For those we lost, We will not forget 09/11/2001 “If the bank loans you a million dollars, the bank has a problem. If the bank loans you a billion dollars, the US government has a problem.”
Mark Steyn, September 17, 2008

“Actually, if the bank loans you a billion dollars, the U.S. Taxpayer has a problem.”
— Perri Nelson, September 17, 2008

 

Gone to that great drag race in the sky


Published Tue, Feb 19 2008 12:02 PM

Charlie Ryan, co-author of the hit "Hot Rod Lincoln" is dead at 92smile_sad

 


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Spread the word


Published Tue, Feb 19 2008 9:49 AM
Technorati Tags: Cool Stuff

As a few of you may know, I'm fond of the Patriot Post's "Founders Quote Daily". On more than one occasion it has provided the inspiration for a post here. Now it's there for your reading pleasure every day in my sidebar!

Mark Alexander, the publisher of the Patriot Post, has put out a call for help in spreading the Patriot's message of "individual liberty, the restoration of constitutional limits on government and the judiciary, and the promotion of free enterprise, national defense, and traditional American values" to as many people as possible. Now that's something I can get behind. I'm not going to copy the entire email here, but here's a bit that he recommends sending to your friends in e-mail…

I subscribe to The Patriot Post, a concise, informative and entertaining analysis of the week's most important news, policy and opinion delivered to my e-mail inbox at no charge. I strongly recommend that you do the same! Subscribe to The Patriot Post at http://PatriotPost.US/subscribe/ and join the ranks of Patriots who read the Internet's leading advocate of individual liberty, the restoration of constitutional limits on government and the judiciary, and the promotion of free enterprise, national defense and traditional American values.

It's Right. It's Free. -- http://PatriotPost.US/subscribe/

Personally, I'm not really one for doing mass mailings. That doesn't change the fact that the Patriot Post provides some of the best conservative reading material you're going to find. No, I don't get paid for this. I don't do pay-for-post, and I don't blog for money. I honestly believe that the Patriot Post is worth the read.

For web site owners (that would be all of you bloggers), They've got some cool banner links too at http://PatriotPost.US/main/media.asp. That's where I found the lovely widget I've added to my sidebar with the Founders Quote Daily.

It's Right. It's Free. -- http://PatriotPost.US/subscribe/


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Toward Mobocracy


Published Tue, Feb 19 2008 12:48 AM
Technorati Tags: Elections, Democrats, Constitution

It seems that more and more we're seeing states work hard to give up their rights, and the rights of their citizens to mob rule. Not content with having the federal government be a binding and cohesive force to hold the states together and having the states govern the people within their borders, the Democratic party marches on down the path toward direct democracy and the inevitable socialism that it brings. Here's the latest from KOMO TV and the Washington State Senate.

OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) - State senators have approved a bill that would deliver the state's electoral votes to the U.S. presidential candidate who wins the national popular vote.

The bill, which passed 30-18 Monday, now heads to the House.

The bill would change Washington's current system of typically giving all of the state's electoral votes to the candidate who wins the statewide election to awarding all of the state's delegates to the national popular vote winner.

So, the State of Washington, with eleven electoral votes will throw away the influence of it's population. Imagine the scenario where a Republican candidate wins the popular vote, but the election results in Washington would normally throw the state's electoral votes to a Democratic candidate. Washington's electoral votes would then go to the Republican candidate.

This isn't really that far-fetched a scenario. In 2004, the Republican candidate won the majority of the popular vote (the first time any presidential candidate had done so in a long time), while in Washington State, the Democratic candidate won the majority of the statewide vote. Under the scheme proposed by the state senate, if it had been in place in 2004, the 11 electoral votes that the State's electors cast for John Kerry would have gone to George W. Bush. That can't really be what the Democratic members of Washington State's Senate want can it?

The proposal is aimed at preventing a repeat of the 2000 election, when Al Gore got the most votes nationwide but George W. Bush put together enough victories in key states to win a majority in the Electoral College and capture the White House.

The Washington state bill was sponsored by Sen. Eric Oemig, D-Kirkland.

The sheer brilliance of Washington's Democratic party eludes me. This wonderful proposal is aimed at preventing just exactly what happened in 2000? If I remember correctly, in 2000, Al Gore did indeed win a plurality of the nationwide popular vote. It seems to me that he also won Washington State's electoral votes. So if this proposal had been in effect in 2000, nothing would have been different with regard to Washington State's electoral votes.

When you consider how blue Washington is, this proposal can only hurt the Democratic party… Not that that's a bad thing in my mind. Maybe that's why it's designed to not go into effect unless a majority of electoral votes go that way too.

This is nothing less than an attempt to do an end-run around the Constitutionally prescribed method of selecting the President though. Electoral votes were apportioned to states the way they were for a reason. Changing that ought to require a Constitutional Amendment.

The U.S. Constitution does allow state legislators to choose the manner in which the state's electors are selected. While this is a perfectly Constitutional way to move toward a direct democracy, it seems to me that the Democratic party can't have really thought it through.


Cross posted at Bloggers for Civil Discourse and NW Bloggers.
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