Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Rhetoric vs. Reality

[video]




ER

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Beck: The One Thing - 07/28

[video]





ER

Friday, July 17, 2009

The Influence of 1773

After posting my 4th of July blog, I wanted to write a follow-up, or an epilogue of sorts, to explain my thought process in writing it.


Believe it or not, the first words written for that entry started over a year ago in Florida. After watching the Dow begin its brutal freefall, taxes being placed on items such as soda in New York and Hurricane Katrina victims still living in FEMA run trailers, I felt that the mind set of this country had started to go down a path that contradicted everything we should believe as Americans.



After writing down the general ideas I wanted to convey, I sat on the outline for some time, waiting on the right moment to post a blog such as that. As a matter of fact, I never really looked at it again and almost forgot about it until the tea parties (TEA - Taxed Enough Already) of this past April.



Unlike the original Boston Tea Party, the protesters of this past April weren’t railing against taxation, but more about the taxing and oppressive nature of a government that is on the verge of running our lives. In the spirit of the original act, today’s tea parties showed a motivating sprit in the original fight for freedom.



While in my hotel room on vacation this past April 15th, I watched and was inspired to finish the original blog I started last year. The tea parties embodied what I wanted to share and pushed me to complete a blog on an emotional high. Seeing Democrats and Republicans, conservatives and liberals protesting against not only taxes, but big government intrusion was inspiring. To me, it showed a grass-roots spirit that is hopefully only beginning.



In turn, I naturally held on to ‘What We Fought For’ till the 4th of July. It only seemed fitting to post a blog about our original fight for freedom on the anniversary of our day of Declaration.



If nothing else, I’m hopeful that we will eventually enter an era of common sense. With big government healthcare and other ultra-liberal projects around the corner, our government has the feel of a power hungry control freak rather than an instrument of promoting liberty.



After all, in Common Sense by Thomas Paine, he said, “Society in every state is a blessing, but government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one; for when we suffer or are exposed to the same miseries by a government, which we might expect in a country without government, our calamity is heightened by reflecting that we furnish the means by which we suffer.”



ER

Saturday, July 04, 2009

What We Fought For

In a speech to the Second Continental Congress in 1776, then representative John Adams said, “While I live, let me have a country - a free country.”


Our founding fathers gave us a vision and a gift that has stood for over two centuries. Born from the chains of an oppressive British crown, the republic that our founders helped create is one that has allowed people to live free and pursue happiness through their own means. This novel idea is not only granted to us by the providence of God, but by a constitution many believe to be the crowning achievement of a free society.



Two hundred and thirty-three years later, what would those same founders say if they saw the District of Colombia today?



Today, we live in a United States that taxes almost everything we buy or create. Our government asks CEO’s of private businesses to resign. It thinks you should eat a soy burger rather than a hamburger. They spend our money as if it were their own. We have representatives that don’t listen to their constituency, but rather push through an agenda that benefits them.



Today, we have a president who relishes in the thought of spending billions in taxpayer dollars to achieve a “21st century healthcare system” that looks more like France and Canada than the United States; where workers can unite under one banner of socialistic hope and be catered to with government handouts and other various entitlements. The previous president signed earmark-laced spending bills into law like they were autographed baseballs from his Texas Rangers days. We have a Speaker of the House who values the life habits of a field mouse in California rather than the people she represents.



The oppressive and cavalier nature of our government has not reached an apogee yet, but if we do not stay vigilant in the cause of Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness, we only have ourselves to blame. An elected government can easily restrict one’s rights, but as a free people, we are charged as the stewards of that government which will achieve greater power only if we let it.



Slogans from the 1770’s are returning with renewed cause. “Join or Die” and “Don’t Tread on Me” represent the fervor and ideas of a revolution that resonates today. From the tea parties of that century to the tea parties of this past April, people are beginning to speak out in the cause of what we originally fought for.



But what was it that we fought for? A free country? A representative democracy? A government free from an oppressive monarchy?



What we fought for was - and still is - an idea that is one of the most noble and idealistic in all of humanity. To think that a free and open democracy with people of varying backgrounds, religions and beliefs could stand for two hundred and thirty-three years is at the very least an amazing feat. To think that this Union has withstood a civil war, two world wars, and a devastating depression is inspiring. And to think that these United States have achieved unimagined marvels that include flight, the internet and a walk by man on the moon is at the very least a testament to the innovation that springs forth in a free country.



What we fought for was not just for the birth of a country, but for the birth of an idea that has manifested into that “shining city on a hill” as Reagan so eloquently described us.



Today, we are charged with preserving that city and to hold true on the original ideas of that fight for freedom waged many years ago. We must spread and keep the values of our fathers and grandfathers by working hard and relying on our own achievements, not advancing in the graces of Uncle Sam. We must remind our representatives that they are in Washington, D.C. for us, not for their own personal gain. We must remind the executives in the White House that we are a republic founded on freedoms that encompass all aspects of life, including separation of “business and state” and “healthcare and state”.



The innovation and free-thinking that got us to where we are today will carry us into the 21st century, not government. As a people, we American’s have always aspired to be more than the sum or our parts. Without freedom, those dreams are nothing more than a thought lost in time.



On this 4th of July, honor the revolution that gave birth to a nation of freedom-loving people. Stand tall when you see the flag while cooking out. When reading an op-ed, give thanks that you can actually read it. And when enjoying the relative tranquility of these United States, realize that maintaining our cherished peace and freedom is the responsibility of we, the people.



On this 4th of July, remember what we fought for.



ER

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Stewart on Pelosi

[video]





ER



Sunday, May 03, 2009

O'Reilly: How Dumb are we Americans?

[video]




ER



Sunday, March 29, 2009

Show Me the Money

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Mortgage Crisis Warning

Back in September of last year, Fox News aired a time line of the financial crisis on Special Report with Brit Hume. After it aired, I tried searching for the video, but it was no where to be found. But, thanks to an avid reader of this blog, that video has been found.


I don't know about all of you, but I've always thought that Barney Frank and Chuckie Schumer are idiots.


[video]






ER


Friday, March 13, 2009

'We Surround Them' Event

If you haven't been keeping up with Glenn Beck's '9 Principles' and '12 Values', feel free to catch up on Beck's website. The culmination of the 'We Surround Them' event will be presented on his show today on FoxNews at 4 p.m. CDT.


ER


Thursday, March 12, 2009

O'Reilly on 'Glenn Beck'

[video]






ER



Tuesday, March 10, 2009

For the Inner Dork

Many of you know how fascinated I am in the exploration of space and NASA. So, it’s no surprise that I would keep people up-to-date on a scheduled launch. If all goes well in prelaunch procedures, the space shuttle Discovery will lift-off tomorrow night at 8:20 p.m CDT. After tomorrow night, NASA only has seven more launches of the space shuttle before the program's last scheduled mission on May 31st, 2010.


Watch if you can!



ER


UPDATE:
Launch moved to Sunday, March 15th at 6:34 p.m CDT.


Monday, March 09, 2009

Glenn Beck: Battle for America's Soul

[video]





Transcript: The Battle for America's Soul


ER

Monday, March 02, 2009

Obama's Spending Bill

To all my Democratic friends out there, please tell me how these items listed below help the economy come out of a recession? All this looks like a bunch of pork barrel pig crap to me.


Pig odor control? Really?


From John McCain's Senate website:


Top Ten Porkiest Projects in the Omnibus Spending bill


10. $1.7 million "for a honey bee factory" in Weslaco, TX


9. $475,000 to build a parking garage in Provo City, Utah


8. $200,000 for a tattoo removal violence outreach program that could help gang members or others shed visible signs of their past


7. $300,000 for the Montana World Trade Center


6. $1 million for mormon cricket control in Utah


5. $650,000 for beaver management in North Carolina and Mississippi


4. $2.1 million for the Center for Grape Genetics in New York


3. $332,000 for the design and construction of a school sidewalk in Franklin, Texas


2. $2 million “for the promotion of astronomy” in Hawaii


1. $1.7 million for pig odor research in Iowa



ER

Friday, February 27, 2009

Here Comes Big Government

You may not have deposits there, but taxpayer money will now be invested into CitiGroup giving the government a 36% interest in the company. Investors didn't seem to like this news considering Citi's stock was in the tank in early morning trading today. Can we say nationalization?


Monday, February 23, 2009

More from Glenn Beck

From the Fox Forum: The Road to Socialism


Glenn Beck: A Look Behind the Curtain


[video]




Plus, is Obama already stressed?


[video]





ER

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Traders to Obama: Boo

If this video doesn't say volumes on how we perceive this economic plan by Obama, I don't know what does.


CNBC:
Trader Buzz on the Government's Plan


Bring on the Tea Party of 2009.


Update: Would You Join the "Chicago Tea Party?"


ER

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

New Look

With nearly three years of blogging on Blogger.com, I thought it might be time to finally update the layout of Politology by Paco. There might be some tweaks to come here and there, but overall, welcome to the new look!


ER

Dems on Escalator

[video]





This ad brought to you by the treasury of the American Socialist States . . .




Image from jesscaswall.com


ER



Monday, February 16, 2009

A Dream Guaranteed?

A trend is emerging in this country that I fear we will never be able to correct.


Ever since emerging from WWII, America has been at the apex of global society. We lead in economic ingenuity. We lead in scientific innovation. And as we always have, we lead in the freedom we provide.



Because of that, the post WWII era has never been equaled in promoting the American Dream. It’s a dream where everyone has the opportunity to be or do anything they want. Through hard work and time, any goal can be accomplished.



Over the past few decades however, the notion of living that dream has been twisted into the idea that since you are an American, you are entitled to that dream.



Through the words of Thomas Jefferson in The Declaration of Independence, we all know that Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness is an unalienable right endowed to us by God, and in this country, we were given the freedom to pursue those endowments through the American Revolution.



But, gradually through time (especially the past half century), I feel that our government has perverted that freedom and those pursuits into an American Guarantee where no one can fail. In essence, the dream itself has become an entitlement program.



When did we go from a people that aspired to do and be something more through a dream to a people wanting the easy road through entitlements and handouts from the federal government? The more government grants and entitles to its people (socialism?), the further we get from what makes America great.



Today, we make excuses that GM and Bank of America are companies too large to fail, but isn’t that the nature of the free market? In GM’s case, their business plan is so warped by the unions that whatever excuses and escapes the federal government hands out, we prolong what inevitably needs to happen. Instead of perpetuating a broken business model, it needs to fail through the tools that are provided in a free market.



From the largest business to the struggling independent contractor, we learn from that failure. We learn to get back up, dust ourselves off and try again. Yes, millions may be out of work, but where there’s a will (or need), there’s a way. Where one door closes, another will open. We live in a country that allows us the freedom to pursue and do as we choose. We will always have successes and failures, neither of which is guaranteed. It’s up to us to make do with what we have and to achieve what we can, not your government.



In the words of Benjamin Franklin in reference to another great document enabling freedom: “The US Constitution doesn’t guarantee happiness, only the pursuit of it. You have to catch up with it yourself.”



ER


Friday, February 13, 2009

GOP in the House say No

. . . and at least seven Dems say no to all 1,071 pages as well.


[video]






ER