Archive for category National Character
Class Warfare: Politics of Victimhood
Posted by Tom in Democrats, Economics, Entitlements, Justice, National Character, Socialism, Welfare on August 6, 2011
Barack Hussein Obama is the master of class warfare; his background is community organizing, pitting sub class against sub class and class against class. As such he doesn’t relate to all classes, his politics are dependent on his ability to divide and thus to create more dependency, pushing victimhood, resentment and class warfare.
Kyle Meintzer alerts us to this in Bill Whittle’s video Rich man, poor man?. Bill uses Heritage Foundation data to show that while the rich get richer, the “poor” get richer also. In fact, the definition of poor is suspect. But Obama and the Democrats need to expand the definition of poor just to keep up with those becoming non-poor, and this, just to buy votes. Enough said, here’s the video:
Thanksgiving 2022–Big Brother is Watching!
Posted by Tom in National Character on July 31, 2011
This sent by Ty Cobb, it’s authorship unknown, but its Winston link to Orwell’s 1984 is, well, Orwellian!
Thanksgiving 2022
“Winston, come into the dining room, it’s time to eat,” Julia yelled to her husband. “In a minute, honey, it’s a tie score,” he answered. Actually Winston wasn’t very interested in the traditional holiday football game between Detroit and Washington. Ever since the government passed the Civility in Sports Statute of 2017, outlawing tackle football for its “unseemly violence” and the “bad example it sets for the rest of the world”, Winston was far less of a football fan than he used to be. Two-hand touch wasn’t nearly as exciting.
Yet it wasn’t the game that Winston was uninterested in. It was more the thought of eating another Tofu Turkey. Even though it was the best type of VeggieMeat available after the government revised the American Anti-Obesity Act of 2018, adding fowl to the list of federally-forbidden foods, (which already included potatoes, cranberry sauce, and mincemeat pie), it wasn’t anything like real turkey.
And ever since the government officially changed the name of “Thanksgiving Day” to “A National Day of Atonement” in 2020, to officially acknowledge the Pilgrims’ historically brutal treatment of Native Americans, the holiday had lost a lot of its luster.
Eating in the dining room was also a bit daunting. The unearthly gleam of government-mandated fluorescent light bulbs made the Tofu Turkey look even weirder than it actually was, and the room was always cold. Ever since Congress passed the Power Conservation Act of 2016, mandating all thermostats – which were monitored and controlled by the electric company – be kept at 68 degrees, every room on the north side of the house was barely tolerable throughout the entire winter.
Still, it was good getting together with family. Or at least most of the family. Winston missed his mother, who passed on in October, when she had used up her legal allotment of life-saving medical treatment. He had had many heated conversations with the Regional Health Consortium, spawned when the private insurance market finally went bankrupt, and everyone was forced into the government health care program. And though he demanded she be kept on her treatment, it was a futile effort. “The RHC’s resources are limited”, explained the government bureaucrat Winston spoke with on the phone. “Your mother received all the benefits to which she was entitled. I’m sorry for your loss.”
Ed couldn’t make it either. He had forgotten to plug in his electric car last night, the only kind available after the Anti-Fossil Fuel Bill of 2021 outlawed the use of the combustion engines – for everyone but government officials. The fifty mile round trip was about ten miles too far, and Ed didn’t want to spend a frosty night on the road somewhere between here and there. Thankfully, Winston’s brother, John, and his wife were flying in.
Winston made sure that the dining room chairs had extra cushions for the occasion. No one complained more than John about the pain of sitting down so soon after the government-mandated cavity searches at airports, which severely aggravated his hemorrhoids. Ever since a terrorist successfully smuggled a cavity bomb onto a jetliner, the TSA told Americans the added “inconvenience” was an “absolute necessity” in order to stay “one step ahead of the terrorists.” Winston’s own body had grown accustomed to such probing ever since the government expanded their scope to just about anywhere a crowd gathered, via Anti-Profiling Act of 2022.
That law made it a crime to single out any group or individual for “unequal scrutiny,” even when probable cause was involved. Thus, cavity searches at malls, train stations, bus depots, etc., etc., had become almost routine. Almost. The Supreme Court is reviewing the statute, but most Americans expect a Court composed of six progressives and three conservatives to leave the law intact . “A living Constitution is extremely flexible”, said the Court’s eldest member, Elena Kagan. “Europe has had laws like this one for years. We should learn from their example”, she added.
Winston’s thoughts turned to his own children. He got along fairly well with his 12-year-old daughter, Brittany, mostly because she ignored him. Winston had long ago surrendered to the idea that she could text anyone at any time, even during Atonement Dinner. Their only real confrontation had occurred when he limited her to 50,000 texts a month, explaining that was all he could afford. She whined for a week, but got over it.
His 16-year-old son, Jason, was another matter altogether. Perhaps it was the constant bombarding he got in public school that global warming, the bird flu, terrorism, or any of a number of other calamities were “just around the corner”, but Jason had developed a kind of nihilistic attitude that ranged between simmering surliness and outright hostility. It didn’t help that Jason had reported his father to the police for smoking a cigarette in the house, an act made criminal by the Smoking Control Statute of 2018, which outlawed smoking anywhere within 500 feet of another human being.
Winston paid the $5,000 fine, which might have been considered excessive before the American dollar became virtually worthless as a result of QE13. The latest round of Q uantitative E asing the federal government initiated was, once again, to “spur economic growth.” This time, they promised to push unemployment below its years-long rate of 18%, but Winston was not particularly hopeful. Yet the family had a lot for which to be thankful, Winston thought, before remembering it was a Day of Atonement. At least, he had his memories. He felt a twinge of sadness when he realized his children would never know what life was like in the Good Old Days, long before government promises to make life “fair for everyone” realized their full potential.
Winston, like so many of his fellow Americans, never realized how much things could change when they didn’t happen all at once, but little by little, so people could get used to them. He wondered what might have happened if the public had stood up while there was still time, maybe back around 2011, when all the real nonsense began.
“Maybe we wouldn’t be where we are today if we’d just said ‘enough is enough’ when we had the chance,” he thought.
Maybe so, Winston. Maybe so.
Rubio on Obama’s Leadership….or lack thereof!
Posted by Tom in Fiscal Policy, National Character, Politics on July 18, 2011
D-Day, Lest We Forget
Posted by Tom in Defense, Freedom, National Character, Presidency on June 6, 2011
This from Ty Cobb:
Friends,
In 1984 President Ronald Reagan and allied leaders attending the G-7 Economic Summit left London and gathered in Normandy to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the D-Day invasion, the difficult but eventually successful battle that turned the tide of the war in Europe. My God, it hardly seems possible that it was 27 years ago!
President Reagan gave two extraordinarily moving speeches that day, one at Omaha Beach with President Francois Mitterand, and another, more remembered, at Point du Hoc–the cliffs the Rangers scaled in the face of German artillery firing directly down on them. This was a U.S. only ceremony, and many of the Rangers who survived that assault were on hand to hear the President that day. I was fortunate to be in charge of coordinating the visit and the event, and it was a moment that none of us there will ever forget.
Here is a link to the President’s speech–you may want to listen to Reagan and reflect on the significance of this anniversary.
– Ty
Memorial Day
Posted by Tom in Freedom, National Character on May 29, 2011
We are here today, enjoying the freedoms we have but do not appreciate because of those men and women in our armed forces and intelligence services. We are here because of the generations of those who preceded them from the founding of the nation forward.
Pause today to say a prayer of thanksgiving and sustenance for them.
“We sleep soundly in our beds because rough men stand ready in the night to visit violence on those who would do us harm.” (Orwell or Churchill)
God bless them.
SHUT IT DOWN!
Posted by Tom in Bankruptcy, Budgets, Congress, Deficit, Entitlements, National Character, Politics, Presidency, Statism on April 3, 2011
I’ve read several articles and posts on the potential shutdown of the government if a wasteful expense cuts are not agreed to by Reid and Obama. The consensus is, as in past shutdowns, that “essential services” would be maintained. (More on that later.) In essence, defense, boarder protections (such as we have), law enforcement, the courts, congress and the administration would continue as would things like welfare checks and social security, medicare and medicaid payments. Our world, our lives, will not end if the government shuts down!
USA Today reports that President Obama has predicted “dire” consequences if there is a shutdown. However, he has instructed agencies not to reveal their shutdown plans. Seems kinda strange, doesn’t? If consequences are so dire, why wouldn’t he let the agencies explain?
“In e-mails from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) last month, agencies were told their statements to Congress “should not state or imply what functions would or would not be continued in the event of a funding gap.”
It continued: “Agencies should not be previewing shutdown plans — that is, policy and operational decisions — in any way.” Agencies were instructed to clear any responses to questions about their shutdown plans with OMB.”
Here’s the point: why is the United States government rendering NON-ESSENTIAL SERVICES, AND WITH OUR TAX MONEY?
By the blood of our forefathers we are a Constitutional Republic, one of limited powers, those not granted by us are reserved to the states or retained by us; this is embodied in the 10th Amendment. The government should perform ONLY essential services.
So, I say, shut it down. And consider shutting it down permanently. The boogyman Obama and his lackeys in the main stream media would have us fear is our own ignorance and dependency. This doesn’t portend a very confident future for our children!
Two Views of Subsidiarity: US & EU
Posted by Tom in Centrally Managed Economy, Individual Freedom, Law, Morality & Religion in the Public Square, National Character on March 14, 2011
Daniel Hannan, a member of the European Parliament penned A European’s Warning to America, as a weekend op-ed in the WSJ in which he warned of Obama’s comprehensive Europeanization. “European health care, European welfare, European carbon taxes, European day care, European college education, even a European foreign policy, based on engagement with supranational technocracies, nuclear disarmament and a reluctance to deploy forces overseas.” In short, the government is all things to all people and the legitimate roles of the individual or small units of society become subordinate and marginalized.
The principle of subsidiarity, the basis of America’s founding, is completely reversed in Europe. That organizing principle has two sides of the same coin: 1. That matters ought to be handled by the smallest, lowest or least centralized competent authority or unit of society. 2. And, that the central authority should perform only those tasks which cannot be performed effectively at a more immediate or local level. Thus our thirteen colonies joined to form a federal union with a government of limited powers, reserving most general power to the states or the people. States, counties, social groups, churches, families and individuals had responsibilities were important were “the people” from wince the central government derived its legitimacy.
In Europe the opposite is true. ”The critical difference between the American and European unions has to do with the location of power. The U.S. was founded on what we might loosely call the Jeffersonian ideal: the notion that decisions should be taken as closely as possible to the people they affect. The European Union was based on precisely the opposite ideal. Article One of its foundational treaty commits its nations to establish “an ever-closer union.”
“The EU places supreme power in the hands of 27 unelected Commissioners invulnerable to public opinion.”
“The will of the people is generally seen by Eurocrats as an obstacle to overcome, not a reason to change direction. When France, the Netherlands and Ireland voted against the European Constitution, the referendum results were swatted aside and the document adopted regardless. For, in Brussels, the ruling doctrine—that the nation-state must be transcended—is seen as more important than freedom, democracy or the rule of law.”
Hannan warns because he doesn’t want to see America, which he considers the repository of traditional freedoms embodied in common law, go the way of his country and become more European. As a Briton he considers America the last bastion of British freedom which lives on in America. He points to the perils of greater regulation, higher taxes and centralized power both in an economic sense and in a human sense.
So our current president, is acting like the Brussels technocrats in growing the federal government, multiplying welfare systems, disarming, and passing the buck to supernational organizations. He is not a leader but a follower of a model destine to fail. Be warned.
Our Leadership Vacuum Is A Moral Issue
Posted by Tom in Foreign Policy, Law, Morality & Religion in the Public Square, Military Policy, National Character, Presidency on March 13, 2011
The United States has abdicated its position as leader of the free world. The Obama Doctrine as today’s WSJ points out editorially is one of defer to others, work only through others and blind ourselves to the inherent indecisiveness and ineffectiveness of others. So Obama will work only through an ineffective UN and he’s smart enough to know it’s ineffective. Or he’ll work only through NATO which he knows is inherently divided and can’t make a decision on its own. Or he’ll threaten justice from the international court. Or he’ll spout blustering threats. One thing is clear: he won’t lead.
In short he wants to hide behind others. So, it’s not his fault. It never will be his fault because he won’t make a hard decision. He the perfect picture of a Hamlet wringing his hands and unable to decide. What can one expect of a Chicago politician who has never had any responsibility. A community organizer who learned effective rabble rousing but little else. A state legislator who voted “present” more often than Aye or Nay. A senator seldom present for a vote. A president who takes polls before taking a position. No wonder the Democrat powerhouses wanted him, public unions, trial lawyers, Wall Street, all of them know he’s easily controlled.
So our empty suited leader will stand by and watch Gadhafi massacre his own people and while tragic it won’t be his fault. After all he did bluster a bit and went to all those international organizations! Now it can be effectively argued that what happens in Lybia is immaterial to our strategic interest. What’s happening in Bahrain and Saudi is certainly more critical to our strategic interests. But the humanitarian cost in Lybia will be horrific. He will turn a blind eye and deaf ear. He is the “peace in our time” Neville Chamberlain of today.
Well, what’s the problem with that? After all, we can’t be the world’s policeman. We are bankrupt ourselves. The problem is both moral and practical in nature. Moral in that it is wrong to standby and watch an illegitimate dictator murder his citizens when we have the ability to stop the massacre. It’s the equivalent of watching Hitler freely executing the Holocaust. We are the only nation capable of leading, because before Obama in modern times we have had that position and because of the indecisiveness and ineffectiveness of international organizations. Our abdication is morally wrong.
The practical nature of the problem is that our abdication of leadership creates a vacuum. As nature abhors a vacuum, so does human nature. The vacuum will be filled by every two bit dictator with any ambition. In this case Gadhafi. And while Gadhafi is a minor player and really more of a European problem, Kim Jong II isn’t; nor is Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. So the moral wrong begets a major security risk.
As today’s WSJ editorial concludes: “Lybia today is what the world without U.S. leadership looks like.”
Leadership In Short Supply Nowadays…But Not With These Two
Posted by Tom in Congress, Liberalism, National Character, Nationalized Health Care, Social Security, State Finances, Unions, Welfare on March 1, 2011
Here are two Reno men who tell it like it is and have the guts to solve the problem, Ty Cobb and Frank Partlow. Their articles follow.
TIME TO REDUCE BENEFITS FOR ALL OF US
The United States and the State of Nevada together are facing budget deficits that threaten the financial viability of the country and the state. The national debt is reaching unprecedented levels– this year alone it will reach a record $1.6 trillion, due to the weak economy, higher spending, and renewed tax cuts.
At the national level, combined expenditures on Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid are projected to account for 45% of federal spending, up from 27% in 1975. That entitlement spending could triple by 2035. When defense spending, interest on the debt, and federal pensions are added in, this accounts for 86% of federal spending. Interest on the debt currently costs $200 billion annually, but if nothing is done, in just five years the interest on this debt will triple to around $640 billion.
Nevada does not have the luxury of printing money to cover budget deficits, and must have a budget that is balanced. The Governor is set to accomplish that by severe spending cuts and not raising taxes. His opponents in the Legislature have squawked loudly, but have yet to offer an alternative plan. The target of the Governor’s cuts are personnel, since that is where the lion’s share of expenditures go, with a focus on reigning in overly-generous pensions, benefits and salaries, a problem that is even greater at the local government level.
Government employees must be prepared to accept reductions in retirement pensions and pay much more for health benefits. That goes not only for local and state employees, but those who work for or are retired from the federal government, including military retirees. The Defense budget is not sustainable and will have to be reduced in the future, especially to offset soaring retirement and health benefit costs.
Those of us who have reached 65 and are now receiving Social Security and Medicare must also be prepared to accept changes—means testing of Social Security perhaps, more paid in doctor visits and prescriptions. Yes, I know, we who have paid money into the system for decades in good faith have reason to protest while those who have been less thrifty in planning their retirements will not be penalized. It is what it is—not fair, not fair at all, but it must be done.
And those of us who served in the military can make the point that our service was much more demanding and difficult. I, for one, had two tours in Viet-Nam in my 26 years—living in the swamps, fighting off the VC and cobras alike, separated from our families for a year at a time (I only saw my first-born one week the first year of her life!). We moved 17 times our first 13 years of marriage, I worked 24 hours a day, 7 days a week in my 6 years in the White House. No overtime, no sick leave, no padding my retirement with phony “call backs” or special health programs (oh, I do go to the VA, but to participate in an Agent Orange tracking program for those of us exposed to the dangerous defoliant).
Still, the nation cannot afford the entitlement programs that I and many others are eligible for. The state, and especially local governments, is on the verge of a financial crisis and personnel costs, particularly benefits and retirement, must be roped in. It is happening in Wisconsin, New Jersey, Indiana and other states where budgets can only be balanced by reigning in benefits for government employees. GOV Sandoval says it must also happen here, and he is right, but at all levels of government.
It ain’t nice, it isn’t pretty, but it must be done.
-Tyrus W. Cobb
Former Special Assistant to the President, Republished from Nevada Appeal
By Frank Partlow
I can barely spell it, but I am a Septuagenarian. At 72, I receive a federal pension for 34 years of Army service, Social Security, Medicare, Tricare and VA benefits. I believe I am “entitled” to all of that. Septuagenarians disagree on many issues, but not on their “entitlements.”
These entitlements are unsustainable. My federal paymaster is $14.5 trillion in debt and borrowing $1.5 trillion more each year. 72 million entitled “Boomers” are right behind. Social Security is a “Ponzi Scheme” which makes Bernie Madoff blush. I receive as benefits what three current workers pay in. What happens when there are two workers paying in? More federal debt.
The only way to fix the deficit and balance the federal budget is to reduce current and future entitlements, which account for 62% of budget outlays and grow each year. Septuagenarians and Boomers not only cringe at this idea, they vow to unseat any politician foolish enough to suggest it. The problem with that approach is that while they may live long enough to collect, their children and grandchildren will not, even while facing crushing new taxes.
A better way is for each generation to take a hit—mine by some sort of means test for Social Security payments. The Boomers could delay their retirement to say, age 70. Those still paying Social Security taxes could pay in a higher percentage of their salary. We are the only country in the world without age limits on medical procedures, an enormous drain on our Medicare and Medicaid, as health care costs grow by nine percent per year. The potential list of reductions is virtually as endless as the nature of “entitlements” themselves.
When Social Security began, the oldest US generation was the poorest. In part by taking mortgage interest rate deductions on their income taxes for thirty or more years, Septuagenarians are now the richest. Can that continue?
Our parents were called the “Greatest Generation” for getting the US through the Great Depression and World War ll. One can argue about that title, but they did get themselves out of their own jams. My generation won’t even come close to doing that. Septuagenarians must understand that our world, its mores, beliefs, facts and fictions are irrelevant.
We septuagenarians are very opinionated. We caused the problems we now face. Yet, we expect the 50 year olds now in public office to jump at to our solutions. Perspective is the only thing we have to contribute. Experience yields perspective and is what you get while you are looking for something else. Our perspectives will help those younger generations understand that if they do what we did, they will get what we got. They can ignore our advice. However, they will live with their decisions and we will not.
With the wisdom of experience and perspective, my generation should lead the way. If, however, we are unwilling to sacrifice some of what was heretofore promised, we will deserve to be called what we will have become: the “Selfish Generation.”
Special Report for the Northern Nevada Network.
Frank Partlow is a Nevada veteran since 1964 who now lives in downtown Reno
The Epitome of American Exceptionalism
Posted by Tom in Individual Freedom, National Character, Politics, Presidency on February 18, 2011
Another segment from Chris Christie’s talk before the American Enterprise Institute.
To my way of thinking, this states the essence of American Exceptionalism, the individual’s desire to live freely and succeed. People still struggle and take great risks to come here just to have the opportunity to succeed.
Sorry, President Obama, your mealy mouth put downs of American Exceptionalism just don’t cut it.