys' teams, so varsity sports like men's volleyball, track and field, hockey, swimming, and maybe even baseball got dropped.

For me, that's just silly.  Reflecting the leftist attitude that everybody's got to get equal outcomes whether earned or not, there's plenty of unfairness in play while the government implements their own version of fair.

One article talked about a lawsuit challenging game schedules for high school boys and girls basketball.  The suit complains that the boys get all the best game times, ie Friday nights, while the girls are stuck with games on weekday evenings and Saturdays.  Come on, give me a break!

Oh well, it's just me again, that lonely voice crying out in the wilderness against the stupidity of our culture.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

The Brand New Indy Colts

One way to address the disastrous 2011 season for the Indianapolis Colts was to start over.  That's the one Irsay went with, from the GM all the way to the last man on the roster.  This year's Colts look like an expansion team, with only a handful of players wearing the horseshoe who also wore it last year.

As a fan I was sort of hoping they'd figure out a way to keep Peyton Manning to help with rookie QB Andrew Luck's transition to the NFL.  But the only realistic way to do that would have been to get Peyton to accept a contract that was heavy on incentives and light on guarantees, so he gets his money if he plays up to form and the Colts are reasonably well protected from a salary cap disaster if he doesn't.

But the Broncos were more than happy to pay Peyton and absorb the risk.  They might ride that decision to a Super Bowl trophy, or they might lose Peyton to injury or damaged nerves in the first game.  They rolled the dice in the craps game the Colts decided not to enter.

Reports from the Colts' mini-camp were that their rookie QB looked good.  Strong and accurate, they say he looks great.

But he's still a rookie.  As are many of his teammates.  They might be good one day, but can they turn in a .500 record this season?  I'm thinking maybe they can get 4 wins.  But maybe, just like when Peyton was a rookie, we'll see the promise in Luck.  Luck may have games where he throws a couple of terrific 60 or 80 yard touchdown passes while giving away 4 or 5 picks in yet another Colts loss.

The fan in me won't be able to help myself with the nausea that may come when Peyton's holding up the Lombardi trophy next February with that horse on his helmet instead of the horseshoe.

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Contempt

Eric Holder tried to delay Mr. Issa's plan to bring him before the House of Representatives for a vote on Contempt of Congress.  They met, but Holder still refused to offer any more documents about that gun-running operation called Fast & Furious.

The questions Issa and the Congress wants answered are pretty simple.  Who came up with the stupid idea for Fast & Furious? (And stop trying to say it was the Bush Administration, that's simply false).  Who ordered it?  Who planned it?  What was its purpose?

Apparently Holder's been stonewalling to the point that he won't even verbally offer a hint about the answer to any of those questions.  He hasn't produced a scapegoat, and we've never heard about anybody he fired over the scandal, except perhaps for the whistleblower that brought it to the country's attention.  We still don't have any idea where the idea came from, what they hoped to accomplish, who ordered it, or who planned and implemented it.

There aren't too many possible reasons he's been so doggedly avoiding those questions.  One reason would be that it was his idea, and the purpose was political advantage in the argument over gun control legislation.  Another was that it came from Obama Himself, for the same political purpose. 

The only other possible reason is that the responsible person is such a close personal friend of Holder that he's willing to sacrifice himself to protect that individual.  That explanation is the weakest.

We've already had leaks and whispers from Justice employees suggesting that the first explanations are going to be the truth.  Making that public at this stage of the campaign could and should destroy Obama's re-election chances.  Therefore Holder will eat those documents with ketchup and salt before he will let Issa see them.

I wonder, will we ever find out why Brian Terry died?

Why Obama Must Go

Obamacare
HHS anti-Catholic Free Contraception Mandate
Cap & Trade Implemented through EPA without a Law
Amnesty for Illegals without a Law
Nationalization of GM
Government gift of Chrysler to foreign automaker Fiat
White House closes Chrysler dealers based on owners' political alignment
Fast & Furious
New Black Panthers Voter Intimidation Case Dropped for political/racial reasons
DOMA defense dropped in courts
The Litany of Outrageous, Overreaching Regulation Suppressing, Closing, and Driving Companies overseas
Apologizing for America to Enemies
Policies that Pacify Enemies and Offend Friends
Anti-Israel Policies
Demonstrable Lies in Every Public Speech
Race Baiting Rhetoric
Coordinating and Directing Media Agendas of MSNBC, Media Matters, and Major News Networks
Shuffling Federal Dollars into Pockets of Political Supporters in Bogus "Green Energy" ventures
Incompetence
Failure to Lead
Failure to Negotiate with Congress to Achieve Results
Exploding Deficits and Unsustainable Debt
Suing States over Illegal Immigration Enforcement
Suing States over Voter ID Laws
Gay Marriage
Usurpation of States' Rights
Education Systemic Failure
TSA
Homeland (In)Security
Drones to be Used Domestically to Spy on Americans
Divisiveness, Partisanship, Alinsky Tactics in White House
Leaking Classified Information Endangering lives to Prop Up Campaign

Friday, June 15, 2012

Glimpsing Truth

Recently the president's been giving us a glimpse of his true philosophy of government, which he went to great pains to conceal during his last campaign.  It started with his statement that was later called a gaffe, that the private sector is doing just fine and it's the public sector that needs help.

It wasn't a gaffe if he meant what he said, and all the proof we need that he meant it is his explanation.  He's spent the rest of the week after making the head-scratching comment expounding on it, not refuting it.

In Obama's world, government is supreme.  Private economic activity exists only as the money tree that funds those government workers he values most.  Obama's solution to the sour economy is to hire more teachers, cops, firefighters, and presumably all the other government professions.

Which points out another interesting part of his philosophy.  In America, the Federal Government has nothing to do with teachers, cops, and firefighters.  None of those folks work for Washington, but for their local communities that raise the funds to hire them, train them, and pay their salaries. 

So now we know another fact about Obama's philosophy.  In his world, the Federal Government reigns supreme, and local governments must be trumped by the Feds.  Because the omnipotent federal government, led by the secularist Messiah Himself, is much wiser, more caring, and better managers than any state, county, or city.

The positive outcome of all this is it finally helps us understand the stark difference between the Republican and Democrat candidates.  One wants to de-emphasize the federal government and promote the private sector, while the other wants to bankrupt the nation by hiring armies of government functionaries.  Which is more likely to result in economic recovery?

The answer is obvious to all but the ignorant and brainwashed.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

My Proposal to Save CNN

This is an open post for CNN with my suggestions on how they can recover from their disastrous ratings slide.  CNN has lost viewers dramatically with the emergence of Fox News.  They've lost many from their left-wing audience to MSNBC, leaving them without a niche.

I have two ideas for how CNN can return to prominence.  If they were to follow these two simple ideas, I believe their ratings growth would become phenomenal and force Fox to scramble in an attempt to catch up.

First, go back to CNN's roots.  Return to being first and foremost a news channel.  For most of the 24/7 cycle, use program blocks to rotate between Washington, the World, the Nation, and maybe a Sports segment.  Do straight news, "just the facts, ma'am", without commentary.  Stop managing the news to try to effect the viewers' opinions and attitudes.  Stop protecting democrats and trashing republicans.  Just gather and report the facts and don't stay away from stories (ie Fast & Furious or Solyndra) that might cast an unfavorable light on your favorite president.  Just report the facts in a strightforward way and let the viewers decide for themselves how they feel about them.

Second, create a special debate program in primetime.  Here's the idea:  Bring a prominent liberal and conservative into the studio to have a moderated debate about an important issue of the day.

Imagine this: A debate between Rachel Maddow and Laura Ingraham about social issues, titled something like "Family Values or Sexual Diversity - Which is healthier for the United States Culture?"

Or imagine Al Gore debating Chris Horner on "Global Climate Change - Is it Real, and if so, What Should be Done About It?"

I know you won't get Maddow because she's at MSNBC, but you get the idea.  Just make sure the debates are moderated fairly and the two people engaged for the debate are equally effective communicators.

It can be fun to imagine all sorts of possible debate matchups.  Limbaugh vs Maher, Ted Nugent vs Alec Baldwin, Michelle Malkin vs Andrea Mitchell, Alan West vs Alan Grayson.  So many fun possibilities.  Talk about great TV.
Do those two things and I'd watch.  I think lots of other folks would too.

Wednesday, June 06, 2012

The Problem with Exit Polling

The media thought the Walker Recall election was going to be extremely close, based on their Exit Polls.  Historically, Democrats have been much more enthusiastic than Republicans about talking to the pollsters after voting, so exit polls almost always overstate the number of votes for the Democrat.

In Wisconsin last night, the mainstream media were pumped.  Until the actual results flowed in from around the state showing a pretty dominant victory for Governor Walker.

So today they're touting a 7-point or higher differential favoring Obama over Romney in November.  Only problem is that Walker's margin of victory was pretty close to 7 percent.  It's reasonable to conclude from the result that the Obama lead is nonexistent or at least impossible to call accurately based on those exit polls.

Watching returns early, when Walker was ahead by 20+ percentage points, I hoped his margin would stay that high or continue to widen.  But apparently the larger cities take longer to report their results, so their results came in late and caused the margin to narrow to about 7 percent.

I find the phenomenon rather strange that the larger the city, the more liberal its residents.  It would be very interesting to find out what factors make city dwellers so much more left-wing than farmers and small town folks.

Monday, June 04, 2012

On, Wisconsin

The unions in Wisconsin didn't like Scott Walker's budget reforms that included a scaleback of those things public unions can negotiate.  That allowed him to proceed to increase public employees' contributions to their pensions and healthcare costs to relatively modest levels of 5 and 12 percent respectively.

The outraged unions proceeded to initiate a recall petition, which succeeded in collecting more than enough signatures to force a special election that happens tomorrow.  They'll either succeed in replacing Walker with a democrat or will fail and keep the governor in office.

My primary thought on the whole event is that a recall isn't justified.  Walker got elected and proceeded to implement the policies he promised.  Mounting the recall over policies with which others disagree isn't justification for recall.  If enough citizens disagree with Walker's changes, all they have to do is vote for his challenger in the next election who promises to roll them back. 

In my opinion, recalls are only appropriate in cases of illegal or immoral behavior of the elected official, not just because of policy disagreements.

By all accounts, Walker's reforms are working wonderfully well.  The state's enjoying budget surpluses without cuts in services.  The outraged union folks are being exposed as a bit greedy, demanding free cadillac health coverage and outrageously generous pensions while their peers in the private sector have to contribute much more for much less health coverage and mostly have no pensions at all.  Polling suggests the unions are making a losing argument, so Walker's opponent isn't even campaigning on the union "rights" issue anymore.

Whether or not a Walker victory tomorrow means Wisconsin becomes a Red state that will go into Romney's column in November remains to be seen.  But the two sides of the argument are pretty clear.

Unions see this as Armageddon, as a Walker win will encourage many others to proceed to weaken their power, until one day soon they become irrelevant.  Conservatives hope they're right, because unions are the primary source of funding for liberal democrats, and the coming irrelevance will translate into GOP dominance of politics over the long term.  Both sides seem a bit delusional.

What seems to have occured over the last couple of decades, especially in the Blue states, is the public employee unions have accrued too much power.  They helped establish a vicious cycle that pours their member dues into pro-union democrat candidates who promist to keep extending their compensation and benefits and created a machine that guarantees the government class receives benefits in excess of their private sector brothers.

I am optimistic that Walker will win.  If the trend continues, will we see the pendulum swing back too far the other way, with public sector employees seeing their wages and benefits and working conditions eroded to unfair levels?  I don't expect that will happen, but if it does and creates a backlash that brings the Left back into power, those who caused it will have nobody to blame but themselves.

Friday, June 01, 2012

Ramping Up

After a little bit of a spring slowdown, it looks like I'm going to be ramping back up in June.  Projects are coming through for me that could suddenly find me overbooked for the rest of the summer and possibly into the fall.

It's good to be busy, but I have to admit it's been nice to have a looser schedule recently.  It may take a couple of weeks to get back into busy mode, adjusting my sleep schedule and increasing my endurance for fulltime workdays and long airline trips.

Still I'd rather continue the variable work schedule that I can control than be a corporate drone living like a prarie dog in a cubicle pen, told what to do and when to show up and granted only 2 weeks vacation per year.