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Thought for the Day

Perkele.

Hey!

The polls are open.  What are you doing here?

Repost – Oh Really?

This was originally posted on December 8, 2009

 

Senator “Dingy” Harry Reid has compared Republicans and others who oppose his healthcare plan to people who wanted to keep slavery and opposed civil rights legislation.

OK, let’s take a moment to reflect on the actual history:

Which party went to war in 1861 rather than see the Union split permanently between free and slave territories?  That’s right, theRepublicans.

Which party actively worked against the country during the Civil War and would have negotiated a peace with the Confederacy if they’d been able to win the presidency in 1864?  That’s right, the Democrats.

Who pushed through amendments to the Constitution that not onlymade slavery illegal, but also guaranteed the rights of the former slaves?  That’s right, the Republicans.

What party was in power in the 1860′s and 1870′s and had to deal withSouthern Democrat partisans riding around in sheets and lynching black people?  That’s right, the Republicans.

Which party actively opposed civil rights legislation in the late 1950′s, even going so far as to filibuster the Senate and stand in the door to stop black students from attending white schools?  That’s right, the Democrats.

Senator Reid, before you ratchet up the rhetoric, and go beyond calling Republicans Nazi’s and such, please get your facts straight.  The Democratic party has a lot more to answer to about slavery and civil rights than the Republicans do.

Remember

Theo van Gogh, a film director who made movies that poked holes in the multi-cultural veil of willful ignorance, was killed on November 2, 2004.  His murderer took offense at his film Submission, which dealt with the issue of abuse of women in the Muslim world.  He shot van Gogh 8 times, tried to cut his head off, then stabbed him in the chest with two knives, pinning an Islamic screed to his dead body.  This forced Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a Somali born member of the Dutch parliament who wrote the script for the film,  to go into hiding for her own safety. 

Was van Gogh a hero?  Depends on how you look at it.  What he did shouldn’t have been remarkable.  Having freedom of religion and speech means you have to take the responsiblity to deal with it when someone exercises their right to free speech to criticize your religion.

Was he a martyr?  Yes he was, in just about the textbook definition of the word.  He was killed because someone who couldn’t control their own violence decided that what he had done was worthy of killing him.  Because of his words, he was murdered.

This is what we are fighting:  People who believe that the answer to objectionable speech is violence, not more speech.  People who believe that to believe differently than what they do, much less publicly question their practices, is to invite your own murder.  We can never forget that, and we should never forget Theo van Gogh, a man who was butchered because he had the temerity to point out that the Dar al Islam is not paradise on earth.

Today in History

On this date in 1889, North Dakota officially became a state.  One of its major historical accomplishments since then was being the state in which I was born.  For those of you who haven’t had the pleasure, it’s a beautiful, if stark, place, with miles and miles of miles and miles.  If you’re looking for a place where there’s elbow room, you could do a lot worse than my home state.

Over at IMAO, they have an article named “Fun Facts About North Dakota”.  Here’s my favorite:

Bismark, North Dakota features a statue of Lewis & Clark’s Indian guide Sacagewea. She’s depicted gazing westward toward the country she helped open, while the baby strapped to her back is shown giving the finger eastward to the country that forced his mom to live on a reservation.

So let’s raise a toast with our frosty Hamms beer (From the land of sky blue waters), and toast my favorite state, North Dakota.

Repost – Huh?

This was originally posted on December 20, 2011

 

The White House today re-affirmed its support for Vice-President Agnew’s assertion that the “Viet Cong are not our enemies per se”.  Even though most attacks against American forces in the Republic of Vietnam are carried out by the VC, administration spokesmen assert that the United States got involved in South Vietnam because of an attack against American vessels in the Gulf of Tonkin, not to fight the Viet Cong or to protect the Saigon government against them.

Agnew further asserted that the United States is working towards two goals in South Vietnam:  First, to root out international communists who can damage American interests in the region, and to help the government in Saigon become strong enough to either negotiate with or defeat the Viet Cong on their own terms.

Newspapers are reporting that the United States is trying to conclude a set of secret negotiations with Viet Cong leadership, with the aim of being able to leave South Vietnam by the target date of 1973.  American negotiators are reportedly offering to release VC prisoners for a promise to renounce violence and refrain from Communist agitation, both in Vietnam and in other countries in Southeast Asia.

Not Talking the Same Language

Overheard at the breakfast table:

Irish Woman:  Someone in the family ought to be starting magazine sales soon.  Are you interested in anything in particular?

Me:  Well, I was thinking of picking up some PMags and maybe some USGI steel ones. Of course, I can always use a few more for the other guns.

Irish Woman: I was thinking of National Geographic and maybe something for Boo.  Wait… what?

Repost – Taxpayer

This was originally published on September 24, 2011.

 

Emperor Obamadus stepped onto the sand of the coliseum.  His faithful guards of the Pressorian Guard parted to make way so that he could step into the ring they had formed around the taxpayers he wished to address.  He looked down his nose at them through the teleprompter that floated before his face.

“Rise, rise”, he said to the taxpayers who had been brought almost to their knees for him.  The Taxpayers wearily rose to their full height, the dust of the coliseum running in lines of sweat down their weathered faces.  The Emperor turned to the tall one who still wore his helmet.
“Your fame is well deserved, Norwegian.  My wife insists that you are Ayers reborn.  Or was it Chomsky?  No matter.  Why doesn’t the great hero of the people reveal himself and give us his name?” he said half interestedly, studying his nails as the words flowed across the teleprompter.
“My name is Taxpayer”, said the Norwegian as he turned his back and started to walk towards the barracks.
“How dare you turn your back on me?”, the Emperor whined.  “Slave!  You will remove your mask and tell me your name!”
The Norwegian slowly turned back towards the Emperor.  He took a deep breath, then reached up and slowly pulled his helmet off.  The Emperor took a step back upon seeing his face and the look of utter disdain upon it.
“I am DaddyBearus Scipio Americanus, Guardian of the Republic, veteran of campaigns in Germania and Dalmatia, and loyal servant to the true image of our nation Constitutionus Invictus.  Descendant of true immigrants who worked for a living, father to children who will toil their entire lives to pay for your excesses, husband to a disillusioned wife, and I will have my revenge, in this election or the next.” the Norwegian hissed, looking the Emperor in his widening eyes.
The Emperor blanched as his teleprompter cracked.  He quickly turned around and moved to the exit as quickly as he could without breaking into a run.
DaddyBearus nodded to the Pressorian Guards and walked with his fellow Taxpayers back to their place of dwelling.  Now that the Emperor knew that he still lived, the job of throwing him out of office had become both easier and more interesting.
With apologies to Ridley Scott and Russell Crowe.

Prayers Needed

Mike Vanderboegh, the blogger who, along with David Codrea, pushed Operation Fast and Furious out of the shadows, is in the hospital.  The War on Guns has details on how to send a get well message to the Vanderboeghs directly, but a thought or a prayer to $DEITY couldn’t hurt.

What’s the Difference?

I know, as a parent, that I’m not supposed to compare my children.  But something just happened that is absolutely remarkable, so I’m going to bend that rule just a tad.

Girlie Bear just came home with her first official progress report from her freshman year of high school.  She got 4 A’s, 1 A-, and 2 B’s, and all of her classes except for JROTC and Choir are in the “Advanced” college prep track.  She called me when she got home and was ecstatic about the grades, and actually had reasons for why the B’s weren’t A’s.  I, of course, reassured her that a B was entirely acceptable, but if she wanted to work to an A, I wouldn’t complain.

In comparison, at this point in his freshman year, Junior, who went to the same school and took the same classes from a lot of the same teachers, had one A (Band), 1 C, four D’s, and a couple of U’s, which is modern educational jargon for what we used to call an “F”.  The rational discussion I tried to start over what went wrong and what he was going to do to rectify the situation pretty much degenerated into one of those arguments that’s spoken of in hushed tones at family reunions after everyone has had a decade or so to cool off. 

Junior is very bright, as is his sister.  Girlie Bear has grown up here in Kentucky surrounded by college educated people who thought that getting a good education was the most important thing a young person can do.  Junior spent his educational years, up until his freshman year of high school, going to excellent schools in California with his mom and step-dad, both of whom are college educated and also value learning.  When he moved here to live with us and go to high school, he was in the same situation that Girlie Bear and Little Bear had grown up in.

So what is the difference? 

Junior was identified early in his life as one of the smart ones, but never seemed to polish talent with hard work.  He was one of those who didn’t do homework or participate in class, but could do OK to well on tests.  His teachers in California did him no favors by putting up with this, because when he reached middle and high school, the habit of hard work just wasn’t there.  When being smart wasn’t enough, and he was expected to also put in the hours and show product, he failed.  To a large part, I blame myself, if for no other reason than the fact that I, as his father, should have been more forceful in his younger years to get him held back until he matured enough to handle both being intelligent and doing the work.

Girlie Bear, on the other hand, has never had anyone tell her that she’s the smartest girl in the room.  Of course, I praise her when she does well, and I reward success as much as I try to motivate after failure, but we never blew sunshine up her skirt and as far as I know, neither did her teachers.  She learned early that if she wanted to succeed, she had to work hard at it, and the habits stuck.  It took one summer of giving up two days a week to go to math tutoring to convince her that it was easier to learn the first time.

The two have a much different attitude toward life.  If anything, Girlie Bear is too hard on herself.  If she comes home with a C on an assignment or test, we have to talk to her about how much she worked on it, and convince her that if she put forward her best effort, we were satisfied with the grade.  She still looks at each A she gets as manna from heaven, even if she busted her tail to get it.   Junior, on the other hand, looked at top marks as his birthright, and lower grades were blown off as “not his fault” or were because he “wasn’t interested” in the subject. 

Now, will the grades on a six week report card when they were 14 mean much in the long run?  Honestly no.  Unless Girlie Bear becomes a mathematician, she won’t use a lot of what she learns in Geometry.  The same goes for her other subjects.  But the habit of working hard and wanting to earn each and every thing she has will help her in life.  Junior is still struggling to learn that lesson, but he will eventually come around to it.  It’s just easier to do when you’re still sheltered by your parents and school.  Doing it when you and you alone are on the hook for food and shelter is much harder.