For thousands of years, horses had been the way to go, whether in buggies or royal coaches, whether pulling trolleys in the cities or plows on the farms. People had bet their futures on something with a track record of reliable success going back many centuries.
Were all these people to be left high and dry? What about all the other people who supplied the things used with horses-- oats, saddles, horse shoes and buggies? Wouldn't they all go falling like dominoes when horses were replaced by cars?
Unfortunately for all the good people who had in good faith gone into all the various lines of work revolving around horses, there was no compassionate government to step in with a bailout or a stimulus package.
If there's a bad analogy involving horses at the turn of the century, I haven't heard it!
1
One problem with the horse analogy is that horses and buggies have become obsolete throughout the industrialized world, whereas American cars are not obsolete. The technological gap between American and non-American cars is not equivalent to the gap between a buggy and a horseless carriage.
But acknowledging those facts still would not justify a bailout. Obsolescence is not relevant; it's a distraction from the real issue.
Fast food restaurants are certainly not obsolete. Two neighboring shopping malls near me each have a restaurant belonging to the same chain, offering identical menu items at identical prices. Suppose one restaurant is successful and the other is ailing. Should the latter restaurant be allowed to go under, its employees "to be left high and dry?" People will protest that it's not fair that one of the twins is dying. They want cosmic justice.
But isn't failure itself a kind of justice? If the second restaurant is poorly run or in a bad location, does it deserve to be bailed out? Must others pay to shield it from the consequences of bad decisions?
As programs like these proliferate, people will grow up believing that there never will be a "day of reckoning," as Sowell put it. They tell themselves "reality is optional." They confuse the subjective with the objective. They conflate "I want" with "it is." They don't question the assumptions underlying their desires. They should follow Ayn Rand's advice and "check their premises." But they don't know how. And we all fund their ignorance with our tax dollars.
Idiocracy, here we come. Believing in electrolytes won't make crops grow.
Posted by: Amritas at December 18, 2008 07:47 AM (+nV09)
JUST FOR LAUGHS
My friend said something a while back to the effect of: Sometimes life gets so crappy that you forget it's not normal to do shots of vodka at 3 PM. It made me snicker at the time. I was reminded of it today at 3 PM and thought, what the heck.
Hooo boy. Why couldn't she have said "White Russians" instead?
DELAYED AGAIN!
We had a new ETA for late tonight, so I ran some errands today and started getting excited. I came home to a new message on my machine saying that this timeline is also not happening anymore. The husband is stuck in Europe, waiting on his next leg of the journey. Maybe tomorrow will be our lucky day. Right? This is excruciating.
1
DOUBLE ACK!!!! Time to break out the kickboxing... or maybe make something that keeps well in the fridge to celebrate - like your favorite flavor of cheesecake? {:-)
Posted by: kannie at December 17, 2008 09:32 AM (iT8dn)
SELF-ABSORBED
The last time, I had a vivid dream about the welcome home ceremony. Last night I dreamt that the husband and I were back together in our kitchen. I was wearing the outfit I plan to wear to pick him up, and he was drinking a beer. I woke up with a jolt and realized disappointedly that it was just a dream.
Today has been a very long day. Right now was the original time I was supposed to go pick him up.
I thought I'd better get back to Real blogging today instead of this dumb personal stuff I've been doing. But I can't seem to concentrate on anything lately. I just can't get into the news. Even Blagojevich's bleep-laden tirades couldn't compel me to blog. Only to laugh at home and tease my parents about living in Illinois.
I'm just sitting here crocheting and looking at the clock. Maybe I ought to do some things on that list; it seems healthier than this Waiting Game. I thought about going in to work today even though I got the day off, but the only task I have left to do at work is to put together more of those foam structures. That definitely ain't healthy.
And I haven't heard anything else today, no more updates, no new timeline, no hint of things to come.
1
Whew! Waiting sucks.
First tip: Stop looking at the clock or the phone.
Second tip: Invite a friend over!!!
((hugs))
Posted by: T at December 16, 2008 01:26 PM (KV0YP)
2
Charles looks thrilled in his doggie 'do photo. LOL
I HATE the waiting for you! At least you are crafty...I'm so not and that means instead of crocheting or knitting, I pace. Or, bake and eat everything as soon as it comes from the oven. If only I could bake, eat and THEN pace, I might not have to worry about gaining a ton??
CRAP!! I want this to be over for you!
Posted by: Guard Wife at December 17, 2008 08:00 AM (N3nNT)
A LOAD OFF
I was starting to panic a little that I got nothing constructive done today. And then I did some thinking and decided to throw the list out the window.
I see knitting and Futurama in my future, not vacuums and dog baths.
Posted by: Green at December 14, 2008 08:54 PM (6Co0L)
2
I read your post over at SpouseBuzz and I think you are doing the right thing... get excited and enjoy the moments! All that other stuff can wait. Congrats!!!
Posted by: Tucker at December 15, 2008 06:07 AM (iu62Y)
MUSHY
So T linked to my brain love post, and I realized that I have recently said that I only love my husband with my brain and that I don't want babymaking. Lest anyone think that our love is boring and passionless, I thought I'd point out an old post from his last deployment:
We are mushy too, not just cerebral. I love him with my brain and my heart, and though I often quote that we "care less, eyes, lips and hands to miss"...really, I do love him with all those body parts too.
1
LOL. I think we all kinda figured that out. Happy homecoming to the both of you. Bottle of wine, soft music, candle light.....lit the mushiness begin.
Posted by: Pamela at December 13, 2008 02:11 PM (pnhpY)
2
I liked this...
Your grammar mistake was cute, but only after I realized what you meant to say. You wrote: "I am so glad to find out that you read my email. I'm glad you are not worried. You have no reason to be my Sarah." I hope you meant "You have no reason to be, my Sarah"!
I love you. I have every reason to be your Sarah
"yours"
is a wonderful word is it not?
Enjoy, and I am glad you are learning from my past lessons and not freaking out...
Prepare your head, and heart for you will both need a soft place to fall. Neither of you had the luxury for months, and now you can.
Posted by: awtm at December 15, 2008 09:13 AM (r0jF6)
T2: NON-JUDGMENTAL DAY
I've only seen the Terminator movies once before, and I was excited to see T2 again. But...I had forgotten how frustrating it is. I mean, the premise of these movies is great: an unstoppable killing machine. (Though Lileks is right that "the abuse that was once reserved for the Terminator is now doled out to human beings, and they not only arenÂ’t killed instantly, they are capable of acrobatic fistfights while hanging from one hand in a elevator shaft.") And this movie has the absolute greatest villain of all time. Robert Patrick turns my blood cold. He could play Santa Claus and I would be scared to death of him.
But the movie is just so interminably annoying. We're going to change the future and save three billion people from dying, but we can't kill anyone in the process because that's mean. John Connor might die and the world could end, but heaven forbid we kill a rent-a-cop. Enough with the lectures on morality and how evil technology is. Oh, and that speech that Sarah Connor gives about how all men do is destroy but women create because they have wombs blah blah blah. Give me a break.
I have lower standards than just about anyone when it comes to action movies. I will tolerate a lot of crap. But despite having the coolest bad guy of all time, T2 is really preachy. Stop with the voice-overs and get to the terminating already.
1
HAHAHAHA! So THAT's where Sally Field got her womb speech.
Posted by: Oda Mae at December 12, 2008 01:41 AM (6zvrq)
2
Oh the "men destroy, women create"thing drives me nuts.
Tell it to Rihab Taha (Saddam's Dr. Germ). Shoot, tell it to Casey Anthony. Apparently those women missed the memo.
Posted by: airforcewife at December 12, 2008 04:31 AM (Fb2PC)
3
Even when I first saw that, I thought it was pretty clear that Sarah Connor was unhinged and not to be listened to. Avoid unnecessary casualties, yes. But given the stakes, it wouldn't take much to justify collateral damage.
Posted by: Sig at December 12, 2008 02:14 PM (3E/Ak)
1
I have a question about knitting and crocheting. I don't know how to do either, but I was wondering if you could do both and which you think is easier. If I were going to start, should I start with one or the other. I am shopping for crocheted hats on Etsy.com and I was wondering, in your opinion, how difficult something like this would be:
http://www.etsy.com/view_transaction.php?transaction_id=12408502
Thanks
Posted by: Sara at December 11, 2008 04:29 AM (Iwnkf)
SOON
My husband has moved on, from where he was to where he will be. He is still In Country, but he is making progress towards home.
I keep finding myself doing the opposite of what I did with the tortillas earlier this year: every time I hear a deadline, I rejoice that it's after my husband's return. My husband gets home before our milk expires. He gets home before the movie I rented is due. He gets home soon.
God willing and the Creek don't rise, as they say around here.
(And in answer to the couple of questions I've gotten about what actually constitutes a "single digit midget': less than 10 days.)
Posted by: Keri at December 10, 2008 05:04 AM (HXpRG)
3
Although this is something I will never experience, so I will never know first hand what you go through while your husband is gone, I am just so very very excited for you!
Posted by: sharona at December 10, 2008 03:34 PM (BeRta)
4
I'm WAY excited for you, friend! It's hard to believe, but next year this time, I'll only be about 1/2 way done. UGH!
Posted by: Guard Wife at December 10, 2008 03:44 PM (eb8pN)
5
Hell, Guard Wife, this time next year I will be waiting for my husband to come home again! We can wait together...
Posted by: Sarah at December 10, 2008 04:12 PM (TWet1)
6
I'm excited for you, too! Just in time for Christmas!
Posted by: Miss Ladybug at December 10, 2008 08:02 PM (zoxao)
Unemployment claims jumped to a 7-year high the week after Obama won the election. Not because of the slow economy, but because “Yes I Can” was added to the application as a valid reason.
SABRINA
I don't like many modern love stories, but I do like the old ones. I watched Sabrina tonight and took pause at this conversation between the Larabee brothers:
But you've got all the money in the world!
What's money got to do with it? If making money were all there was to business, it'd hardly be worthwhile going to the office. Money is a by-product.
Then what's the main objective? Power?
Bah, that's become a dirty word.
Well then, what's the urge? You're going into plastics now; what will that prove?
Prove? Nothing much. A new product has been found, something of use to the world, so a new industry moves into an undeveloped area, factories go up, machines are brought in, harbors are dug, and you're in business. It's purely coincidental, of course, that people who never saw a dime before suddenly have a dollar, and barefooted kids wear shoes and have their teeth fixed and their faces washed.
That's so Reardon-esque that it made me swoon.
And I wonder...does the 1995 remake have the same speech? I may have to watch someday to find out.
1
Sarah-
The opening bit reminds me of an episode of Coach.
By this time Coach was in Florida. The female owner of the team was contemplating moving the team to a much colder climate zone (the likes of which Coach had only recently escaped).
Coach protested and the owner indicated money was her motivation.
Coach protested saying "You are one of the richest women in the world. How much money do you need?"
To which she replied "How much is there?"
That line shoulda won an emmy or something.
Posted by: tim fitzgerald at December 08, 2008 06:53 PM (rASAT)
2
I don't think that speech is in the remake. I've seen it more times than I can count. It does have a little bit to say about the younger brother finally growing up and taking responsibility within the company that has given him the life he lives, and also about the older brother learning to not make life all about the work...
Posted by: Miss Ladybug at December 08, 2008 08:24 PM (zoxao)
3
I second Miss Ladybug; I don't think that quote is in the Harrison Ford remake. I love that movie, though. I've seen the original once, the remake probably more than 50 times. It's one of my favorite movies.
Posted by: Leofwende at December 09, 2008 06:30 AM (jAos7)
4
I love the '95 version, and own it so we watch it pretty often. That discussion doesn't appear, but there is a good line Harrison Ford has abut living in the real world that I always like.
Great movie - you should try the new on .... but I suspect you should treat it like a new movie ;-)
Posted by: Barb at December 11, 2008 04:37 AM (p+dnl)
5
I loved the remake, sadly will have to netflicks the original. I remember it being our favorite chick flick for the longest time, until the vVHS started to get all wacked out. Remember those days when you recorded tv shows, with commercials, on VHS?
Posted by: Darla at December 13, 2008 04:57 AM (UcAbT)
THANKS A LOT, DOG
When my husband is gone, my bedtime creeps later and later. I have begun the process of pushing it back to where it needs to be to match my husband's sleep cycle. So Saturday was my last hurrah and I was going to go to bed early last night.
I let Charlie outside one last time, and I noticed he was spending a suspicious amount of time in the garden. We came back in the house, went upstairs, and he immediately crawled under the bed and barfed.
Had he mathematically calculated, he couldn't have done a better job of finding the middle of our queen sized bed. So I'm squeezed under the bed, my arm stretched as far as it will go, scooping up vomit.
Then I notice that the genius dog has also barfed all over his front paws. So into the bathtub he goes.
Guess who didn't really go to bed early last night?
1
I'm LMAO. I'm sorry. I really am. But that's the funniest thing I've read all morning.
Posted by: airforcewife at December 08, 2008 06:53 AM (Fb2PC)
2
I thought my canines had the corner on the doggy brain trust market. I apologize. I'm sure it was because Charlie spent entirely too much time with Henry & Annie this summer. They were a bad influence on his mojo.
Posted by: Guard Wife at December 08, 2008 11:39 AM (N3nNT)
Posted by: Green at December 08, 2008 03:01 PM (6Co0L)
4
Good thing he is so darn cute! I'm not sure it is any sillier than Moo eating a 3-pound bag of Starburst then puking on the bed. He probably just needs an extra tummy rub.
Posted by: Butterfly Wife at December 09, 2008 11:59 AM (H+5RX)
I LIKE BLOGGING
A couple of you have been freaked out of late by my blog post titles. No, I'm not throwing in the towel anytime soon. You're stuck with me.
By the way, I finally watched The Terminator tonight. And yes, other people on my case, I have gotten the memo that The Wire is good. I plan to watch that with my husband though, not without him. I gotta get my chick flicks in before he gets home...what guy wants to watch Die Hard or The Terminator?
Oh wait...
And while I have your attention: did one of you lovely imaginary people get me one of these fantastic bracelets for Christmas? It came in the mail with no note, and it's not from my mother or husband, so I'm clueless.
Incidentally, my husband said, "Oh, well dang...wish I had thought of it."
AWTM has the distinction at SpouseBUZZ, like it or not, of being our resident go-to person on reintegration. And I personally always felt fine letting her have that title, because I didn't really grok her experience. I always assumed that her discomfort with reintegration came from the fact that she had babies while her husband was gone, so they went from being just a couple to being a family. Or I thought it was because her husband came back changed. Or that they were having a hard time getting back in sync as a family when he got home. Since I had not experienced any of those things, I never fully understood AWTM's trepidation about reintegration.
But I wrote before that deployments are like snowflakes. I was talking about my soldier in that case, but I am starting to see that deployments can feel very different from the homefront too.
My husband's first deployment was harder on him than this one has been: tougher mission, less amenities, more danger, longer deployment time. He was out in the thick of things and had some difficult experiences. During that deployment, my life was relatively straightforward. Nothing big happened to me that year, so our focus was on my husband and how he would react coming home.
This time around has been the reverse. My husband's job is easier -- safer, shorter, and relatively cushy -- but my life has been tumultuous. I have gone through some pretty heavy emotional growth in the past eight months. And all of a sudden, we're single digit midgets...and I am starting to think that this reintegration will play out differently.
AWTM called me the other day and asked me how I was doing. I didn't even fully realize that I was so apprehensive until she began to drag it out of me. And then she told me something that I know will be part of my vocabulary for the rest of my life. She told me about an interview with Mike Myers in which he talks about how hard it was to lose his father:
I've always felt I was given these emotional casino chips which had no value until I went home and told my dad about things. My father was like my spiritual cash window. I would tell him about stuff, just to hear his reaction.
AWTM said that she and I and people like us need a "spiritual cash window." We need someone to vent to, to rehash every detail of our day with, to take note of every ebb and flow of our emotional cycle. We need someone to cash our chips in to. And for both of us, that person is our husband. So when our husbands are gone, we stockpile our emotional casino chips.
I seem to have a lot of emotional chips from this deployment.
I have started to realize this past week that I am afraid of overwhelming my husband when he gets home. I am afraid that when he walks in that door, I am going to unload on him like a firehose. I'm afraid I won't be able to pace myself...because I have over seven months of chips in my hands that I am going to dump on him at once.
And I've realized that I am also sad that he hasn't been here for me to cash my chips in to on a daily basis. He hasn't seen me grow moment by moment. He is going to get the insane recap version at the end, where I have to explain every detail of everything that has happened to me lately.
And how do you do that? How do you explain what you were feeling six months ago and still make it relevant? How do you tell someone that, while you are no longer feeling stressed about X, Y, or Z, you used to feel stressed about it and therefore would still like to cash it in?
Poor husband.
My husband does not have emotional casino chips. The last time he was gone, the majority of the fighting and danger he faced happened at the beginning of his deployment. By the time he got home eight months later, that was old news to him. That was over and done with. He didn't need to cash it in. And I remember feeling a tad hurt that he didn't need to do this, like what did he need me for if I wasn't his spiritual cash window? I didn't understand how he could've had these enormous life experiences -- to include watching a man die -- and not need to cash it in.
I just never knew how to put that feeling into words.
I have always known I am this kind of person, but it took AWTM acknowledging it and giving it a name for me to realize how important it is to me and how hesitant I feel about our reintegration this time around.
Because, boy, do I have chips that need cashing.
And all of a sudden, I understood what AWTM has been talking about for years. It clicked for me, and I realized that it wasn't just having her husband underfoot in the house, or that he had a daughter he had never met, or that he might be jumpy or less patient. It was that she held these chips too and didn't know how to cash them in.
I didn't realize that she was this type of person too, and I think we both felt some relief talking about it on the phone and realizing that we're not the only one who holds these emotional chips.
Heck, Mike Myers does too. Maybe he should read SpouseBUZZ...
1
So this post has me kinda choked up. You just summed up one of the biggest reasons deployment and reintegration are hard for me. Thanks for putting it into words.
Posted by: Lucy at December 06, 2008 10:32 PM (nzG0t)
2
You Hubby is probably prepared for your chips unload. He seems that kind of person from what you have said of him. AND.. he's reads this blog and talks to you regularly. I bet he is going to be ready with all the right words and reactions. Have a little faith in him, expect the best and I'm pretty sure that is what you will get. I think you're having the pre-integration jitters. I'm not saying "get over it", I'm saying things WILL be good again. Remember he lost those babies, too and I think you mentioned he is not the type to talk to others about it, so you both have some chips and grieving to do together.
Posted by: Ruth H at December 07, 2008 04:52 AM (zlUde)
3
the way you felt talking to AWTM on the phone was how I felt when you were talking about anticipatory grief at the Milblogging conference 2 years ago.
As for the chips, I have them too. And the our last deployment was incredibly tumultuous on this end (and not so much on his end) too. I worried a lot of the same things as you.
It will be ok. Even though he hasn't be there to see the moment-by-moment growth that you've experienced, he loves you and you love him and it will all work itself out.
Posted by: HomefrontSix at December 07, 2008 09:56 PM (4Es1w)
THIS IS THE END
I had my FRG meeting tonight. The ladies were nice. I love our Rear D commander.
And we have a return date.
The end was so much harder for me last time. Last time, my husband was one of the last people home. I watched all my friends and neighbors welcome their husbands home three weeks before I did. That was rough. Last time my husband came home with a whole brigade, so there were ceremonies and fanfare. This time it's just a handful of families, and since all my friends are imaginary, it doesn't matter like it did last time. I honestly haven't been thinking about it. Even when Sis B's husband came home yesterday, it still didn't feel like my turn was coming up.
Even when I heard the dates and started talking about the return process -- where to pick him up, what he will need to do afterwards, when block leave starts -- it didn't really sink in.
But since I was on post, I had decided to make a stop at the Class Six: the husband has put in his booze request. And as I circled the store shopping, I started thinking that soon we would be drinking that booze together.
And then shit just got real: I am a few days away from being a single digit midget.
Couldn't wipe the grin off my face in that Class Six.
BREATHTAKING
I don't watch American Idol or shows like it, but I happened upon a youtube tonight of the winner of the British version. Paul Potts is a real life Mr. Tanner, only with a happy ending.
This clip of his initial tryout for the show is excellent. You can just see the dread on the judges' faces when he says he's going to sing opera.
It is beautiful.
Why don't we get opera singers winning American Idol?
1
I've seen that before, but it still gave me goosebumps and brought tears to my eyes!
Posted by: Miss Ladybug at December 04, 2008 04:53 PM (zoxao)
2
Oh my...thank you so much for sharing that. It actually brought tears to my eyes and gave me goose bumps. Amazing...
Posted by: Stacy at December 04, 2008 06:43 PM (/fVrW)
3
ditto.
and then there's the teeny-boppers. . . . on whatever reality TV show is currently posing for "must-see-TV"
the sublime vs. the trendy.
Funny, because tears seem to be the stamp of the sublime.
[and yes, it was funny to see the look of apprehension on the judges faces when he said "opera"!]
Posted by: prophet at December 05, 2008 03:32 AM (3GLn5)
4
Loved it! And I love prophet's point: "tears seem to be the stamp of the sublime."
*Ducking rocks now* Hubby has gotten me into American Idol, but I do see real artistry in a few of the contestants. Not all, by any stretch of the imagination, but I did recognize a different artistry in the latest AI winner (David Cook). Like I said, it's different from Paul Potts's talent, but still another type of artistry, appreciable in its own way... at least in my mind. :-) As to why they don't have opera singers winning, it's a pop singing competition, (unfortunately and probably *unwisely*), so they turn down the good opera singers and tell them to stick with that. It sure would liven things up if they had all sorts of competition - and I'd be interested to see how the more sublime arts fared against the teeny-bopper crowd... :-)
Posted by: kannie at December 05, 2008 11:54 AM (iT8dn)
5
Actually this wasn't Idol, it was Britains got talent. On the America's got talent version, there was an opera singer also and he won the $1,000,000. His name is Neal Boyd and he sang the same song, it always make everyone cry.
Posted by: rayanne at December 05, 2008 03:58 PM (l/CzG)
NEW EXPRESSION
I have never heard the expression "That just rips my knitting" -- which apparently is Scottish for "chaps my hide" -- but I totally want to start using it.
Learned here, in an excellent post by Wendy Sullivan at Ladyblog. Which they describe "Like Fight Club, but with better hygiene." Heh.
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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--