Monday, March 22, 2010

NJ House Healthcare Traitors

It was a short time ago that this Rutgers-Eagleton poll was released. Two interesting statistics that came out of the poll were that while 88 percent of respondents felt that change was needed, 70 percent thought that the congress needed to start over(ie that this legislation would not solve the problem). This poll was conducted right here in New Jersey and should have been instructive to our state House of Representatives members.

But alas only one Democrat (John Adler NJ-3) and all Republicans thought that they should pay any attention to what New Jersey voters think. Come election time, remember the following Democrat Non-Representatives:

Robert Andrews NJ-1
Rush Holt NJ-12
Frank Pallone NJ-6
Bill Pascrell NJ-8
Donald Payne NJ-10
Steven Rothman NJ-9
Albio Sires NJ-13


Each of these people decided that Nancy Pelosi was more important that the voters of the State of New Jersey. And they cannot say they didn't know. Adler clearly got the message he resisted all summer and deserves some credit for that. I hope each of the rest of these NON-representatives soon get to know this new healthcare world they will enjoy as FORMER members of the House.

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For Whom Was The Term "Imperial Presidency" Coined, Again?

Got an email from Barack Obama today. It says, in part (boldface in the original):
We have all been forced to ask if our politics had simply become too polarized and too short-sighted to meet the pressing challenges of our time. This struggle became a test of whether the American people could still rally together when the cause was right -- and actually create the change we believe in.

Yeah. Because when every Republican votes against your bill, that's not "too polarized".

He talks as if the American people rallied together around this cause; as if this were change that most Americans believe in; as if most Americans weren't against it.

This is the change that he believes in, perpetrated on us by a bunch of people with insufficient spine to stand up to Chicago politics.

It amazes me that people claimed that George Bush had an "Imperial Presidency". This whole process has been such a staggering display of ego it's hard to describe.

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Obama's Idea of "Common Purpose" and His Real Similarity To Abe Lincoln


I was struck by this graphic from the Wall Street Journal. The raw partisanship of it expresses so much.

No, I'm not surprised. Obama has been telling us that this is his modus operandi all along.

Of course, one could misinterpret Obama's candidacy announcement, and his talk of "common purpose".
In the face of a politics that's shut you out, that's told you to settle, that's divided us for too long, you believe we can be one people, reaching for what's possible, building that more perfect union....

It was here we learned to disagree without being disagreeable -- that it's possible to compromise so long as you know those principles that can never be compromised; and that so long as we're willing to listen to each other, we can assume the best in people instead of the worst....

This campaign has to be about reclaiming the meaning of citizenship, restoring our sense of common purpose, and realizing that few obstacles can withstand the power of millions of voices calling for change.

By ourselves, this change will not happen. Divided, we are bound to fail.

But nobody should be fooled by these musings of togetherness and common purpose. In the same speech, Obama talked about Lincoln rallying people during the Civil War, in which the South hated "Northern aggression" enough to fight and die for it -- and Lincoln was unwavering in bringing those renegade states to heel.
In the face of tyranny, a band of patriots brought an Empire to its knees. In the face of secession, we unified a nation and set the captives free.

That's what Abraham Lincoln understood. He had his doubts. He had his defeats. He had his setbacks. But through his will and his words, he moved a nation and helped free a people....

As Lincoln organized the forces arrayed against slavery, he was heard to say: "Of strange, discordant, and even hostile elements, we gathered from the four winds, and formed and fought to battle through." That is our purpose here today.

That's why I'm in this race.

Not just to hold an office, but to gather with you to transform a nation.


Is it possible that he really believes his statement that this legislation "runs straight down the center of American political thought"? I don't think so. I think he can see the same graphic that I did at the top of this post, and come to the same conclusion.

This is Obama's model: He believes his purpose to be as great as Lincoln's, and he has waged a total war to impose it. That he divides his nation to do it is immaterial to him.

As long as I'm calling this fight a war, perhaps it won't seem too melodramatic to quote Lincoln against Obama.
Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation, so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field, as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this.

But, in a larger sense, we can not dedicate...we can not consecrate...we can not hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us—that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion—that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain—that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom—and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.


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Hey Bart Stupak: Planned Parenthood Sends Their Thanks

Hi, Bart. I thought you might want to see this.

I received an email from the Planned Parenthood mailing list this morning, and it contained this paragraph:
We were able to keep the Stupak abortion ban out of the final legislation, and President Obama did not include the Stupak language in his Executive Order. Unfortunately, the bill does include the Nelson amendment, which will impose new and severe restrictions on private health insurance coverage for abortion for millions of women. And no doubt we will have to beat back more attacks on women's health as the Senate considers the final health care reform package. We'll let you know when we'll need your help in the days and weeks ahead.
Yes, you heard right, Bart. Ben Nelson's Cornhusker Kickback did more for the pro-life cause than you did. At least he got his thirty pieces of silver.

And note that Planned Parenthood's President, Cecile Richards, highlights the fact that the legislation is unaltered first; that's no doubt because she knows that the Executive Order that you asked for doesn't alter the law as passed -- there's this little thing called "the separation of powers" that prevents the executive branch from overriding the legislative branch.

I would think that a long-time Congressman like you would know that. After all, you weren't subject to the decay of education that's happened since the unconsitutional Department of Education was born under our second-most-awful President, Jimmy Carter. (I know it's too early to see the effect of the Healthcare bill, but I think we're safe granting the top title to Obama already.)

Of course, I think this whole executive order thing is a fig leaf anyway. This video shows how insincere you were all along, and I only wish it were around earlier so the pretense could have been dropped:

So, you were never sincere about your pro-life stance, and you showed that either you're stupid (by believing that the EO is worth something) or conniving (because you're using it as an excuse). Before that, you were never one of us conservatives, but at least you looked like you had a spine. You appeared to have something rare in a politician: a spine. Now you're despised by both right and left, and a hollow man to the center. Is it any wonder that the world is noting the similarity between "Stupid" and "Stupak"?

Sincerely,
Jake Freivald

P.S. By the way, "Sincerely" means "I mean what I say."

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Sunday, February 21, 2010

Malcolm X and the Nanny State

I'm reading Malcolm X: The End of White World Supremacy, four speeches edited and with an introduction by Benjamin Goodman, a.k.a. Imam Benjamin Karim. (As he explains in his introduction, he was initially "Benjamin 2X" when he joined the Nation of Islam. The introduction is worth as much as the speeches.)

There are lots of things that strike me when I read about Malcolm X. I am white, so to some extent I read what he writes as an adversary (by his choosing, not mine), but he's still so very worth reading. The man who looks for accuracy in ancient historical detail will be scandalized, but the student of human nature can find absolute gems. This is a perceptive man, and an honorable man (despite issues that he may have had), in the sense that he was fighting for what he sincerely believes to be The Good.

Here's one example from a news story of April, 1957, in which he addressed police officials after a black man named Hinton Johnson was (according to the story) beaten viciously by white policemen and kept from receiving appropriate medical treatment:
"We do not look for trouble," he told police officials. "In fact we are taught to steer clear of trouble. We do not carry knives or guns. But we are also taught that when one finds something that is worthwhile getting into trouble about, he should be ready to die, then and there, for that particular thing."
Yes, sir. What a perfect articulation of my feelings about power and rebellion. Powerful stuff indeed, and completely in line with the assembly, at that time, of thousands of blacks with complete discipline, eschewing violence, in support of Hinton.

Nice. But what does this have to do with taxes in New Jersey?

I was struck by this passage in his speech called "Black Man's History" (read it or listen to it):
The so-called Negro are childlike people -- you're like children. No matter how old you get, or how bold you get, or how wise you get, or how rich you get, or how educated you get, the white man still calls you what? Boy! Why, you are a child in his eyesight! And you are a child. Anytime you have to let another man set up a factory for you and you can't set up a factory for yourself, you're a child; anytime another man has to open up businesses for you and you don't know how to open up businesses for yourself and your people, you're a child; anytime another man sets up schools and you don't know how to set up your own schools, you're a child. Because a child is someone who sits around and waits for his father to do for him what he should be doing for himself, or what he's too young to do for himself, or what he is too dumb to do for himself. So the white man, knowing that here in America all the Negro has done -- I hate to say it, but it's the truth -- all you and I have done is build churches and let the white man build factories.

You and I build churches and let the white man build schools. You and I build churches and let the white man build up everything for himself. Then after you build the church you have to go and beg the white man for a job, and beg the white man for some education. Am I right or wrong? Do you see what I mean? It's too bad but it's true.
None of what follows should be seen as belittling Malcolm X's legacy or the serious strides that blacks have had to make to reach this point in history. It's more of a practical and tactical application of his strategic and even prophetic statements.

See how he admonishes his people for allowing others -- those who dominate in the culture -- to do things for them? He strikes exactly the right note with me regarding the aptly named nanny state. Corzine told us we should do stem-cell research. He also told us we should create "green jobs". President Obama tells us that we need green jobs, too, and, along with his cronies in the House and Senate, forced us to allocate three-quarters of a trillion dollars to "stimulus spending".

They want to build the factories, metaphorically speaking, and we'll end up begging them for jobs.

Worse: Reid, Pelosi, and Obama want to take over healthcare. It's just funding, of course, but those who fund are also those who build. When everyone does what the Federal Government says, and pays the Federal Government its taxes in order to pay for those gifts that the Federal Government bestows on us, isn't it then the Federal Government that is building the hospitals? Isn't it the Federal Government that is creating new medical treatments? Isn't it the Federal Government that is deciding what treatments we can get, and what treatments we can't?

And aren't we then just children? We're letting them handle healthcare -- along with our food, clothing, and shelter; along with the cars that General Motors will build; along with the salaries that AIG will pay; along with the energy we're allowed to make and consume; along with every other detail of our lives -- because we don't know how to do it ourselves, or we're too weak to, or we're too dumb to.

I could go on, but I think the point is clear. The term "nanny state" could not be more accurate. As we keep abdicating more and more responsibility to the state and federal governments, we are reverting to a childlike state. We are letting the government call us "boy". Even if I believed that the government could run things better than the collective abilities of 300 million Americans could, I would find that repugnant -- and I would hope that all liberty-loving Americans would as well.

I disagree with a lot of what Malcolm X preached, but there's no doubt that he understood people. He knew what made humans tick. He also knew what subservience meant. And he knew enough to fight it.

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Tuesday, December 22, 2009

The Healthcare Gravy Train: Why is NJ getting nothing?

The bribes paid to recalcitrant Democrat legislators have been documented in various blogs on both the left and right. The so-called 'Cash for Cloture' scandal can be reviewed in detail here at Michelle Malkin's site. No reasonable citizen can look at this situation and the actions by Harry Reid and not be sickened by the Senate Majority Leader using taxpayer money to bribe senators in his own caucus to support a bill that over 60 percent of Americans are against.

But my cynical side wonders where our two senators are hiding throughout this process. Menendez and Lautenberg are such comfortable votes for the Democrats that they have no leverage to get anything for the State of New Jersey's citizens. They continue to excel in their combined 30 year losing streak on behalf of our state. But hey, at least Nebraska citizens won't have to worry about their healthcare costs.


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Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Scope Matters

Do you wonder why there's so much angst about health care reform?

At least part of the reason is the scope of the legislation we're trying to pass. And I don't mean the 2,000-plus-page length of the bills; I mean the fact that it covers the entire nation.

If New York or California wanted to pass a 2000-page bill socializing their health care, I wouldn't protest. If anything, the experiment would give people examples to look at, an ability to see what is possible or likely when we try great big social experiments.

But when you want to take over the entire country's health care system, you've gained my opposition. There's no room for innovation, or for temperance. We're all in it together, and not in a good way: In scientific terms, there's no control group.

The United States are united, yes, but they're also states. They were created as a federation for a reason. We need to maintain our liberty, which means maintaining our ability to *not* always act as a single country.

California, Nevada, New York, New Jersey: Do you want to provide free health care to all of your citizens? Do so. If you don't think you can afford it on your own, what makes you think we can all afford it together? If you think its viability will be undermined by freeloaders from Pennsylvania or Arizona, how does that affect your thinking on America's relationship with Mexico? But whatever your choice, don't force it on others.
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Monday, October 19, 2009

Cartoon: John Francis Borra on the Democrats' Health Care Reform

This is a good one:



Find the original here.


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Tuesday, August 25, 2009

What Astroturf Looks Like

I got this from Twitter, and I apologize for not being able to give credit -- I don't remember which link I clicked.

Check out this August 20 email (link is a PDF) from Kelly Gallaher (communityforchange@gmail.com) in which she details the campaigns of Democratic operatives' plan to overwhelm Paul Ryan's listening sessions in the 1st Congressional District in Wisconsin. I've transcribed most of it below. The subject line was "Paul Ryan's Roadmap to Hell(th) Tour".
Hi Everyone!

Congressman Paul Ryan is touring the 1st CD next week, we met yesterday and laid out a plan. He has 17 listening sessions scheduled and it is our intention to overwhelm each session with reform supporters.

The Democratic Party of Wisconsin (1st CD Dems), Organizing for America (OFA) and Community for Change are working together to promote attendance at these sessions.

Here are the plans: (Thank you Meg for taking GREAT notes! and it CANNOT be forwarded enough!)

At each session, we will have 2 tables with a banner. At the tables, we will have information on:

1 "Organizing for Health Care" (a glossy 4 page brochure),
2 Information on why Paul Ryan's health care plan is wrong for the 1st CD
3 Contact information for Ryan, Feingold, Kohl and OFA
4 Sign up sheet for those interested in joining us
5 Rally signs

If we encounter official resistance to our table, we will have bags to carry all the same information. The rally signs may not be allowed in the actual meeting place.

There may be an opportunity for people to go online and print their own 8 1/2 by 11 sheet for display IN the session from www.barackobama.com

It is intended that people rally (keep moving) and carry the signs before the session.

We are scheduling 2 Teams each day. The teams will leapfrog each event, so we are set up in advance and ready to go before the previous event ends. Each team will have a table and materials. Team Leaders each day will be assigned to one or more sessions. In addition, each team will have:

1 Maps showing location(s) for the day
2 Locations of fast food restaurants in the area
3 Questions for key people in the session
4 Information for those who might be interviewed by the media

The Team Leaders will:

1 Get the tables and materials the night before (for their first session of the day)
2 Get to the location about an hour before scheduled start time
3 Set up and staff the table
4 Be prepared to move the table (or take it down, if officially required)
5 Stay at the table during the session
6 Remain at the table after the session, until all people have gone
7 Sometimes, the team leaders will move to another session already in progress (particularly at the end of the day which have the biggest locations (Kenosha, Racine, Janesville) [sic]

For each day we will have 2 teams per day.

Here's where you come in. We'd like help staffing these tables, bringing supporters and attending as many sessions as you can. OFA is very active in Racine and we will provide at least one person per session.

Please let me know if you can help. We still need some team leader names in a couple of far flung locations.

We will be phonebanking active volunteers and reform supporters, but turning your people out is essential.

Here is the schedule!

Please look it over and contact me to fill in the blanks:

Monday, August 24


EAGLE: Kelly Gallaher and _______________
11:30am-12:15pm, Village Hall, 820 East Main Street

NORTH PRAIRIE: Glenda Alexander and _____________
1:30-2:15pm, Village Hall, 130 North Harrison

Tuesday, August 25

SHARON: Glenda Alexander and __________________
9:00-10:00am, Community Center, 125 Plain Street

GENOA CITY: Kelly Gallaher and _________________
10:30-11:30am, Village Hall, 715 Walworth Street

PADDOCK LAKE: Glenda Alexander and Meg Andrietsch
12:00-1:00pm, Village Hall, 6969 236th Avenue

KENOSHA: Kelly Gallaher and Meg Andrietsch
2:15-3:45pm, Gateway Technical College, Madrigrano
Auditorium, 3520 30th Avenue
You get the idea. Wednesday, Thursday, and Monday are similarly blocked out. Under Thursday, there's this comment:
For the Racine session, which runs until 230, we have reserved the room until 5pm, so the session can continue with or without Paul Ryan. (That is a bit of a secret, so don't tell Paul Ryan!)
She closes with this:
Thanks for reading this far. If you call me and say "I thought it was Highway to Hell", Meg will buy you coffee.

To volunteer, ask questions and submit ideas, please email or call me!

Thank you!

Kelly Gallaher

I leave you with this quote from Nancy Pelosi:
This initiative is funded by the high end — we call call it astroturf, it’s not really a grassroots movement. It’s astroturf by some of the wealthiest people in America to keep the focus on tax cuts for the rich instead of for the great middle class.
She was talking about tea parties, but... hmmm...

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Wednesday, June 24, 2009

NY Times Healthcare Poll - Fake, Phony and Fraud

When I saw the New York Times Healthcare poll the other day that claimed that there was massive support for Obama's healthcare plan, I was surprised becauase the poll didn't seem to fit with the number of people who were "happy" with their current plans and doctors. Apparently, the fix was in (from CNSNews):

A New York Times/CBS News poll released Saturday that showed broad bipartisan support for President Obama’s health care reform, over-sampled Obama voters compared to McCain voters, critics say.

The poll, administered June 12-16, found that 72 percent of respondents favored the creation of a government health-insurance plan that would compete with private insurers.


I have long been suspect of anything that is labelled to be fair form either CBS or the New York Times. But this is outright manipulation of data - propoganda to benefit the Obama agenda. But the facts don't match the poll. And the media is trying to ram healthcare reform down our throats.

“We are identical to where we were in 1993-94,” she told CNSNews.com, “with only 51 percent of respondents even in the Democrat-skewing poll saying the health-care system needs fundamental changes, versus 52 percent in January 1994. When the question becomes whether the system needs to be completely rebuilt, 34 percent say yes in the NYT/CBS poll, versus 38 percent in 1994.

Additionally, the vast majority of Americans are satisfied with their own insurance coverage, as they were at the beginning of the Clinton administration. Approximately 77 percent in the current poll say they are at least somewhat satisfied.


Read the entire article here.

It's real hope and change you can believe in. Except its fake.
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