Sunday, August 26, 2007

Why you should vote for Ron Paul

If you want to live in a free country, you're going to have to give up the idea that every scraped knee in the United States needs a federal program to come in with a Band-Aid.

"But scraped knees are terrible. They could get infected. And you can't leave this important issue up to the states because it's not fair for children in one part of the country to get Band-Aids while in other parts of the country children sit on the sidewalk and bleed. And you can't count on parents because they're both working and the kids are home alone because there aren't enough after-school programs...."

If that's what you think, you want to live in a country that compels people to work for the benefit of people they don't know and can't control. You want to give a big chunk of your money to the government -- actually, they won't wait for you to give it to them, they'll just take it -- whenever the government decides that somebody else needs it.

But if you want to live in a free country, vote for Ron Paul.

Ron Paul is a Republican candidate for president, a ten-term U.S. Congressman from Texas, and a man whose libertarian philosophy favors freedom, limited government, and adherence to the Constitution.

Here's a link to a Houston Chronicle article that sums up Rep. Paul's views: "Ron Paul's campaign buzz resonates on Internet."

You will not have to look far to find some well-respected political analyst to tell you that Ron Paul can't win.

But if you support him, you should vote for him anyway.

If you agree with Ron Paul's views and you vote for somebody else, no one will know you exist. But if everyone who agrees with Ron Paul's views votes for him, everyone in politics will take note of how many voters there are out there who will support a politician who stands for freedom, limited government, and adherence to the Constitution.

Nothing gets everybody's attention in politics like a big chunk of votes.

Opinion polls are taken seriously to an extent, but polls are just guesses based on telephone calls to people who are eating dinner. Votes are actual voters who knew the date of the election and the location of their polling place.

So if you support Ron Paul's views, you should vote for him. Your vote will make a difference. Maybe not in this election. But very likely in the next one.

Copyright 2007

Editor's note: You may be interested in these essays by Susan Shelley:

"The Tyranny of the Children"

"The Motive for War: How to End the Violence in Iraq"

"How the First Amendment Came to Protect Topless Dancing" [Read the full version, with complete source notes, at the web site for The 37th Amendment: A Novel.]

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The border wall effect: higher wages

The Associated Press reports today that employers in Montana can't find enough workers to fill the low-wage jobs in the area. One McDonald's restaurant owner offered $10 an hour, but "the only calls were from other business owners upset they would have to raise wages, too."

There are similar reports of jobs going begging in Utah, Idaho and Wyoming.

Baby boomers around the country are selling their homes for sums they once associated with Jeb Clampett and moving to the interior West, which is suddenly experiencing a tight labor market.

Nowhere in the story is the word "immigration" mentioned, but America Wants to Know can't help but observe that this report comes just weeks after the final immolation of the guest-worker-path-to-citizenship immigration reform embraced so enthusiastically by politicians who accept campaign contributions from businesses that benefit from cheap labor. Now the White House has announced a crackdown on employers who hire illegal immigrant workers, and in the West, wages are going up.

Sadly, this AP report may already be tacked to the wall of Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke's office. The Fed has a history of regarding higher wages as a harbinger of catastrophic inflation. The wizards who decide the critical Fed funds rate prefer to see rising "productivity," which is defined as more work out of the same people for less money.

So we can expect another Wall Street crash on the day the Fed announces it's holding the Fed funds rate steady instead of cutting it. We'll be lucky if the decision isn't accompanied by a statement hinting that they almost raised the key interest rate but didn't want to crash the real estate market too suddenly.

President Bush never tires of telling us that there has been spectacular and continuing "growth" in the economy.

But if "growth" in the economy can only happen when wages are falling, economists should write a new definition of "growth" before half the country starves to death.


Copyright 2007

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Lies and secrets

In September, 2006, America Wants to Know wrote that Bill Clinton's history of finger-wagging performances made it likely he was lying during an interview on Fox News, when he furiously contended that he had authorized the CIA to try to kill Osama bin Laden. (See "Down memory lane with Bill Clinton.")

Now an unexpectedly declassified 2005 report by the CIA's inspector general confirms our suspicion. Here's an excerpt from the August 21 story by Newsweek's Michael Isikoff and Mark Hosenball:

The report also criticized intelligence problems when Bill Clinton was president, detailing political and legal “constraints” agency officials felt in the late 1990s. In September 2006, during a famous encounter with Fox News anchor Wallace, Clinton erupted in anger and waived his finger when asked about whether his administration had done enough to get bin Laden. “What did I do? What did I do?” Clinton said at one point. “I worked hard to try to kill him. I authorized a finding for the CIA to kill him. We contracted with people to kill him. I got closer to killing him than anybody has gotten since.”

Clinton appeared to have been referring to a December 1999 Memorandum of Notification (MON) he signed that authorized the CIA to use lethal force to capture, not kill, bin Laden. But the inspector general’s report made it clear that the agency never viewed the order as a license to “kill” bin Laden—one reason it never mounted more effective operations against him. “The restrictions in the authorities given the CIA with respect to bin Laden, while arguably, although ambiguously, relaxed for a period of time in late 1998 and early 1999, limited the range of permissible operations,” the report stated. ([Former chief of the CIA’s bin Laden unit, Michael] Scheuer agreed with the inspector general’s findings on this issue, but said if anything the report was overly diplomatic. “There was never any ambiguity,” he said. “None of those authorities ever allowed us to kill anyone. At least that’s what the CIA lawyers told us.” A spokesman for the former president had no immediate comment.)
We call this to your attention not because it's news that Bill Clinton is a liar, but to illustrate that secrecy in government is corrosive to democracy. Politicians, including current office holders, make statements that cannot be verified by the press or by the voters because everything that backs up those statements is classified. We have U.S. troops suffering in Iraq because the public was forced to accept the word of the president that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction and an active nuclear program.

Even now, when congressional committees try to find out how that mistake was made, the Bush administration hides its failures behind a wall of secrecy. It is simply too dangerous, the administration insists, to make any information public.

But it is dangerous not to make information public. The secrecy that protects sources and methods also protects liars and errors.

The passion for secrecy isn't limited to national security or even to current White House occupants. The Clinton presidential library is refusing to open the records of Hillary Clinton's work on health care reform back in 1994. The archivists claim they don't have the manpower to vet every document for privileged presidential communications, or some such excuse.

We can guess what's in the documents. The Clinton campaign (then and now) probably accepted enormous contributions from companies that make, let's say, software for computerizing the medical records of patients, or companies that wanted to take over Medicare billing and payments, or companies that wanted to "manage" benefits after the government mandated that everyone's benefits must be "managed." We can guess that the documents include schedules of meetings with donors followed shortly by memos recommending policies and mandates that would benefit the donors at the expense of everyone else.

It would take Michael Isikoff fifteen minutes to put it together and post it on Newsweek's Web site.

The Clinton library says the papers won't be available until 2009.

Hillary Clinton is running for president of the United States and she intends to press for health care reform. She would like you to cast your vote without seeing any of the records of her work on this issue when she was first lady.

She would just like to tell you that she has "worked" on this issue for years.

President Bush would like you to support the endless deployment of U.S. troops in Iraq and the warrantless wiretapping of people inside the United States. He does not want you to ask for hard evidence that either of these policies were necessary, or that they are achieving their aims, or that they are worth all that they are costing.

He would just like to tell you that he loves freedom.

In both cases, it's simply not good enough. Democracy cannot function if politicians lie without consequence, hide critically important information from the voters, and then win political office. When that happens, millions of people regard the result of the election as illegitimate. Contempt and resentment flood the political system. Debate and compromise are displaced by mistrust and apathy.

The solution is a sharp knife to cut away all government secrecy except in the narrowest classification of national security. And even there, the relevant committees of Congress and the Senate should have access to everything the executive branch sees.

The dangers of disclosure must be weighed against the dangers of secrecy. It's easier to rebuild a skyscraper than a free country.

Copyright 2007

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Thursday, August 23, 2007

Sen. Joe Biden erases Israel

Senator Joe Biden, Democratic candidate for president, spoke at a synagogue in Des Moines Tuesday and said this:

"The road to peace between Israelites and Palestinians is not through Baghdad, but ironically, the road to be able to negotiate real peace has to first settle the situation in Baghdad."
Did you catch that shift in terminology? Senator Biden referred to the Israelis as "Israelites."

Why?

Probably because Senator Biden wants to appear even-handed and impartial in the conflict between Israel, which is a sovereign nation, and the Palestinians, who are a group of people seeking their own sovereign nation on land won by Israel in a war. The war, incidentally, was started by neighboring countries who were trying to destroy Israel.

If Senator Biden were to refer to the conflict between Israel and "Palestine," he might be accused of pre-judging the outcome of a negotiation that is far from concluded.

So he has come up with another way to appear even-handed in the dispute: he has called the Israelis "Israelites," a term that carries the connotation of an ancient historical people who live on the land, just as the Palestinians live on the land, although the Palestinians are not an ancient historical people unless you consider sixty years to be ancient history.

Do the Palestinians have the right to a state? Do the Kurds have a right to a state? How are these questions to be decided, and once decided, are they subject to eternal reargument whenever any group uses violence against the state that was created?

Is a sovereign state presumed to have the right to its own existence, or does every claim against that sovereignty have the presumption of validity when accompanied by violence?

Israel is a sovereign state.

The Palestinians are a group of people who freely elected a government dominated by members of Hamas, a terrorist organization that campaigned on a promise to destroy Israel.

Is it morally right to take a neutral stand in the conflict between them? Is it pragmatic? Or is it an endorsement of terror tactics as a means to a political end?

Senator Biden may have it exactly backwards. Instead of peace in Baghdad leading to peace in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, it may be that terrorism against Israel has served as an instruction manual for terrorism against the U.S. and its allies in Iraq, not to mention New York.

It may be that even-handedness in a conflict between a sovereign government and rocket-firing terrorists is an American form of suicide bombing.

If so, Senator Biden's words might as well be a backpack full of dynamite and ball bearings. He verbally erased the sovereign state of Israel by calling the Israelis by a name that makes them sound like wandering Jews.

Is it possible that Senator Biden merely misspoke?

He's the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

It's likely he knew exactly what he was saying.

And now, so do you.


Copyright 2007

Editor's note: You might be interested in the earlier post, "A vacancy sign behind the eyes."

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Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Female self-esteem and the Hillary Clinton vote

Of all the ways the women's vote has been dissected -- married, single, older, younger, highly educated, high-school educated -- there may be one factor dividing women that has been overlooked.

Today in the Washington Post, Anne Kornblut quotes a 31-year-old seventh-grade teacher from Des Moines named Wendy Daniel who says she is thinking about supporting Barack Obama in the caucuses. In the general election, she said, she might support Rudy Giuliani, if he was the Republican nominee.

"But if Hillary gets up there, I won't vote for her," Ms. Daniel told the Washington Post. "I don't like her 'stand-by-your-man kind of girl who rides on her husband's coattails just to become president' thing. Maybe if she would have gotten a divorce and done everything for herself I would have thought about it."

Now, that's interesting.

When Hillary Clinton was on her book tour promoting her autobiography, "Living History," her book-signing events attracted long lines of women who told reporters that they thought very highly of Mrs. Clinton. Many of the women cited Hillary Clinton's intelligence as the reason they admired her so much.

Consider this: Whether a woman admires Hillary Clinton may have something to do with whether that woman was cheated on, and what that woman decided to do about it.

Let's write a character. A woman, age unimportant, who has known for years that her husband was cheating on her but chose to stay in the marriage. She suffers from terribly low self-esteem, both because her husband lost interest in her and because she doesn't have the desire or the courage to give up the married life, even if it is bitter, and live as a single woman. She fears that she is weak, stupid and untalented.

Enter Hillary Clinton. Here is a woman who is widely regarded as strong, intelligent and accomplished. And she made the same choice!!

The self-esteem of our character rises sharply every time Hillary Clinton is publicly humiliated by her husband and stays in the marriage anyway.

That might be what's behind those public opinion polls that showed Hillary Clinton's popularity at its zenith when the Monica Lewinsky scandal was in the headlines.

But what about women like Wendy Daniel? She sounds like the kind of independent person who makes our character feel so inadequate. "Maybe if she would have gotten a divorce and done everything for herself I would have thought about it," Ms. Daniel said of voting for Hillary. Wendy Daniel sounds like a woman who won't let anyone walk on her. And she's not voting for Hillary.

I don't think there are any poll numbers on how many voting-age women in America have good self-esteem. I doubt if pollsters can get truthful answers to questions about infidelity. But if the women's vote splits in mystifying and unexpected ways, self-esteem might turn out to be the missing link.



Copyright 2007

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Thursday, August 16, 2007

Sleeping well through stock market turmoil

Did you follow the investment advice of The Granville Guys and start dollar-cost averaging into a good no-load mutual fund?

If you did, you're probably sleeping like a baby.

It's not too late. Do your blood pressure a favor and read The Granville Guys' investment advice for lottery winners. Learn the real secret of flawless market timing.

Absolutely free.

A public service of ExtremeInk.com.

Click right here.


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Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Did Jack Abramoff sink Karl Rove?

Karl Rove certainly didn't look happy yesterday when he announced that he was leaving the Bush administration to spend more time with his family in Texas.

And that hand-shake-into-a-bear-hug the president gave him seemed to be heavily laden with emotion. Less like the kind of hug you'd see at a retirement party, and more like the kind you'd see before a hanging:





Maybe we're reading too much into it.

But did you know that on April 9th of this year, NBC News reported that jailed superlobbyist Jack Abramoff might get a reduction in his sentence based on his cooperation in a federal influence-peddling case? Assistant U.S. Attorney Paul Schwartz recommended the leniency "based upon the defendant having provided substantial assistance to the government in the investigation and/or prosecution of others."

Did you know that Susan Ralston, a one-time associate of Jack Abramoff, went on to become Karl Rove's assistant in the White House?

Did you know that the House Oversight Committee asked Susan Ralston in May to testify about her knowledge of contacts between Jack Abramoff and the White House, and that Ms. Ralston refused to testify unless she was granted immunity from prosecution?

Maybe Karl Rove took off in the presidential helicopter yesterday because the Secret Service has a lot of experience keeping process servers away.


Copyright 2007

Editor's note: You might be interested in the earlier post, "Where the rivers of scandal join: Meet Susan Ralston."

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Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Michelle Obama is good

No wonder Hillary Clinton had such a chilly reaction to Barack Obama's decision to run for president.

Barack Obama is married to a woman who makes Hillary Clinton look like a phony artifact from another century.

Michelle Obama's interview with Mary Mitchell of the Chicago Sun-Times is a clinic on how to win the women's vote.

The overwhelming impression is that Michelle Obama is nobody's victim. She doesn't talk to female voters as if they're victims, either.

"Women have taken on all this burden with fewer support from society and the government," Mrs. Obama said, "and we are all just struggling through because nobody wants to look like they're not handling it."

It's a subtle but compelling difference from the typical Hillary Clinton speech, which usually includes a list of some sample woman's problems in depressing detail, followed by the accusation that the woman is invisible to President Bush.

The interesting thing is that their basic philosophy is essentially the same. Both Clinton and Obama believe it is the appropriate role of the federal government to take money from people who have it in order to meet the needs of people who don't.

America Wants to Know doesn't share that philosophy (See "The Tyranny of the Children"), but for voters who do, Hillary Clinton and Michelle Obama are like two rival storyboards from advertising agencies competing for the Democratic Party account.

In Hillary Clinton's ad, the voter is a helpless, crumpled heap on the sidewalk, a victim of illness, poverty and neglect, a sad and ignored mass of suffering. The Republicans roar by in the street, the wheels of their carriages kicking stones and dust into the faces of the invisible people who cling to the sidewalks. Then Senator Clinton rides in. "Take heart, powerless people!" she shouts. "I will put the rich in horse harness and they will pull you up into the good life that you deserve!"

But in Michele Obama's ad, the voter is a heroic figure, struggling against overwhelming odds, trying not to "look like they're not handling it" as they work and raise their kids. "We need to change our priorities and make some demands as women about what the world should look like to help us be successful in our endeavors," she told the Sun-Times.

Same product, different sales pitches.

And different pitchmen. Michelle Obama had a real career that did not depend on clients who were seeking favor from her husband. She appears to have a real marriage, without a war room of staffers knocking down bimbo eruptions. She is a working mother of two young daughters, and she doesn't live in a governor's mansion full of government-paid servants. She told the Sun-Times she plans her travel around the social schedule of nine-year-old Malia and six-year-old Sasha.

Senator Clinton, on the other hand, cannot be described as real. So entrenched is her reputation for calculated image-making that the Washington Post actually published a story about the senator wearing a lower-cut blouse on the Senate floor, believing there was some political strategy behind the decision to show a little cleavage.

"Sometimes a blouse is just a blouse," NBC's Andrea Mitchell countered.

While the Washington press corps debates the depth of Hillary Clinton's political calculation, the voters are meeting Michelle Obama, the woman that the women's movement dreamed about creating: confident, independent, and so secure that she doesn't even care if we see her without full make-up ("Who's got time to put eyelashes on and all that?"). She gives the impression that she is a real person with a real life beyond the cameras and crowds of politics.

Next to her, Hillary Clinton looks like an exotic vase at the Antiques Roadshow: the center of attention, about to be exposed as a manufactured copy.


Copyright 2007

Editor's note: You might be interested in the earlier post, "Hillary Clinton and the 'basic bargain.'"


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Saturday, August 04, 2007

Sen. John D. Rockefeller stands up

Did you notice anything odd yesterday when the U.S. Senate voted 60-28 to pass emergency legislation to expand the federal government's power to conduct electronic surveillance without court approval?

Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman John D. Rockefeller voted no.

That's worth a close look. While most of the members of the U.S. Senate have to take the president's word on intelligence matters, the chairman of the Intelligence Committee is fully briefed on everything.

Everything.

If there is anyone in the government who is in a position to know if the Bush administration is off the mark on intelligence matters, it's Senator John D. Rockefeller, the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee.

And he thinks they are.

Sen. Rockefeller said the emergency legislation lacks "the privacy protections and safeguards American citizens deserve and expect."

He can't tell us what protections are missing, because he can't tell us what the intelligence agencies are doing, because everything about this surveillance program is secret.

The argument can be made that all this secrecy is actually counterproductive, and that if the intelligence agencies put more information on the table, it would actually increase our security by allowing the press and public to recognize both the errors and the suspects.

The argument also can be made that all this secrecy is unconstitutional, because secret courts and secret evidence and warrantless surveillance are specifically, in plain English, prohibited.

But that's a discussion for another day. Today, as the House of Representatives prepares to vote on a bill identical to the one passed by the Senate yesterday, the question is this: Can we trust the Bush administration with the power to collect the phone records of American citizens inside the United States?

Can we trust Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, a man who has been caught in so many lies that senators of both parties are considering perjury charges against him, to make the determination that warrantless surveillance in any specific case is allowable?

Justice Department officials have already admitted violating civil service laws by using political considerations to hire and fire federal prosecutors. What would they have done with secret access to everyone's phone records?

We can make a pretty good guess about the nature of the National Security Agency's terrorist surveillance program. It appears to be a database aimed at collecting the records of all the phone calls made in the United States. That's different from listening to the conversations, which probably will require a warrant, if the Bush administration follows the law. The creation of a database of calls would allow the government to search the phone records of people who are suspected of something, even though they were not suspected of anything at the time the information was collected.

In a perfect world, it would work like this: the moment a terror suspect is identified, the database would produce a complete list of everyone he ever called and everyone who ever called him. Then those phone numbers could be run through the database to find the phone numbers linked to each one.

But in the real world, the world in which the FBI has spent fortunes on two consecutive computer systems that don't work, the government's collection of all the phone records in the country presents problems. The machinery of federal law enforcement is powerful and oppressive. There is a very real risk that innocent people will be mistakenly suspected of terrorist connections.

Imagine the effect it would have on your career and family if a team of FBI agents swept into your workplace one day and walked out carrying your files and computers in cardboard boxes. It could easily happen if your phone number was believed to be linked to a phone number that once belonged to a suspected terrorist. That might be enough for a judge to sign a search warrant. Nobody wants to be blamed for the next terrorist attack.

But while the probability of error is very high, the likelihood of usefulness may be very low. Former CIA Director George Tenet said his agents were so backlogged with information before 9/11 that they failed to notify the FBI that al-Qaeda operatives had entered the country. Does it make us safer to vastly increase the irrelevant information in the CIA's in-box?

Is it really necessary to our safety to expand the warrantless surveillance program? It's all secret, so we can't answer that question.

But Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman John D. Rockefeller can. And he just did. And he said no.

The Members of the House of Representatives should look closely at that before they vote today.


Copyright 2007


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Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Los Angeles Dodgers lose their mind

All right, first of all, we would like to say that we are not making this up.

The Los Angeles Dodgers are advertising a promotional giveaway of a lunchbox, sponsored by Cacique, at their August 19th game against the Colorado Rockies.

Maybe they don't know this, but Cacique is a lingerie retailer.

Wait, it gets better.

Not only are the Dodgers offering a lunchbox to children 14 and under, sponsored by a company that makes sexy women's underwear, but Cacique is owned by Lane Bryant, and it sells lingerie to women who wear size 12 to 28.

Wait, it gets better yet.

In the TV commercial which ran Wednesday night on KCAL Channel 9 in Los Angeles, an adorable female moppet no older than four is shown, we're not making this up, eating ice cream straight out of the carton with a Dodgers player.

You can't make it up.

The Los Angeles Dodgers have scheduled a promotion giving away a children's lunchbox, sponsored by a large-sized lingerie maker, and they're advertising it by showing a young girl eating ice cream straight out of the carton.

"Eat up, honey, Vin Scully doesn't like them skinny."

WHAT'S WRONG WITH THESE PEOPLE?!!

YOU CAN'T GIVE AWAY A LUNCHBOX TO CHILDREN SPONSORED BY A LINGERIE COMPANY THAT MARKETS TO OVERWEIGHT WOMEN!!!

WAKE THE HELL UP!

This marketing consultation service is presented to the Los Angeles Dodgers at no charge, courtesy of America Wants To Know.

You're welcome.


Copyright 2007

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