Entries Tagged as 'Politics'

The final rant for the political season…

Well, we’re at the end of the political season, and as of 8:00 Pacific time, for all intents and purposes, we have a new president. And it’s thanks, in no small part, to my generation that the new president got elected.

My generation just made what will probably go down in the history books as the dumbest mistake we’ve ever made as a country for the sake of idealism.

We’re sick of war, sure. We don’t like that the economy’s in trouble, fine. We don’t like high gas prices, okay. We want renewable energy, whatever. But seriously, how is Obama going to help?

The catch phrase of this election has been “change”. If I were a drinking man, and had decided to make a drinking game out of the news coverage, I would’ve been shlockered since last November from how many times I’ve heard the word change. But you know what? for all that Obama talks about change, I’ve found very few of his followers who know what that “change” is, aside from “someone other than Bush”.

Seriously? And they call Republicans uneducated hicks? At least I can tell you what my candidate stands for without blasting his opponent for his party ties.

I have to agree with McCain’s comment in the final presidential debate: “Mr. Obama, if you’d wanted to run against President Bush, you’re four years too late.” McCain isn’t president Bush, despite all of Obama’s best efforts to portray him that way. The argument that McCain votes with president Bush 98% of the time became a catch phrase used by the democrats to attack republicans in every other battleground, making them sound like a broken record (When I heard Merkley use it on Smith, I thought “Can we not come up with something that doesn’t sound plagarized from Obama’s playbook?”). It’s become guilt by association instead of anyone actually paying attention to issues, REAL issues.

Additionally, Obama talks about how he’s going to “get more jobs in America”, but at the same time talks about only cutting taxes for the middle class.

Economics lesson, kids. If you make it more expensive for a corporation to do business, the business will generally move to where it can be done for cheaper. We’ve already got corporations moving overseas for the cheap labor, how exactly does Obama think raising corporate income taxes is going to help stem the proverbial tide of our jobs being sent overseas? It IS cheaper over there, after all. Pretty soon, we’ll have to call our orders at the McDonalds drive through in to some guy in India who’s getting half as much as the lazy teenager that McDonalds couldn’t afford to keep on with the tax hike.

And furthermore, the “Bush gives tax cuts to the wealthiest one percent of taxpayers” argument is a crock. Can I be totally frank? Yes, they got a tax cut. Yes, they got more back than we did, simply because they paid more in to begin with. The wealthy tend to be a little more mobile with their funds, though, they can afford to hide their money in offshore tax shelters from the IRS so they can get out of paying their taxes if they want to make the effort.

I found the most helpful illustration on Scott Adam’s Dilbert Blog:

Sometimes politicians, journalists and others exclaim; “It’s just a tax cut for the rich!” and it is just accepted to be fact, without questioning it But what does that really mean?

Just in case you are not completely clear on this issue, the following might help. Let’s put tax cuts in terms everyone can understand.

Suppose that every day, ten men go out for beer and the bill for all ten comes to $100. If they paid their bill the way we pay our taxes, it would go something like this:

The first four men (the poorest) would pay nothing.
The fifth would pay $1.
The sixth would pay $3.
The seventh would pay $7.
The eighth would pay $12.
The ninth would pay $18.
The tenth man (the richest) would pay $59.
So, that’s what they decided to do.
The ten men drank in the bar every day and seemed quite happy with the arrangement, until one day, the owner threw them a curve. “Since you are all such good customers,” he said, “I’m going to reduce the cost of your daily beer by $20.”Drinks for the ten now cost just $80.

The group still wanted to pay their bill the way we pay our taxes so the first four men were unaffected. They would still drink for free. What about the other six men, those paying the tab? How could they divide the $20 windfall so that everyone would get his ‘fair share?’

They realized that $20 divided by six is $3.33. But if they subtracted that from everybody’s share, then the fifth man and the sixth man would each end up being paid to drink his beer. So, the bar owner suggested that it would be fair to reduce each man’s bill by roughly the same amount, and he proceeded to work out the amounts each should pay.
And so:
The fifth man, like the first four, now paid nothing (100% savings).
The sixth now paid $2 instead of $3 (33%savings).
The seventh now pay $5 instead of $7 (28%savings).
The eighth now paid $9 instead of $12 (25% savings).
The ninth now paid $14 instead of $18 (22% savings).
The tenth now paid $49 instead of $59 (16% savings).

Each of the six was better off than before. And the first four continued to drink for free. But once outside the restaurant, the men began to compare their savings. “I only got a dollar out of the $20,”declared the sixth man. He pointed to the tenth man,” but he got $10!” “Yeah, that’s right,” exclaimed the fifth man. “I only saved a dollar, too. It’s unfair that he got ten times more than I!” “That’s true!!” shouted the seventh man. “Why should he get $10 back when I got only two? The wealthy get all the breaks!” “Wait a minute,” yelled the first four men in unison. “We didn’t get anything at all. The system exploits the poor!”

The nine men surrounded the tenth and beat him up.
The next night the tenth man didn’t show up for drinks, so the nine sat down and had beers without him. But when it came time to pay the bill, they discovered something important. They didn’t have enough money between all of them for even half of the bill!

And that, boys and girls, journalists and college professors, is how our tax system works. The people who pay the highest taxes get the most benefit from a tax reduction. Tax them too much, attack them for being wealthy, and they just may not show up anymore. In fact, they might start drinking overseas where the atmosphere is somewhat friendlier.

The sad mistake is, most people think just because someone’s working for a corporation at an executive level, that they’re not as hard working as the middle-class guy who’s working at the low pay grade job. Can I tell you something, though? No one just walks into a corporation and is handed the reigns. Most of these guys had to work hard to get where they were, and while a few have made poor decisions (See: Enron, Arthur-Andersen, MCI Worldcom), the men who make it to the top in these corporations have worked just as hard or harder than the average guy working the lower level. As Vince Lombardi once said, “The difference between a successful person and others is not a lack of strength, not a lack of knowledge, but a lack of will.”

Obama wants universal health care, but he wants to tax the wealthy and corporations to do it. I watched Obama trying to justify taxing more to the people earning over 250,000 to even out the break he was giving to the middle class to a man’s face, and his argument was less than convincing. Can I just say, the government’s not going to do any better with the health care than the private corporations are? I’m completely content with my health care system as it is, I’d rather the government didn’t take it over, because honestly, I don’t think they’re competent to make that kind of decision for me.

And that, dear reader, is precisely what’s gotten us into this mess: We want the government to do it for us.

The fact that Obama’s gotten elected is a nod towards socialism. We want everything to be fair for everyone, we want to be able to not have to think about things. That’s why Obama’s so popular amongst our generation: He doesn’t make us think. He’s essentially said “Don’t worry about how we’ll pay for it, I can sort that out, just vote for me and I’ll give you hope.” However, in an ironic twist, by making things more “fair” for the middle class, we’re actually making the whole system unbelievably unfair for everyone else. We’re making the people who are motivated to actually work pay for those who aren’t (in other words, welfare). I do not bust my tail end at work 40 hours a week to support some lazy nit-wit who’s sitting at home collecting unemployment checks while watching Judge Judy. Do you know, dear reader, what socioeconomic system gives everyone “equality” and doesn’t make them think? Communism. Why work hard when you’ll get the same pay as everyone else? Sadly, that’s what we’re making a long, slow slide towards with what we as Americans are voting for these days. Letting the government do our thinking for us and letting them hand what they deem we “deserve” to us on a silver platter, like universal health care and a turkey in every pot.

And to close this out, before anyone starts calling me a racist or a change-phobe, let me assure you, dear reader, I am not a racist. If McCain and Obama had swapped ideologies, I would’ve voted for Obama. If a white man was spewing this and I spoke out against it, I wouldn’t be considered a racist, so the race card really does not come in here. And I’m all for change, but I’d like to know what kind of change I’m getting myself into before I blindly vote for it.

And when my mother said, “Yes, we’ve voted for change, but will we like the change we’re getting?” my only reply was, “That’ll depend on how much change he leaves in our pockets.”

Signing off for the 2008 political ranting season…

~Andrew

  

ANOTHER rant for the political season…. The Economy!

I hate this time of year. This we’ve already established. But now, it’s becoming more because of the media and it’s “The world’s going to end, it’s all the Republican’s fault, vote democrat and you can save us!” mentality.

We all know what I’m referring to, kids. The economy. The fact is this: The majority of media outlets are left-leaning, and won’t outright support a republican candidate. These same media outlets know, for whatever reason, that democrats appear stronger on the economy than republicans, so what do they want to do? Scare everyone by saying “A new depression is coming! We’ll all be living out of cardboard boxes unless the democrats bail us out of our mortatges!”. And we, being the mindless sheep that we are and blindly trusting the established media outlets, go along with it. Every time.

Ladies and gentlemen, I’m going to tell you all something that might come as a surprise to you, but it is true: Barack Obama isn’t going to save the economy. John McCain isn’t going to save the economy. George Bush didn’t cause the economic downturn we’re experiencing right now, and Bill Clinton didn’t cause the economic upturn he got right before he left office. That’s not how it works.

We’ve become so obsessed with the president being some kind of superhero, here to save us from high priced health care, economic troubles, and high gas prices. But let’s face it: They have about as much control in that position as I do writing legislation for Congress. but the politicians promise us all lower gas prices, a fixed economy, and health care for everyone if we’ll just vote for them (nevermind the “affordable health care” involves jacking up our taxes, or “fixing the economy” involves spending 700 billion dollars worth of money we don’t have to bail out wall street’s idiotic greed when it could’ve been fixed a whole lot cheaper… The way the market has been plummeting since the bailout was approved, clearly that plan worked like a charm… :-p)

Dave Ramsey said “If you follow the market day to day, you’ll give yourself an ulcer.” That’s a good point. the fact is, the market fluctuates day to day, but if you look at it for the last 100 years, you’ll be shocked to find out it has made movement in a generally upward direction. There have been hiccups, sure, but nothing we haven’t recovered from. Our economy is resillient, people, stop expecting the politicians to fix it and just let it ride.

If you don’t believe me, check out this graph of the Dow Jones industrial average:


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DJIA_historical_graph_(log).svg (SVG file, nominally 800 × 400 pixels, file size: 791 KB)

So ladies and gentlemen, everyone take a big step back and calm down. The world is not going to end, the market has a long way to go before it crashes, and the politicians are NOT going to fix it. The media knows this, it’s about time we as Americans did our homework and paid a little more attention to it, too.

  

A rant for the political season…

It’s been a while since I’ve blogged, but seeing as the time of year it is, I feel like it’s about time I said something. (Come on, we’re in an election season, you wouldn’t expect me to sit this one out, would you?)

Right now, it’s one of those magical times where we are in the process, as Americans, of selecting who will be next to lead our country. I expect most of you know my views on it (being a gun-toting right wing conservative), but my rant today will not be about who we should elect as our next president. In fact, the main theme I have for today can be summed up in one sentence.

I hate politics.

I will be overjoyed once we are through with this political season (regardless of who wins, ultimately we’re getting who we deserve either way). It used to be (long ago, before I could even vote) that campaigns were run on the issues. Now, it’s become the proverbial three-ring circus, with the media making a spectacle out of everything that doesn’t actually matter (then again, this is from the same news services that somehow think we care about what Britney Spears is doing with her life… If I wanted celebrity gossip, I have the sense to watch a celebrity gossip show, not the evening news…), and the campaigns are throwing out ads at each other that don’t focus a lick on what the issues are, but instead tell you everything that’s wrong with the other guy.

Now before all the partisans start saying the other side’s doing it, shut up. They’re BOTH doing it, and as a nation we’re hanging on their every word, treating everything that comes out of their mouths as honest to goodness truth and not questioning whether that’s even an issue worth worrying about. I’m a big fan of free speech (I am, after all, a blogger), but I am all in favor of cutting off the political campaigns and restricting them to stating their views instead of attacking their opponents. In the months leading up to this election, I feel like I’ve learned less about what each candidate’s platform is than I have what’s wrong with their opponent’s platform from campaign ads. Enough, for the love of crackers, just shut up about the other guy and focus on your platform. I don’t care what you want to twist to make the other guy look bad, we’re never going to have a truly “fact” based campaign if you spend all of your time trying to knock the other guy down. We aren’t even getting an unbiased opinion if you just state what you’re running for, but at LEAST we wouldn’t have to feel like you’re getting into a 3rd grade name-calling contest on the national stage anyone.

And news media, shame on you. We’ve always known it’s impossible to have a truly unbiased news media, but now bias isn’t even the problem, you blow EVERYTHING out of proportion and start covering it as a leadoff story when, typically, what you’re covering has little to no impact on what the campaigns are doing. McCain’s not creating controversy, Obama isn’t even creating controversy. You know who’s creating controversy? The established media outlets! If they would shut their pie-holes and go back to the good old days of Peter Jennings, Dan Rather, and Tom Brokaw covering the news in a professional manner instead of turning the political season into a freak show that we feel we should be seeing on shows more like Entertainment Tonight, we might, just MIGHT, have an ethical political campaign because no one would care about anything aside from what the real issues are.

I love America. I love that we have the freedom to choose who will be leading our country. But I HATE the fact that so many Americans do it so blindly, without having any idea what they’re voting for other than the charismatic ability of a candidate to make speeches but not really present any kind of real policy. Enough is enough, can we get back to a real campaign now?

As a side note to all of this, I saw a rant from Craig Fergusson that I found particularly fitting. Enjoy!
(Warning: Slight language)

  

Why Al Sharpton needs to just shut up…

I was reading this story on CNN today, a verdict came in on three men who were accused of killing an unarmed man on the night of his wedding, and good ol’ reverend Sharpton said “Justice was not miscarried, justice was aborted.”

So much of the focus has been on the police (represented primarily as white supremicists, as evidenced by someone’s screaming that the shooters were KKK members) shooting an innocent black man, but really, I don’t think that this is the time to be playing the race card.

Please understand me, this is a great tragedy, I would not wish this on anyone, but at the same time, I’ve been around police enough to know it’s hard enough second guessing yourself on tactical decisions without having the general public screaming that you’re a racist murderer. I’m glad the courts weren’t caving to the political spectacle that Sharpton drags out every time he involved himself with something.

Now, as far as why I think this is a lousy time to play the race card, let’s take a look at something here: The five cops that shot the victim. Of the five, two were black, one was white, one was Middle-Eastern, and one was of biracial Haitian/Mexican descent. In addition to this, the first officer to fire was, oddly enough, black. So now is really not the time to try playing racial politics.

Additionally, anyone with enough sense can take a Citizen’s police academy course (quite a few have them nowadays) and at one point or another, you come to the realization of how quickly the officers have to react. If you try something stupid, say reaching into your jacket pocket when told to put your hands in the air, or trying to run an officer down with your car, the officer has limited time to think and react, and if you’re not complying you’re automatically tagging yourself as a potential threat. When I was in CPA for WashCo, I got to go into the deadly force simulation, and you know what? The reaction time between when a perp doesn’t have a gun and does have a gun is almost obscene, I wasn’t even holstering my weapon and the guy still got the first shot off before I could drop the hammer on him. Time for a police officer isn’t measured in seconds; it’s measured in miliseconds. You never know what kind of situation you’re walking into, and you have to react accordingly.

Let’s look at it from another angle. Let’s assume, just for a moment, that Mr. Bell was, in fact, a bad man. Let’s also assume that, when he went back to the car, there was a gun there. And, just for kicks, let’s assume that the officers, instead of shooting at a perceived threat waited until it was a definite threat. I’ve been shooting enough to know that it does not take a long time to empty a 12-round clip, for kicks, let’s say he’s got a 9mm glock with high-capacity magazines. That’s 16 in the clip, one in the chamber. If you’re fast enough (and accuracy is no object), you can easily empty a clip in under 10 seconds. Now, instead of one potential threat (who, again, wasn’t complying with the officers) dead, we have potentially three to five dead NYPD detectives.

I guess what I’m trying to say is, stop second guessing the decisions made by cops on a daily basis and educate yourself, Mr. Sharpton. Unless you’ve been in those shoes, unless you’ve been there on that dark street, with the possibility of not coming home that night being real to you, you are in no position to pass judgment on those officers, so stop trying to act like you think you know all there is to know in the world on the subject.

  

Well, whether or not I intended to start THAT fire up…

I received a comment from a new reader (hi, new reader!) on my last post where I briefly (And I do mean briefly) alluded to the Iraq Puppygate scandal, with the U.S. Marine who threw a puppy off of a cliff.

Nowhere in my post did I take a stand on the video’s authenticity, and had that been the subject of the post in its entirety, I probably still wouldn’t have taken a stand on that aspect. So before I get every PETA member with a bone to pick posting death threats on my blog, allow me to explain my comment.

I commented about the incident from the aspect of what I saw happening in the aftermath. Was the puppy real? Was the puppy fake? Was it living? Was it dead? Was the yelping added in, or was it actually the puppy? I do not know, nor will I ever claim to know.

However, I think it’s moronic that some whack-job thought it was okay to post on youtube, along with the video, the guy’s address, his family’s address, his sister’s myspace, and the phone number for his parents.

First off, what the heck did they do to deserve that? Okay, so their kid/brother threw a puppy off a cliff. When you become a parent, do you want to be held responsible for every idiotic thing your adult children do with their lives? What if it had been your brother who threw the puppy off a cliff? Would YOU want harassing messages on myspace?

Secondly, that’s someone’s private information they were posting there. If, for instance, some nut actually decided to carry out one of those death threats, congratulations, you’re now an accessory to murder!

People, please, think before you post these things. And don’t blame the family for what the kid did. Leave them in peace.

  

Speaking of things you don’t see everyday…

Jack Nicholson has apparently decided on a unique way to garner support for Hilary Clinton: He recut video segments from various movies he’s done over the years, intersparsed them together with notes praising Clinton, and slapped “I’m Jack Nicholson, and I approve this message” onto the end. Brilliant, absolutely brilliant.

You put together a campaign ad that looks like a film school did it in his free time.

Need proof?

Behold, the parody (NSFW):

And I’m sure things will only get better from here, we’ll have every celebrity in the world “voicing their opinions” on the candidates via intercut film clips and ideas.

The new political dynamic: The youtube campaign.

  

Ahmadinejad speaks at Columbia university…

You can read about it here.

My amusement?

“We are friends of all the nations,” he said. “We are friends with the Jewish people. There are many Jews in Iran living peacefully with security.”

My mental image?

Two Jewish men, locked up in a prison with two armed guards.

You have to give the man credit, he certainly has a way with words. :-p

  

Oh dear lord…

As most people know, they’re coming out with the Wii Zapper for Wii within the next few months. And, apparently, a parenting blog asked the question, “What do you think about the Wii?”.

What is increasingly clear is that none of these people have ever handled a gun in their lives.

What’s amusing to me, though, is how all of the defenders of Nintendo have jumped in and essentially shut up the parents who were complaining about it.

For anyone who’s not familiar, the Wii Zapper doesn’t look ANYTHING like a real gun. Additionally, it’s my understanding that the “shoot” trigger is the forward one and not the rear one (thus taking away any shooting function similarity to a real gun). Finally, the Wii Zapper isn’t really good for recoil, unless you consider a shake that’s softer than a cell phone on vibrate as being “realistic”.

Then again, this is from New Jersey, as one commenter wrote, “the Sheeple State”…

  

And now, for the Rosie O’Donnell cheap-shot of the week…

Rosie to Child & Family Services: “Take my child, please.”

I think that’s child exploitation, but go ahead, post pictures of your four year old with bullets on the internet to further your politcal statement. It’s not like you aren’t losing fans like water through a leaky paper cup already anyway. :-p

  

Y’know, the news makes one nervous nowadays…

Iranian president says clock is ticking on Israel’s destruction

Putin attacks west ahead of G8 summit

First off, the president of Iran is a psychopath. Secondly, Putin’s old school KGB, and despite his grabs at dictator-like power, the Russian people support him. Of course, we’re so tied up as it is, that even if credible threats did arise from either of the two, as American’s we wouldn’t really be able to do anything about it.