Wednesday, December 10, 2008

On the decline of dead tree media

A recent post on one of the blogs I frequently read has me thinking. Of course, that's generally the point of blog postings. I'm just not certain that what I've been thinking about is what the blogger in question wanted me to be thinking about. By the way, this isn't a dig at the Hoopy Frood Dude. If you only read the article I linked to above, you won't get the full picture. You have to follow the link at the bottom of his article to read the whole thing on John's blog. There you'll find a bit more detail, like this…

Many factors are plaguing the Tribune Company at this time. The expected sale of the Chicago Cubs for one, has been delayed indefinitely, as the highest bidder, Mark Cuban faces insider trading charges. And just as the New York Times had seen, a steep decline in advertising due to both the "recession" and more readers going online rather than to the print pages has taken a toll.

Another thing that is frequently cited by conservative pundits and bloggers when it comes to the decline of the news media is their obvious bias. I'm not so certain that this really has that much to do with the problem though. For one thing, the “media” has been biased since the first publisher put ink to cellulose for distribution in this country (and actually even before that). For another, I honestly believe that most people  that are seriously interested in the news are likely capable of recognizing and filtering out the bias that is presented.

The real problem is in the bias that prevents stories from being published. That's a lot harder to detect. It generally requires several news sources with differing biases to learn what media bias is hiding from you.

Ideologues have a completely different problem with “media” bias. Often they tend to dismiss any news sources that don't fit their own bias. Thus liberals often tend to dismiss a point when it's supported by a quote from Fox News  or World Net Daily for example. And of course, just about everyone dismisses blogs as news sources, even when they are written by and for people working in major media outlets.

No, media bias is probably not the reason for the decline of print media. I think that the Internet and a general public apathy are largely responsible for that. I used to subscribe to several newspapers. I no longer do. I tend to read the news on the newspaper's Internet sites, and that doesn't cost me anything. I also end up having to dispose of less trash as a result. Newspaper adds bulk and weight to my recycle bin, and I get charged to use that thing. I might buy a newspaper when I'm looking for something to read and don't have access to the Internet other than through my cell phone (Have you tried reading the news on a 32x16 screen? It's almost as bad as watching the nightly news on television… or eating your meals through a coffee stirrer), but that's about it.

I love getting my news on the Internet. I read the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Washington Times, The Seattle Times, The Daily Mail, The Wall Street Journal, and lots of other newspapers online. Most of that doesn't cost me a thing (other than bandwidth). I have to wonder how long that's going to last though. I know that most online news sources are supported by online advertising and I just about NEVER click on any of the advertisements, and I find the full-page ads that interrupt my reading to be annoying. When I click on a story I expect to read the story, not to have to click a link that says “close this ad.”

I also don't read the sections of the papers that require a paid subscription. What can I say, I'm cheap. Besides, if I can get similar stories for free through other outlets why pay for it?

And that, I think more than anything is what's contributing to the decline of news media today. If nobody wants to pay for the news, what incentive is there for the media outlets to publish it? Sure, they may want to push an agenda, but more than that, I think they want to put food on their own tables. If nobody is willing to pay for their product they're not likely to be able to afford to produce it.

I can't rejoice when another media outlet falls to the reality of declining revenues, even if so many of them are merely echoing one another or simply reproducing stock feeds from the Associated Press or Reuters. As more outlets fall, eventually getting the news will be harder and harder.

We all want something for nothing. Most of the time, we want our governments to provide it ala socialized medicine, social security, and government spending programs. Conservatives have been saying that that doesn't work for a long time. Are we perhaps seeing another example of the failure of the something for nothing mentality?

Internet geeks like to say that information should be free. It's the foundation of things like open source software and the like. The problem is everything has a cost. It will really be sad when the greatest medium for distributing news and information leads to a serious lack of news and information. The Internet is a great tool, but making it pay its way… that's the trick.


http://perrinelson.com/2008/12/10/1289.aspx

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Moving from the abstract to the concrete

I've been repeating the call to educate the electorate about conservative principles and values for some time now, and especially since the election. It's something we must do if we want to get our message across. Getting that message across is something we must do if we want to regain the liberties that we have lost over the last 150 years or so, and it's something we must do if we want to return our nation to the principles that made it great and can make it even greater in the future.

Individual liberty. Individual responsibility. Smaller government. More accountable government. States rights. Sensible and sane foreign policy. These are not just abstract ideas, but they sound abstract if that's all we say about our platform and our ideas. We need substance and not mere platitudes. If the people want platitudes let them go listen to the other guys. They will anyway, because after all the other guys are better at that than we are.

Barack Obama and other “liberals” ran on a campaign of “change,” an abstract notion if there ever was one. Not that the left can truly afford to run on specifics. Many a commentator has noted how it was that whenever he gave a prepared campaign speech Barack Obama was clear and articulate in his message. Many a conservative commentator has noted too that whenever he had to deal in specifics about his positions, or respond ad-hoc to criticisms of his past or his proposed policies that he lost that articulateness. His speech became filled with pauses and stuttering.

I believe that this was due to the fact that he felt the need to hide his true positions from both his supporters and from the middle. Otherwise, much of his support would have evaporated. There were gaffes aplenty during the campaign, from Joe Biden, Michelle Obama, and even from “the one.” Focus was quickly diverted from these errors of specificity though and the mantra of “change” was intoned from on high again and again.

Tonight, as I was driving home I chanced to hear David Boze on the radio and something he said got me to thinking again. As conservatives, we can't let the same thing happen to us. We should never be afraid to stand for our values. If we're genuine conservatives we shouldn't hide our ideas behind rhetoric or stammering. But an abstract recital of our ideology won't cut it either. As we develop candidates and as we educate one another and the independents and moderates about our values, we've got to present concrete examples of how conservative ideals and values can impact the lives of the people we're trying to reach.

As an example, conservative politicians tend to be against such jobs destroying policies as minimum wage hikes. Simply coming out and saying that it's a bad idea isn't going to cut it, because the left will simply turn it upon us and say that “conservatives don't care about low income working families.” And we let them get away with it if we don't explain carefully why minimum wage hikes actually hurt the low income working person, or at least people trying to get a start in the job market.

We as conservatives know that the simple truth of the matter is that small businesses, and the ones most likely to offer minimum wage jobs in the first place have a limited revenue stream to work with. Forcing them to pay ever higher “minimum” wages typically means that they must cut expenses elsewhere, or offer fewer jobs. For a business working on a small margin it generally means fewer jobs.This of course means that less work gets done, unless there's a rise in individual productivity. Less overall productivity will end up cutting into the businesses' bottom line, with the possible outcome that even fewer jobs become available. It's not just bad for the business, it's bad for the potential labor pool as well.

A change in the minimum wage rate rarely matters to skilled labor, or to people with more experience. These people seldom are working at minimum wage in the first place. Even in the fast food industry, minimum wage is the starting point. Good, reliable workers will tend to earn raises over time. I remember my experience with this all too well. In my college years, I began a minimum wage job as a fry cook, flipping burgers. Over time, I learned the job well, and learned other jobs for the restaurant. I earned wage increases.

True, they were small, but I wasn't working there to make a living, I was working to help pay my way while I went to college. I had room and board through the graciousness of my parents, and the money went to pay for tuition, books, and a few extras. Once I finished college I started looking for a real career, and I wasn't about to take minimum wage in that job.

Anyway, it seems that each time I earned a wage increase, the state would follow up by increasing the minimum wage a month or two later. I would work my backside off to earn that increase, only to find that I had essentially wasted my efforts as the minimum wage increased to the point where I was back at minimum again. The state literally took away the incentive for working hard and learning new positions. What, after all, is the point of working hard when people that don't work as hard get the same increase in pay simply for showing up?

So increases in the minimum wage rate tend to reduce the job pool for potential workers. They tend to result in increased unemployment in the people that need those starter jobs the most. They tend to decrease productivity among the people earning minimum wage and for the businesses that provide those jobs. Further they result in disincentives for those same people that might want to get ahead. These are concrete reasons why a conservative might oppose a minimum wage hike.

This is the sort of thing that we as conservatives need to present when we teach others about our principles and values. We need to teach people not only what those values are and where they come from, but how they will affect the people we're trying to reach.

Sure, it's more work than the “change” mantra and empty promises. But then, conservatism isn't about empty promises. It's about liberty and responsibility. And, in the end, conservatism is compassionate in all of the ways that socialism isn't. Individuals after all have compassion. Bureaucracies don't.


http://perrinelson.com/2008/11/11/1275.aspx

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Disappointing

John McCain conceded defeat to Barack Obama before a single West Coast vote was actually reported.

Barack Obama is our president-elect. The country has voted for socialism and anti-Americanism. I find it all disappointing, but not exactly surprising. The polls gave a clue, as did the pre-election “electoral maps”.

But, I will not quit seeking to see real change in our government. Not the sort of rapid lurch toward socialism that seems inevitable now. Not the sort of falling away from our Constitution that seems inevitable either.

Rather, I seek a real conservative revolution. It's not time to retreat and start licking our wounds. Now more than ever conservatives need to get and be engaged in the real issues that matter. Much of the electorate has demonstrated that they believe that bigger government and forced redistribution of wealth are the way to prosperity.

They're likely to be disappointed more than I am. Conservatives are going to need to make a real effort to either convince people of the truth behind the principles of individual liberty and individual responsibility or learn them themselves and stand up for them.

One things certain. We will see change. We can't afford to spin this. It's a defeat. The left has been better at this than we have — dominating the Internet, the major media. They've managed to hide and/or sugarcoat their messages to the point that people believe in socialism without believing in its name. They've managed to convince the American people that there's something fundamentally wrong with the principles that made our country great.

Congratulations to the left. Condolences to the future.


http://perrinelson.com/2008/11/4/1271.aspx

If

If you are a citizen of the United States…

If you are eighteen years of age or older…

If you are legally registered to vote…

If you've educated yourself as to the issues and the qualifications of the candidates…

If you haven't been disqualified due to mental incapacity or felony…

then…

vote today

otherwise…

…stay home!

Thursday, October 30, 2008

A few thoughts about rights

The republican is the only form of government which is not eternally at open or secret war with the rights of mankind.
— Thomas Jefferson (Letter to William Hunter, 11 March 1790)

Where do our rights come from? Are they a gift to us from God or do they come to us from our government? I think that that's an important question. It also seems to be central to the divide between liberalism and conservatism in our modern American political discourse.

Here's another question — who actually possesses the rights we're talking about? Do rights belong to the individual or do they belong to society? Do they belong to the people or to the government?

Barack Obama sees the Constitution, and particularly the Bill of Rights as sort of a“charter of negative liberties”, bemoaning the things it doesn't say about what government must do for you. They're documents that say what government can't do to you, but that omit what it must do for you. It's clear which side of these questions his political philosophy falls on. He sees rights as being provided by the government and belonging to the government.

It might be interesting to look at that a bit more. Lets compare two rights shall we? Lets pick two that seem (at least to me) to be examples of the divide between liberals and conservatives. How about the right to keep and bear arms and the right to health care? Conservatives believe that the second amendment to the Constitution ensures that the government shall not infringe upon our right to own and use firearms, while liberals appear to believe that firearms are a great evil that must be kept out of the hands of citizens. Liberals appear to believe that everyone has a right to health care and that the government must therefore provide it. Conservatives tend to believe that there is no universal right to health care.

Yes, I could have picked other rights, but these two seem to crop up from time to time in our politics, and they tend to illustrate a major difference between the attitudes of conservatives and liberals toward our rights. Conservatives believe that our rights are inherent in our nature. Liberals believe that our rights are manufactured things provided to us by our society.

The right to keep and bear arms is an example of the conservative viewpoint. Conservatives believe that the right to self defense is inherent in our nature. The instinct to self defense exists in all higher animals — when attacked they fight, or if unable to fight they flee. It's an extension of the right and natural desire to live. People, being intelligent creatures made the discovery that their “natural” weapons — tooth and fingernail (I'd say claw, but can you really call those flat things “claws?”) were inadequate protection against some of the better equipped predators in the world and so they learned to arm themselves, first with rocks and sticks and later with manufactured weapons, such as sharpened rocks and pointed sticks. Firearms are merely an extension of that concept.

To a conservative, the right to keep and bear arms is related to defense, and the type of arms is suited to the need. By defense, I don't mean merely “self defense”, but the defense of our families, our friends, our state (hence the need for a well organized militia) and our nation as well. This defense is not limited to defense against predators in the animal kingdom, but against predators among men and nations as well, and as the founders demonstrated against the tyranny of governments.

Liberals don't seem to see it that way though. It seems that, to the liberal, weapons don't exist for the purpose of defense, but rather to serve the aggressive instincts of our base nature. It's certainly true that they are often used for that purpose. Not accepting that weapons serve a defensive purpose, or that our rights are inherent in our nature, the argument that keeping and bearing arms as a means to defend against tyranny is often dismissed, as is the self defense argument. Instead, firearms, handguns and “assault weapons” (an emotionally loaded term used more often to describe weapons with a certain appearance rather than function) are an evil that must be kept out of the hands of the citizenry. The argument goes that if possession of weapons is prohibited, then they won't be used to commit violent crimes. This is used as justification for “gun control” laws that remove firearms from the citizenry.

Much more could be said about the topic of firearms, but I think I've made my point about the opposing viewpoints of liberals and conservatives regarding this right. Fundamentally the question resolves around whether it's a right inherent in our nature that must be preserved, or a manufactured right given to us by government, and mistakenly preserved in our Constitution by our founders. That some governments are even considering the step now of considering the possession of knives to be the next step in this battle underscores the point.

I said that I'd contrast two rights, the right to keep and bear arms, and the right to health care, so now let's turn to health care. Do we have an inherent right to health care? It seems to be an important issue in today's politics, and again underscores the differences between conservatives and liberals, so I think the answer is fairly important.

Barack Obama has asserted that health care is a right. To read the newspapers or watch or listen to the news on television it would seem that reporters in the major news media seem to believe that this is the case as well. It's an essential campaign issue according to the pundits.

If health care is a right, where does it come from? As a conservative, I would say that it cannot be a “natural” right. I say this because health care is not a thing to be found in nature. Instead, early health care was the product of individual compassion, and not a “right” enjoyed by those that received it. As civilization advanced, health care professionals still demanded compensation for their services or were patronized by the wealthy. It was not seen as a “right” even then. What care was given to the common man was still the product of individual compassion or a service that was paid for by the individual. Health care does not exist except as a service provided by other people, and medication except as a product produced after considerable research and development. To put it bluntly, no one has a natural “right” to command the labors of others.

Liberals on the other hand appear to see rights not as being inherent in our nature, but given to us by society. Under this view, rights don't belong to the individual but instead belong to the society. When they involve something with a monetary value they are doled out to the people as “entitlements.” As an example, Social Security and Medicare are “insurance programs” managed by the government and that provide benefits to citizens as “entitlements.” Health care as a right would fall under this classification. This is certainly a popular notion. Suddenly we are “owed” money and services simply by virtue of being members of the society.

To me at least this attitude is ludicrous. Still, the two attitudes toward rights go a long way to explaining the different attitudes that liberals and conservatives hold toward government.

Conservatives are wary of government amassing this kind of power over our economic lives and our individual liberties, because we view our rights as belonging to the individual and not to society as a whole. To conservatives the principle role of government is to preserve and defend our natural rights, to defend the people against criminal aggression, and to defend the society from external aggression. Because of this, we would see governments power over our individual lives reduced as much as possible, and see its interference in our daily affairs reduced as well.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed,--That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.

This is the conservative's view of our rights. This is the conservative's view of the role of our government. This is the root of the conservative's distrust of excessive government power. This is why when the founders established their first post-declaration system of government they chose a loose confederation of independent States with a weak and limited central government. When that government proved inadequate to the needs of the States and their defense as well as unable to deal with its international debts they replaced it with a new, stronger government under our Constitution. Even then, that government was strictly limited in its powers and in its responsibilities, because the founders distrusted a powerful central government. The Bill of Rights was established to place further, explicit limitations on the power of the central government.

Liberals view our rights from a completely different perspective. While conservatives view them as inherent in our nature and unalienable, liberals view them as changeable.

The task of statesmanship has always been the re-definition of these rights in terms of a changing and growing social order.
— Franklin D. Roosevelt (Commonwealth Club Address, 1932)

In his Commonwealth Club Address, Roosevelt took the foundational rights declared in the Declaration of Independence and redefined them. He converted them from inherent rights that provide opportunity for individuals into rights that convey entitlements as I mentioned earlier. For example…

Every man has a right to life; and this means that he has also a right to make a comfortable living.

Now that's an interesting interpretation don't you think? A conservative would say that he has a right to seek a comfortable living, but that that is not included in the right to life. Rather it is included in the right to the Pursuit of Happiness. The right to life does not imply a right to comfort, but Roosevelt's redefinition of it does. Roosevelt wasn't satisfied with merely asserting a right to comfort though…

Every man has a right to his own property; which means a right to be assured, to the fullest extent attainable, in the safety of his savings.

Here he introduces the notion of the socialization of risk. Rather than taking the responsibility to protect his own property, the individual now has the right to be secure against the loss of his savings. If times are bad why “in the strength of great hope we must all shoulder our common load.” The savings of one become the responsibility of all.

Roosevelt was quite happy redefining our rights, as liberals are quite happy to continue to do today. In his 1944 Message to the Congress on the State of the Union he said that…

This Republic had its beginning, and grew to its present strength, under the protection of certain inalienable political rights—among them the right of free speech, free press, free worship, trial by jury, freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures. They were our rights to life and liberty.

Here, he further re-defined our right to life, as well as our right to liberty, except that he does so by only enumerating a few of the liberties protected by the Bill of Rights (it's notable I think that he omitted the second amendment right to keep and bear arms from his enumeration). He then went on to say that “these political rights proved inadequate to assure us equality in the pursuit of happiness.”

Liberals see government as the provider of our rights, and as being responsible for providing us all with equality. This isn't an equality of opportunity, but rather the equality of results. To arrange for this to become a reality they have to twist or otherwise abandon the meaning of the Declaration of Independence, and to ignore the Constitution, or in tried and true fashion to pack the federal courts with judges that ignore the plain meaning of the words of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights in favor of a “living” document as Roosevelt did.

This by the way is an early instance where the notion that we have a right to health care was asserted. Roosevelt's state of the union message called upon Congress to enact a new, second Bill of Rights, more a bill of entitlements than rights. The notion that the original Bill of Rights consisted of a series of amendments to the Constitution rather than laws enacted by Congress in defiance of the Constitution appears to have been lost on him. Not that this would have mattered much to a man that considered the Constitution to be a quaint relic of the horse and buggy era.

The United States Constitution defines the three branches of our federal government. It lists the duties and powers of each, explicitly enumerating those powers and responsibilities. It specifies the relationship between the federal government and the States. It very explicitly sets for the acceptable procedures for making changes to it. These procedures present rather high hurdles to those that would change the Constitution for a reason — the founders had established a limited government and they wanted it to stay that way. This too derives from the Declaration of Independence…

Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed.

Liberals, not satisfied with the restrictions upon our government began a systematic attack on the Constitution and on the principles presented in the Declaration of Independence over a hundred years ago. From time to time the established procedures for changing the Constitution have been followed, but liberals like Woodrow Wilson, Franklin D. Roosevelt and others (in particular, should he get the chance Barack Obama) have always found it easier simply to redefine our rights. They willfully ignore the stable solid foundation of the plain meaning of the written word in favor of a living document that means whatever they want it to. In this way our rights have been changed from individual inherent rights that are unalienable into a series of entitlements provided by our government. In this way, our government has been transformed from one of limited powers to one of vast reach and scope far beyond the nightmares of our founders.

When government provides your rights for you though, government can take them away as well. Ask yourself, if government can take it away — is it really a right?


http://perrinelson.com/2008/10/29/1268.aspx


Thursday, October 23, 2008

Is this what we want to base our election decisions on?

Sometimes, I think that the major media and the political punditry really have their priorities out of whack. Why else would we have to endure articles that criticize a candidate for the amount of money that they spend on their wardrobe?

[N]ews that the Republican National Committee (RNC) bought Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and her family nearly $150,000 worth of clothing since September fueled charges of hypocrisy by her detractors and sparked questions about the legality of the expenditures.

Really? Why?

Consider it a campaign expenditure, similar to John Edwards' haircuts at $200 or more a clip. Yes, I know that conservative commentators criticized Edwards for those haircuts, and that Rush still refers to him as “the Breck Girl”, but come on! This is ridiculous on both sides.

It's a sad fact of life that physical appearance matters in our election.decisions. This has been evident ever since Richard M. Nixon lost the election to John F. Kennedy, an occurrence that was attributed to some degree on his poor physical appearance during their nationally televised debates. Given this, campaign expenditures on wardrobe, makeup, haircuts or other items relating to physical appearance and attractiveness seem justified.

But really now. Doesn't this support my contention that our national elections are really nothing more than popularity contests? Shouldn't we be basing these important decisions on matters of policy preferences, and on the records of the candidates?

Focusing on how much money a candidate, or a campaign, spends on clothing, haircuts, makeup, or other visual trappings is nothing but pettiness. The media needs to grow up. So does the electorate.


http://perrinelson.com/2008/10/23/1262.aspx


Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Parties, primaries, and long races

It's been a long race for President, spanning nearly two years. Some might say that it's actually been going on for the last four years. Nevertheless, it's been going on for a long time, perhaps too long.

When a national political campaign runs this long, it's expensive. It requires continual fund raising. It requires constant advertising. It costs money to build the organization. It requires huge amounts of money, that must be raised very quickly. It's comparable, I suppose, to a startup business that has to expand to nationwide markets extremely quickly. People pay out their contributions just like they spend their money to buy a product, but what do they get?

Usually, they don't get anything. In the Presidential race there have been at least a dozen candidates that fell by the wayside as the campaigns wore on.

It took over a year and a half on the campaign trail before Barack Obama's background had to undergo any scrutiny. Once the scrutiny began, charges of racism began to fly. Meanwhile, the die-hard Obama fans won't be changing their mind, no matter what evidence is turned up. That's par for the course. I even know a few people that are reasonably intelligent, that I've been able to debate and carry on reasonable discussions that now get ticked off at me and have to leave before things get ugly when I point at Obama's hypocrisy. They'd rather sit and stew than have to face the facts.

The same can't really be said for John McCain and the Republican ticket. John McCain's support among conservatives is precarious at best. In fact, he only had the most reluctant of support until he chose his running mate. Sure, his pick of Sarah Palin energized the conservative base, but it wasn't because she is a woman, and it wasn't for a wealth of experience. It was because she has a decently conservative record.

That may not be enough anymore.


A big part of the problem is the way politicians choose to align themselves. For all practical purposes, we have a two party system in our politics, and to my way of thinking this is a bad thing. Nothing in our Constitution mandates two parties. That's just the way it falls out.

It's easier to choose from two alternatives than three or more, or it seems that way anyway. That's not really the choice we have, but we act as though it is. We actually have at least five choices in the Presidential race this year. There's the obvious choice — Republican or Democratic. But there are also Libertarian and Green party candidates to choose from, as well as perennial loser Ralph Nader.

These also-rans don't have much chance of toppling the top two (thank God for that, especially in the case of the Greens). It's rare that a third party ever does, but it does happen. More often than not though, a third party candidate serves only as a spoiler. Often the result is that we end up with the worst choice. That's what happened to us in 1992 thanks to H. Ross Perot. When he took 19 percent of the vote, mostly from the Republican candidate we ended up with the philanderer in chief as President.

This is the sort of thing that tends to keep the larger parties in power. It's that power that tends to give us the worst possible choices after the long haul of the campaign.

Conservatives are left with nothing but bad choices in this election. We can vote for a rather confused moderate — a RINO, or choose the Libertarian and end up with the Marxist. Marshall Art reminds me that

… we weren't given anything, but that we allowed the party to become what it has. Thus, if we want to encourage anyone to do anything, it must be to flood the party offices with calls demanding that they support OUR notions …

All well and good. He is, of course, correct — but party isn't the answer to my way of thinking.


Quite possibly the worst part of the problem is the Primary process. In particular the staggered primary process. The way this works is well known to most of us. A politician decides to run for President. They form an exploratory committee. They begin soliciting money. They put forth their name. Then, they appear on the ballot in one or two small states. The people in those states, members of the politician's party then cast their ballots.

Before the country at large has a chance to vote, small states like Iowa have already begun the process of choosing the candidates for our party. The primaries move from state to state, and before you know it, candidates that might represent the best possibilities for our nation, and our party drop out of the race. People that vote in the primaries in “later” states are deprived of their chance to prop up those candidates, left with nothing but unpalatable choices.

When the chance came for Washingtonians to vote, most of the real conservatives were gone.

“We can't abdicate our responsibilities as citizens any longer and pretend our past inaction hasn't led to this sorry state.”

I'm sorry, but this situation isn't the result of inaction on our part out here on the left coast. It's this ridiculously long process of “weeding out” the better candidates in favor of the populists.


Events in the State of Washington have recently given me even more reason to think about the primaries. We've gone through a long process of working out just how we're going to hold our primary elections. We hold primaries for partisan races. A few years ago, we held open primaries. Any registered voter could vote for any candidate on the ballot for any party's nomination.

So, if you were registered to vote, and there was a primary election, you had the option of helping the Democratic party choose their candidate and you had the option of helping the Republican party choose their candidate. It didn't matter what your party affiliation was.

Can you see a problem with this? Well, I suppose if you're working for one or the other party, you might not like it. After all, Washington is a decidedly “blue” state. With a majority liberal electorate, it's easy to envision the selection of the nominees being skewed — the strongest liberal would likely end up being the Democratic party's nominee, while the weakest conservative would likely end up being the Republican nominee. The end of this would of course be a continual skewing to the left. At least, that's one way to look at it.

The major parties weren't too happy with that scenario, and others. So after lawsuits, initiatives, and controversy we ended up with a new partisan primary format. Voters now had to choose a preference, and a partisan ballot. If you chose the Democratic party as your preference, you could vote in non-partisan races and Democratic races but not in any other races. If you chose the Republican party, you could vote in non-partisan races and Republican races but not in any other races. And then, there were the minor parties too.

This, of course is expensive. Elections officials have to print a lot more ballots for this sort of primary election than they do for an open primary. A lot of those ballots would end up being wasted too (thank God for recycling). Now though, we have yet another style of primary election. Now, voters don't have to state a preference. Now the partisan races aren't quite the same. If there's three Democrats, two Republicans, a Libertarian and a Green party candidate on the ballot, only two go on to the general election, and it's possible that they'll be from the same party. Of course, the lesson of H. Ross Perot would seem to apply here too.

To this I ask the question — “Why Bother?” If the primary election isn't to select candidates for the parties, why have a primary election in the first place? Why not simply hold one election and choose the winner and be done with it? Why go to the expense of holding two separate elections to choose who will serve in one office for a single term? Eliminate the expense, and let the people choose between all of the candidates.

Get it over with. If the people are intelligent enough to choose candidates for office, why not simply let them choose the office holder in the first place.


With Washington's new “top two” primary we get to see even more controversy. The Democratic party filed suit over the selection of the “preferred” party label of Gubernatorial candidate Dino Rossi. He chose “prefers GOP” as opposed to “prefers Republican”. Anybody that knows the history of the Republican party knows that GOP is an acronym for “Grand Old Party”, a historic nickname for the Republicans. The Democratic party objected to this though, because they claimed the Republican brand was “damaged”, and that the electorate wouldn't understand that GOP and Republican are synonymous. Apparently they thought Dino Rossi was attempting to defraud the electorate.

Of course, they don't appear to mind insulting the electorate while attacking the Republicans.


Changing all of this is something I'd like to see. What we have for a political system right now is madness. I think in some ways it leads to voter apathy. I get weary of discussing the candidates. I get tired of the mud slinging.

Yes, I know that it's important to understand the character of the politicians we have to choose from. I'd much rather have them tell me what their proposed policies are. I'd much rather understand what their political philosophy is. I'd like to understand why they choose the policies they do, rather than listen to why I should vote against the other guy.

I don't think I'll see it in my lifetime, but I think we need to ask those sort of questions. We need to look at the things candidates propose — not in terms of who it will benefit and who will be harmed, but in terms of whether it's even something that government ought to be involved in. We need to take back our liberties and exercise our rights — but to do that we need to take responsibility for our own wants and needs and take the consequences of our decisions rather than hoping for a bailout.

When our Congressmen passed the Senate's modified bailout package we saw an interesting thing. Democratic representatives and Republican representatives that had earlier voted “No” on a $700,000,000,000.00 bailout package changed their mind when it turned into an $850,000,000,000.00 package. I guess what was really wrong with it in their minds was it wasn't “big enough.”

The Vice Presidential debates also pointed out something in our politics that is simply appalling to me. A s0-called Constitutional Scholar (Joe Biden) turns out to have less than a clue when it comes to what the Constitution actually says about the role of the Vice President. When Joe Biden made his assertion that the Vice President is merely an assistant to the President and has no legislative role he pointed up his ignorance. Of course the Vice President has a legislative role. He's the President of the Senate. He may not have a vote in the Senate, unless the Senate finds itself in a tie, but he's still the President of the Senate. That means that the Senate's comings and goings, and all of its procedures are his responsibility. I know that I'm not the first one to write anything about this, but when I was hearing his words, I immediately understood what a gaffe that was. Even my youngest son, no political animal he, understood how wrong this man who's been in the Senate for more than 30 years was. And Joe Biden has taught lessons on the Constitution?

Our Congressmen, our Senators, our President, the Vice President, our Judges — every legislator, executive office or judicial officer, at both the federal and the State level are required by the Constitution to swear or affirm that they will support our Constitution. We the People of the United States deserve to know that they will do so. It is our right to expect them to do so. More, it is our duty to require it of them.

I ask you. “How can we continue to elect men like this? How can we continue to elect men and women with so little regard for our Constitution that even after 30 years they don't even understand it?”

My son can understand the Constitution at the ripe old age of 14. He knows that it's a compact between the States and the People, and our federal government. He knows that it's there to place limits on our government. He knows that it defines what our government can and cannot do.

I may not find a replacement for the Republican party — a party that's abandoned it's principles. But I can and I will try to find men and women that understand our Constitution and still want to serve in public office, if only to return us to where we ought to be. That's my ONLY measure of a candidate any more. John McCain isn't that man. Neither is Barack Obama.

This election is lost, no matter who wins. The next one needn't be.

Friday, October 3, 2008

Please pass the Kool-aid

We are so screwed. Not just conservatives, but all of us. The Senate passed a pork laden bail-out yesterday. The House passed a bail-out today. Now all that remains is to resolve the differences and President Bush will sign whatever abomination results.

[Update: The abomination is already signed. We really are screwed.]

Ironically, on the news, prices on Wall Street spiked — for a moment. They're tanking again, as if this bail-out won't do any good for them anyway. It won't, and maybe a few investors have figured it out.

Our mortgages will be nationalized. Our government's power over our lives will grow even more, and without bounds. Our national debt will continue to rise. So will inflation and our taxes.

John McCain is promising to bring Al Gore back to negotiate Kyoto-like treaties. We're going to kill our economy trying to fight global warming — in the middle of a cooling trend, no matter who wins.

There's only ONE person that seems to be a real conservative running for the executive branch, and she's praising a populist with practically no conservative credentials because she's his running mate.

Just about everyone at work is telling me to vote Democratic. That's not really new, but so far not one of them has given me a rational argument why I should.

The closest any of them has come is to say “how does that affect you personally” when I complain about the rise of government socialism.


SO.

This is an open call for Democratic/Liberal/Socialist arguments. WHY should I vote FOR a Democrat? Offer up to me your reasons. Put it in writing. Explain to me why I should abandon conservative principles and vote for someone that opposes them all.

I'm serious. Try to convince me. If you can make a coherent argument, supported with facts and references, put it in writing and send it to me in email. Whether I agree with it or not, I will post it here, at My Website, and at NW Bloggers.

Then we'll discuss it.


This is also a call for “Republican” (not necessarily conservative Republican) arguments. Why should I vote Republican? Why should I vote for a party that's completely abandoned its principles? If you've got a coherent argument for that, send it to me. The same offer applies.


Regardless of how I choose to vote this year, I am no longer a Republican. Unless the Party changes and returns to true conservative principles, I can't support it any longer. That doesn't mean I can support the Democrats, the Libertarians, or any other existing party. It does mean though that I will be seeking a Party I can believe in.

It's time that we had a party that believes in our Constitution — the way the founders did. It's time we had a party that seeks to roll back the unconstitutional excesses of our federal government, whether they're popular or not.

Marxism is a failure, yet our federal government is willingly headed toward it. Socialism has failed wherever it's been tried, but our politicians and news media appear to be convinced that it's the only way to go. Our people are being brainwashed, losing their initiative and drive. Evolutionists and biologists tell us about survival of the fittest and the principle of stimulus/response, yet our government, our politicians, and our media encourage us to act contrary to those principles.

We punish success and reward failure.

It seems a sure path to suicide as a society and people to me.

Tell me why it's not.


To send me arguments send email to perri@perrinelson.com.

No bumper stickers or platitudes please.

[Update: And PLEASE... don't send me reasons why NOT to vote for the other side. I can come up with those on my own. Only send me reasons to vote FOR your side.]

Monday, July 21, 2008

More twisting of plain words

Two convicted felons are using last month's Supreme Court ruling in Heller to challenge a federal law that prohibits them from owning guns. They're challenging based upon the court's ruling that the second amendment allows them to keep loaded handguns at home for self defense.

"Felons, such as Barton, have the need and the right to protect themselves and their families by keeping firearms in their home," says David Chontos, Barton's court-appointed lawyer.

Mr. Chontos and other criminal defense lawyers say the high court's decision means federal laws designed to keep guns out of the hands of people convicted of felonies and crimes of domestic violence are unconstitutional as long as the weapons are needed for self-defense.

Have you heard that quaint colloquialism that rhymes with "spit"? You know the one I speak of, the one with the literal meaning "fecal droppings from a male bovine?" Mr. Chontos apparently didn't really bother to read the courts opinion, where Justice Scalia said…

Although we do not undertake an exhaustive historical analysis today of the full scope of the Second Amendment, nothing in our opinion should be taken to cast doubt on longstanding prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons and the mentally ill…

Look it up. It's on page 54 of the opinion of the court. I guess criminal defense lawyers don't really bother reading the opinions they cite in the defense of their clients. Is it any wonder it takes decades to see justice in some cases?


Originally posted at Perri Nelson's Website. Cross posted at NW Bloggers.

Friday, July 4, 2008

Essential resources for the citizen

It doesn't matter if you're a liberal, a conservative, a communist, a socialist, a Republican, a Democrat, or whatever political side you take… if you're an American citizen, there are some essential resources available free of charge on the Internet to help you to understand where our nation came from, and where it ought to go. Put aside ideology for a while, our nation is defined by the content of these documents.

Every one of them is available in its entirety online. This is probably one of the single best reasons for having an Internet connection in my mind. They just don't seem to teach this stuff in public schools anymore. These documents ought to be required reading for every American citizen…

  1. The Declaration of Independence.

    "When in the course of human events…" The American Revolution was already in progress when the Continental Congress unanimously declared our independence from Great Britain on July 4, 1776. This is why we celebrate Independence Day on the fourth of July every year, even though the war was far from over in July of 1776. Drafted by Thomas Jefferson, the Declaration of Independence recognizes that all men are created equal and that we all have rights that are given to us by our creator. In other words, our rights come to us from God, and are not granted to us by any government.

    The Declaration of Independence also tells us that governments are instituted among men to protect their God given rights, and outlines the serious and grave reasons for overthrowing an existing government, something that the founders did not consider should be done lightly. A long list of grievances against the British Crown were enumerated, ending with the declaration that the thirteen colonies were from that moment forward free and independent states, sovereign nations if you will.

  2. The Articles of Confederation.

    The strong federal government we have today is a far cry from the initial government of the United States that came out of the revolution. That first government was merely a loose confederation of independent sovereign states (not states as we know the word today, but literally states — sovereign nations). Knowing where we came from, and the weaknesses of that original governmental structure is essential to understanding the government that followed and the reasons for its founding.

  3. The Constitution for the United States of America.

    This is the big one, the document that defines the structure of our federal government. It establishes the powers of the federal government. It establishes the limitations upon that government. It establishes the relationship between the states that gave up a little of their sovereignty to the federal government in exchange for the protection and unification provided by that government. It stands as the supreme law of the land. If you don't bother to read any of the other documents listed here, read this one and the next one.

    After reading the Constitution for the United States of America and the ninth and tenth amendments you should have an understanding of why it is that I believe that the founders intended a much weaker federal government than the one that we have now. This document is a major compromise between some extremely intelligent, strong-willed men who wanted a supremely powerful national government and some equally intelligent, strong-willed men that wanted the states to retain their sovereignty over the people. For a truly excellent description of the Constitutional Convention, including the changing factions and the evolution of the basic framework of our government, you might also want to pick up the book A Brilliant Solution: Inventing the American Constitution by Carol Berkin. It's a fun read and contains a lot of insight into the mind and character of our founding fathers. It's a civics lesson that's truly entertaining.

  4. The Bill of Rights.

    It has been said that the Constitution might not have been ratified if there hadn't been a Bill of Rights containing amendments to it presented at about the same time. The anti-federalists thought it necessary that certain of our inalienable rights be enumerated. As originally drafted, the Bill of Rights contained twelve amendments to the Constitution. The first two proposed amendments were not ratified. The remaining ten were all ratified and are now a part of our Constitution. When I write about "states rights", I'm often referring to the tenth amendment, an obscure passage that says quite simply:

    The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

    Clearly this is evidence that the founders intended to limit the power of the federal government. Remember that when you hear words similar to these…

    "The Court would have us believe that over 200 years ago, the Framers made a choice to limit the tools available to elected officials… I could not possibly conclude that the Framers made such a choice."
    — Justice Stevens, dissenting in DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA v. HELLER, 554 U. S. ____ (2008)

  5. Amendments 11 — 27 to the United States Constitution.

    Of course, the founders also knew that there would be times when the Constitution would not be sufficient for the needs of a growing nation. At the same time, they strongly believed that "Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes". That's why they provided the processes by which it could be amended, and made it as difficult to amend as they did. Even so, seventeen additional amendments followed the Bill of Rights. Possibly the most profound changes to the structure of our federal government are included in these amendments. Interestingly enough, the second amendment that was ever proposed to the Constitution, part of the original draft of the Bill of Rights was finally ratified on May 7, 1992, the last amendment (so far) to be ratified, the twenty–seventh amendment…

    No law, varying the compensation for the services of the Senators and Representatives, shall take effect, until an election of representatives shall have intervened.

  6. The United States Code.

    The United States Code is a compilation of United States Law as enacted by the Congress. The link here will take you to a page where you can select a section of PDF documents to download to your computer. If you have a CD Burner and the appropriate CD Burner software, you can download ISO images of the United States Code and burn them to CD. You can then install the program to your computer, just as if you had purchased the United States Code on CD-ROM from the Government Printing Office. If neither of these options work for you, you can always search the United States Code online.

  7. The Federalist Papers.

    The Federalist Papers (also known as The Federalist) were a series of articles written in support of the Constitution for the United States of America. These were the arguments of the federalists for ratifying the Constitution and explain what the Founders thought that the Constitution meant. If you have a problem interpreting the original intent of the Constitution, this is a good place to start, assuming you've actually read it. Truly there's no better place to start than the actual document itself.

  8. The Anti-Federalist Papers.

    Not everyone wanted the new Constitution to be ratified. The Anti-Federalist papers were a series of articles arguing against the ratification of the Constitution. While the anti-federalists were ultimately not successful in preventing the ratification of the Constitution, they were responsible for the Bill of Rights. Without their arguments, which concluded with Anti-Federalist number 84 On the Lack of a Bill of Rights, we might not have the first ten amendments to our Constitution, collectively known as the Bill of Rights.

    In some ways, the anti-federalists were quite right about the weaknesses of the constitution. I've remarked before on the prophetic nature of some of Brutus' comments in Antifederalist No. 78-79. The failure of the Constitution to put adequate restrictions on the Judiciary has resulted in a sad perversion of the founders original intent, leading to a judicial oligarchy that is practically unassailable. He noted that "There is no power above them that can correct their errors or control their decisions." The founding fathers, perhaps weary after a long, hot summer overlooked this point as they drafted the Constitution, and Alexander Hamilton dismissed the point in Federalist number 81 — but that's an argument for another day.

As we celebrate the 232nd anniversary of the official declaration of our independence from Great Britain I would like to suggest that each and every one of you make note of these resources, and READ THEM. Set aside any pre-conceived notions that you have regarding what we "need to do" as a nation and simply read these documents — at least the first five of them. Item two defined the original government of the United States, and was so full of weaknesses that the Constitutional Convention was held to improve upon the design of the confederation, resulting in the Constitution we have today. The sixth item is so large as to be practically unwieldy (and that in itself ought to say something about how far we've strayed from the first five documents intent). Items seven and eight give some perspective to the rest of this, helping to flesh out the founders understanding of what it was that they crafted.

Maybe then, after you've carefully read them and considered what they have to say about the role of the federal government, the role of the states, and the role of the people we will all have a common framework upon which to debate the issues of the day.


Originally posted at Perri Nelson's Website. Cross posted at NW Bloggers.

Monday, June 16, 2008

Money in politics

"Follow the money."

That sounds like good advice when you want to know who's behind a campaign or initiative doesn't it? That's part of the reason behind some of our campaign finance laws. Knowing who's funding a campaign is important… if you assume that all money is corrupt… and if the campaign is for a person rather than an idea.

I'm not so sure that the same applies to initiatives. After all, most initiatives are about ideas, not people. Take for example, Washington's initiative 1000, the so-called "right to die" initiative. The initiative's supporters call it the "Washington State Death with Dignity Initiative". The initiative's opponents refer to it as "the assisted suicide initiative".

It would seem to me that this particular initiative is very solidly about an idea and its opposite. There's no candidate running for office based on this initiative. It's all about an idea. Myself, I'm against this one. I don't think that suicide is a good idea, and I'm not all that thrilled about the concept of euthanasia either. Still, I've watched close friends die in pain and misery, and I can understand the motivation for both. I can honestly believe that the people who might propose an assisted suicide initiative could truly believe that it's a good thing to help people who are suffering achieve "death with dignity" and an end to their misery. I can also understand (quite easily since it's my own view) that some people might think that suicide isn't the way to depart from this life, and that euthanasia — at least where people are the ones being euthanized comes very close to murder.

You would think then, that the debate about this particular initiative should center around the ideas. The debate should discuss why it is believed that suicide is "death with dignity" or why it isn't. Does it really matter who is saying one thing or the other about it? Should we oppose the idea just because someone notorious might support it? How does the person supporting an idea change the validity of the idea? Should we support the idea simply because a religious organization might oppose it? Since when does the identity of the proponent or opponent of an idea have anything at all to do with the idea itself?

This is what I find so mystifying about some of the news coverage about this initiative and other campaigns. In the Seattle Times, we find this article, which begins as follows…

Both sides of a voter initiative to legalize physician assistance in dying, likely on track for the fall ballot, have accused the other of attempting to hide the identity of donors and opening the door to out-of-state interests.

Initiative supporters claim that right-to-life group Human Life of Washington wants to influence the election while keeping voters in the dark about the true source of opposition funds, which historically have come from Catholic churches and related organizations.

On the other side, Initiative 1000's official opposition claims that supporters' "sleight of hand" has so obscured the identity of donors that voters wouldn't know if convicted euthanizer Jack Kevorkian had written a check to the campaign.

Would it help to know that the people opposing initiative 1000 are supported by the Catholic church and related organizations? Shouldn't it be obvious that religious organizations would oppose suicide, assisted or not? Aren't those organizations entitled to fund an initiative that is in line with their own ideology? For that matter, what does it matter if Jack Kevorkian has written a check to the campaign. We all know that he supports the concept of assisted suicide and euthanasia.

Each side says arguments made by the other don't meet "the smell test." At stake, they argue, is nothing less than democracy, the people's right to know and freedom of speech.

As far as I'm concerned, that's a load of that specific sort of excrement that is produced by unneutered male cattle. Yes, the people have a right to know. Supporters and opponents alike, no matter who they are have a right to speak freely. NOTHING about the right to the freedom of speech requires the identity of the speaker to be known though. People cherish their anonymity on the Internet for example, even if the concept is really an illusion. As for democracy, the initiative process allows it to go forward. Most likely initiative 1000 will be on the ballot this fall. Democracy isn't being harmed simply because we may or may not know who supports the idea behind the initiative or who opposes the idea.

In this particular instance, the notion that the money trail has anything whatsoever to do with the issue at hand — whether assisted suicide is of benefit or harm to society — is a Red Herring.  It's nothing more than a distraction and has nothing whatsoever to do with the merits or failings of the initiative.

Oppose the initiative or support it. But if you're going to do so, do so on the merit or weakness of the ideas behind it. Who cares where the money comes from.


Originally posted at Perri Nelson's Website. Cross posted at NW Bloggers.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

A politically incorrect question

What happens when you take farmland that is producing crops that are brought to market to feed your nation's people away from the farmers that own it by force, murdering those farmers if they don't comply with your desire to seize their land? Do crops grow without the seed being sown? Do crops thrive without fertilization? Do crops produce food when they are choked with weeds or burned to the ground? When you seize farmland from working farmers and give the land to men and women who know nothing of farming and who refuse to do the work required to nurture the crops what will the land produce for you to bring to market?

When a nation that once produced an abundance of food, a literal cornucopia that helped to feed a hungry continent stops farming, what sort of result do you expect? When a country's population is starving but the military government that is responsible for the collapse of that country's farming economy orders international aid organizations like Care International to suspend their operations in that country because of political paranoia what do you expect the political leaders of that nation to do?

 

 

I'm sure you can guess.

 

 

Come on... guess.

 

 

That's right — blame the racist west.

"The United Kingdom has mobilized her friends and allies in Europe, North America, Australia and New Zealand to impose illegal economic sanctions against Zimbabwe." — Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe

According to the Associated Press, Robert Mugabe was "staying at a posh hotel near the top of Rome's Via Veneto, an elegant street lined with chic cafes." when he accused the West of maneuvering to bring about "regime change" in Zimbabwe.

Maybe that's why Father Pfleger thinks that America is the greatest sin against God. After all, we don't believe in Zimbabwean style redistribution of wealth here — unless we're liberal politicians anyway.


Originally posted at Perri Nelson's Website. Cross posted to NW Bloggers.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Is politics as usual doomed?

Probably not. But it's fun to watch as all of the negative campaigning takes place in the Democratic Presidential race and bomb-thrower after bomb-thrower goes down in flames. A lot of really outrageous claims have been made by political "operatives" who then are either fired or asked to resign.

It almost seems like a new twist on an old tactic. It used to be if you had something negative to say about your opponent, you just came out and said it. Then you'd say it through surrogates so that if it backfired you could say that you didn't support it. Now, you can have someone say it and before it gets you in trouble get rid of them.

It doesn't change the fact that someone said it, but you can pretend to be above all of that. I don't think that anyone is really fooled by it all though. There have been way too many of these convenient firings or disavowals of the support of bomb-throwers for it to be anything else but another political ploy.


Look at the character of some of the negative campaign remarks while we're on the topic. Remember, that we're talking about purely Democratic Party politics. The campaign in question is between two Democratic candidates that differ only marginally in their politics. There hasn't been much need for Republicans to step into the fray, because they aren't running against one — yet.

The negative campaigning has touched on the alleged religion of one of the candidates. Is he or isn't he a Muslim, as if that really matters. Why should it matter? It would seem that the campaign that raised the issue, and then got rid of their bomb-thrower thinks that it matters to Democratic voters. Does this imply that the oh-so-tolerant Democratic party might have a problem with religious discrimination?

The negative campaigning has touched on the race of one of the candidates, in more than one way, and from more than one side of the issue. Is Barack Obama getting a pass because he's a black man as failed Vice Presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro seemed to imply? Is he "not black enough" as Al Sharpton implied? Could it be that the Democratic party, which relies so heavily upon the black vote and is quick to condemn even a hint of white racism (ala Trent Lott's praise of Strom Thurmond, the longest serving Senator in history), has a problem with racism in its own ranks?

The negative campaigning has touched on the gender of one of the candidates as well, but not so much from the males in the campaign. Rather the female candidate has complained about the men ganging up on her and picking on her because of her gender, as if it should give her a pass. Again, Geraldine Ferraro made a point of gender as being important to the campaign as well. Aren't feminists claiming that it's about equality? So why should gender matter in the race at all?


As much as I detest both Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, I wish they'd campaign on the issues. The "go negative without going negative" approach to this campaign is insulting to Democratic voters, and damaging to the Democratic party (not that that last is such a bad thing in my view).

It also points to the "power at any price" mentality of politicians today, particularly that of Hillary Clinton, whose campaign has been responsible for most of the negative campaigning. There's a long way to go yet before November. The negative campaigning is dividing the Democratic party quite nicely.

Perhaps if Hillary's campaign goes down in flames we'll see an abatement of the politics of personal destruction.

Somehow though, I doubt it.


Originally posted at Perri Nelson's Website.

Time to move on

This morning, I was awakened by my wife, who brought me coffee. As I was rousing from my groggy slumber my clock radio turned itself on, and I heard Mr. Spitzer's resignation speech.

New York governor Eliot Spitzer has resigned, purportedly over a sex scandal. It seems the governor, who spent his career as an attorney general and politician has been visiting high-priced hookers for the past ten or so years. He's right to resign.

After all, prostitution is illegal in New York. It's illegal in Washington D.C. It's also illegal in both places to solicit prosecution. As a former attorney general, Mr. Spitzer knew this, and in fact probably prosecuted people for it.

Democratic calls for his resignation that I've heard have touched on his hypocrisy. Democratic support for Mr. Spitzer has ranged from condemnation of America because of our backward value system to the it's just about sex argument. After all, more enlightened and culturally advanced Europeans think there's nothing wrong with a man acting on his base animal instincts, or cheating on his wife.

The fact remains that what Mr. Spitzer did was illegal. If he hadn't resigned, the New York legislature should have impeached him.

Conservative and Republican reactions have been varied. I first heard about this scandal on the Sean Hannity show a couple of days ago. On that day Sean was talking to J.C. Watts. It seemed to me that they struck the right tone. Eliot Spitzer was a man, subject to the failings of all men. What he did was wrong, and should have a price, but we shouldn't be quick to condemn him. After all, all men have moral failings.

We don't know for a fact that Mr. Spitzer actually engaged the services of a prostitute, but there's a lot of evidence that he did. Mr. Spitzer's apologies to his family and constituents never mentioned what he actually did. His resignation was short and to the point, again never mentioning his specific failing.

As I was listening to his speech I was grateful, because this was yet another scandal that really doesn't need to be all over the news. And then I heard the commentary from Glenn Beck. Frankly it was disgraceful. They replayed his resignation speech, interspersed with mocking commentary by Glenn. The schadenfreude was obvious.

It's always a shame to see a man fall to disgrace, particularly a man in a position of power. Regardless of his politics lives are often destroyed by it. Things aren't going to change in New York because Mr. Spitzer is leaving politics. The Democratic party still has a lock on power in the state. The lieutenant governor is just as liberal as the governor was.

Comparisons have been made between the treatment of Eliot Spitzer and Mark Foley, or Larry Craig. I even considered making one myself. After all, toe-tapping in a public restroom hardly compares with spending a thousand dollars for an hour with a prostitute. I thought better of it though.

The political parties and opposing ideologies are indeed different when it comes to this. Democratic politicians with moral failings that don't quite rise to provable violations of law are often lauded for those failings, while Republican politicians in the same circumstances are often hounded out of office by both parties for it. It doesn't seem fair.

Men, and women elected to public office ought to be held to a high standard. It doesn't matter which party they are from. When they are given the responsibility for crafting and enforcing our laws they should not be above them. If they violate those laws they should and must be removed from power.

But it's not a cause for great rejoicing.

Eliot Spitzer is leaving politics. The public will benefit by this in a small way, because a man who violated the laws he was sworn to uphold is no longer in office. Eliot Spitzer and his family will also benefit, because now that his sin is in the open he has the chance to repent and to repair his relationships.

We should take the opportunity to look to ourselves. Eliot Spitzer succumbed to his moral failings and was caught, but we all have moral failings (maybe not the same ones, but we have them anyway). This is an opportunity for us to consider them and hopefully do something about it.


Originally posted at Perri Nelson's Website. Cross posted at NW Bloggers.

Monday, March 10, 2008

On the Presidential election

Once again, the Patriot Post picks a winner…

“Each State, in ratifying the Constitution, is considered as a sovereign body, independent of all others, and only to be bound by its own voluntary act. In this relation, then, the new Constitution will, if established, be a FEDERAL, and not a NATIONAL constitution.”

-- James Madison (Federalist No. 39, 1788)

In this year when we are getting ready to select another President via a vast popularity contest, it seems good to remember what the original purpose of our federal government was and why the founders chose the method of electing a President that they did.

Remember, our Founders sought to bind thirteen nations together into a single union for the purposes of mutual defense, and to ensure liberty. It wasn't their purpose to eliminate the States, but to unify and defend them.

They started with a loose confederation of nation-states. When that confederation proved to be inadequate to the mutual defense of the nation-states they created a federal republic bound by a federal Constitution. Each and every State that has joined the United States has ratified that Constitution, which promises…

The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government, and shall protect each of them against Invasion; and on Application of the Legislature, or of the Executive (when the Legislature cannot be convened), against domestic Violence.

That promise ensures that, barring amendment to the Constitution, which must be ratified by the States, the federal government shall remain a republic. That promise outlines in a brief paragraph what the purpose of the federal government is, and why the States ought to join it.

As James Madison argued, the Constitution was a FEDERAL Constitution, and not a NATIONAL Constitution. This explains a lot about the mechanism the founders chose for selecting the President…

Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a Number of Electors, equal to the whole Number of Senators and Representatives to which the State may be entitled in the Congress: but no Senator or Representative, or Person holding an Office of Trust or Profit under the United States, shall be appointed an Elector.

It's plain that the selection of the President was not intended to be a nationwide popularity contest like we see today. The President is intended to be the chief executive of a federal, not a national government. The President doesn't stand for the people, he stands for the States.

There have been several amendments to the Constitution that affect the election of the President. None of them have changed the clause just quoted, although they have had a diluting effect upon it, most notably the 14th amendment.

The point is that the States and not the people choose the President as the chief executive of the federal government. This is why it's distressing to me to see the States attempting to throw away that privilege and responsibility in moves toward direct democracy.

In the originally defined process, the Electors would each vote for two persons. Under the simplest scenario outlined in the original Constitution, after these electoral votes were counted, the one having the most electoral votes would be President, and the one having the second most electoral votes would be Vice President. Can you imagine the outcome today if that process hadn't been amended? Almost surely the President and the Vice President would come from opposing political parties.


Look at the choices that the Democratic party and the Republican party have given us this year. Compare their positions with what the founders declared that the president should be and do.

The President shall be Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States, and of the Militia of the several States, when called into the actual Service of the United States;

This is the first and primary duty of the President as laid out in our federal Constitution. Which of the three candidates do you honestly believe is best qualified to fill that role? Some experience is desirable don't you think? Which of the candidates has that experience?

Of course such experience isn't that hard to come by. All three of the candidates have had the opportunity, although arguably one of them would have been excluded from combat until recently. Nevertheless, military experience isn't mandatory…

he may require the Opinion, in writing, of the principal Officer in each of the executive Departments, upon any Subject relating to the Duties of their respective Offices,

Are any of the candidates on record having called the principal officers of any of the executive departments, particularly the military, liars? Have any of them said that they don't trust the opinions of… say the Secretary of Defense? Have any of them come out and challenged the veracity an officer of the military placed in charge of a high-profile military campaign of national interest while he was giving sworn testimony to Congress?

Whether you agree in principal with the war in Iraq or not, Congress authorized that action. Members of both major political parties called for action. Members of both major political parties voted to authorize the use of military force. Members of both major political parties voted to enact a policy of "regime change" in Iraq, and did so before September 11, 2001.

Which of the candidates, having voted for the authorization to use military force now claims to have been misled? Which of the candidates has made promises to remove the military from the war on terror? Which of the candidates has made promises to invade an ally (albeit a weak one) in the war on terror?

and he shall have Power to grant Reprieves and Pardons for Offences against the United States, except in Cases of Impeachment.

Which of the candidates has a questionable record when it comes to the subject of impeachment? Which of the candidates has a questionable record when it comes to pardons? Yes, I know that none of the candidates has been in the position to grant pardons, however one of the candidates has been in a position to influence some very questionable pardons.

He shall have Power, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, to make Treaties, provided two thirds of the Senators present concur; and he shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall appoint Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, Judges of the supreme Court, and all other Officers of the United States, whose Appointments are not herein otherwise provided for, and which shall be established by Law: but the Congress may by Law vest the Appointment of such inferior Officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in the Courts of Law, or in the Heads of Departments.

Which of the candidates do you trust to appoint judges that will honor the Constitution as the founders intended? Which of the candidates have tried to obstruct the appointment of judges? Which have tried to obstruct the appointment of Ambassadors by supporting filibusters when they were in the minority, or by supporting the filibuster even when they were in the majority? Which of the candidates has made an issue of the firing of inferior officers by the head of one of the departments?

The President shall have Power to fill up all Vacancies that may happen during the Recess of the Senate, by granting Commissions which shall expire at the End of their next Session.

With a Senate bent upon obstruction, Presidents have found it necessary to take advantage of this power granted to them by the Constitution. Which of the candidates have made that necessary?

He shall from time to time give to the Congress Information of the State of the Union, and recommend to their Consideration such Measures as he shall judge necessary and expedient; he may, on extraordinary Occasions, convene both Houses, or either of them, and in Case of Disagreement between them, with Respect to the Time of Adjournment, he may adjourn them to such Time as he shall think proper; he shall receive Ambassadors and other public Ministers; he shall take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed, and shall Commission all the Officers of the United States.

Which of today's candidates can you think of that have challenged the carefully chosen words in the State of the Union address of a sitting president, calling them a lie when it was demonstrable that they were in fact true? Which of the candidates has the most questionable record with regard to the faithful execution of laws? Have any of the candidates been associated with the suppression of evidence? The harassment of witnesses in a trial? When it comes to integrity, do any of the candidates come to mind?

The Senators and Representatives before mentioned, and the Members of the several State Legislatures, and all executive and judicial Officers, both of the United States and of the several States, shall be bound by Oath or Affirmation, to support this Constitution; but no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States.

All three of the current candidates have been bound by Oath or Affirmation to support the Constitution. Which of them has respected that oath? Have any? All three of the current candidates are sitting Senators. Which of them has honored the limitations upon the Congress outlined by the Constitution? Which of them has worked to eliminate the earmarks and other appropriations of federal money for local purposes that the Constitution doesn't authorize throughout his or her career? Which of them have not? Which of the candidates (or their campaign staff) has made the religion of one of the other candidates an issue?

These are the issues upon which we ought to make up our mind who is most, or least, qualified among the candidates to be President. Personally, I find all three candidates to be lacking in one or another of these issues.

The answers to these questions have nothing to do with the liberalism or conservatism of the candidates. Frankly, they're all too liberal (using the current meaning of the word, not the classical meaning) for my tastes. But, when I consider the purpose our founders had for the office of the President, and I consider how the current set of candidates fit that purpose, I am left with only one choice.

I'm going to vote for John McCain.


Originally posted at Perri Nelson's Website. Cross posted at NW Bloggers.

Saturday, March 1, 2008

A new contributor?

The entire point of this blog was to start discussion of various topics from both sides of the political aisle. Hopefully soon we'll have a new contributor.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Toward Mobocracy

It seems that more and more we're seeing states work hard to give up their rights, and the rights of their citizens to mob rule. Not content with having the federal government be a binding and cohesive force to hold the states together and having the states govern the people within their borders, the Democratic party marches on down the path toward direct democracy and the inevitable socialism that it brings. Here's the latest from KOMO TV and the Washington State Senate.

OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) - State senators have approved a bill that would deliver the state's electoral votes to the U.S. presidential candidate who wins the national popular vote.

The bill, which passed 30-18 Monday, now heads to the House.

The bill would change Washington's current system of typically giving all of the state's electoral votes to the candidate who wins the statewide election to awarding all of the state's delegates to the national popular vote winner.

So, the State of Washington, with eleven electoral votes will throw away the influence of it's population. Imagine the scenario where a Republican candidate wins the popular vote, but the election results in Washington would normally throw the state's electoral votes to a Democratic candidate. Washington's electoral votes would then go to the Republican candidate.

This isn't really that far-fetched a scenario. In 2004, the Republican candidate won the majority of the popular vote (the first time any presidential candidate had done so in a long time), while in Washington State, the Democratic candidate won the majority of the statewide vote. Under the scheme proposed by the state senate, if it had been in place in 2004, the 11 electoral votes that the State's electors cast for John Kerry would have gone to George W. Bush. That can't really be what the Democratic members of Washington State's Senate want can it?

The proposal is aimed at preventing a repeat of the 2000 election, when Al Gore got the most votes nationwide but George W. Bush put together enough victories in key states to win a majority in the Electoral College and capture the White House.

The Washington state bill was sponsored by Sen. Eric Oemig, D-Kirkland.

The sheer brilliance of Washington's Democratic party eludes me. This wonderful proposal is aimed at preventing just exactly what happened in 2000? If I remember correctly, in 2000, Al Gore did indeed win a plurality of the nationwide popular vote. It seems to me that he also won Washington State's electoral votes. So if this proposal had been in effect in 2000, nothing would have been different with regard to Washington State's electoral votes.

When you consider how blue Washington is, this proposal can only hurt the Democratic party… Not that that's a bad thing in my mind. Maybe that's why it's designed to not go into effect unless a majority of electoral votes go that way too.

This is nothing less than an attempt to do an end-run around the Constitutionally prescribed method of selecting the President though. Electoral votes were apportioned to states the way they were for a reason. Changing that ought to require a Constitutional Amendment.

The U.S. Constitution does allow state legislators to choose the manner in which the state's electors are selected. While this is a perfectly Constitutional way to move toward a direct democracy, it seems to me that the Democratic party can't have really thought it through.


Originally published at Perri Nelson's Website. Cross posted at NW Bloggers.