Updates from February, 2010

  • Chicago Politics

    Tom 6:26 am on February 22, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply

    Political discussion lately has often made reference to “Chicago-Style Politics” and generally in a negative sense. I’m not sure ethical people can even perceive that phrase in a positive light.  Politics has always been dirty business, even back to the days of Plunkett of Tammany Hall who drew a distinction between legal graft and illegal graft. Some political careers have appropriately been called dynasties. That’s not the way it was planned 235 years ago. They rejected kingship in favor of a Republic.

    It was in a recent show on the History Channel about the gangster era of Chicago that it all started to make sense to me. From the time of prohibition and Al Capone, the criminals controlled the city. They controlled the drugs, the booze, and the prostitutes. They infiltrated the cops, judges, and city hall. They made the law what they wanted it to be and used strong-arm tactics to get their way. They excelled at intimidation and rewarded those who were “cooperative.” The cemetery was filled with the bodies of rivals. Seems remarkably similar to many inner cities today. The difference is that this form of corruption and intimidation became the norm and therefore acceptable. This is the political machine within which Obama earned his chops. It is the political temperament that is being exported throughout the Federal government, where ACORN tactics are acceptable, votes are to be bought with taxpayer money, and “no crisis should be wasted.”

    Obama’s strong socialist upbringing is undeniable and many who supported his hope and change philosophy have suddenly gotten religion upon discovering the outcome of such policies. Larger government, beholden constituency, benefits for non-contributors, higher taxes to those who actually work for a living, and ballooning deficits. What I find most troubling today, however, is how these Chicago style antics have started to become mainstream. In two recent postings from the left the language is troubling.

    According to Kristinn Taylor at biggovernment.com, a recent CNN published article concluded with:

    Obama’s critics keep blasting him for Chicago-style politics. So, fine. Channel your inner Al Capone and go gangsta against your foes. Let ‘em know that if they aren’t with you, they are against you, and will pay the price.

    There was similar language in the Huffington Post:

    You’ve given it your best shot, you’ve tried numerous times to talk with the Republicans, to negotiate, to meet them halfway on every single matter before the American people. But they hate you for many reasons. It’s time you break kneecaps [bold in original]. It’s time to destroy the Republican Party. They don’t deserve a seat at the table when all they want to do is score political points by being the Party of No.

    The posting included a picture of a baseball bat with Barack’s name on it.

    I won’t begrudge the people of Chicago from putting in place whatever style of government they want. Our diversity of viewpoints and freedom to choose is part of what makes America great. But I will absolutely draw the line on threatening violence against a group of people SOLELY for their support of our constitution. I further object to the persistent lies and false characterizations (another hallmark of Chicago style politics) as seen in the example above, calling the Republicans “the Party of No.” Any rationally thinking person knows that the Republicans have been completely marginalized in Congress and even if they WERE the “party of no” (they are not; numerous republican proposals have been ignored by the democratic party leadership), blaming them when the Democrats could not get their agenda passed even with a super majority can clearly be seen as a typical temper tantrum. We failed and it couldn’t possibly be our own fault, so we have to find someone else to blame – yet another mantra of the morally deficient left.

    Taylor also noted that the Obama White House has consistently allowed such rhetoric. This certainly implies endorsement. After all – to a Chicago politician there is nothing abnormal about it. But there is. And we know it. There are reasons to be afraid. And we need to consistently call out such inappropriate language. It’s wrong in any political system and especially ours.

     
  • Why so Long?

    Tom 10:03 pm on February 5, 2010 | 1 Permalink | Reply

    Why so long? Why has it been since October that this blog has been updated? Well, there are literally thousands of reasons, but only a couple that matter. As I look back over what has happened in this country since then I see a few significant trends. For awhile the only thing ANYONE was talking about was health care reform. The sides were clearly drawn. What could I add to the dialog? The Tea Parties had been held, the left had disparaged them, and the conservative voters fought back in the most appropriate way – they elected a Republican Governor in Virginia, a Republican Governor in New Jersey, and a Republican Senator in Massachusetts – to fill the “Ted Kennedy” seat. The greatest comment made throughout these wonderful episodes was from Scott Brown in one of the Massachusetts debates when he reminded the questioner that he was not seeking to fill the “Teddy Kennedy” seat or even the “Democratic Seat” but the seat that belongs to the people of Massachusetts. Such arrogance from the left.

    Then there was Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Years. Good riddance to 2009. I even had a birthday in there somewhere and had another article published in Contract Management magazine (January issue). And you know what? We got several new subscribers here at the blog and NOT ONE SINGLE COMPLAINT about no postings. We also got no new comments. So I’ve come to the conclusion  that these are my own private musings. If I feel like writing I will. If I have something to say, I will say it. A very wise man once told me that when you have nothing to say, say nothing. And one of my favorite historical figures, Mark Twain remarked that it is better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt.

    We are turning a corner in this country. We needed Obama and his radical socialism to wake us up. We needed Eric Holder to supplant the Commander in Chief and decide to prosecute the Christmas underwear bomber as a civilian. New York is waking up and telling the feds that there will be no prosecution of Guantanamo terrorists just blocks from the World Trade Center site. Several Democrats are retiring rather than face defeat in the next election (of course – why not retire, they are already entitled to full pay and benefits for life just for serving in a part-time job). And the benefits they get far exceed ANYTHING anyone of you get or will ever get. As Mel Brooks has told us, “It’s good to be king!” Boxer, Pelosi, and Reid (no relation thank God!) are struggling for their political lives. Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. Those people are totally corrupt.

    AARP has sold out its members, and people are discovering that the AMA speaks for very few doctors. Public unions are growing to the point that they now exceed the membership of private unions (those that represent true contributors to society through the capitalistic system). Their attempts at dirty tricks, such as eliminating the secret ballot, are failing. The public sector is growing far too fast to be supported by any level of capitalism, and people who illegally sneak into the United Sates are given more rights than natural born citizens – social security without ever paying into it, welfare without residency, free public school education without paying taxes to support it, and a free college education in several states. While H1B visas for the real contributors to our society lie stagnant in some bureaucrat’s inbox.

    There is still much to do. We are piling up debt far too fast. China is buying us by the pound. We have truly mortgaged our children’s and our grandchildren’s future. We must fix that. It will be tough medicine. Obama may still get some of his agenda through, but we must continue to fight for personal liberty and a free society. We must defend our Constitution and the principles of states’ rights which it clearly intends to protect. We must support our troops and stop coddling our enemies. Yes, we have real enemies. We have people in this world who hate our way of life and want to kill us. To me, that makes them our enemies. And as a society it is time to grow up a little more. We are spoiled and feel far too much entitlement to the world’s resources. Europe still has us beat in that respect, but they should not be our model. Their social experiment has failed. We need to grow up on our own and seek reconciliation with our creator. Whenever I have been in a discussion on abortion or stem cell research I offer that we should not do things simply because we can. As a society we are not yet mature enough to know how to handle all the knowledge we have. We are like a 12 year old girl who has new body parts and no idea how to control them rather than let them control her. We simply haven’t matured enough to know how to handle it all. At one point in our history we thought it was OK to own human beings as property. While some treated it as a political issue it wasn’t. It was a moral issue. Thankfully we grew up enough in time to keep our country in one piece – but just barely. Abortion, likewise is not a political issue but a moral one. As is stem cell research. And we do not yet know the answer. We look back at pre-Civil War times and ask, “How could we as a society think that slavery was OK?” No one rationally accepts slavery as proper in any form today. Someday our descendants will look back at us and ask, “How could they have been confused about abortion?”

    So please visit when you can. Stumble us. Recruit friends. Link to this site. And offer some thoughts. Even something as simple as “I agree” or “I disagree” at least lets me know that someone is reading. And I will try to have something to say more often. Something worthwhile. Something to make you think. Something that will prompt you to respond.

     
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