“evolves” in their opinions always look for the money. Case in point.
Category: Politics
All I Ask…
is one simple thing. Don’t complain to me about any politician, party, program, government issue, or anything else for that matter unless you also have a solution to the problem. We seem to be a nation where a vast majority of complainers whine about what a minority of doers are about. It doesn’t seem to make much sense to complain about something without having a solution to the problem, there is enough noise in the world already. I hope to follow my own advice.
Tired of the Two Party System?
Here’s an interesting alternative. What do you think?
I Think Right Now…
I like Ron Paul. He’s not a messiah but he talks a lot about freedom and I think freedom is empowering. He speaks of non intervention, too, and I think that we’re long past the time where we can meddle in the lives of other nations or give our very best to the ungrateful.
Could this change? Yes. Is he the ultimate hope?. Not even close. But freedom matters and in a country where our politicians seem to be just rearranging the seats at the nanny state table of largesse, he’s speaking a completely different language. For that alone he should be considered.
Just a Thought…
If it’s okay for us to enable the killing of other country’s leaders should we not be surprised if others play by that rule with us? If we intervene in the life of any country that displeases us somehow with military force could those decisions some day come back to haunt us? The rules we apply when we are strong will be the rules in place if we become weak.
Frank Schaeffer…
Orthodox Christian (?) advocates for protesting, Occupy Wall Street style, at churches. Read more here.
A blogger for The Huffington Post, young Schaeffer is now faulting religious conservatives for facilitating Wall Street greed. He’s imploring the Wall Street Occupiers to “protest the root source of America’s tilt to the far unregulated corporate right.” For Schaeffer, the next logical step is to demonstrate “outside mega churches, Evangelical publishing houses, [and] religious organizations that lead the ‘moral’ crusades against women and gays and all the rest.”
Thoughts on a Killing…
The American Civil Liberties Union has criticized Awlaki’s killing. But so far, the only politician of note to do so is Rep. Ron Paul, the Republican presidential candidate with a touching reverence for the Constitution as written. “Al-Awlaki was born here; he’s an American citizen. He was never tried or charged for any crimes,” he exclaimed. Paul, though, gets dismissed as a constitutional kvetch.
I do not share Paul’s indignation, but I do his dismay. Something big and possibly dangerous has happened . . . in secret. Government’s most awesome power — to take a life — has been exercised on one of its own citizens without benefit of trial. A guy named Barron and another named Lederman apparently said it was okay. Maybe it was. But I’d sure like to hear the attorney general or the president explain why.
After 1700 lives…
and over 400 billion dollars this is what we get from Afghanistan.
A Thought Worth Considering…
If we want smaller government, we will have to pick up the slack. Helping change another life for the better may be the most satisfying work we do on Earth. It is part of my own ethic and I can testify to the satisfaction it has given me. Make it a fad and it could become a trend. Ron Paul’s answer, which to some sounded crass, might prove itself to be the ultimate in compassion.
Read more here…
Just a Thought…
The other side of the “let’s get the government off our back” is that we’ll have to change as well. Let me explain.
That there will be poor, homeless, and people in need of services is a constant. It’s been that way from the dawn of time. In the last 70 plus years we as Americans have slowly but surely given over large portions of that population to the government to feed, house, teach, and pay the bill. And as governments have taken on the responsibility we’ve been freed from what had heretofore been our tasks, except, of course, for paying the bill. Grandma doesn’t live in our house anymore, she goes to a nursing home at taxpayers expense and instead of taking care of her we go and visit.
Now if we really do “want the government off of our back” and out of our lives we’re also going to have to think about Grandma, and the homeless guy down the street, and the kid who doesn’t have enough to eat before school. They’re still going to be there and they’re still going to have needs. Who is going to step up? Are you? Am I? We want freedom from taxes and we want less regulation by and involvement with the government. It’s not a bad idea but the cost of that freedom is that we, perhaps for the first time, are not going to be able to farm our problems out to some agency or just count on welfare to take care of things.
We’re going to have to live of our lives in a different way. Grandma may come to live with us and not just for a weekend. We’re going to have to get our own hands dirty. We’re going to have to care more than in words. Are you ready for that? Am I ready for that? Is the Church ready for that? We’ll see.
Just be careful what you ask for because you might get it.
