Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Having a Form of Godliness


Those of us born in the 1930s and 40s came along at the tail end of an era, a bright and special era, an era in which children were still taught to love their country, to admire its Founders, and to revere the Constitution. Many of us took those lessons to heart, but now we find ourselves increasingly at odds with an imposing and ever-growing army of powerful and influential people--people in the highest levels of government, people who manage the country’s largest news organizations, people who operate our nation’s most prestigious universities.

It seems as though a vast and increasing number of slick, fashionable and well educated people believe that patriotism is nothing but foolish sentimentality, that the Constitution is a burdensome and inconvenient impediment to progress, and that the 18th Century beliefs of the Founders are now hopelessly outdated.

Yet these same people insist that they are genuinely concerned for us, especially in these difficult times, and want only to make us all secure and happy. Mind you, they want to dismantle all the priceless safeguards to our liberties, but they want us to be secure and happy. In other words, instead of placing our trust in a written contract, the Constitution, they want us to place our trust solely in them and their word.

But to those of us in my generation, this kind of talk sounds dubious, dangerous and frightening. According to what we were taught in those little one- and two-room rural schools, this is just the kind of devious chicanery the Founders were hoping to steer their posterity clear of when they wrote the Constitution and the Bill of Rights in the first place. Of course, when we attended school our dedicated and self-sacrificing teachers didn’t have access to the latest educational theories put out by the federal government, so they admittedly were working under a severe and serious handicap.

Nevertheless, call me backward and old-fashioned if you must, but I’m not buying the clearly self-serving tripe these un-American radicals are dishing out. I don’t believe for one minute that their interest in our welfare is genuine. I believe it’s thoroughly counterfeit and utterly bogus, as well as insulting and disgusting. I believe it is nothing more than a clever and deadly pretense, a ruse, if you will, possessing only the crudest outward appearance of authentic concern and compassion. Their idea of charity is seizing your money through taxation and transferring it to someone else, someone who in their opinion is in greater need of it than you are. Is that compassion? No! Let’s call it what it is, it’s socialism! And socialism isn’t what this country’s about. It’s repugnant and alien to us. Strong, proud, self-reliant men and women don’t need or want socialism. A socialist is not, and can never be, a true American.

I don’t give a hoot what presidential candidates and senate majority leaders say. I couldn’t care less what big city newspaper editors and television commentators think. And I’m certainly not interested in what the distinguished head of the political science department at Harvard University believes. I think we’d be damned foolish to let go of any portion of the Constitution. Those Founders were an extremely wise group of men. Their theories of government are still valid and will continue to hold us in good stead. All we have to do is wholeheartedly return to those beliefs and ideals, and embrace once again that independent and self-sufficient spirit that made Americans and America great.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

We The People



In re-sponse to the recent mortgage and credit crisis, our govern-ment has taken a series of dramatic steps. If one uses the Constitution and the political beliefs of the Founders as a measure of what comprises the legitimate powers of government, these steps are another serious and dangerous departure from time-honored and revered principles.

We all know there is corruption and incompetence in government. We all know there is unrestrained greed and depravity in many areas of business. But we also need to recognize that as citizens we too are failing to measure up to our full responsibilities. We too share much of the blame for what is going on around us.

In America the will of the people underlies our political system and its institutions. That is a fortunate thing, but when we neglect to forthrightly express our will, the government goes forward without our guidance. And a misguided government is a dysfunctional government--ponderous, pernicious and dreadful, as we all are now witnessing.

As citizens we are guilty of electing and re-electing, irrespective of party, presidents and members of congress who, in the absence of corrective input from us, have virtually set our political and economic systems ablaze. How much more apparent does it have to become? Is not the current man-made conflagration evidence enough of their malfeasance, negligence and incompetence? Must we experience further horrors at their hands to be convinced?

If our nation is to escape complete destruction, we, average Americans like you and me, must become involved--right now and in a big way! Our house is on fire and the arsonists are pretending to be the fire department. Their method of fighting a fire is to throw more fuel on it. They want to use the same combustibles that ignited it to put it out. What does that reveal, despite what they are telling us, about their true intentions?

Perhaps the supercilious and condescending elitists who rule in Washington believe we are all hopelessly stupid. Perhaps they arrogantly believe they can do much better without our input than with it. But anyone who has eyes can see they are leading us down a slippery and perilous path. Look around you. Who is going to bring this great country back on course if we don’t? We are all that is left. We are all that stands between these bloated putrescent politicians and total destruction.

If there is going to be meaningful change in America, if we as a nation are going to set a true course back to stability and safety, we can’t entrust such a vital job to career politicians. We the people must initiate it and carry through with it. The solution to the grave problems that presently beset us lies in our becoming better educated and informed, and in becoming much more involved in political affairs. If we as citizens and taxpayers don’t know what constitutes sound political and economic principles, how are we going to provide essential and worthwhile guidance to our elected officials? And how will we know if they are devising and implementing programs that truly are in our best interest?

It’s time we understood that not every clown jumping at the chance to serve is fit to serve. We need to do a much better job of monitoring and grading our leaders and screening candidates. We might begin by demanding simple honesty and some commonsense.

We elect these people to be public servants, which implies that they work for and answer to the public. However, a great many of them, once elected, come to see themselves not as humble servants but as superior beings, far wiser and more intelligent than the simple people who put them in office.

The hour has come. Time is short. Beginning today, and without delay, we must begin the crucial process of culling out these pompous jackasses and replacing them with a new generation of patriotic, pro-America leaders, leaders who love their country more than money, power and fame.

“Don’t interfere with anything in the Constitution. That must be maintained, for it is the only safeguard to our liberties.”
--Abraham Lincoln

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

The Arcane and Deadly Workings of Government


Note: Please be aware that certain key elements in the following brief explanation of the recent mortgage catastrophe and its causes may not make sense to you unless you're a seriously impaired career politician like the smiling man on the right.

Now that the fog of con-fusion has dissipated to a degree, we are learning that the origin of the mortgage debacle essentially comes down to one thing. Admittedly, there were other factors, but if you follow the problem upstream, this is what you find.

A number of years ago, in an effort to put lower-income families into homes they couldn’t actually afford, congress enacted a bill entitled the Community Reinvestment Act.

Whatever congress’ intentions may have been at the time, whether well meaning or not, this ill-conceived act induced a lot of banks, with the dubious assistance of co-culprits Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, into making a great many subprime loans. A subprime loan is a loan made to someone who really didn’t qualify. The loans went through anyway, however, because Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, at the behest of the federal government, were essentially guaranteeing them.

Then, as if this curious bill heavily laced with faulty economic theories was not dangerous enough in itself, something else happened that added to the problem and stoked the rising fever. Some of the banks swept up in this developing fiasco began doing innovative things on their own initiative. They began devising creative if not completely ethical ways of packaging and bundling these subprime loans and selling them off as investments to other unsuspecting banks. These shady shenanigans soon became standard operating procedure for several of the more unscrupulous banks and some of their employees began behaving almost as if they were on a mind-altering drug.

Yet surprisingly enough, even as the potential hazards inherent in all this risky wheeling and dealing were becoming more and more evident, congress did nothing, despite repeated and urgent warnings from within and from without.

So why did congress drag its feet? Perhaps members of congress simply decided that with so many of their constituents, from house flippers to bank presidents, believing they were getting rich in this unprecedented and astonishing housing boom, albeit an artificially created one, they ought not dispel the illusion but rather play things out a little longer. After all, when a party’s really rockin,’ why be a wet blanket? Right?

Now that the party’s over, however, and with the horrific results laid bare before us, we can see what congress REALLY did when it passed that poorly thought out and pestilent bill in the first place. In effect, that ill-advised act of congress injected into our nation’s economy what turned out to be a deadly virus, even though one of its intermediate manifestations was a delusional sense of euphoria in some of its eventual victims. Over the course of several years the harmful effects of that virus led to a massive accumulation of what we now are calling “toxic” debt, debt that ultimately proved to be so pernicious it poisoned the very heart of our nation’s economic system, killing some banks and lending institutions outright and leaving many others gravely ill.

And now to top off everything, we are being told that some of the banks that barely survived the ordeal, and were left crippled as a result, will be expertly and lovingly nursed back to health by the very government that poisoned them. And that, they say, will ultimately bring about a happy conclusion to this tragic tale.

I warned you this might not make sense.