Archive for October, 2009

Why We Are Not Excited

I was reading Peggy Noonan’s column today and I think she nailed it.  We are in the middle of good economic news and potentially the end of the recession and no one is excited at all.  As she starts off:

The new economic statistics put growth at a healthy 3.5% for the third quarter. We should be dancing in the streets. No one is, because no one has any faith in these numbers. Waves of money are sloshing through the system, creating a false rising tide that lifts all boats for the moment. The tide will recede. The boats aren’t rising, they’re bobbing, and will settle. No one believes the bad time is over. No one thinks we’re entering a new age of abundance. No one thinks it will ever be the same as before 2008. Economists, statisticians, forecasters and market specialists will argue about what the new numbers mean, but no one believes them, either. Among the things swept away in 2008 was public confidence in the experts. The experts missed the crash. They’ll miss the meaning of this moment, too.

The biggest threat to America right now is not government spending, huge deficits, foreign ownership of our debt, world terrorism, two wars, potential epidemics or nuts with nukes. The biggest long-term threat is that people are becoming and have become disheartened, that this condition is reaching critical mass, and that it afflicts most broadly and deeply those members of the American leadership class who are not in Washington, most especially those in business.

I read the rest of the column and I have to agree that we as a people are getting frustrated and disheartened.  I know why I am.  I am in the group that disagrees with the people in power and no one is listening to me (which is why I started the blog).  The proposed solutions treat me as a child who can’t be responsible while at the same time taking more and more of my money for my “own good” to fund this junk.  If Peggy is seeing this also, it is not something simply out here on the fringe.

Yes, I don’t see any of the leaders out there presenting a path to recovery and prosperity.  The Democrats with everything going on are more concerned with consolidating power than they are fixing the mess.  Regardless what Obama says about how we need to let him clean it up, I have not heard a plan.  Lowering emissions and decreasing energy use is not a plan to grow the economy.  Offering heathcare to those who don’t have it won’t grow the economy.  And spending $787 billion on stimulus over several years is not showing much progress either.

Where is the leadership?  Where is the plan to get us back?

I think Peggy says it nicely about our current leaders:

We are governed at all levels by America’s luckiest children, sons and daughters of the abundance, and they call themselves optimists but they’re not optimists—they’re unimaginative. They don’t have faith, they’ve just never been foreclosed on. They are stupid and they are callous, and they don’t mind it when people become disheartened. They don’t even notice.

At some point, children have to grow up.  Hopefully, it will be soon enough to make the pain bearable.

- FOP Vermillion

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Photo-op or Respect? UPDATE

Last night the President went to Dover AFB and paid his respects to eighteen fallen soldiers as they came home to their families.  Considering this is the same person who had to be shamed into meeting with the commander of our forces there, and who has been unable to make a decision on troop levels and strategy, I have a hard time not being cynical about the motivation.  (Now to be fair the tone of the WSJ linked article bothers me so maybe the warm and fuzzy feeling just went away too quickly.)  Knowing what I know about our CINC I imagine the decision was made on the basis of the photo-op and who died (most died in a helicopter crash rather than in combat) rather than honor for the fallen.

Prove me wrong Mr. President.  Don’t make this a one time thing.  Honor our warriors and their sacrifice.  They deserve it and they have earned it.

- FOP Vermillion

Update:  Well it looks like Hot Air has caught the friends of the White House at the NY Times covering up the fact that the trip to Dover AFB was a calculated move that looked good.  The operative phrase is “intended by the White House to convey to the nation that Mr. Obama was not making his Afghanistan decision lightly or in haste.”  I would rather have been proved wrong.

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Project Valour-IT

I am happy to say I have joined the Army team for the Project Valour-IT fun raiser.  This project raises money to buy technology for wounded warriors and supports their recovery.  This is a great cause and I fully support it.

- FOP Vermillion

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Down but not out

The combination of demands on my time for work and family as well as slow news has kept the posting down. I will be back at it soon and I expect to get back to the previous posting frequency quickly.
- FOP Vermilion

When the Police Can’t Help

My first thought when I heard of the terrorist plot to randomly shoot people at malls was “I am glad I chose to carry.”  Attacks like the one Tarek planned (and not very well thank God) are a fact of life in many places in the world and could happen at any time here.  Here we go along with our lives assuming if something happens that the police will protect us.  However, when the plan includes shooting the emergency responders, chances are you will be without protection for a while.  Let’s face it – officer safety is a big deal and I can’t blame them since they have families to go home to also.  The problem is you are stuck in the mall with the bad guys while the police stay outside and get together a plan.

So what to do?  I like many others have chosen to go through the process and training required to legally carry a concealed weapon.  When someone like Tarek comes to my mall where I and others like me shop, I think he will be surprised by the wall of bullets flying back at him.  I am not alone or a weirdo and in my neck of the woods, I am not rare.

I do not ever want to see a terrorist in my neighborhood but if I do I will be grateful I live in an area populated by sheepdogs and not sheep.

- FOP Vermillion

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Bono’s Vision

Bono had a piece in the NY Times today.  It was interesting because it gives a nice insight into the liberal thought process without the hate and personal attacks that you often see.  The thing that stood out to me was that even while being supportive of Obama, it was weak and damning to a point.

To start the essay, he points out that Obama’s win of the Nobel Prize was not based on accomplishment but based on projection.

There’s a sense in some quarters of these not-so-United States that Norway, Europe and the World haven’t a clue about the real President Obama; instead, they fixate on a fantasy version of the President, a projection of what they hope and wish he is, and what they wish America to be.

However, Bono thinks the “virtual Obama” is the real Obama and the basis for this opinion is a part of the speech given at the UN last month.  The key passage for Bono is:

“We will support the Millennium Development Goals, and approach next year’s summit with a global plan to make them a reality. And we will set our sights on the eradication of extreme poverty in our time.”

The millennium goals are a set of guidelines that according to Bono are to reduce “extreme” poverty.  Of course that is just one part (the whole list is below), but it is a part that is near to his heart.  The remaining parts of the three “extremes” that need to be addressed are ideology and climate.  If only these three extremes could be eliminated, the world would be a better place.  Based on Obama’s words, Bono believes the changes needed can happen as long as there is action behind them.

Now, I think this is all wishful thinking and not just because Obama has not shown he is big on follow through.  The words are getting old to me as the results are few and far between.

But to the three extremes:

  • Poverty:  I believe that the root to the poverty problem is not a lack of wealth but a lack of opportunity.  People going about and doing what they are best at … chasing a profit motive will create more wealth than any other method.  The biggest barrier to opportunity is the government systems that empower few and funnel wealth to those who do not earn it.  As long as there are dictators and feudal lords who can demand wealth from those around them at the point of a gun, there will be limited opportunity.  Considering the make up of the majority of governments at the UN, I do not expect that much will truley change in this area.  There may be wealth transfer but it will not make its way to the people who need it.
  • Ideology: When most people think of extreme ideology, they think left-right.  As much as I disagree with the opposition, the real problems in this area are outside of the US.  Currently, radical Islam would be the best example of this in my mind.  Those who disagree and refuse to submit are executed.  The problem is not one of understanding, it is of acceptance.  In this area, the US is not the problem.  Until I see true moderates in this area outside of the country, I do not expect there will be any progress regardless of who the President is.  In the end, we are not the ones saying submit or die so it is only logical to assume the ones saying it must change or be defeated.
  • Climate:  If you have been reading this blog you know my thoughts on man made climate change/global warming.  The bottom line is I think it is bad science.  the planet warms and cools over time and we can do nothing to stop it.  The fact that the theories have to keep changing reinforces my point.  Let’s get to where we can acurately predict the weather a few years out before we start making dramatic changes to society to prevent a potential coming problem.

The entire list of Millennium Development Goals are:

  • Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger;
  • Achieve universal primary education;
  • Promote gender equality and empower women;
  • Reduce child mortality;
  • Improve maternal health;
  • Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other diseases;
  • Ensure environmental sustainability; and,
  • Build a global partnership for development assistance.

The actual problems that Bono see are ones that will need to be solved by people and not governments.  The three extremes are problems of the world and people and will not be solved by decree.  They will only be solved, where they can be solved, by a billion small individual actions.  No matter what Obama’s actions are, or what the UN does, the end result will be minimal change if the real change does not come from the bottom up.

- FOP Vermillion

Goal 1: Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger Universal Declaration of Human Rights, article 25(1); ICESCR article 11
Goal 2: Achieve universal primary education Universal Declaration of Human Rights article 25(1); ICESCR articles 13 and 14; CRC article 28(1)(a); CEDAW article 10; CERD article 5(e)(v)
Goal 3: Promote gender equality and empower women Universal Declaration of Human Rights article 2; CEDAW; ICESCR article 3; CRC article 2
Goal 4: Reduce child mortality Universal Declaration of Human Rights article 25; CRC articles 6, 24(2)(a); ICESCR article 12(2)(a)
Goal 5: Improve maternal health Universal Declaration of Human Rights article 25; CEDAW articles 10(h), 11(f), 12, 14(b); ICESCR article 12; CRC article 24(2)(d); CERD article 5(e)(iv)
Goal 6: Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases Universal Declaration of Human Rights article 25; ICESCR article 12, CRC article 24; CEDAW article 12; CERD article 5(e)(iv)
Goal 7: Ensure environmental sustainability Universal Declaration of Human Rights article 25(1); ICESCR articles 11(1) and 12; CEDAW article 14(2)(h); CRC article 24; CERD article 5(e)(iii)
Goal 8: Develop a global partnership for development

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Let It Snow

With all the doom and gloom about global warming and climate change, I am enjoying the cold snap.  It is delicious to see us go from “this may be the last Olympics” 2016 due to effects of climate change to this summer ending fast and the snow starting to accumulate across the country. As much as I hate winter because of the effects on my work, I will gladly put up with a few miserable seasons if it will shut these nutsos up.  Being a former Boy Scout, I appreciate the environment and I respect nature but to believe we can change the weather because of our actions is ridiculous.  The sooner these people start putting their energies into improving our lives and not more in line with cave people the better.

Bring on the ice age if it brings on the silence.

- FOP Vermillion

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Rules of Warfare

Dafydd has an interesting scenario of how badly the civilian trials could turn out now that another barrier has been removed in the eventual closing of Gitmo.  This reinforces my belief that we made a mistake acting as if the people we are fighting are other than terrorists.  Our enemy does not obey the rules of warfare and with few exceptions, they not a member of a nation state.  With even fewer exceptions, they are not American citizens.  However, with all that. we keep granting right after right to these people.

As long as our enemy refuses to observe any of the rules of warfare. I do not see why we need to do anything more than what we would do to a normal P.O.W..  At the end of the war, we can send them home.  Of course when you declare war on a tactic rather than a specific group, it makes it hard to declare victory.  But just because we have done a poor job of declaring war on the right group that does not mean it is not war.  We delude ourselves by pretending this is a law enforcement issue.  As long as we approach terrorism as a crime, we will continue to be in this weird situation where the momentum is toward the courts and rehabilitation rather than punishment and victory.

- FOP Vermillion

New Hope

Recently I have been getting down as the health care bill seems destined to be rammed through Congress.  There are many procedural tricks, the Dems in Congress are many, and the momentum against it is slowing down.  So today I get some good news that the insurance companies are finally starting to fight back.  Now that the financial details are starting to come out, it is clear nearly anyone in the medical care industry is going to get soaked.  It is easy to get in bed with the government if you think you will come out out ahead.  However, if your margins are being squeezed and you will be blamed as quality of care comes down then it is a little less appealing.

There is a lot of money on the sidelines at the moment and the public is not behind the takeover.  If the industry decides to push back hard, it will cause a significant problem for Congress.  The web, combined with large industry advertising spend, could cause the Democrats to pause and that would be a good thing.

Right now the inertia is on the side of “reform”.  We need some luck if we are to going to see this bill die.

- FOP Vermillion

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Welcome Anita

Visiting Hot Air I came across a post by Anita MonCrief giving some insight on how she became an “ex-liberal”.  I  found her blog and the entire post is there.  One of the parts that grabbed me is this paragraph:

The Democrats seemed to be the answer: social programs, better schools, and politicians who cared. I do think that if I had never seen the other side of community organizing that I would still be blindly following along that same path. Being a conservative gives me hope, and peace. While it has not been easy, I decided to start with what made me love America as a child – its history and Constitution- and go from there. Friends who are still radicals rail at me for loving a country that enslaved us, and I tell them I don’t. I love a country that had the guts to stand up time and time again and right a wrong. A country that is not afraid to pick itself up and start again.

Her love of our history and Constitution is something we share.  I know we are not perfect, and many liberals want to focus on the flaws to minimize the positives, but we have a great deal to be proud of.

Being Conservative/Libertarian in my values and actions if not in name for my entire life, I have no first hand knowledge of what it is like to be a liberal just as I will never know what it is like to be a black woman.  I have enjoyed discovering Anita’s blog and I look forward to hearing her perspective as she becomes more involved in the Conservative movement.

- FOP Vermillion

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