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Birth of A Nation

Does this sound familiar: after a war , a constitution for a new political system for the country is formed and a new political order created. Immediately there are sections of the nation which decry the new system, local revolts and bloodshedding occur, sympathizers of the old regime are targeted for retribution, fights over economic spoils divide the new country, debates over more autonomy for the local areas are acrimonious and foreign powers hover in the background, trying to influence the outcome in their favor. Iraq? No, the new United States between 1781 and 1789 when the Constitution replaced the Articles of Confederation. For eight years this country was on the verge of dissolving as the People attempted to create a Democracy, and this for a fairly peaceful population which , while there were religious differences, had none of the animosity and vitriol towards one another that we see in Iraq's warring groups today. It took years of trying by those men we would hail as the Founding Fathers to finally resolve most of the disputes, through trial and error, compromise and ,yes, good fortune,  and even then the establishment of the political parties which governed the Nation resulted in fierce competition and the kind of dirty campaigning that would even make James Carville blush. And it resulted in the greatest political system man has ever implemented.

Now I am not saying that Iraq will ever have as happy an ending as that, though it may. The point is, the answer to the question will not be known for years if not decades. Giving birth to a Nation is a long term ordeal which requires patience, superhuman effort and faith. Those Liberal politicians who scream for an exit strategy, and those media who announce, almost with glee, the latest deathcounts, are not moral, they are reprehensible. Did anyone really expect the US to remove Saddam, and then have a peaceful , functioning Democracy in place in a few years? If they did, they probably should not be in a position of power because they are out of touch with reality, if not worse. To have overturned a ruthless dictator, totally revamped the political structure and have had three national votes resulting in a popularly elected Government within a few years is a mind boggling achievement which should be hailed, not treated as a mundane, everyday occurrence. We are nurturing a new paradigm in the MidEast, one that may, hopefully, one day bring the Islamic Arab population into the 21st century, and by doing so finally humanize a harsh religion which is still in the middle ages in terms of development. This is an epic undertaking which will require an immense effort by the Iraqis and the US, but it must be done if the world is to have security and peace.  And when we get frustrated with how this new nation is progressing, maybe we should remember our own national childhood, and have some patience.
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More about Inaccurate Polls

 This is a great article I saw on National Review Online about the inaccuracies and distorted use being made of polls by the Liberal establishment. 
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"We support the Soldiers But Not..."

What does supporting the soldiers but not the war mean anyway? This favorite catchphrase of Dems who want to prove their patriotism is nonsense if you look at it, an attempt to have their cake while wolfing it down. Soldiers are people who are trained to fight wars, plain and simple. To support them, you must be behind what they do, otherwise, what are you supporting? If you say you like a reporter, it means you like the way he presents the news. If you like a baker, you enjoy their pastries. If you support the military, you are an advocate for what they are accomplishing, their stock in trade, which is fighting wars to protect our country. I am disgusted with all those Liberals who hide behind their meaningless blather, afraid to say what they really mean: we are antimilitary, anti-army, and thus anti-soldier. As usual, they do not have the strength of their convictions, and thus seek to fool the masses, who are promilitary, with meaningless drivel. Well, in keeping with this tactic, let me say I am pro-Liberal democrat, but against everyone of their policies and beliefs. Maybe this will make sense to them.
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Liberals and Marriage

The NY Times recently reported that for the first time ever, married opposite sex couples make up a minority of households [49.7%] in the country, which, if true, holds some hope for the Liberals who make up the majority of the Times readers which I will get to in a moment. First , however, I have to say that from numbers they present in  the article I cannot make the math work. These include 5% of the households being comprised of non married opposite sex couples, and about 800,000 [or .7%] being male or female couples, totaling just about 6% total. They also mention that 1 in 20 households [another 5%] have single occupants. Adding the 49.7% to the other 11%  to come up with a  grand total of about 61%. Where is the missing 39% if we have covered married couples, non married couples  and single persons? Maybe it is just a bad day for me, but I cannot figure out what's left that would account for more than 40,000,000 households. If you can, please let me know.

Putting this aside, why is the Times trumpeting this? Well, they might feel that this truly is an Earth shattering revelation that deserves their headlines, because I know I wake up every morning wanting to know the demographic breakdown of US homes, don't you? But if I may, allow me to also point out that some recent articles have correlated married voters with the Republican party, meaning that if they are decreasing, this is good news for Liberals, the Chosen People of the Times. Also, if heterosexual marriage is seen as a declining institution, Gay marriage will probably benefit because they both would appear to be representative of minority constituencies [yes, I know, about 50% vs less than 1%, but who wants to quibble over this!]and suddenly heterosexual marriage is no longer a fundamental pillar of society ["oh  those pesky minority heterosexual  couples can get married, why not us?"]but just another social sexual union which should be open to all. Much like the all too frequent census counts which are ticking off the days that remain until white non-hispanics are a minority in this country, this household breakdown, if we can ever make the numbers add up, is just another indication that Liberals are remaking the country in their image, and the Days of the Conservatives are quickly dwindling.

Given all of the above, it would seem a nice Liberal news organization like the Times would have more than enough reason to follow this story. However, there has always seemed to me to be an underlying bias against marriage in Liberalism which is a reflection of the fact that of all the social institutions Conservatism seeks to protect, marriage maybe  the most important, and thus enemy number 1 of the Left. Why should this be so? Well firstly, it intimately ties religion into the lives of many people, and we all know the Liberal take on religion. But just as importantly, it separates people from the general, homogeneous masses, and creates units of self interest and resources which any self respecting Liberal would prefer go to the government [hence their love of the death tax]. Families offer an alternative to the Government in many respects, and thus competition for the resources and allegiance of the people. Hillary didn't write "It takes a Village" for nothing! Liberals would love to eliminate the atomization of Society caused by marriage, and replace it with a communal population that shares everything. After all, Liberalism taken to its extreme is Communism, which is the ultimate manifestation of this drive to non differentiation. Marriage, neighborhoods, churches, are all ways we express our individuality and independence from the government and its drive to sameness, and so anytime the Times can write an obituary for them, they don't miss the chance. Hopefully, like Mark Twain's, marriage's reported death is greatly exaggerated.
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NY Times Cheers UN

The NY Times today headlined the UN resolutions adopted against North Korea as the toughest since the Korean War [for those who don't know, the only reason the UN approved that war was that the USSR boycotted the Security Council Meeting, and thus didn't exercise their veto], and held that impotent organization up to accolades as it went into detail about the strictures imposed. If you continued to read however [the Times usually gets to the important stuff later in the article, sometimes much later], you will find that all military action has been excluded as an option, and that China, the only country that really matters when it comes to trade with North Korea, is indicating it will not enforce the sanctions. What remains is the best we could hope for from the UN, but probably nothing more than useless window dressing, giving cover to those who want to say diplomacy worked, while postponing the true day of reckoning. And the Times gets the chance to hail another of the icons of Liberalism, the United Nations, which, like the newspaper itself, reminds me of the lines from Macbeth about sound and fury signifying nothing.
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The Rewards of a Liberal Culture

A soon to be released report [ Study Finds Crime Growing at 'Alarming Pace' ] about an expected epidemic of crime supplies yet more proof, if any is needed, that the Liberal culture which has taken deeper and deeper hold over our country over the last 20 years is resulting in the nihilistic society Conservatives have warned against and feared. After so many years of seemingly improving crime statistics, this article comes as a wakeup call to all of us. The picture it draws of our youths, as violent and uncontrolled predators with no respect for life, seems to come  from some other place, but it is here and now. While the obvious reference to the availability of guns is mentioned [how could any MSM article about crime pass that by!], more importantly, attention is drawn to the culture now permeating our world, which glorifies gangsta rappers and their lifestyles. What should also be discussed is the erosion in our society of those moral arbiters which have always served to provide us with examples of right and wrong, and yes, even the threat of punishment for shameful behavior. All those proud Liberals out there who slight religion and seek to minimize the influence of the Church and more importantly God in our childrens lives, should be taking note of what their beliefs have wrought. As prayer is removed from school, and MTV provides 24 hour soft core pornography for preteens to absorb, our children are descending in moral chaos and the country faces a very scary future. San Francisco policies are corrupting our country, and shame on us for letting this happen. Unfortunately, we may be the last generation to understand, and feel, shame.
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What Conservatives Seek to Conserve

With the political debate becoming evermore hysterical and accusatory, and so many complex issues ranging from America’s fuel strategy going forward to the War on Terror serving as focal points for debate and recriminations, the meaning of Conservatism has become lost to great degree as the name itself as become affixed to one side of the national debate. As people take sides, Liberal and Conservative have become the teams, but at the expense of clarity and understanding. What indeed is Conservatism?

This question would probably be answered in different ways by different branches of the movement itself, and yet there is a fundamental bedrock tenet which underlies it even if many don’t realize that. Simply, it is an acknowledgment of the fallibility of men, and the futility of trying to “perfect” them through governmental institutions. All else, as the Biblical phrase so aptly puts it, is commentary.

But what does this mean in terms of the practical applications of Conservatism as a political philosophy? First and foremost, that history counts, and that the processes and institutions that Men have devised, and which control his imperfection while allowing his progress, should never be discarded unless careful thought and extreme prudence are used beforehand in weighing the pros and cons of the argument for change. The collective wisdom of Mankind, as expressed in these existing creations, including Family, Church and Neighborhoods, should be given great respect, and conserved as much as possible. That which is time tested should take precedence over the new and novel.

Secondly, because men are imperfect, giving any man or group of men more power by increasing government regardless of the goal envisioned is always considered dangerous, and rightfully so. The model of Liberal Revolution is the French Revolution, which , in one fell swoop, eliminated the Church, Monarchy, Aristocracy , even the calendar and units of measurement, in the name of rationality and progress, and it went from the crowd governing to the Directorate to the three Consuls to Napoleonic, and absolute, authoritarian rule. This is what the other governments in Europe feared and ultimately waged war against, and what Conservatives since then have continued to fear; in the name of Progress and the People, the imposition of stronger and bigger government which , in the hands of imperfect men, become tyranny.

The Founders of the US understood this, and that is why they incorporated checks and balances and the Bill of Rights and all the other restrictions on governmental power that we have. However, as Jefferson said, the price of liberty is constant vigilance, and so we must constantly be on the lookout for those who, in the name of progress and equality, would weaken or destroy the institutions which support and protect us, whether the cause is gay marriage or separation of church and state, and would increase the power of government . The law of unintended consequences and man’s nature insures that the end result of these kind of changes would be very different then anticipated or planned, and probably very harmful to the fabric of our society and survival of our nation.

Liberals believe they can make things perfect through their reason if only they can be given the power to do so. No problem is too big, no obstacle too difficult to succumb to governmental power. Conservatives know that man is ruled by passions, instincts and desires which will never allow for a perfect society, and the bigger the government, the greater the chance for abuse and tyranny, but we can have a world where everyone can have the chance to be happy, or as it says in the Declaration of Independence, the right to pursue Happiness, with no guarantee of success, because there are no guarantees in life. This hope of happiness through limited government and maintenance of the institutions and processes which have been time tested is something worth conserving.

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An Evolutionary Conundrum?

I just have a quick question regarding the infallibility of natural, random selection as the driving force of evolution: the Human brain is usually said to make use of only around 10 to 20% of its capability [anyone who feels this is wrong, please feel free to comment], but if nature only chooses genetic mutations which are useful to the survival of the species, why would an entire organ have been developed which we still do not know how to use? Considering the difficulty which a large head causes for the birthing process [I'll take my wife's word on this], it would seem there is no reason for our brain to be so large, yet it is. Now this is entirely different from a vestigial organ , like the appendix, whose use has become superfluous [other than as a source of income for doctors who remove it] , but which nature has not yet seen fit to weed out of existence. The brain seems to be promising us uses in the future [if we survive that long], but why then has the blind eye of evolution chosen it now? Can this be chocked up to the list of arguments for Intelligent Design?
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Complicating Evil

In considering all the handwringing and analysis going on in the MainStream Media and, truth  be told, both political parties, regarding the situations in Iran and North Korea, it behooves us to take a step back, catch our breath, and try to put things in perspective. As much as the Liberals would have us "see the world through the other man's eyes" [the entire philosophy of multiculturalism],  what actually happens is that they project our beliefs onto them, and thus empathize with their views [which cannot be that different from ours, since they actually ARE ours], and thus we paralyze ourselves in trying to defuse an international situation. I see this as a kind of international Stockholm Syndrome, where our will to resist is overcome by a creeping identification with the Other caused by our failure to understand exactly what the Other represents. Sometimes it is as obvious as a Hitler, who very thoughtfully laid out his entire program in Mein Kampf  which was written in the 1920's, and then the world stood by shocked as he implemented it, while refusing to abide by the conventions and niceties of Western civilization [to the utter amazement of Chamberlain, who really believed he could negotiate with Hitler]. What sane man, knowing what we know today, wouldn't put an end to Hitler in the 1920's? My fear is that the same thing will be said sometime in the future regarding the threats facing us, unless we act in a decisive, and perhaps military manner, soon. Let's take the Iranians and North Koreans at their words, which are ,and there is no better word for it, EVIL, and act upon that, and stop trying to project our reaonableness and regard for life onto two regimes which give no indication of caring about either. Jean-François Revel , the recently deceased French philosopher, wrote a book titled "Why Democracies Perish", and in truth it is not because we become weak in the face of danger, but rather because we fail to recognize danger because it is so alien to our principles and values.  Sometimes the world really is drawn in black and white, and refusing to see that is indicative of a mental dysfunction which can only result in catastrophe.  Nero may have fiddled while Rome burned, but we refuse to even see the flames.
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Practical Politics

In the last few weeks, it seems more and more Conservatives  have taken to finding fault with the Republican Party because it does not adhere to a strictly Conservative agenda, or represent the traditional values which are the backbone of the Conservative Movement,  and as a result are calling for a boycott of the elections, and even suggesting a Democratic victory would be just what is needed to get the Republicans on the straight and narrow again. Of course the Liberals have picked up on this line of reasoning and are keeping their fingers crossed. We cannot allow them to be right.

As wonderfully idealistic as it sounds, this whole concept of "punishing" the Republicans is,in the end, self defeating,and the damage a Liberal Democratic Congress would cause is awful to contemplate, especially in a time of war. Yes, in a wonderfully idealistic and perfect world, making such a stand sounds ever so courageous and even noble, but in  reality it would result in a marginalization of the Conservative Movement, and an abdication of responsibility on upholding the traditions that are the bedrock of our society, and upon which Edmund Burke based the political philosophy we have come to call Conservatism. Yes, there have been times when Liberalism has swept over our society, and remade it into a hideous parody of what this country was founded as [the 1960's obviously comes to mind], but Conservatives owe it to the practicality of their outlook to always attempt to protect this country from the misplaced and wrongheaded idealism of Liberalism; we cannot afford to retreat to an ivy tower and sulk while everything falls to pieces around us. Even if we have to make compromises, half a loaf is better than none. Are there problems with the current Congress? Of course there are. But it could be infinitely worse.The Speaker of the House could be named Pelosi.
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A Tale of Two Parties

The more one learns about how the media and Democrats dealt with their past sex scandals, the more cynical and hypocritical they look regading the Foley matter[see Item 3 on Olbermann: Bush a 'Compulsive Liar' Who Is Helping al-Qaeda --10/6/2006-- Media Research Center].
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Atheism: The Religion Without God

The fundamental premise of Atheism, that God doesn't exist, is an article of faith, since a logician, someone near and dear to the hearts of all Atheists, will tell you a negative can never be empirically proven. Therefore, Atheism is in fact a faith based philosophical movement which seeks to explain the Universe through its beliefs, which include the supremacy of the Human Mind, and thus comes perilously close to the definition of a Religion. This being the case, all the attempts by Atheists and Liberals to remove God from the public square is in reality an attempt to impose the basic tenet of their Religion on the vast majority of us, and is in violation of the First Amendment. Both belief in and doubt of the existence of God are matters that will never be resolved objectively, but are among those lofty questions each of us ultimately answers with faith, even if an Atheist will never recognize this truth, and their effort to justify removing "God" from the institutions of our country is actually just another crusade to eliminate a competing religion, one which the vast majority of this country believes in. We are beginning to realize  jihads can be be waged both in God's name, and against it as well.
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Right Where We Want Them

 Oftentimes in battle the hardest thing to do is get the enemy to engage you when and where you want. Up until Napoleonic warfare, forcing a battle on favorable terrain was extremely difficult, and warfare consisted of armies doing a lot of moving and relatively little fighting. Napoleon changed this through his organizational modifications which allowed his armies to be more mobile and  "trap" his opponents. Thus was warfare forever changed.

In considering the threat posed by the Iraqi Islamofascists, this is a point well worth keeping in mind. The asymmetrical warfare which the pundits refer to really means that we are not fighting a conventional enemy using the tactics of an army. Rather, our enemy is an insidious one, lurking in the darkness, hiding within the camouflage of civilian populations, and striking wherever he detects weakness. On 9/11 I would imagine one of the major concerns of the people in charge of protecting us was "Where are these guys?". With the whole world as their potential battleground, where do you seek these fanatics? To sit back and wait for them was a recipe for disaster, as the rubble of the Twin Towers demonstrated for all to see. Yet they would never be stupid enough to congregate and fight us in a geographically limited area.

Think again. The Iraq war, aside from being justified by Saddam's refusal to abide by the armistice agreement of 1991, the potential for them to develop and share WMD's with terrorists whom they had supported [no one mentions Saddam's payment to the family of suicide bombers who attacked Israel. Imagine what he would have paid to have the US attacked.], and the opportunity for us to replace a brutal dictatorship with a democracy which could be used as a model to drag the Islamic world out of the Middle Ages, was also the perfect place to concentrate the Islamic terrorists so we could engage them, if they were that stupid, and they ARE that stupid, as the recent figure of 4000 deaths released by their leadership has shown. This is not just a matter of fighting them over there as opposed to over here, this is about taking a shadowy, almost ephemeral movement and making them visible, so that we can defeat them, and we are defeating them, as their internal memos state. Is Iraq a difficult place, with convoluted politics and messy coalitions? Of course it is, and how this will all end for the Iraqis is hard to know, though I can't imagine any of them , other than the die hard Baathists, would rather still be under the brutal regime we have eliminated, and it will take years, if not decades for a true, peaceful democracy to be established [just as it did in Europe and Japan after WWII]. In the meantime we have engaged our enemy on the terrain of our choosing, and we are killing them in the thousands, and in warfare it doesn't get any better than that.
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Through the Looking Glass Again

In listening and watching the Clintons defend Bill's actions for eight years in regards to the terrorist threat to the country, I am amazed at the almost glee they both take in describing both his powerlessness, and ignorance, as if these are the highest attributes a US President can evince. After listening to Bill blame everyone [including those wicked Uzbekistani's ] for his failure to capture or kill Bin Laden, one cannot help but walk away with the feeling that the President is truly just a figurehead sans any real power who is at the mercy of the FBI, CIA, NeoCons, foreign nations, [and obviously any intern with salacious thoughts]. To think we could expect him to exert leadership against these cabals in order to defend the country!

And, in truth, was he even aware of a threat to national security? Sure, terrorists tried to blowup the World Trade Center, succeeded in blowing up our foreign embassies, and attacked the USS Cole, but what did that really mean? According to Hillary, nothing, since he never received a written, detailed memo saying Bin Laden was going to attack the US [which according to an excellent article in the Weekly Standard Warning Signs he in fact did receive!]. Talk about turning a highly unlikely ignorance into a virtue! Everybody knew Bin Laden was targeting us it seems to  me, and yet Hillary insists the President was uanware, or else he would have been moving Heaven and Earth to protect us, not like those inept Republicans in the beginning of 2001. Aside from the fact that this seems to be contradicted by Bill himself [why would he be trying to kill Bin Laden unless he posed a threat to the US?],it is both shocking and dismaying to me that the Clintons would brew this disturbing recipe of presidential stupidity with executive powerlessness and believe it will work as an effective  response to those who say the Democrats are weak on national security. If this is the best they can offer, a Forrest Gump model of the Presidency, this country may have a lot more to worry about than foreign terrorists. It can have another Clinton as President.
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Three's a ....Marriage?

In the last few days I have been reading about a lawsuit in Denver where three people  are trying to legalize their polygamous marriage [See NewsNet5.com - Family - Utah Trio Fights Polygamy Ban In Court], and I have been waiting for all those who had predicted that this would be the ultimate outcome of the Gay marriage movement to come forward and say "We told you so". I haven't seen this yet, so I will say it: once you compromise the concept of marriage to includes Gays by resorting to so called Constitutional Rights, you have opened the door to a justification that has no foreseeable limits, and now we will have to wait and see if the Liberals who have kowtowed to their gay constituents now suck it up and admit they were wrong, and that marriage can indeed by defined by society as between a man and a woman, or will they finally walk off that cliff that has been staring them in the face, and argue that anyone [or three or more] who want to marry should be allowed to. Now is the time for the Conservative movement to hold the Liberals' feet to the fire, and see how nihilistic they truly are. The American people deserve the answer to this question, and the opportunity to get it has never been better.
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