We will never know who these "CIA employees" were who were killed in Afghanistan. They will never be publicly recognized. Their families will not be openly lauded for their sacrifice.
They served in silence and have died in silence.
But I am thinking about them today, and silently thanking them for their service to our country.
1
I ma glad we have such people who would sacrifice all, knowing they risked all without mention of their names, deeds, or achievements. It is a hallmark of their success that they were specifically targeted by our nations' enemy. Their names are unknown, but their sacrifices will long be remembered.
Posted by: Chuck Z at January 01, 2010 10:29 AM (bMH2g)
The suicide bomber who killed seven CIA agents in Afghanistan had been courted by the US as a possible informant, US intelligence sources have said [...]
A US official, and former CIA employee, said such people were often not required to go through full security checks in order to help gain their trust.
"When you're trying to build a rapport and literally ask them to risk [their lives] for you, you've got a lot to do to build their trust," he told the Associated Press news agency.
If these 'informants' were truly willing to help America, they should also have been willing to be searched. Diana West asked,
What happened to the 'but verify' in trust? What happened to the "intelligence" in CIA?
Posted by: Amritas at January 01, 2010 04:27 PM (ke9P1)
3
<i>But I am thinking about them today, and silently thanking them for their service to our country. </i>
You and me both.
Posted by: HomefrontSix at January 01, 2010 08:18 PM (umhCJ)
PAGING HEALTH CZAR STARNES
(Via Bookworm Room) Zombie has a good post up about why universal health care is bad for us...morally and socially. His gist: "it turns each of us into a little fascist. A nagging nanny who tells other people what to do and how to live."
Unlike the scenario in "Atlas," the anger under ObamaCare would likely be directed at *groups* rather than individuals. Instead of rage at Millie Bush, there would be rage at categories of people perceived to be raising the H/C expenses for all of us. Probable targets include...
--the obsese
--gays
--people who pursue sports with a high injury rate (skiing, for example)
--parents of children who let them be born despite predicted health problems
--and, of course, the elderly
Posted by: david foster at December 16, 2009 11:39 AM (2z8Ig)
2
A very small point -- I don't believe Zombie has ever confirmed whether the author is male or female. Or were you using it in the generic pronoun sense?
Posted by: Lissa at December 17, 2009 06:52 AM (mgjM7)
3
Lissa -- Good point. I have always just assumed Zombie to be a he, not based on any evidence...
Posted by: Sarah at December 17, 2009 08:33 AM (gWUle)
"If you want men to be like brothers, have them join in the building of a tower. If you want them to hate each other, throw bread among them."
--Antoine de St-Exupery
(approximate quote)
Posted by: David Foster at December 17, 2009 05:09 PM (oj+w+)
5
I'd forgotten the details of that part of Atlas Shrugged... when I first read the post, and saw the part about bashing Millie Bush's teeth in... I thought of Pres. George H.W. Bush's dog Millie, and wondered why anyone would want to attack her.
Posted by: malclave at December 17, 2009 07:57 PM (OCRaO)
6
I agree with david foster about classes of Millie Bushes. Class warfare. How Leftist. A policy that makes us all dependents and dictators at the same time. As Newsweek declared, ""We are all socialists now."
Posted by: Amritas at December 18, 2009 05:32 PM (dWG01)
SYNOVA IS DEAD ON
Althouse has a post about how CNN seems to have a broken English-to-English translator. In the comments was this gem from Synova. (I am copying the whole perfect comment because I can never get Althouse's permalinks to jump down to the right comment.)
In Iraq they did not *accidentally* wait until American soldiers were
surrounded by Muslim children to attack them. And then, without irony,
they *themselves* say that those children would not have died if the
Americans were not there.
Then someone like Wright explains that the violence would not have happened if the Americans were not there.
Here's a clue.
The enemy knows what they are doing.
They
are not simple or child-like brown people who don't know better or who
are being tossed, to and fro, by events that are beyond them.
They
may or may not believe their own propaganda, but they do understand
psychological warfare and engineer the massacre of children with the
explicit knowledge and understanding of just *how* they can jerk *our*
chains.
So... "We are sorry that there are dead Muslims, that we
shot into a crowd of them, that we planted IED's, that we blew up that
Mosque, that we were forced to go through your village and dispense
justice and left the bodies in the street to be found."
And the
thing is... America and the West has NOTHING to combat this with
because we simply refuse to do so. We have no one who's job it is to
broadcast our side of the story, to put the information out there over
and over that by far the most Muslims killed are not killed by us but
are killed by those we are fighting. And it's the truth! It's the
truth, so why doesn't our media push it voluntarily? Why don't they
make certain that every person knows the atrocities committed by
Muslims on other Muslims. Why don't they?
When we have found and documented rooms with shackles and blood on the walls...
The
response to a dead and *gutted* woman in Iraq who had spent her life
working to help people there was an insipid "oh, dear" followed by...
"but they made a prisoner at Gitmo look at pornography."
The
response to butchered and defiled Americans was "screw them". The
response to defiled, dismembered and tortured to *death* American
soldiers was "OMGAWD we poured water on someone's FACE!"
Someone is enabling this sort of thing, abetting, and participating.
And AQ is *sorry* that Muslims asked for it, oh well... lets blow up more Muslim kids and blame it on America.
1
I love your phrase "broken English-to-English translator"!
Why don't they
make certain that every person knows the atrocities committed by
Muslims on other Muslims. Why don't they?
Because in their eyes, only Westerners are accountable for their actions. All others are supposedly victims of the West ... even though Muslims are actually the biggest victims of Islam. But they can't say that. No, only Christianity is 'fair game' for criticism.
Someone is enabling this sort of thing, abetting, and participating.
It would take us Americans years of training and study of databases and so forth to figure out what every Iraqi or Afghani over the age of 12 already knows about his language, culture, neighbors, and neighborhood.
The main information needed in such “wars†is who are the bad guys. The locals know. But it is extremely difficult for us to figure it out. Our weapons and training for killing the bad guys are useless if we cannot figure out which ones to kill.
Unlike buying a building, you cannot just ask for the information and rely on it in the Middle East. But the point is that it is extremely foolish of us to try to use ordinary 18-year-old guys from Gary, Indiana and Flagstaff, Arizona and such to become competent policemen in those countries. Most of the problem there is a police, not a military matter, and it must be done by local policemen.
The U.S. Marines were tense looking for bombs buried near a mud compound in this remote farming town in southern Afghanistan. Their new Afghan police colleagues were little help, joking around and sucking on lollipops meant for local kids.
The government had sent the new group of 13 police to live and train with the Marines just a few days earlier. Most were illiterate young farmers with no formal training who had been plucked off the streets only weeks before.
Building a capable police force is one of the keys to President Barack Obama's new Afghan strategy.
A broken key. Throw it away. Policing their country is their problem. Let's police our own country. Watch our borders. Secure our airports. Keep an eye on jihadism at home. That is doable. So why aren't we doing it? Why insist on the impossible - made doubly so by restrictive rules of engagement?
The U.S. and allied soldiers who refrain from shooting where civilian human shields are benefiting themselves by enabling themselves to claim they are great humanitarians who held their fire. But they do that at the expense of the rest of the American and allied military who will be in continued danger from the bad guys in question. Indeed, the bullet that kills the humanitarian soldier who held his fire, or his best friend, may be fired by the bad guy he let escape with his decision not to shoot where he knew or suspected bad guys were—because of the presence of civilians.
Similarly, refraining from shooting at an enemy soldier because he uses innocent (or maybe not) civilians as shields rewards and thereby encourages the use of human shields. It is immoral to encourage the use of innocent civilians as shields. Furthermore, refusing to refrain from shooting at those who use civilians as shields will immediately end the practice which will lead to fewer civilian and military casualties on all sides and an earlier victory in the war. Paradoxical thought it may seem, ignoring the possibility of civilian casualties by shooting at the enemy regardless of the presence of civilians will save civilian lives in the long run.
Synova is right. The enemy knows what it's doing. But do we know what we're doing? Can we even define victory?
I don't think the term victory is relevant. I don't think it is possible for the US to destroy jihadism. But it is possible to contain it. To deport jihadists. To prevent jihadists from coming here. To attack jihadist states before they attack us. The latter will result in victories, but not the victory - the total annihilation of jihadism. That is out of our hands. Muslims must reform their own religion and social institutions. We can encourage them, but we cannot do that for them. We cannot be Atatürk. Yet we cannot simply wait for new Atatürks. We must defend ourselves. Locking our doors would be a good first step. What good is it to fight jihadists over there if they can still come here?
Posted by: Amritas at December 13, 2009 05:47 PM (dWG01)
TERRORISM THAT'S PERSONAL
When I was 21, a boy asked me to marry him. He wasn't the right person for me, and I had to politely decline the surprising offer. I'm sure it hurt his feelings, but that was the extent of it.
And that's what I thought of when I saw Terrorism That's Personal. (Warning: graphic content that will make you cry.) No one threw acid on me or tried to kill me.
I was allowed to not marry him.
Many women in this world are not allowed to make that choice. Or when they do make that choice, they must live with the consequences of wanting some control over their own lives. Blindness, disfigurement, even death.
1
Wow, I read that last night, via someone else. I was completely shocked. I vaguely remembered hearing something about a woman having acid thrown in her face, but I didn't know it was a REGULAR occurrence over there. God have mercy . . .
Posted by: Deltasierra at December 02, 2009 09:51 AM (+Fbnb)
2
This makes me so angry. It's just unf***ing believable...sorry, I think the swearing justifiable here. I can't believe that we turn such a blind eye to this for the most part. I caught a clip on Oprah yesterday where they were talking about how many women in the world die in childbirth, and if it were men, there would be a lot more done about it...just like now that it's men that are starting to get raped in Darfur, it's becoming a huge UN issue.
Posted by: Calivalleygirl at December 02, 2009 10:54 AM (irIko)
3
Tell me, again, how this is the religion of peace?
And we're the godless infidel.
Posted by: Chuck Z at December 02, 2009 03:29 PM (bMH2g)
However, it is unfortunate that in many parts of this planet men simply are not men.
It is stories like this and images like this that keep me driving forward in our adoption of our daughter. Her part of the world is not a safe place for her and I'm bound and determined I will bring her home come hell or high water.
Posted by: Guard Wife at December 02, 2009 10:17 PM (I6LTM)
5
I posted a link to that on my fb. I've got quite a few liberal friends on there (mostly people from back in HS). Curious to see the reaction I might get...
Posted by: Miss Ladybug at December 03, 2009 12:13 AM (vqKnu)
It's your choice, Mr. President. But if you can look into those eyes
and abandon these women to the rule of monsters, then honor is dead.
The War on Terror is hard enough. How can the US also fight a War on Misogyny? Have our military serve as an international human rights police?
They require local police who can speak the language
as natives, know the people as natives [...] Furthermore, this is an open-ended commitment.
The need for police has never ended in New York City. It will never end
in Baghdad either. That’s another reason why the police must be local, not a GI from Indiana or a Marine from New Mexico.
There is no amount of
money to spend, infrastructure to build, schools to provide, hospitals
to heal, or good will that Americans can display toward the Afghan
people that will produce a lasting effect.
In 2002, Bangladesh introduced the death penalty for throwing acid and laws strictly controlling the sales of acids.
Under the Qisas law of Pakistan, the perpetrator may suffer the same fate as the victim, and may be punished by having drops of acid placed in their eyes. This law is not binding and is rarely enforced according to a New York Times report. Iran has a similar law, and sentenced an attacker to be blinded in 2008.
However, the court overruled the application of the sharia laws in the case, canceling Movahedi's blinding.
An eye for an eye? Horrifying.
The world outside the West can be nightmarish. Once the whole world was that way. But the West got its act together, and other countries like Japan and Turkey managed to modernize themselves.
Conservativism is about self-reliance, not dependence. If we oppose welfare at home, shouldn't we oppose welfare abroad too? Only the Third World can fix itself. Perhaps someday Afghanistan will have its own Ataturk to lead it out of ignorance. Or not. Either way, it's out of our hands.
Ask a man on the street if he is concerned about genocide in Darfur
and he will say he is. Ask him what he’s going to do about it, and he
will shrug. Push him on whether he would serve in the military there or
send his child to serve in the military there and he will say no. Ask
if he wants his taxes raised to pay for some sort of help to Darfur and
he will probably react negatively.
Although the American
people are willing to pay lip service about such things, the bottom
line fact is that they really do not care enough to support any action.
The same is true of the rest of the world.
If the tables were turned, would the people in Darfur care about us?
Politicians talk about such suffering to show they care. The media knows disasters mean ratings. We watch, we listen, we feel bad for a moment, and then we go on with our lives, while the suffering also goes on, out of sight, out of mind ...
I wish it were otherwise.
Posted by: Amritas at December 03, 2009 05:09 PM (+nV09)
GLOBAL WARMING FLOW CHARTS
There's a good post at The Devil's Kitchen (via The Corner) with flow charts explaining how we ought to make decisions on global warming vs how we do. I have debated this with real-world friends and have always tried to steer it towards the Ought flow chart, but it always ends up skipping right ahead to the "We're all going to die" box. Laymen, especially quasi-treehuggers, don't want to talk about cost-benefit analysis; I've been told that we need to err on the side of caution and try to prevent climate change from happening no matter the cost because it's For The Childrenâ„¢. And even when I try to play Bjorn Lomborg, as I've said I always try to do to concede some ground in the debate, and say that there are things we can do to save The Children right now instead of in 100 years, it never seems to have much effect.
If anything, Climategate can at least give me another talking point to get us off the bozo flow chart and back onto the Ought one. The science is most certainly not settled, so any decisions you make For The Children based on the "consensus" are flawed.
But what do I know, I don't even recycle.
UPDATE:
Slightly related, I enjoyed this comment on Althouse's post (via Boxenhorn).
He easily could've made an argument that Republicans are sceptical of
anything which tries to paint Capitalism in as bad a light as possible,
or that we are not idealistic so much as pragmatic, and realise that
academia (who fired the first AGW volleys) are mostly left-wingers
intent on hounding corporations for their multiple "crimes".
But
no, he goes for the "Republicans are dumb and don't like science [read,
because they are religious and therefore are all creationists]".
We're even better at making their arguments for them!
And here's a great summary of Climategate itself. (I just discovered that the link doesn't go directly to the comment, so I am reposting it here.)
The reason why people say it has warmed at all in the last 100 years is
because the CRU told them so. How did CRU come to that conclusion?
Well, NASA gave the raw temperature readings for however many years
such things existed. CRU then proceeded to "adjust" those readings.
Clearly, some adjustment and almalgamation was needed to get the proper
global temperature measurements. But were CRU's adjustments done
correctly?
Understand, this is a really hard question. We don't
know what the actual global temperature is. We are supposed to figure
that out by looking at the temperature data and adjusting it
accordingly. But if you don't know the final answer how do you know the
adjustments are correct? That is a hard question.
But we will
never know if the adjustments were done properly because the CRU
destroyed the raw temperature readings. They only have their adjusted
or "value added" readings. But there is no way to tell now if those
readings are correct.
The whole proposition that the world
warmed over the last 100 years is now in question. For all we know, the
world could be cooler now than it was in 1900. We have only CRU's word
and adjustments to go on. And CRU has been revealed to be a complete
fraud. Basically, climate science has to start over from square one.
1
We have always been tuned into the Climate "debate" at our house. My husband is a scientist. Well, just go to my blog and see how many posts we have done on it and my explanation of why. We means me, my son and daughter. You don't want me to repeat all that here.;D Rockport Conservatives
Posted by: Ruth H at December 01, 2009 12:18 PM (KLwh4)
I love the flow chart! Thanks for linking to it. If everyone wrote such charts, we'd understand their thinking much better. Alas, there is much more feeling than thinking ...
Laymen, especially quasi-treehuggers, don't want to talk about cost-benefit analysis
Why would they want to be like a (gasp!) capitalist weighing alternatives when they can have faith in the One Truth? Again, feeling over thinking.
there are things we can do to save The Children right now instead of in 100 years
That assumes saving anyone is the point. It isn't.
Being a Borlaug is boring. Silent salvation? Zzzz. Better to keep everyone awake with hype, I mean, the Truth about our burning planet, keep everyone's eyes on you, a superior being high above those gun-clinging Creationists. Point to the flaming globe sticker on your SUV and talk about how you'd like to get a Prius.
- AGW is real and all this data-cooking was totally unnecessary
- AGW is as bogus as the data
I was on the fence for years but now I lean toward the latter. Imagine you're Jor-El during the last days of Krypton. You find data indicating your planet will soon blow up. Would you
(a) want to be disproven? (Science is about testable hypotheses. Counterevidence. Skepticism. Not belief. Not dogma.)
Just ask yourself: are the global warming alarmists behaving like
people who have discovered the equivalent of an asteroid heading for
earth that will destroy life as we know it? Or are they behaving like
people who "never let a good crisis go to waste," a la Rahm Emanuel?
If
I had discovered an asteroid heading for earth, I would bend over
backwards to provide every bit of my data, my models, my emails,
whatever, to the skeptics so that I could convince them. You wouldn't
need to file an FOA request to see my emails or data because I'd be out
showing them to as many people as possible. I'd be as open as I could
because I'd WANT to be disproven if possible. And knowing that my
political opponents would be skeptical of any proposals that smacked of
confiscatory taxes and world government, I'd say "YOU decide what we
should do - I don't care how capitalistic/free-market/conservative your
solution, as long as it solves the problem". Such a problem would truly
be beyond politics or careerism, and a person who really believed it
was potentially civilization-ending would welcome skepticism, would
welcome critiques, would be as open as possible.
It would be tragic if AGW were real, if we could do something about it, but we didn't because of Climategate.
How obvious is the connection between your beliefs on tax policy and foreign policy?
Another way of looking at this is that in our politics and society,
group association seems to give certain beliefs or policy positions a
mutual 'stickiness' even if they do not seem to be connected together
in any logical or consistent way, or any way that would make sense out
of the context of our culture and society.
I see a lot of intellectual 'package deals'. A lot of 'if you believe in X, you also believe in Y' even if X and Y don't necessarily go together.
I think AGW is a good fit for the Leftist memetic package - it combines status-seeking ("look at meeee, I'm aware!") with statism.
But what about, say, the Afghanistan/Iraq War? Leftists who love Big Government and all things Third World are hostile to nation-building in Afghanistan and Iraq. Conversely, Rightists who hate Big Government tend to be for the war which William Saletan called "the one welfare program conservatives can't criticize or even recognize, because they're the ones running it."
Can someone explain that to me?
Ruth,
I have been reading your comments on this blog for years and always wished I could read your thoughts on another site. Now I can. Thank you for linking to your blog. I read all the posts on your front page and I look forward to exploring your archives.
Posted by: Amritas at December 01, 2009 05:26 PM (+nV09)
3
Amritas -- I also really liked the asteroid comment when I read it today. Thanks for adding it to the post.
Posted by: Sarah at December 01, 2009 05:56 PM (gWUle)
4
Amritas, Oh no don't read my thoughts! Seriously, I got into my blog very slowly with just links, until I decided since I was posting comments at many other places why not put my thoughts on my site too. I guess I'm a slow learner. Don't we love our Sarah, though?
Posted by: Ruth H at December 01, 2009 11:00 PM (JFseb)
POLITE SOCIETY
Related to the granting the premise idea, here's Roger Kimball on Lou Dobbs and what the media deems acceptable:
The English critic William Hazlitt once spoke disparagingly of "common
place critics" who pretend to put themselves "in the middle, between
the extremes of right and wrong." Something similar could be said of
the rancid, illiberal liberalism of commentators like Krugman and
Burns. They look upon their own opinions less as opinions than as
universally applicable observations that reflect the state of nature.
Their opinions are just what any enlightened, virtuous member of
"polite" society believes. Only those who disagree with them have
"fractious," line-crossing opinions unacceptable to such polite company
as represented by Krugman, The New York Times and Media
Matters. Here's what's really at stake in the controversy of Dobbs and
CNN. It's not only Dobbs who's been rusticated: It's also the robust
liberalism that thrived on disagreement, argument and polemic.
1
I hate it so much when people say use the term "the middle ground."
The Middle Ground is a stupid idea. The truth is never at either extreme, but never is it in the middle, either. The idea of that in order to be "fair" one must split the difference makes me want to hurl. It's just stupid and it exists only on the premise that the rest of us are stupid enough to fall for the idiotic premise that the truth is always at the 50/50 mark.
Well, that's crap.
We will always need to compromise and work together, because that's how life is. It's that way micro and macro (case in point - my house, which is neither the all-white-in-every-room preference of my husband, nor the bright-colors-everywhere that I would have chosen). But that does NOT mean that you abandon all premise but "being on the middle ground" as if that is some sort of moral victory.
If you ask me, that is the absence of morals and a vacuum of moral thought.
Either stick to straight news (which even the most PBS inclined among us has to admit gets very boring) or pepper your staff with both views and allow robust debate. Defending our positions is how we learn, not by being surrounded by people in an echo chamber.
CNN reminds me of that book by Judy Blume - Freckle Juice, where the boy is told in the end that all perfect people do is sit and drink weak tea all the time. BORING. And totally not worth emulating, either.
Posted by: airforcewife at November 17, 2009 09:33 AM (uE3SA)
The truth is never at either extreme, but never is it in the middle
I would say the truth is what it is. People think in terms of spectra. Suppose we define a spectrum in terms of 0 to 10. The truth could be at one extreme (0) or the other (10) or in the middle (5). Or the spectrum could be completely wrong, and the truth is really a negative number or infinity or A.
I do not rule out the extremes because existence is extreme. Either something exists or it does not. If "the truth is never at either extreme" and is never "in the middle," then something can never exist or not exist or be halfway between existence and nonexistence; it can only almost exist or almost non-exist. If nonexistence is 0 and existence is 1, then 0, 1, and .5 have to be ruled out, and the only possible values would roughly be 0.0001-0.4999 and 0.5001-0.9999. (The exact number of zeroes and nines after the decimal point would be infinite.) But some things are binary in the real world. Ayn Rand's John Galt either exists or does not exist in real life. (Bad news: he doesn't exist.)
I am not saying truth is whatever we want it to be. I am saying that truth is independent of our fantasies and our mental shortcuts like 'the truth is never X or Y'.
We can compromise on things in the future. We can decide to aim for 5 instead of 0 or 10. But the past and present are less subject to negotiation; we can change our minds about them, but they exist independently of our thinking. When someone says the truth is always/never X, they are trying to project their desires upon reality. And they may not realize what powerful words 'always' and 'never' are. They are not synonyms for 'usually' or 'rarely'.
I realize I have simplified a complex subject. Not all reality is binary. Before we can speak of whether X exists, we have to agree upon what counts as X. Semantics is fluid. Language is just labels; reality exists independent of it. We can abolish a word, but its referent won't vanish from history just because its tag is gone.
If you ask me, that is the absence of morals and a vacuum of moral thought.
The irony is that those who claim to be in the middle believe they are on the moral high ground. Quite the opposite. They are distorting reality. How can that be moral?
Defending our positions is how we learn, not by being surrounded by people in an echo chamber.
I strongly encourage people to listen to others who share some common ground with you but otherwise are diametrically opposed to what you stand for. Some degree of overlap is needed so you respect them and can keep listening to them. Otherwise you'll run away and won't be able to learn from them at all. I have rejected a lot of my old positions by leaving the echo chamber and reading blogs written by my partial opponents.
Posted by: Amritas at November 17, 2009 12:43 PM (+nV09)
Posted by: david foster at November 17, 2009 02:45 PM (uWlpq)
4I strongly encourage people to listen to others who share some common
ground with you but otherwise are diametrically opposed to what you
stand for. Some degree of overlap is needed so you respect them and can
keep listening to them. Otherwise you'll run away and won't be able to
learn from them at all. I have rejected a lot of my old positions by
leaving the echo chamber and reading blogs written by my partial
opponents.
Amritas, that is an excellent way to put it. You have to be willing to listen to someone to hear what they have to say, and you're far more likely to do so if you can see the complex person beyond that particular opinion. If someone is knee-jerkedly a "neocon" or what-have-you, you have made them into a caricature, which is easy to dismiss.
I think that I probably didn't explain myself very well about the scale, though. And I was thinking in terms of the linear scale you used, too! The truth is definitely the truth, but I think that there are truths and then there are truths. One thing that I find so interesting about studying the history of conflicts is the reasoning people use for their participation. There is truth, definitely, but there is also the greater good and the lesser evil. And all these things work together to make an answer that we may not like in any way, and yet understand to be the best solution that is possible. In the meantime, with each addition of a new aspect, the truth is sliding around on the 1 - 10 scale from one place to another, since very rarely are we analyzing things like "WWII happened", and more often we are analyzing things like, "We need additional troops in Afghanistan."
Yes, I think we do. Because I want to win the war and it seems to me that the analysis says those troops are necessary to smack the crap out of AQ and move forward to a holding pattern with fewer troops. Others might think we need NO troops, pull them all out, it's useless. Etc, ad infinitum.
That's what I meant by the fact that there's truth and then there's truth. And the scale never being at an extreme or the middle.
If that makes sense. I'm sure it's utterly boring - sorry for that.
Posted by: airforcewife at November 17, 2009 03:02 PM (uE3SA)
TRUTHS OF A DIFFERENT HUMAN ORDER
I am closing in on the end of my 2009 Reading Challenge. Unfortunately, all I want to do is read Atlas Shrugged again, but I ain't tackling a 1200 page book when I'm up against Karl Rove. So I was happy to pick up For the New Intellectual, a gift from Amritas. I have long wished I had access to a searchable Atlas, but this has the next best thing: excerpts of some of the best monologues from the book. I read them on the plane and got all embiggened yesterday.
And also nervous:
And, paving the way for Attila, the intellectuals are still repeating, not by conviction any longer, but by rote, that the growth of government power is not an abridgment of freedom -- that the demand of one group for an unearned share of another group's income is not socialism -- that the destruction of property rights will not affect any other rights -- that man's mind, intelligence, creative ability are a "national resource" (like mines, forests, waterfalls, buffalo reserves, and national parks) to be taken over, subsidized, and disposed of by the government -- that businessmen are selfish autocrats because they are struggling to preserve freedom,while the "liberals" are the true champions of liberty because they are fighting for more government controls -- that the fact that we are sliding down a road that has destroyed every other country, does not prove that it will destroy ours -- that dictatorship is not dictatorship if nobody calls it by that abstract name – and that none of us can help it, anyway.
Do you wish to know whether that day is coming? Watch money. Money is the barometer of a society's virtue. When you see that trading is done, not by consent, but by compulsion--when you see that in order to produce, you need to obtain permission from men who produce nothing--when you see that money is flowing to those who deal, not in goods, but in favors--when you see that men get richer by graft and by pull than by work, and your laws don't protect you against them, but protect them against you--when you see corruption being rewarded and honesty becoming a self-sacrifice--you may know that your society is doomed. Money is so noble a medium that is does not compete with guns and it does not make terms with brutality. It will not permit a country to survive as half-property, half-loot.
Reading Rand always reminds me of this Daniel Quinn quote: "We know that the pious don't go to church every Sunday because they've forgotten that Jesus loves them but rather because they've not forgotten that Jesus loves them. They want to hear it again and again and again and again. [...] there are truths, of a different human order, that must be enunciated again and again and again -- in the same words and in different words: again and again and again."
I like to be reminded that someone like Rand lived, and wrote, and thought.
1
Thanks for mentioning me. I last reread For the New Intellectual on a plane almost exactly a year ago (26 November 200
. So it's neat that you also read it on a plane. At the time, Obama's election was still fresh on my mind and the book made me cry. I've had the book by my side for the last year, and I may reread it when I board a plane next month.
I come here for reinforcement. I like to be reminded that someone like you lives, writes, and thinks.
Posted by: Amritas at November 15, 2009 12:45 PM (G4Rx6)
SAY WHAT YOU MEAN AND MEAN WHAT YOU SAY
This is fantastic: Daily Kos sounds just like Glenn Beck.
Tonight proved conclusively that we're not going to turn out just
because you have a (D) next to your name, or because Obama tells us to.
We'll turn out if we feel it's worth our time and effort to vote, and
we'll work hard to make sure others turn out if you inspire us with
bold and decisive action.
The choice is yours. Give us a reason to vote for you, or we sit home.
Read the whole thing. I promise I am not being snarky. I think this is great. I want both parties to say what they mean and mean what they say. I hate how everyone runs as a moderate and tries to tweak their message so it doesn't offend anyone. Or conversely, when they pretend to have principles and then get in office and abandon all their promises. I want both parties to stand for different principles and then voters can decide which one they align with, not this election trickery where they all try to out-center each other.
I am 100% certain that I don't agree with Markos on any of the issues that he brings up: "health care, financial services, energy policy and immigration reform." But he wants a candidate who represents his views and doesn't just pretend to represent them in order to get elected. I completely agree with this.
Wouldn't it be nice if both parties stopped hiding who they really are and started standing for principles?
Imagine if we really had two distinct choices on election day...
Posted by: Sarah at
01:16 PM
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"Her inner voice became her outer voice," Martha Raddatz,
a veteran NBC correspondent said on the network, explaining that while many in
the administration believed what she said to be true (that Pakistan is coddling
terrorists), it was rare for America's top diplomat to say it publicly.
Officials in Washington were trying to keep a straight face, but there were a
few gasps, she added.
Clinton's blunt remarks came during a pow-wow
with half-dozen combative senior Pakistani journalists who harried her about US
policy in the region.
"Al-Qaida has had safe haven in Pakistan since
2002," she finally asserted when challenged about Washington’s tough
prescriptions for Islamabad. "I find it hard to believe that nobody in your
government knows where they are and couldn't get them if they really wanted to."
After having publicly doubted the bona fides of her hosts, she
added, as an afterthought: "Maybe that's the case; maybe they're not
gettable...I don't know. As far as we know, they are in Pakistan." At one point
during the exchanges, when a journalist spoke about all the services rendered by
Pakistan for the US, Mrs Clinton snapped, "We have also given you
billions."
Sarah - I am sorry for leaving this request on your comments but I don't have your email address (I think I used too?!). I was wondering if I could commission you to make a few hats? My cousin's good friend's daughter (who is 16 months) has been diagnosed w/cancer and is losing her hair due to her treatment. I wanted to see if I could talk to you about making a few hats
Thanks, Keri
Posted by: Keri at November 01, 2009 08:51 PM (dtvJC)
OTOH...also while in Pakistan, Hillary blamed the lack of peace between Israel and the Palestinians on George Bush:
"I think that, look, we all know that the Israeli-Palestinian issue is one that is a very serious and difficult problem that we are working hard also to try to resolve. We inherited a lot of problems. If you remember, when my husband left office, we were very close to an agreement because he worked on it all the time. The next administration did not make it a priority and did not really do much until toward the end. And unfortunately, we are trying to make up for some lost time, in my opinion."
Not only does this demonstrate this administration's utter lack of class and executive strength, it undercuts the assignment of responsibility for the conflict to the place it actually belongs--the death-cult leadership of the Palestinians.
Posted by: david foster at November 01, 2009 08:51 PM (uWlpq)
"MAKING SOMEONE ELSE PAY"
My husband and I have paid for car insurance for over seven years. We have never once filed a claim.
My dental insurance costs about $140 per year. I have never had any dental work done besides cleanings, twice a year at $70 each.
These two insurances work in remarkably different ways. The dental insurance covers every time I walk in the door, even just to have some nice lady floss my teeth for me. The car insurance doesn't cover anything routine and doesn't even cover some big things, like when my windshield broke last year.
And yet, I think about the dental insurance so much more often, for some reason. I am always irritated about breaking even. I keep telling myself that it will pay off once we have kids, or once I need a root canal or something. In the meantime, I get annoyed every time I break even. I start to think that I could get by with one cleaning per year and save the remaining $70. I want to feel more in control of that money, as if I am paying directly for a service instead of paying for insurance.
Maybe, with the car insurance, it's the fact that I don't have a choice to cancel it. I don't often imagine all the money we threw down that hole, but it's a lot. What if we could have it all back?
And don't even bring up all the money we've spent in life insurance...
But that's what insurance is: paying small amounts up front so that you will be eligible for the windfall payment at the end if bad luck strikes. It's a gamble. In the case of our vehicles, we have lost the gamble so far. All the money we've paid in has gone to fix other people's cars for the past seven years.
Such is life.
Health insurance seems to be a misnomer then, because it doesn't seem to work like other insurances, at least not car or life insurance. People seem to want to pay a small amount every month but get a large amount of benefit out every month too. They want to pay $100 and get $300 worth of prescriptions. That's not insurance, that's just redistribution. That's just "making someone else pay", as Patrick McIlheran titled his recent article. He explains why the proposed Obamacare system won't work:
Some companies noted last week that Congress' plans to mandate that
everyone buy health insurance include only weak penalties. The plans
also make insurers take on customers who are already sick. If you're
young and daring, you pay the low penalty and go insurance-free until
your doctor says you've got cancer. You then apply and pay $800-a-month
premiums for $10,000-a-month care. Sweet, until the industry inevitably
collapses, say insurers.
When stated so succinctly, it should be obvious that this system cannot work. You cannot pay $800 for $10,000 worth of benefit without having someone else paying $800 for zero, for a long time. That's how the gamble works in life insurance.
And while we all hate the stories of people who lose their jobs and then get cancer -- and trust me, I hate them pretty bad right now -- the solution, in my opinion, is not that insurers need to cover pre-existing conditions. The solution is to have health insurance that is independent from your job, just as your car or life insurance is. Then it doesn't matter when you get cancer; if you've paid in, you have "won" the gamble.
Mandatory insurance coverage is not, by definition, a gamble. If you can wait to apply until after you have cancer, then why would you ever pay in beforehand?
It seems obvious to me that that system can't work. So why are we trying to implement it?
1
What amazes me is that many people aren't seeing the whole parallel here with the government forcing banks to give loans to those who they usually wouldn't (or in other cases the government taking the risk factor away, and banks become reckless in their loan practices) as a huge contributing factor to the crashing of the housing market. If insurance companies are forced to insure those they usually wouldn't insure, that will lead to insurance companies failing and leaving those who paid dutifully over the years without coverage later when they will most need it.
Posted by: CaliValleyGirl at October 26, 2009 10:00 AM (irIko)
2
I don't understand why we expect medical insurance to pay for non-emergency/non-catastrophic care.
My car insurance doesn't kick in for my oil changes - why should my insurance kick in for my doctor's office visits? It doesn't make sense for me. Insurance is for emergencies - right? Or at least, that's what I thought it was for.
The same goes for dental insurance, I think. Why is the insurance paying for "upkeep" like cleaning? Fillings, I get. Root canals, braces, etc. all make sense. But the cleanings you need to get done at a scheduled time? Like an oil change?
In fact, we had to pay for our own baby delivery because TriCare didn't consider homebirth to be an "approved method" when we cranked out the last three. And we were okay with that, because we knew what we wanted, and what it cost. Kind of like getting your car detailed. Expensive and certainly not covered by your policy, but worth it for some people.
What is being called "insurance" isn't insurance. Even without reform.
Posted by: airforcewife at October 26, 2009 10:34 AM (uE3SA)
3
AFW, I honestly irks me that healthcare isn't an option as an employment benefit. Like, you could opt for healthcare coverage, or you could cash out. Because if you get healthcare coverage, but you can't choose how you are going to get your healthcare, might as well not have to "pay" for that coverage as part of your employee benefits.
Posted by: CaliValleyGirl at October 26, 2009 11:48 AM (irIko)
4
I'd argue that braces aren't even really that unexpected or catastrophic. They're kinda the norm these days, so that means many people are getting a benefit without paying for it.
But that's just details...
You're right: why does United Concordia pay for someone else to floss my teeth? That's not insurance, that's redistribution.
And why don't more people notice that distinction?
Posted by: Sarah at October 26, 2009 12:03 PM (gWUle)
5
I was going to say that it isn't insurance, it is rent.
I think that the argument used by most for visit coverage in insurance policies is two-fold: 1 - the visits are expensive and add up, and 2 - someone who can't help having a chronic condition should not have to pay for routine doctor visits.
Which is redistribution. No, it's not fair, but most of life isn't fair and we all make our choices. That includes health care.
I think I can use my dog for an example: in the last month I noticed that Ike, my sweet dog that can usually have horrible things done to him (like Charlie ripping his toenail out) and not so much as whine at a person started acting weird. He was showing teeth - not growling or snapping, but showing teeth and trying to get away from people. That was weird, so I took him to the vet. Now, we belong to the pet HMO at Banfield, so I didn't have to pay for his vet visit. I did, however, have to pay for a urinalysis and for a blood panel. Sure enough, nearly 450$ later, we found that Ike has a severe UTI (which was nearly entirely blocking his urethra, and could have killed him in short order) and he's been on Clavamox for the week, with one week left to go. And the best part is that I have my dog back now!
Here's the deal - that 450$ has to come from somewhere. I mean, it's not FAIR, right? I shouldn't have to pay for my dog's medical emergencies! Other people's dogs are healthy! I should be able to have a dog and not have to cover these kinds of expenses! Now I have to put off movies and going out to eat for the month of November while other people whose dogs are not so wimpy inside get to go to Applebees! Life's not fair! I want to go to Applebee's too! (PS: I do not spend that much money on movies and going out to eat in a month, but that is just taking into account what we had budgeted for dog care and then the additional that the treatment cost. Also, with four people hitting the theater, you can imagine how that adds up when we DO go out, even if we try to only go to 5$ Tuesday)
That's how I see a lot of the health care argument. Life is NOT fair. Some people never have to see the doctor. Some people have to forgo Disney World because they have a chronic condition that requires significant resources to treat. I'm sorry, but that's just the way life is.
Sarah - your house is WAY nicer than mine. That's just the way life is - we had different resources to allocate because we had different conditions placed on our lives at the time we bought a house. That's just the way it is. I'm not owed a better house. And you certainly shouldn't be forced into something not as nice to "be fair."
I think healthcare is the same thing, with a slight twist. There are certain things we should work hard to change - catastrophic care should be available for everyone at a reasonable cost (one that reflects societal ability to pay and also allows hospitals and doctors to continue to provide coverage because they have enough funding!), but I don't think that means government insurance. I think that means we need to rethink the way we've been doing business. If all those celebrities spending money trying to gather support for Universal Healthcare coverage instead put that into seed money for a non-profit, non-work attached catastrophic coverage that would work something like the Fireman's Mutual Life Insurance (for example), we'd have another real option and more competition and impetus for change from within that is responsive to what people actually need. And the money wouldn't be wasted as it is being now, but that's only my opinion.
//thesis off, for the moment. But I reserve the right to re-visit this after CCD, swim team, and Girl Scouts this evening.
Posted by: airforcewife at October 26, 2009 12:31 PM (uE3SA)
I had all the miscarriages and, had things worked differently, was getting ready to pay $12,000 out of my own pocket to try to have a baby. Fair? Hardly. It's because of genetic scrambling done when I was conceived, not something I could control at all. But normal people get to have a baby without $1000 in testing/prep like I had to do, and certainly without $12,000 fees.
Such is life.
Life ain't fair.
Oh, and I would also add...we've talked before and your house cost the exact same amount as my house did. But yours is in a higher-cost area. I could've only afforded what you have if I were in your area too. When you are restricted to having to live somewhere based on where your husband is assigned, you have to buy based on that. Trust me, if our next duty station pans out, you'll probably have more house than me again!
And I want to make that into an argument for being about to buy healthcare across state lines...but I'm too lazy to lay out the whole argument. So go ahead and imagine it in your own head
P.S. Glad Ike is feeling better...and glad you were observant enough to notice he was suffering. Charlie misses him.
Posted by: Sarah at October 26, 2009 01:12 PM (gWUle)
7
One thing about car insurance, though, is that is it primarily not to protect YOU, but to protect those you might hurt. At least in Texas, the only required coverage is liability. Anything above that - to pay for damage I cause to me or my car - it extra.
Health insurance, on the other hand, is ONLY about protecting you. If you don't have health insurance, it doesn't immediately affect anyone else (ignoring the potential that you go to the emergency room, and the taxpayer is stuck paying for it).
One of my old employers did a "self-insurance". We, the employees, were the only ones contributing to the pool that care was paid from. Guess what? Every year, we were told we "had a bad plan year", and our premiums would go up. They NEVER went down. A couple of women have babies, or someone has to have major surgery, and me, who only really ever went in for an annual and the other people who weren't ever needing real medical care, were picking up the tab. That's what insurance companies do, on a larger scale. It's just easier to see when you work at a company with only 10s of employees (no more than 200, I'd say, and not all of them would have been eligible for coverage, if they weren't full-time, regular employees). Yeah, it's great when someone has a baby, or they get a surgery that saves a life or makes life easier, but why should I have to help pay for it?
Posted by: Miss Ladybug at October 27, 2009 12:36 AM (paOhf)
8
Paying a flat rate for medical care might make sense. I pay a flat rate for Internet access, for example. But it's not insurance. Insurance by definition can only be for things that are unlikely to happen. The way you turn medical insurance into real insurance is to have a high deductible. Not too complicated - but exactly the opposite of what's being proposed in Congress. National insurance for catastrophic illness would be MUCH cheaper than what's now being proposed, and would answer most people's real fears.
Posted by: David Boxenhorn at October 27, 2009 05:04 AM (RIeXu)
@Airforcewife. Please please please take your dog to someplace other than Banfield. I work for Petsmart as a trainer, I NEVER recommend them and always tell people to go to an independent pet insurer. It's cheaper and they actually cover things. Banfield is corporate vet medicine. When my old roomate was waiting to hear about jobs right as she was graduating in May I said "you can always work for Banfield for a year if what you want doesn't pan out" She said she would rather go back work as a Vet tech rather than work as a Vet for them.
I pay for really good insurance out of my own pocket with a policy with a really high deductible. If I meet it then for the rest of the year everything is covered 100%. I want a choice to do that.
I think the problems lie in the fact that Dr.'s have to pay so much for malpractice insurance and the drug companies can jack up their prices while spending money of golf trips for the Docs they are trying to get to use their products.
We need insurance reform and tort reform. Not national healthcare.
Posted by: Mare at October 27, 2009 08:25 AM (HUa8I)
10
Miss Ladybug -- My family has some experience with that, only on the flip side. My mom is the expensive one, with many prescriptions and a chronic disease. She and one other wife have always been the one to make insurance at my dad's office expensive for everyone else. And she feels bad about it.
My point is, what the Democrats/Obama is proposing just isn't affordable. Costs for EVERYONE keep going up. Personally, I'd like to be able to get some kind of catastrophic coverage, then pay for everything else as I need it. Right now, I am uninsured because I am single and do not have full-time regular employment, and with the debt I incurred going back to school and the very unexpectedly long period of underemployment, I cannot afford to buy insurance on my own. I have had to go to the doctor since I became uninsured (again - I temporarily got student insurance when I was in school, but that has been expired for more than 2 years now), but I don't make the taxpayer pay for it by going to the ER. I go to a local walk-in clinic and pay for it myself, either out-of-pocket immediately or on credit, depending on what I was bringing in at the time. I ask for generics, letting doctor know I'm having to pay whatever the going price is. Having that direct financial impact I know makes a difference in the medical choices I make. Insurance removes that direct impact and allows people to forget what it REALLY costs, and that many times translates into making choices that cost everyone eventually because insurance companies have to cover their costs.
Posted by: Miss Ladybug at October 27, 2009 05:13 PM (paOhf)
Someone I know made an interesting point to me this morning. If they legalize marijuana and tax the hell out of it, it would pay for health care for everyone.
A munchie tax? Persoanlly I'd call it the 'if you're going to be a dumbass' tax
Posted by: Mare at October 28, 2009 09:04 AM (HUa8I)
13
I don't know about the legalized marijuana tax being such a solution. When have tax revenues EVER been what they were predicted to be? People find ways around them.
Not to say there wouldn't be tax revenue realized on pot, just that I highly doubt it would be anything near predictions.
I mean, seriously - if it's legal, it can be a house plant. I can see old ladies switching their ferns out and spray bottle spritzing cannabis.
On the bright side, there might be an upsurge in FFA registrations, as teenagers join to learn all the newest techniques.
Posted by: airforcewife at October 28, 2009 09:38 AM (uE3SA)
As for the stunning laziness he has showed in certain matters such as
the stimulus and Guantanamo, here's another theory: that Obama is like
Francisco D'Anconia in Atlas Shrugged. That is, he keeps screwing up,
because he doesn't give a damn if things get fouled up or not. He's not
putting his intelligence into the system, because he doesn't care about
the system, even if his failures make him look bad as well. In other
words, in some instance he causes damage deliberately, as with his
healthcare plan, and in other instance he causes damage by simply not
putting his mind into what he's doing.
Via Amritas, that has kept me thinking all day. Because you know I'm always up forcomparing Atlas to real life.
First, I am not sure I agree with Auster's summary of D'Anconia's strategy. I do indeed think he "gave a damn." His actions were deliberate and his method was calculating. He lost everything to bring about the collapse of the system, including the woman he loved. His sabotage was intensely personal and heartbreaking. But it was a deliberate choice because he DID give a damn. And yes, his failures made him look bad, but the trashing of his reputation was deliberate as well. He sacrificed everything he was in order to stop participating in a system he abhorred. At least that's the way I remember D'Anconia.
Conversely, I don't think Pres Obama would ruin his reputation to achieve his ends the way D'Anconia did. I think all Obama has is his reputation. I don't think he would give up money and power and his good name to bring about...whatever it is he is working towards (and there is much debate about that.) In short, I don't think he has half the integrity or fortitude as D'Anconia did. What Obama wants is wealth redistribution, which is the moral equivalent of stealing from one man and giving it to another, and then patting yourself on the back for helping, as CVG once said. He's not sacrificing anything of his own for his goals. Hell, how many times have people pointed out that he could start by helping his aunt and brother if he cares so much about all people living equally?
My opinion is that Pres Obama doesn't have the moral conviction that Francisco D'Anconia did, and that he wouldn't sacrifice one iota of his own wealth or reputation for his worldview.
1
You know, I love your quote: "The US is not one big family with a collective bank account."
Posted by: CaliValleyGirl at October 23, 2009 01:50 PM (irIko)
2
"...the moral equivalent of stealing from one man and giving it to another..."
Has anyone else been thinking over the last few months (or hey, maybe longer and I'm just slow) that Robin Hood really isn't a story we should be telling kids?
Posted by: Doug at October 23, 2009 02:23 PM (wTfju)
3
Sarah, you're 100% correct on D'Anconia. I'd say we have a damn good James Taggart on our hands . . . wants to do nothing but take credit for everything, trusting someone else to keep the engine running. Sound about right?
Posted by: Lissa at October 23, 2009 03:26 PM (eSfKC)
Sarah, thanks for analyzing why that comparison doesn't work. It seemed off the wall to me when I forwarded it to you last night and now I clearly see why.
Rand's heroes were not interested in reputations because that would make them dependent on others.
Obama is all about dependence. He's a community organizer. He needs a community to organize ... in other words, other people. Unable to create anything himself, he takes from the haves and gives to the have-nots ... or should that be the want-mores? In turn, they support him ... the greatest haver of them all. They pat his back. They prop him up. They voted for him. And they will vote for others like him.
Doug, good point about Robin Hood. Kids shouldn't admire socialist adventurers. But I can still sympathize with Robin Hood and his Merry Men on one level. Robin Hood was anti-establishment whereas Obama is the ultimate establishment figure. And I can't imagine Robin Hood living the high life without helping his aunt and brother.
Lissa, too bad Michelle Obama is no Dagny. Nor is Palin. Where is our Rearden, much less our John Galt? The Limbaughs and Becks are transmitters, not creators. I fear that the creative class* in the real world is not on our side. Talk radio and Fox News are not enough.
*I am referring to engineers and the like, not Hollyweirdos.
Posted by: Amritas at October 23, 2009 04:04 PM (+nV09)
5
It is a true old saying that charity begins at home. I can't imagine anyone in my family not helping out another member if they were in the condition of Obama's siblings, aunts and uncles. In their country it would take only a pittance to keep them in good condition. A person who would not help his relatives is not worthy to ask us to help anyone. Is anyone besides me disgusted with all the talk of volunteers in comic strips and ads going around? I am a longtime volunteer and manager of other volunteers and I know how ticked they get when someone comes along wanting to be, and getting paid for, the work they have been doing for free for years. I am speaking specifically of Americorp claiming to be volunteers years ago in Louisiana. We lost several volunteer tutors in one small town due to their machinations. (hey, maybe I should have posted that on my own blog)
Posted by: Ruth H at October 23, 2009 08:18 PM (CvvEA)
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Amritas, I think Robin Hood is a great story for kids. The story revolves around an anti-establishment vigilante taking back taxes and wealth that were immorally extracted from the public. What's not to like? Plus, the Disney movie is really cute
It's a great way to teach kids from a young age that taxes are distasteful!
Posted by: Lissa at October 24, 2009 06:54 AM (mgjM7)
Remember, Robin Hood lived in a feudal society, whose operative principle was "no land without a lord, no man without a lord."
Our present leaders are attempting to restore such a society, a hierarchy in which everybody knows his place (now to be determined by educational credentials and political contacts rather than strictly by birth) and in which all our open "lands" (entrepreneurial opportunities) will be enclosed and placed under the direction of the established nobles.
Posted by: david foster at October 25, 2009 09:44 AM (uWlpq)
YAY, GIVE HIM ANOTHER PEACE PRIZE!
Finally, an Obama move I can applaud:
Federal drug agents won't pursue pot-smoking patients or their
sanctioned suppliers in states that allow medical marijuana, under new
legal guidelines to be issued Monday by the Obama administration.
Two
Justice Department officials described the new policy to The Associated
Press, saying prosecutors will be told it is not a good use of their
time to arrest people who use or provide medical marijuana in strict
compliance with state law.
It makes no sense to have a state law that makes something legal and a federal law that trumps it. For me, it's a simple Tenth Amendment issue and a fight or flee issue: if you need medicinal marijuana, move to a state that offers it; if it offends you, move away. I don't think it should be a federal law at all.
So good job, for now, of clarifying a ridiculous conflict in laws. Let the states decide.
Now to work on teasing apart inter- and intra-state commerce...starting in Montana...
HAVE YOU EVER LISTENED TO A WORD HE'S SAID?
David Frum is absolutely wrong. I would bet anything you'd ask of me that Glenn Beck would rather be penniless than to sell out on his values and principles. I would guarantee it. Frum is dead wrong, which makes me wonder if he's ever even listened to Beck in the first place.
1
Frum asked, "Do Limbaugh and Beck Believe What They Say?"
I'd like to ask him the same thing. I bet he probably does.
Some believe one thing and say another.
Others believe what they say, but not all of them retain the same core beliefs over time.
A lack of retention is not necessarily a bad thing. I myself have changed enormously over the years. Am I evil because I'm not a Leftist anymore?
The problem is when one becomes Y but still claims to be X.
Frum still regards himself as a conservative. Yet he has mutated into the perfect nominal opponent of the Democrats. Different, but not too different. Not too radical. Safe. Weak. Like the Korean Social Democratic Party and the Chondoist Chongu Party in North Korea which can never threaten the Workers' Party of Korea.
Why does Frum call his site newmajority.com? Because he feels liberals are the majority and he wants to be part of it. He cares what others think. He wants to be one of them.
America has changed (= liberalized), so 'conservatives' must also change (= liberalize).
Frum wants American conservatives to be like British and Canadians. Listen to him in this video starting at 0:03. I couldn't stand to listen to any more of it.
Perhaps Frum believes that those who have not become RINOs, who have not 'evolved' to a 'higher', more Leftist level, must be clinging to the past for profit.
Or perhaps it's all projection on his part.
I don't really care what he thinks. I have no idea. I shouldn't speculate. It is sufficient to condemn what he says.
You may want to read "Is Glenn Beck Good for Conservatives?" which is more like "Does David Horowitz Think David Frum Is Good for Conservatives?" The short answer is 'no'.
Frum is a disgrace. I don't envy him. Who wants to be a 'court conservative' surrounded by Leftists?
There will be no token liberals in the gulch.
Posted by: Amritas at October 18, 2009 05:29 PM (h9KHg)
If Frum has gone liberal, I'm OK with that. I don't know him personally. I don't feel betrayed. People switch sides all the time. Personal beliefs don't hurt me.
What upsets me is how he wants others to follow his lead and build "a new [non-]conservatism that can [supposedly] win again". Frum can believe whatever he wants, but does he have to try to drag us down with him so he won't feel lonely?
Why should we support RINOs who are doomed to lose? Why would a liberal vote for a guy who offers almost as many handouts? Why would a conservative vote for a guy who offers handouts at all?
Winning isn't everything. Being small r-right is what matters. If only a few people are right, so be it. I'd rather be one of them than part of Frum's new majority.
If most people start believing 2 + 2 = 5, Frum will advise us to believe it, or at least to 'admit' that 2 + 2 = 5 ... sometimes. I'd ignore him. Truth is not democratic.
Again, changing your mind is not inherently wrong. The question is, do you change it because you want to be (un)like everyone else*, or because you think you're closer to the truth?
(*Being a deliberate contrarian is as bad as being a lemming. Rejecting something just because everyone else believes in it is still a form of caring about what others think, of letting others determine your thoughts, of not using your brain's full potential. What a waste.)
One more thing: Although there is no inherent reason that the word conservatism has to mean what I think it does as opposed to what Frum thinks it does or something completely different, we need some degree of consensus on what a term means, lest it become meaningless.
'Fascist' is almost meaningless. Nowadays it simply refers to whatever the speaker doesn't like, regardless of whether it resembles Mussolini's ideology or not. It's just a more politically flavored synonym of 'bad'.
Will 'conservative' mean 'almost liberal'? Will a new term like 'traditionalist' arise to take its place? That term has its own issues: e.g., which traditions does traditionalism stand for? All of them? Some of them? Maybe there's no point in discussing a new term now if we should try to hang on to the one we've already got.
Posted by: Amritas at October 18, 2009 06:07 PM (h9KHg)
3
I think they do believe what they say. I mean, what a waste of an article. It's not like Olbermann, O'Reilly and all the other opinion hosts just woke up one day and decided they wanted to be famous and though really hard about what their tactic would be. That's such a ridiculous statement from Frum, however, I do have to say that although I like the message, I don't like Glenn Beck. I mean, he really gets over the top sometimes...like when he starts crying about stuff...seriously? Come on, Glenn. You're not Oprah. It's supposed to be an opinion news show.
Posted by: CaliValleyGirl at October 21, 2009 08:57 AM (irIko)
ROOSEVELT'S WAGER
A great paragraph from my book The Forgotten Man. I think it applies to today just as easily, and I think it captures my frustration with why the system is not what I believe it should be:
But the critics had another reason to be loud -- their own frustration at the genius of Roosevelt's wager. Roosevelt, they saw, had understood something that the Republicans had not. The contest now was not Democrat versus Republican but rather this classical republic versus the classical democracy. Government was less a representative republic than it had once been, more directly controlled by the people. The change had started back in the 1910s with the constitutional amendment to permit the electorate to pick senators directly, rather than through their state legislatures. Suffrage for women had accelerated it. And the Depression had accelerated it again -- people who might not have had an interest in government before now found that hunger concentrated their minds. Instead of asking what government was doing on behalf of the general welfare, voters were asking in a very democratic way what Roosevelt was doing for them.
1
I've been pondering over that passage during the last week. I've never read the book, so I don't know its full context. In isolation, Shlaes seems to be saying that a government "more directly controlled by the people" is worse than one that is less directly controlled. But is letting the electorate picking senators necessarily a bad thing? Are state legislatures inherently better selectors of senators? (One could argue that they are, since they are probably better educated - or indoctrinated? - than many or even most voters and by experience if not training are more acquainted with the law.) Would state legislatures not have picked Ted Kennedy and Obama?
Suffrage for women had accelerated it.
Undoubtedly, because allowing women to vote instantly doubles the electorate. Would Shlaes advocate that women no longer be able to vote? That would halve the (excessive) power of the people.
Instead of asking what government was doing on behalf of the general
welfare, voters were asking in a very democratic way what Roosevelt was
doing for them.
And so they voted for him. Should direct elections of presidents be abolished in favor of a prime minister appointed by Congress?
Would a "classical republic" necessarily cause voters to ask what Shlaes seems to think is the right question: what is government doing on behalf of the general welfare? How much does the form of government influence the thinking of its citizens?
Tonight I watched this video on the difference between a democracy and a republic: rule by people vs. rule by law. But I wondered: which laws? Who makes them up? Laws are neither inherently good nor evil. Law-and-order people always assume that 'laws' are right (i.e., embody what they think is right.) But Article 58 was also a law.
"Who among us has not experienced its all-encompassing embrace? In all
truth, there is no step, thought, action, or lack of action under the
heavens which could not be punished by the heavy hand of Article 58."
- Solzhenitsyn
Just as 'democracy' was not a panacea for Iraq, the concept of a 'republic' is not a panacea for America. (Has anyone demanded a 'republic' instead of a 'democracy' for Iraq, Afghanistan, etc.?) Here's how a 'republic' could work:
- the people vote for state legislatures (mostly made up of lawyers)
- those legislatures vote for senators (more lawyers)
- the senators pick a prime minister (another lawyer)
This is not that different from what we already have - de facto rule by an oligarchy of lawyers. (That video contrasted an oligarchy with a republic. The dividing line is not so obvious to me.) This would be fine if the lawyers were like Guard Wife, but they are more like St. Ted and the One.
Any system of government can be 'gamed'.
Posted by: Amritas at October 12, 2009 02:45 AM (h9KHg)
2
It just occurred to me that if rule by law is ideal, then rulers have to be lawyers. Why give power to a Palin when it should be in the hands of an anointed caste that elects each other?
54 percent of respondents [among LSAT takers] say they will "definitely" or "probably" run for political office ...
Has Obama's law degree proved more inspiring than Bush's MBA?
I wonder how many law student graduates want to run for office? How many think they can be the next Obama? The next Hillary or Bill?
A special few make the laws and all others must obey them. Take the LSAT. Go to law school. Pass the bar exam. And even then, there's no guarantee of success:
At Northwestern University Law School, at least three-quarters of
students who graduated in May had their employment deferred, in some
cases up to a year, says Bill Chamberlain, head of the school's career
center.
But if you're lucky enough, power can be yours. And you can write more laws to make yourself more powerful. When the people cry, "Do something!" you can say truthfully that you are doing something, even if you don't admit you're just empowering yourself. The impressed masses will then reelect you. Term limits? Why would you ever draft or vote for such a thing?
The only reason you want the Twenty-Second Amendment is so that some incumbent won't stand in your way. It should only be repealed once the throne is yours.
Posted by: Amritas at October 12, 2009 09:02 PM (h9KHg)
I JUST WANT TO STAY HOME
On the plane on the way home, I horrifiedly figured out that by the time my baby is born, she will have already been in 18 different states.
I wonder if someone has tried to have a fifty-state baby.
Posted by: Amritas at September 29, 2009 01:26 PM (+nV09)
5
I noticed you missed The People's Republic of New Jersey. Probably a wise choice, because if you are in the state for more than thirty-seconds, you'll be taxed for something or other. :-)
Posted by: Jim - PRS at October 02, 2009 03:11 AM (HZ0p9)
BORLAUG CARRIED A WATERMELON
I'm a few days late, but I was finally prompted to say something because of Patrick Swayze. I don't mean to denigrate him at all; he was a fine actor and probably a fine man. (He was in Red Dawn, for pete's sake, so that automatically makes him OK in my book.) But a couple days ago, Deskmerc was the only one of my Facebook friends to salute the passing of Norman Borlaug. As of last night, dozens of people were saluting Swayze. I think that's exactly backwards, and while everyone is touched that Johnny won't dance again, myself included, we all missed the fact that the greatest man who ever lived passed away this week too.
We are still cavepeople. We feel more for what we can see. We saw Patrick Swayze, not just in a brief clip like one you linked to, but in movies watched by millions. Or a movie in my case. I've only seen him in Red Dawn over 20 years ago and have only the vaguest notion of what he looks like. So I had to look up "carried a watermelon".
How many actors from Shakespeare's time are remembered today? Only those who saw those actors perform remember them, and they are as long dead as the actors. But Swayze's image will live on every time a DVD of his performances plays.
I don't care for the cult of the actor. Movies are stories (or are supposed to be stories). Who makes up those stories? Unseen writers. Yet even directors get more attention. But there would be nothing to act out, nothing to direct, without writers. Yet how many people can name the writers of their favorite movies and TV shows?
Writing is abstract and doesn't impress us the way an actor does. Our reactions to actors are no different from a caveman's reactions to an attractive human. We let our instincts overpower our intellect. This is why people sit through bad movies with charismatic actors (and put up with bad but charismatic leaders).
I must have seen Borlaug's name before. I've definitely read about the Green Revolution before and I even mentioned it to you in a recent email (albeit without Borlaug's name). Nonetheless his name didn't stick in my brain. Unlike Swayze, Borlaug was a name without a face. A string of letters that unraveled and disappeared down the memory hole. I had to look him up this morning after you mentioned him. His achievements are hard to visualize:
Borlaug's discoveries have been estimated to have saved over 245 million lives worldwide.
Penn said "a billion people".
We can't see those billion lives being saved. There aren't cameras running to record his process of discovery. And watching people farm and eat isn't exciting, whereas a guy saving a single life on camera is exciting ... and understandable. Most of us don't process big numbers. We can easily envision saving one life, or the lives of everyone on a bus. We've seen such acts dramatized. But a billion lives? We cannot see that many people. It's physically impossible.
So in short, here's the cruel irony: we're hard-wired to admire the small and concrete but neglect the great and abstract. Man can do amazing things, but other men may not care - even though they may depend on the hidden and virtuous for their very lives!
Virtue is its own reward. Do what's right, even if you'll never be recognized. Be like Borlaug.
Posted by: Amritas at September 15, 2009 11:27 AM (+nV09)
2
Take a look at this (well, maybe you shouldn't): "The feted agronomist may have saved a billion from starvation, but..." How can anyone write "but" after "may have saved a billion from starvation"?
Posted by: David Boxenhorn at September 16, 2009 01:01 AM (/+KQb)
WHY IS THERE STILL A HOLE?
Like Glenn Beck, my anger has been more focused lately on my own government than on the enemy. Even with my husband in Afghanistan, I have spent the majority of my time fretting over the 10th Amendment.
I thought this was worth watching and thinking about yesterday...
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Great bit comes at the end, in response to a question about why we'd pass cap and trade if it's failed in Europe:
The purpose of these things is not to do anything; it's to show that you're a nice man. The worst aspect of modern politics is this belief that legislation should somehow be proportionate to public outrage, rather than proportionate to the need to get something done. [...] The global warming thing...is an elevation of the moralistic over the moral. It means you place more emphasis on holding the right opinions about big corporations than on actually doing the right thing in your own life. Little example of this: Do people in this room know who I mean by Irena Sendler, who was a Polish Catholic who smuggled babies out of the Warsaw ghetto during the war? Incredibly heroic woman who died a few months ago. She was captured and tortured and, then this is the amazing thing, changed her name and went back to doing it. She was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize, and do you know who the Nobel Peace Prize went to that year instead of her? Al Gore! Al Gore! Just stop and ponder that for a moment, think about what that says about society's values: that it is more important to have made a film having the correct opinions than to have risked your life day after day rescuing children.
1
Yeah, I was totally thinking about that today too: if the point is to actually get something done, there always seems to be something that is "sexier". I mean, according to statistics about 20,000 people die a year in America because they are uninsured and can't get proper health care. Obviously those statistics are a little fuzzy, because it is hard to know if they would have lived if they had the proper health care...which brings me to a scarier statistic. The number of people who die every year in America, because of malpractice: around 90,000 (although I have seen as low as 40,000). Obviously the same applies as with the first statistic, but the fact remains that more people die in America every year FROM medical treatment, than those who die because they don't get it. So it seems to me that there is a bigger problem out there. But every seems to overlook that one.
Posted by: CaliValleyGirl at August 09, 2009 07:43 PM (irIko)
That has never been the point. If one has power, one doesn't need "something done". One has servants to do everything for your personal needs, which are all that truly matter.
It is the Omegas who need "something done", but are foolish enough to fall for "something that is 'sexier'." These creatures even pay the government to deceive them with feel-good propaganda and fund their own 'free' handouts. They deserve what they get.
The question is, do you?
How can Great Leaders, willing dependents of the State, and free men coexist in the same nation? As Sesame Street would put it, one of these things is not like the others.
Posted by: kevin at August 10, 2009 12:47 AM (h9KHg)
3
Yeah, the proponents of the "healthcare" program show remarkably little
interest in the actual *operation* of the healthcare system, and in
issues such as medical errors. It's mostly about power and glory for
politicians and also for the vast armies of academics and consultants
who would benefit.
There *are* people worrying about the medical-error problem...one good
source isMark Graban's blog. (www.leanblog.org) Mark is a guy
with a lot of experience in manufacturing and with expertise in Lean
methodologies, now focused on the improvement of processes in
healthcare.
Posted by: david foster at August 10, 2009 09:18 AM (uWlpq)
4
David, Thanks for that link...I will definitely bookmark it.
Posted by: CaliValleyGirl at August 10, 2009 09:22 AM (irIko)
5
Love, Love, LOVE Daniel Hannan!!! Did you know you can buy "Dan Han's the Man" t-shirts? LOL... Can't find the link now, but here's another one you'll appreciate. ;-)
Posted by: Krista at August 10, 2009 10:27 AM (sUTgZ)
"THE LEPER'S BELL OF AN APPROACHING LOOTER"
BigD said she hasn't yet found time to read Atlas Shrugged. She also said that she is sometimes so surrounded by lefties that she forgets that there are other people out there who think like she does and have the same values she does.
BigD, you are not alone. This is for you...
"So you think that money is the root of all evil?" said Francisco d'Anconia. "Have you ever asked what is the root of money?...
AL GORE'S BIGGEST FAN
An inventive counterpoint to anthropogenic global warming (via Amritas):
In a way I am happy to accept AGW as real, because if you do then it becomes highly illogical to
-send
tonnes of food to low carbon footprint 3rd world countries leading to a
population boom (Daniel Quinn has written some good stuff on this -
more food, more people);
-then subsequently invite them to high carbon footprint countries (my country having the highest immigration rate in the world).
This
provides a handy excuse to call for a stop foreign "aid", and to stop
immigration, while retaining moral highground versus the left. If they
really cared about AGW and really believed it to be the greatest threat
to humanity, they would stop feeding "surplus" carbon producing humans,
and also stop transferring them from low carbon footprint societies to
high carbon footprint societies.
It's a fun argument to make
against AGW freaks; public policies must mesh together; in my country's
case we committed to reducing total carbon emissions to 6% (I think)
under the Kyoto accord while simultaneously increasing our population
through immigration by about 7% during the implementation phase. You
can have the world's highest immigration rate while also fueling a
population explosion in the third world, or you can fight AGW, but you
can't do both, not at the same time. Public policy debates with
leftists rarely present such easy rebuttals to what is so dear to them.
Hey, if AGW gets us off the hook from foreign aid and gets us
zero immigration, I'll be Al Gore's biggest fan, but for some reason
I'm quite certain that's not their end game.
I think it would be hilarious to hear that brought up in a global warming debate.
1
A logical liberal argument - unnecessary. As long as it makes you feel good in that "WAY TO GO!!!!" kind of way (thank you South Park). The lefties just want more control.
Good post.
Posted by: Patrick at August 01, 2009 08:12 AM (/iKMZ)
2
That is really brilliant... there are just SO MANY complications to trying to make EVERYTHING turn out "right" in life, aren't there? ;-)
Posted by: Krista at August 01, 2009 02:10 PM (sUTgZ)
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There is neither happiness nor misery in the world; there is only the comparison of one state with another, nothing more. He who has felt the deepest grief is best able to experience supreme happiness. We must have felt what it is to die, Morrel, that we may appreciate the enjoyments of living. --The Count of Monte Cristo--
While our troops go out to defend our country, it is incumbent upon us to make the country worth defending. --Deskmerc--
Contrary to what you've just seen, war is neither glamorous nor fun. There are no winners, only losers. There are no good wars, with the following exceptions: The American Revolution, WWII, and the Star Wars Trilogy. --Bart Simpson--
If you want to be a peacemaker, you've gotta learn to kick ass. --Sheriff of East Houston, Superman II--
Going to war without France is like going deer hunting without an accordion. You just leave a lot of useless noisy baggage behind. --Jed Babbin--
Dante once said that the hottest places in hell are reserved for those who in a period of moral crisis maintain their neutrality. --President John F. Kennedy--
War is a bloody, killing business. You've got to spill their blood, or they will spill yours. --General Patton--
We've gotta keep our heads until this peace craze blows over. --Full Metal Jacket--
Those who threaten us and kill innocents around the world do not need to be treated more sensitively. They need to be destroyed. --Dick Cheney--
The Flag has to come first if freedom is to survive. --Col Steven Arrington--
The purpose of diplomacy isn't to make us feel good about Eurocentric diplomatic skills, and having countries from the axis of chocolate tie our shoelaces together does nothing to advance our infantry. --Sir George--
I just don't care about the criticism I receive every day, because I know the cause I defend is right. --Oriol--
It's days like this when we're reminded that freedom isn't free. --Chaplain Jacob--
Bumper stickers aren't going to accomplish some of the missions this country is going to face. --David Smith--
The success of multilateralism is measured not merely by following a process, but by achieving results. --President Bush--
Live and act within the limit of your knowledge and keep expanding it to the limit of your life.
--John Galt--
First, go buy a six pack and swig it all down. Then, watch Ace Ventura. And after that, buy a Hard Rock Cafe shirt and come talk to me. You really need to lighten up, man.
--Sminklemeyer--
You've got to kill people, and when you've killed enough they stop fighting --General Curtis Lemay--
If we wish to be free, if we mean to preserve inviolate those inestimable privileges for which we have been so long contending, if we mean not basely to abandon the noble struggle in which we have been so long engaged, and which we have pledged ourselves never to abandon until the glorious object of our contest shall be obtained -- we must fight! --Patrick Henry--
America has never been united by blood or birth or soil. We are bound by ideals that move us beyond our backgrounds, lift us above our interests and teach us what it means to be citizens. Every child must be taught these principles. Every citizen must uphold them. And every immigrant, by embracing these ideals, makes our country more, not less, American. --President George W. Bush--
are usually just cheerleading sessions, full of sound and fury and signifying nothing but a soothing reduction in blood pressure brought about by the narcotic high of being agreed with. --Bill Whittle
War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things. The decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feeling which thinks that nothing is worth war is much worse. The person who has nothing for which he is willing to fight, nothing which is more important than his own personal safety, is a miserable creature and has no chance of being free unless made and kept so by the exertions of better men than himself.
--John Stuart Mill--
We are determined that before the sun sets on this terrible struggle, our flag will be recognized throughout the world as a symbol of freedom on the one hand and of overwhelming force on the other. --General George Marshall--
We can continue to try and clean up the gutters all over the world and spend all of our resources looking at just the dirty spots and trying to make them clean. Or we can lift our eyes up and look into the skies and move forward in an evolutionary way.
--Buzz Aldrin--
America is the greatest, freest and most decent society in existence. It is an oasis of goodness in a desert of cynicism and barbarism. This country, once an experiment unique in the world, is now the last best hope for the world.
--Dinesh D'Souza--
Recent anti-Israel protests remind us again of our era's peculiar alliance: the most violent, intolerant, militantly religious movement in modern times has the peace movement on its side. --James Lileks--
As a wise man once said: we will pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, in order to assure the survival and the success of liberty.
Unless the price is too high, the burden too great, the hardship too hard, the friend acts disproportionately, and the foe fights back. In which case, we need a timetable.
--James Lileks--
I am not willing to kill a man so that he will agree with my faith, but I am prepared to kill a man so that he cannot force my compatriots to submit to his.
--Froggy--
You can say what you want about President Bush; but the truth is that he can take a punch. The man has taken a swift kick in the crotch for breakfast every day for 6 years and he keeps getting up with a smile in his heart and a sense of swift determination to see the job through to the best of his abilties.
--Varifrank--
In a perfect world, We'd live in peace and love and harmony with each oither and the world, but then, in a perfect world, Yoko would have taken the bullet.
--SarahBellum--
Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children's children what it was once like in the United States where men were free. --Ronald Reagan--
America is rather like life. You can usually find in it what you look for. It will probably be interesting, and it is sure to be large. --E.M. Forster--
Do not fear the enemy, for your enemy can only take your life. It is far better that you fear the media, for they will steal your HONOR. That awful power, the public opinion of a nation, is created in America by a horde of ignorant, self-complacent simpletons who failed at ditching and shoemaking and fetched up in journalism on their way to the poorhouse. --Mark Twain--
The Enlightenment was followed by the French Revolution and the Napoleonic wars, which touched every European state, sparked vicious guerrilla conflicts across the Continent and killed millions. Then, things really turned ugly after the invention of soccer. --Iowahawk--
Every time I meet an Iraqi Army Soldier or Policeman that I haven't met before, I shake his hand and thank him for his service. Many times I am thanked for being here and helping his country. I always tell them that free people help each other and that those that truly value freedom help those seeking it no matter the cost. --Jack Army--
Right, left - the terms are useless nowadays anyway. There are statists, and there are individualists. There are pessimists, and optimists. There are people who look backwards and trust in the West, and those who look forward and trust in The World. Those are the continuums that seem to matter the most right now. --Lileks--
The best argument against democracy is a five-minute conversation with the average voter.
--Winston Churchill--
A man or a nation is not placed upon this earth to do merely what is pleasant and what is profitable. It is often called upon to carry out what is both unpleasant and unprofitable, but if it is obviously right it is mere shirking not to undertake it. --Arthur Conan Doyle--
A man who has nothing which he cares about more than he does about his personal safety is a miserable creature who has no chance of being free, unless made and kept so by the existing of better men than himself. --John Stuart Mill--
After the attacks on September 11, 2001, most of the sheep, that is, most citizens in America said, "Thank God I wasn't on one of those planes." The sheepdogs, the warriors, said, "Dear God, I wish I could have been on one of those planes. Maybe I could have made a difference." --Dave Grossman--
At heart I’m a cowboy; my attitude is if they’re not going to stand up and fight for what they believe in then they can go pound sand. --Bill Whittle--
A democracy is always temporary in nature; it simply cannot exist as a permanent form of government. A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover that they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates who promise the most benefits from the public treasury, with the result that every democracy will finally collapse due to loose fiscal policy, which is always followed by a dictatorship. --Alexander Tyler--
By that time a village half-wit could see what generations of professors had pretended not to notice. --Atlas Shrugged--
I kept asking Clarence why our world seemed to be collapsing and everything seemed so shitty. And he'd say, "That's the way it goes, but don't forget, it goes the other way too." --Alabama Worley--
So Bush is history, and we have a new president who promises to heal the planet, and yet the jihadists don’t seem to have got the Obama message that there are no enemies, just friends we haven’t yet held talks without preconditions with.
--Mark Steyn--
"I had started alone in this journey called life, people started
gathering up on the way, and the caravan got bigger everyday." --Urdu couplet
The book and the sword are the two things that control the world. We either gonna control them through knowledge and influence their minds, or we gonna bring the sword and take their heads off. --RZA--
It's a daily game of public Frogger, hopping frantically to avoid being crushed under the weight of your own narcissism, banality, and plain old stupidity. --Mary Katharine Ham--
There are more instances of the abridgment of freedoms
of the people by gradual and silent encroachment of those in power than by violent and sudden usurpations. --James Madison--
It is in the heat of emotion that good people must remember to stand on principle. --Larry Elder--
Please show this to the president and ask him to remember the wishes of the forgotten man, that is, the one who dared to vote against him. We expect to be tramped on but we do wish the stepping would be a little less hard. --from a letter to Eleanor Roosevelt--
The world economy depends every day on some engineer, farmer, architect, radiator shop owner, truck driver or plumber getting up at 5AM, going to work, toiling hard, and producing real wealth so that an array of bureaucrats, regulators, and redistributors can manage the proper allotment of much of the natural largess produced. --VDH--
Parents are often so busy with the physical rearing of children that they miss the glory of parenthood, just as the grandeur of the trees is lost when raking leaves. --Marcelene Cox--