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Monthly Archives: September 2009

The Dissent of George Mason

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“Who’s George Mason?” you might ask, proving that the victors indeed write the history.

People inherently bring their previous experiences to any challenges they encounter in life.  As a Virginia delegate to the Ratifying Convention and framer of the U.S. Constitution, George Mason certainly drew on his experiences in Virginia state politics.  As the author of Virginia’s Declaration of Rights, which preceded the Virginia State Constitution, he expected a declaration of rights to precede the federal constitution, or at least be included from the outset. 

Given that our Bill of Rights did not come about until two years after the signing of the Constitution, George Mason became a vocal opponent of the Constitution’s ratification.  He refused to sign the Constitution, saying that without a Bill of Rights, its first principles were “highly and dangerously oligarchic” and with a Bill of Rights, the Constitution would be restricted in its “awful squint towards monarchy.” 

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In May of 1776, two months before Thomas Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence, the origins of which I recently discussed here in relation to property rights, George Mason penned these words in the Virginia Declaration of Rights:

“That all men are born equally free and independent, and have certain inherent natural Rights… among which are the Enjoyment of Life and Liberty, with the Means of acquiring and possessing Property, and pursueing and obtaining Happiness and Safety.”

George Mason’s words obviously influenced the direction Jefferson took.  These principles were commonly regarded as sacred among our founders, but the execution of a federal government for the protection of these rights was hotly debated.  The belief that a decentralized government would govern best solidified a group of patriots known as the Anti-Federalists, opposed to the majority party, deemed, you might have guessed, the Federalists.  If today we think the minority party is defined by its opposition alone, it is worth looking back and seeing what a true opposition party looks like.  America’s First Congress fought over the Bill of Rights for two whole years, the principal founding years of our nation.

What I found interesting about this particular debate is that the minority party did not capitulate on their ideas.  Instead of meeting the majority’s demands for a stronger federal government, they stood by their fundamental beliefs that the individual was sovereign and any authority is a trust endowed by individuals, conceded to the state first, and then to the federal government.  These are the very principles George Mason believed in, and are reflected in our Bill of Rights today.

The Anti-Federalists vocal opposition of the Constitution, as it was proposed, lead them to sponsors for their concerns within the majority party, including the influential statesman Thomas Jefferson, and leader of the Federalists, James Madison.  Their sponsorship, however, was not achieved without a partisan fight.

Standing Athwart History

Federalist Alexander Hamilton, co-author of the Federalist Papers, eloquently argued against the Bill of Rights on justifiable grounds in The Federalist No. 84, stressing that the while he favored a British system of common law, that is, of rights that exist undefined, the U.S Constitution was different than anything seen before, and therefore, a Bill of Rights in America was unnecessary.  Hamilton stated: 

“Bills of rights are in their origin, stipulations between kings and their subjects, abridgments of prerogative in favor of privilege, reservations of rights not surrendered to the prince.  Such was “Magna Charta”, obtained by the Barons, swords in hand, from King John.”

To Hamilton, defining particular rights of the citizen would put restraints on the citizen through omission.  ”Why declare that things shall not be done which there is no power to do?  Why, for instance, should it be said that the liberty of the press shall not be restrained, when no power is given by which restrictions may be imposed?”

While his logic is reasonable, Hamilton in fact dissects his own argument:  The limits of state power were not defined, and the individual needed explicit protection from his government.

It became clearer to the founders on both sides of the aisle that a Bill of Rights was going to be necessary, and Thomas Jefferson in particular realized that Anti-Federalist support for the Constitution depended on a Bill of Rights, but further delay endangered the entire process.  As Ambassador to France, Jefferson, in a letter to James Madison, wrote, “Half a loaf is better than no bread.  If we cannot secure all our rights, let us secure what we can.”  The Federalists answered in kind, and the Constitution was finalized without a Bill of Rights.

Meaningful Opposition

George Mason, in turn, refused to sign the Constitution on September 17, 1787, a great document he saw as wanting, and it underwent the Ratification process without his approval.  George Mason’s opposition cut ties with George Washington, his neighbor and friend, and along with his affiliation with the Anti-Federalists, accounts for why George Mason is lesser known than his Federalist colleagues. 

The Anti-Federalists united in opposition against a Constitution without a Bill of Rights, and stood their ground.  Patrick Henry, the articulate, well-known leader of the Anti-Federalists, even refused to accept offers to be this nation’s first Secretary of State or a Supreme Court Justice.  In June of 1788, he argued against the Ratification in his famous “Liberty or Death” speech:

“Is it necessary for your liberty that you should abandon those great rights by the adoption of this system?  Is the relinquishment of the trial by jury and the liberty of the press necessary for your liberty?  Will the abandonment of your most sacred rights tend to the security of your liberty?  Liberty, the greatest of all earthly blessings — give us that precious jewel, and you may take every thing else!”

The vehement opposition of the minority had a subsequent effect on the process.  James Madison, the other co-author of the Federalist Papers, tried to reassure a concerned, fledgling nation of colonies, in the process of becoming states, in The Federalist No. 39, in 1788: 

“Each State, in ratifying the Constitution, is considered as a sovereign body, independent of all others, and only to be bound by its own voluntary act.  In this relation, then, the new Constitution will, if established, be a federal, and not a national constitution.”

State by state, the Constitution was ratified, with the exception of Rhode Island, who opposed it on similar grounds as George Mason; they felt the Constitution, without explicitly enumerating rights, had the power to reinstitute a monarchy.  When Rhode Island finally ratified the Constitution, it sent a message back to Congress, with demands for a Bill of Rights.  Acts such as these from other colonies – North Carolina, South Carolina, and New York were also visibly upset - as they became states lent credence to the Anti-Federalist movement.

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Eventually, the Constitution was adopted, and went into effect on March 4, 1789.  The First Congress met in September of that year, two years after George Mason’s dissent; almost immediately, delegates began to argue for a Bill of Rights.  James Madison had proposed a Bill of Rights to Congress earlier that June, in an attempt to avoid a Second Constitutional Convention, which he knew had the potential to destroy the budding nation.

Madison’s proposal was based mostly on the work of his friend and fellow Virginian, George Mason, which drew upon centuries of laws and theories, from John Locke to the Magna Carta.  It took two more years for the colonies to ratify the Bill of Rights, which went into effect December 1791, more than four years after the signing of the Constitution, and more than fifteen years after George Mason first wrote Virginia’s Declaration of Rights.

The Prescience of George Mason

George Mason feared a powerful federal government would eventually usurp the privileges granted to it under the Constitution, as he felt the federal government would see powers not prohibited explicitly as permitted implicitly.  Although he had crafted the Declaration of Rights for his own state, he feared for state rights under the new federal system.  In his major speech detailing the reasons for his objection to the Constitution, George Mason argued, “The laws of the general government being paramount to the laws and constitutions of the several states, the declarations of rights in the separate states are no security.”

Mason also feared the powers granted to the Executive Branch, and made these salient points about the dangers of an unrestrained governing body:

“The President of the United States has no constitutional council, (a thing unknown in any safe and regular government).  He will therefore be unsupported by proper information and advice, and will generally be directed by minions and favorites; or he will become a tool to the Senate; or a council of state will grow out of the principal offers of the great departments – the worst and most dangerous of all ingredients for such council, in a free country; for they may be induced to join in any dangerous or oppressive measures, to shelter themselves, and prevent an inquiry into their own misconduct in office.”

George Mason’s objections drew a proverbial line in the sand with the majority party, and his dissent did not come without consequence.  Although Mason found a critical sponsor for his Declaration of Rights in James Madison, the leader of the Virginia Federalists, he relinquished his spot in American history with his opposition.  Instead, George Mason shares the title of “Father of the Bill of Rights” with James Madison.

In his closing remarks before the Constitutional Convention, Mason made this prediction about the burgeoning governing body for the newly formed United States of America:

“This government will commence in a moderate aristocracy: it is at present impossible to see whether it will, in its operation, produce a monarchy or a corrupt oppressive aristocracy; it will most probably vibrate some years between the two, and then terminate in one or the other.”

On this point, I sincerely hope we prove George Mason wrong.  Looking at the fever pitch of politics today, I’m not sure where we are heading.  It looks like we are coming apart at our seams.  What common thread weaves together the diverse fabrics of America?  It’s hard to see what, if anything, we have in common with each other anymore.

I wonder what the founders would think of our arguments today.  Patriots today still stand athwart history, and have become targets for the bosses in both government and media.  To quote French philosopher Voltaire, “It is lamentable, that to be a good patriot one must become the enemy of the rest of mankind.”

Some Final Thoughts

When an archer draws back his bow to launch an arrow at his intended target, the glide path of that arrow is always the same:  the arrow ascends upward; the arrow crests; the arrow begins its descent.  So it is with governments.  Nations may remain constant, but their governments come and go, ebbing and flowing, with distinct historical trends.

State power gained is individual liberty acquiesced; it you don’t believe me, look at the “communist” countries in the world, and assess the magnitude of personal freedoms their citizens enjoy.  Pretty blight, huh?  This trend is not coincidental; democracy depends on the protection of individual liberties, which are devalued by state control.

Our government is the longest lasting sovereign democracy in the world.  I believe our arrow has crested, and is descending towards either its intended target, or a failed state.  Constant maintenance is required to keep the arrow moving towards the target the founders intended for the people of this nation.  President Ronald Reagan conveyed as much by reminding us:

“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.”

I hope the cause of individual liberty might provide a little more lift for this arrow, and for our current government.  If not, I hope that when individuals take action, it will be for that cause, in accordance with Jefferson’s finalized words in the Declaration of Independence, which I have included in context:

“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.  That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.  That whenever any form of government becomes destructive to these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness.

“Prudence, indeed, will dictate that governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed.  But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security.”

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Sep 17, 2009

Eight Years Later

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“Our country is that spot to which our heart is bound.”
~ Voltaire

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Eight years ago, nineteen Islamo-fascists hijacked four commercial airliners, crashed two of them into the twin World Trade Center towers in New York City, one into the Pentagon, and one, Flight 93, was diverted by a band of heroes in a field in Pennsylvania, killing everyone onboard.  Eight years ago, nearly 3000 Americans were cremated in the streets of Manhattan and our nation’s Capitol.  Eight years ago, we came to know the name Osama Bin Laden.  It became personal.

We haven’t forgotten all this, have we?  Sometimes, I think we have.  Today, high school kids and metrosexuals wear keffiyehs with little regard for its meaning. Do you remember where you were that day?  I distinctly remember where I was.  After that day, my life was never again the same.  My commitment to “support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies foreign and domestic” began to have a much deeper meaning.  As a result, I started paying attention.

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I have been silent for a while on foreign policy and national security matters, because, believe it or not, I mostly agree with the President.  This may come as a shock to you, since I didn’t spend $500 to fly 3000 miles round trip on November 4 and vote in my district to praise the guy.  That expense was an investment for the future, because if I had not voted, my words would be just that: only words.  On domestic policy, I have hammered the President on this website, while supporting and defending the Constitution, and remaining loyal only unto God and the country which I have had the privilege to serve.

On foreign policy matters, though, I feel the President has it just about right.  This morning, at a Wreath Laying Ceremony at the Pentagon, he made a remarkable speech, saying:

Scripture teaches us a hard truth.  The mountains may fall and the earth may give way; the flesh and the heart may fail.  But after all our suffering, God and grace will “restore you and make you strong, firm and steadfast.”  So it is – so it has been for these families.  So it must be for our nation.

Let us renew our resolve against those who perpetrated this barbaric act and who plot against us still.  In defense of our nation we will never waver; in pursuit of Al Qaeda and its extremist allies, we will never falter.

I agree, Mr. President.  I hate to say it, but the pursuit of Al Qaeda is a truly forgotten effort among the American public.  The fact that, eight years later, Bin Laden remains free, stands as our greatest failure.  What should we do, though? At this moment, the war in Afghanistan is shifting, and our goals are unclear. Here we are, again, entering an era of mid-wartime ambivalence, with polls showing Americans are beginning to turn against our efforts in Afghanistan.

A recent Washington Post-ABC News poll reports, “42 percent of Americans say the United States is winning in Afghanistan; about as many, 36 percent, say it is losing.”  What is striking about the poll is the marked partisan divide: “Although 60 percent of Americans approve of how Obama has handled the situation in Afghanistan, his ratings among liberals have slipped, and majorities of liberals and Democrats alike now, for the first time, solidly oppose the war and are calling for a reduction in troop levels.”  Roughly 70 percent of Democrats say the war has not been worth its costs, and about 70 percent of Republicans support it.  President Obama’s slipping support among his own caucus may prove to be a large challenge in the days to come.

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The supporters of our previous foreign efforts set the “spread of democracy” as a goal.  Afghanistan is a curious place to re-embark on this mission, with a recent uptick in violence, and a presidential election this week rife with fraud.  These truths are undoubtedly influencing the sentiments of the left, and I understand why. It is not disloyal to want to conserve American lives.  Dissent is patriotic; however, it is idiotic to plainly reject any military action.  Many on the left end up in this camp, but we’ll leave that for another day.  Let’s move forward.

General Stanley McChrystal, President Obama’s hand-picked commander of U.S. and international forces in Afghanistan, said today that while he sees no sign of a major Al Qaeda presence in Afghanistan, he will likely ask for more troops from Congress, stating that he believes our presence there has kept America safe in the wake of 9/11.  General McChrystal told the Associated Press:

“We have not been struck again in the United States, and I think the strikes that would have hit across the world — not just in Europe or the United States but I think also in much of the Muslim world — I think have been prevented.  I can’t prove that because you can’t prove a negative, but I certainly strongly believe that is the case.”

I agree with General McChrystal’s assessment.  The goals, though, are a bit confusing, and he will have a hard time getting Congress to approve a troop surge in Afghanistan.  I do believe American troop presence has kept America safe, but troop presence will not help to spread democracy to any nation we might occupy, let alone Afghanistan, commonly referred to as “the graveyard of empires.”

Democracy is not spread like a sexually transmitted disease to other cultures that are void of the civil liberties required to fundamentally alter an entire governing system in favor of freedom. Capturing or killing Bin Laden should be our top priority; past that, spreading democracy through “nation-building” is not a trait our U.S. military possesses, nor should.  Don’t be confused by popular terms such as “integrating” or “rebalancing” a nation, which essentially mean the same thing.

Our nation’s leaders owe our military an honest assessment of our goals and capabilities in Afghanistan.  In the words of Milton Bearden, three months after 9/11, “The United States must proceed with caution – or end up on the ash heap of Afghan history.”

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Eight years later, the greatest service we could give our troops is to remember what happened that day, learn from our past mistakes, and define a set of clear, achievable goals.  President Obama must stand strong in the face of adversity to achieve the singular mission of bringing Bin Laden to justice.  I, for one, support him in these efforts.

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Sep 11, 2009

Two Little Words

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During the President’s speech last night on health care, I was amazed by two little words that were unleashed; no, I’m not referring to Representative Joe Wilson’s outburst of, “You lie,” which, while maybe deserved, was indeed a breach of protocol.

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You can contribute to Wilson’s now up-hill battle against the Statists here.  You would think that after nearly six weeks of raucous town hall meetings, nobody in that chamber would have been surprised to hear the echoing of American sentiment from one of 535 Congressmembers, but nay, it shocked (shocked!) the left, most visibly Madame Pelosi, and they’re calling for action against Representative Wilson.

No, those two words, “You lied,” weren’t the two words that shocked me last night.  After plain distortions and covert deceptions, the President actually used the words “social justice.”  During a moving evocation of a letter written by the late Senator Ted Kennedy, the President read from his teleprompter:

He expressed confidence that this would be the year that health care reform — “that great unfinished business of our society,” he called it — would finally pass.  He repeated the truth that health care is decisive for our future prosperity, but he also reminded me that “it concerns more than material things.”  “What we face,” he wrote, “is above all a moral issue; at stake are not just the details of policy, but fundamental principles of social justice and the character of our country.”

My shock over this issue should not subsequently shock you; it wasn’t two days ago that I wrote on my last post, “I have never believed in social justice.”  What do I mean by that?  As we work towards a just society, what’s so bad about social justice?

Social justice is an endorsement of social and class warfare, and is today disguised as reform.  Again, please, don’t believe me.  The sainted Wikipedia defines “social justice” thusly:  “The term ‘social justice’ is often employed as a euphemism by the political left to describe a society with a greater degree of economic egalitarianism, which may be achieved through progressive taxation, income redistribution, or even property redistribution, policies aimed toward achieving that which developmental economists refer to as equality of opportunity and equality of outcome.”  Now; are you shocked?  How have we gone so wrong to prefer social justice over just society?

A Destructive Agenda

In his classic The Republic, Plato coined the famous adage, “Necessity is the mother of invention.”  I would offer that in a prosperous, capitalist society, Want qualifies as the surrogate mother of invention.  Whatever a person could want or need is developed, produced, and traded freely for the benefit of all parties involved.  The opulence of the parties involved has always irked the left; it’s simply not ‘fair’ that some succeed while some fail.  They do not contend that equal opportunity, a goal on the left and the right, renders a wide range of results, based on the efforts and talents of those parties involved.  They believe trade should be fair, not free, because free trade rewards some, and not all.

These sentiments heightened recently to scary levels in the wake of our economic crisis.  Public opinion prompted a strong disdain for capitalism, as we know it, in America.  The slow destruction of our system now comes from within, and serves as testament that our society lacks any real, fundamental wants, or for that matter, any foundational needs.  Our age of prosperity lifted all classes, to the point where Escalades sit parked outside Section 8 housing, and the homeless in food lines have Smartphones.

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Our government refuses to address the underlying source of our current economic situation, which is our lack of Homeland Production.  Due in large part to lofty corporate taxes and a federal standard for wages, we sublet labor to China and India, who now hold much of our debt.  No, instead, the current regime has decided to demonize the very industries that provide for the Wants and Needs of this country, in particular energy and health insurance companies.  Immediately lowering corporate taxes would provide an incentive for industries to move back home, where jobs are scarce.

Do not be confused:  The proposed reforms are not about energy security, improved education, or health care at all.  The agenda of the left is about control:  energy control, education control, and health control, not unlike the agendas of other leftist regimes before them, littered throughout world history.

Historical data on state-run health care lends credence to the claims of potential rationing and “death panels” within the bill.  Think about this:  Mrs. Palin’s two little words, “death panels,” incited a firestorm of criticism.  Why?  Because they rang true.  A quick glance at the practices of the University of Chicago Hospital, First Lady Michelle Obama’s former employer, to divert patients in order to cut costs, support such concerns.  Palin’s dissent rang true, and that’s why Representative Joe Wilson’s words resonated today.  Since many feel the President is lying to them, as a representative, Wilson spoke up.  Now, under this regime, he faces an unknown future.

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So what is Obama’s ultimate agenda on health care?  He admitted he supported a single payer system in 2003, and waaay back in 2007, he tipped his hand on how to get there:

I think that we’re going to have to have some system where people can buy into a larger pool. Right now their pool typically is the employer, but there are other ways of doing it. I would like to — I would hope that we could set up a system that allows those who can go through their employer to access a federal system or a state pool of some sort. But I don’t think we’re going to be able to eliminate employer coverage immediately. There’s going to be potentially some transition process. I can envision a decade out or 15 years out or 20 years out where we’ve got a much more portable system.

I believe the public option, a policy proposal unheard of until this year, is a Trojan Horse for the kind of single payer system Obama supports.  Through such means, the federal government would assume control of sixteen percent of the economy, with the public sector taking money out of the private sector to do so, redistributed, dollar for dollar.

How is justice rendered, then, if not through the reallocation of wealth?  Well, Article III of the Constitution leaves it to Supreme Court to administer blind justice based on the fairness in a transaction, regardless of its outcome.  Contrary to the theories of President Obama’s fellow professor John Rawls‘, “Equal Justice Under the Law,” implicit in the Fourteenth Amendment, is not apathetic to the parties involved, and thusly free and fair trade is guaranteed.

Likewise, contrary to President Obama’s beliefs stated here, waaay back in 2001, the Constitution should not be addressed on the basis of what “government must do on your behalf,” nor should the Supreme Court “venture into the issues of redistribution of wealth.”  Equal justice, when properly rendered, ignores upshot, and leaves social justice a theory banished to the far, far left.  Hereunto, proper reform of our health care system depends on abandoning these ideas.

“How can limited government and fiscal restraint be equated with lack of compassion for the poor?  How can a tax break that puts a little more money in the weekly paychecks of working people be seen as an attack on the needy?  Since when do we in America believe that our society is made up of two diametrically opposed classes — one rich, one poor — both in a permanent state of conflict and neither able to get ahead except at the expense of the other?  Since when do we in America accept this alien and discredited theory of social and class warfare?  Since when do we in America endorse the politics of envy and division?”
~ President Ronald Reagan

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Sep 10, 2009

Goodbye, Doctor Jones

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“I’m willing to forego the cheap satisfaction of the radical pose for the deep satisfaction of radical ends.”
~ (Former) White House Green Jobs Czar Van Jones, 2005

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A little about myself:  As of now, I am a 28 year old man, and I am neither poor nor rich.  I grew up neither poor nor rich.  I have neither loved nor hated the poor nor the rich.  I am no middle class hero, either, nor would I want to be.  I try to avoid tendencies I observe among poor people, and try to emulate those I observe among the rich.  What I have found may shock you:  rich people get rich by living like they’re poor, and poor people stay poor by living like they’re rich.

Simply put, I don’t rely on envy to dictate my political leanings.  I believe in equality of opportunity and probability of outcome based on effort.  This belief, consequently, puts me at odds with the entire left-wing of the political spectrum.

I’ve never believed in social justice.  I don’t hate the rich, nor do I want to kneecap their efforts; I realize their efforts employ others and benefit society as a whole.  If their efforts do not do those things, barring a monopoly on a sector of the economy, they will begin to lose money.  That is an outcome of natural economic laws; no outside force needs to punish the rich in order to help the poor.

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Enter Van Jones.  Dr. Jones recently resigned from his Cabinet post as White House Advisor for “green jobs,” not for his inflammatory remarks in which he called Republicans a–holes, but for signing a “9-11 Truth Petition,” alleging that 9/11 was an inside job, a sick conspiracy theory that doesn’t even pass the simple test of deductive reasoning.  His John Hancock on said document rightly did not meet the White House’s criterion for its Administration officials, and he was promptly shown the door.

What is surprising is that his other public rhetoric had previously met the White House’s standards.  Dr. Jones was an avowed communist, waaay back in 1992, during his time as a civil rights activist.  Due to his influence within the far left wing of the Democratic Party as someone with bold ideas on our energy future, this statement was more than likely overlooked.

In 2004, Van Jones wrote a critically-acclaimed book entitled Green Collar Economy:  How One Solution Can Fix Our Two Biggest Problems. He saw our two biggest problems as global warming and the incarceration of the impoverished.  His solution?  Have inmates manufacture clean energy solutions, such as wind turbines or solar panels, in order to keep that money out of the hands of industry, which he defines on purely racial lines.  Capitalism, in Dr. Jones world, is discrimination.  Please, don’t take my word for it; read the statements he made in a 2004 interview, here.

In 2005, he made the statement that headlines this post.  What exactly does “I’m willing to forego the cheap satisfaction of the radical pose for the deep satisfaction of radical ends” mean?  A shift had occurred.

Dr. Jones had a specific agenda.  In his White House Cabinet position, he controlled $80 billion dollars of stimulus funds, directed at agencies of his choosing.  I’m not making the number up; check it here.  Don’t misunderstand me; I believe in the investments Van Jones is talking about.  That’s what free-market venture capitalism is all about.  I simply do not believe in disincentives, or Van Jones’ methodologies in getting there.

Since 1992, when Van Jones admitted to being a communist, he has done nothing to prove his socioeconomic sentiments shifted.  He began using the right lingo, even inventing the idea of “eco-capitalism.”  But simply investing public dollars in our energy infrastructure is not capitalism.  Van Jones has a deep-seated disbelief in basic free-market principles, which he made clear by describing his opposition as a “gluttonous, warmongering oil industry” and a “military/petroleum complex running the government.”

Van Jones further believed that “Every significant economic advance in this country, whether it’s the internet, or nuclear power (which a lot of people don’t like, for good reason,) highway infrastructure; the government, the federal government, had to get involved to give it a boost to get it started.”

This is not capitalism.  Additionally, the specific economic advances Dr. Jones cites were all developed by, or for the use of,  the U.S. military.  Their public benefits, while plentiful, were secondary in nature.

Furthermore, Van Jones had a distinct way of mixing up racial issues, social justice, and environmentalism, painting a world of false negatives, where we must make choices between what he calls ‘ego apartheid,’ defined as “more cool solar toys for rich people, more hydrogen stuff in Marin, while Oakland falls further behind, choking on the fumes of the last century’s production models,” and what he calls ‘social uplift environmentalism,’ which is “rainbow from the beginning:” “it talks about job creation, as well as environmental clean-ups and environmental health restoration that can unite business, people of color, and environmentalists, that can be pro-markets but pro-markets that are healing markets not pro-markets that destroy life and destroy capital and destroy the environment, that can say – most importantly – we’re pro-US government.”

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Van Jones is gone, for now, though this might not be Dr. Jones’ “Last Crusade.”  Near the end of this chapter of his story, though, Van Jones effectively altered his rhetoric to achieve what he called “radical means.”  You will notice this tendency among leftists:  to employ conservative dialect in their favor.  This is part of a strategy the left utilizes to appeal to the political center while marginalizing their opposition.  Mostly, their words are rubbish.

On Wednesday night, as the President addresses the nation, you will hear the words conservatives long to hear, regardless of the legislative direction the President chooses to take, with reconciliation, the public option, co-ops, or exchanges.  You will hear how a public option would “drive down costs” and “encourage competition in the free market.”  You’ll hear him reassure senior citizens and the center by guaranteeing “security and stability” with increased “availability and access,” while reassuring the left that his plan (which he has left entirely up to Congress) while provide “coverage for all.”

By the way, they re-opened the Golden Gate Bridge in Van Jones’ home state today.  Any takers?  I’m open for bids. 

If he wanted to, President Obama could work a bipartisan health care bill.  There are many different conservative ideas on the table, discussed here.  Republicans have even indicated their willingness to allow a “trigger” for the public option if the private health insurance industry did not cooperate to lower costs in five years.  Obama could develop a pliable regulatory framework to ensure universal coverage within private insurance, drop the distinction between employer-based insurance and individually-purchased insurance, and drop the restrictions for buying insurance across state lines, in an attempt to drive down costs without the use of that taxpayer backstop.

There’s no way the President will do that, though.  Bipartisanship in this matter is not part of his agenda.  Frankly, this is not about health care at all.  This is about control.

“f you want total security, go to prison.  There you’re fed, clothed, given medical care and so on.  The only thing lacking is freedom.”
~ Dwight D. Eisenhower

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Sep 8, 2009

Bouncing Back

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When I was a child in elementary school, I was a fanatic for Hardy Boys books.  In fact, I read every single “Choose Your Own Adventure” book in the library.  I loved getting to the bottom of that pivotal page where you had to choose whether to take one course of action or the other.  If you chose poorly, I would simply go back to the page of decision and go the other way.  I would often read both paths, just to see if I had initially chosen wisely.

hardy_boys

Life, however, is not a Hardy Boys book.  For the most part, a man must live with the consequences of his actions.  He can’t flip around, rewriting history, making better decisions at different points in his life.  In this life, things are going to suck sometimes, and sometimes, they are going to suck worse than other times.  There’s no escaping that.  Sure, a man can try to avoid the suck, but what kind of life is that?  The unsucky part about life is that the sucky parts, while they suck when you are going through them, make your life better in the end.

How can that be?  Well, after going through the bad parts of life, a man is more prepared for the bad when it returns because 1) he’s stronger and more resilient to it and 2) he’s more prepared for a similar situation and can avoid unnecessary pain associated with the situation.  The bad parts in life prepare us to bounce back.  Finding the willingness to do so is the challenge.

General George S. Patton once said something to the effects of, “A man’s success is not measured by how high he climbs, but how high he bounces back when he hits bottom.”  There are plenty of great quotes like this attributed to Patton; check it out.  Essentially, Patton is reminding us that in the face of adversity, it would be easier to lay down and wallow in defeat.  It takes a lot more strength to get back up and try again.

Another person with a plethora of great quotes on the importance of perseverance is Sir Winston S. Churchill.  Among his popular “Never give in” quote, and, “If you’re going through hell, keep going” quote, I found this pearl of wisdom:  ”Success is not final, failure is not fatal:  it is the courage to continue that counts.”

If you listen closely to Churchill, you can hear the echoes of another great leader, Theodore Roosevelt, who in his ”Man in the Arena” speech to a graduating class in Paris, France, in 1910, said the following words some of us know all too well:

It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better.  The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat.

While words like these from great historical figures can provide inspiration during trying times, ultimately, the challenge is personal, and victory over the challenges come from within.  The first step towards victory is accepting your past as having passed, and setting your mind towards the future.

As for me, I’m not President Roosevelt, Sir Winston, or General Patton; not even remotely close.  These gentlemen certainly lived by these words, but for me, it’s easier to say these things than it is to follow them.  Life has its unexpected twists and turns, and subsequently, its regrets.  Sometimes I want to flip back and choose a different path at those points in my life which I, knowingly or unknowingly, made bad decisions that resulted in wasted time, money, or brain cells…. but I can’t. 

And I won’t.  I don’t want to.  I’m looking forward. 
So now, it’s official:  I am a Patriot.

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Filed under Personal
Sep 1, 2009

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