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Obama vs. Republic of Texas

Surprisingly, I have to thank my first ex Cindy for this.  Normally she depends on ME to rabble rouse:
 
THE COUNTRY OF TEXAS  
 
Please note that Texas is the only state with a legal right to secede from the Union . (Reference the Texas-American Annexation Treaty of 1848.) 

We Texans love y'all, but we'll probably have to take action since B. Hussein Obama won the election. We'll miss you too. 

Here is what can happen: 
 
#1: Barack Hussein Obama becomes President of the United States , Texas immediately secedes from the Union . 

#2: George W. Bush will become the President of the Republic of Texas . [Note:  I am not particularly supportive of this myself. There are better choices!]

So what does Texas have to do to survive as a Republic? 
 
1. NASA is just south of Houston , Texas . We will control the space industry. 

2. We refine over 85% of the gasoline in the United States . 
 
3. Defense Industry--we have over 65% of it. The term "Don't mess with Texas ," will take on a whole new meaning. 

4. Oil - we can supply all the oil that the Republic of Texas will need for the next 300 years. Yankee states? Sorry about that. 
 
5. Natural Gas - again we have all we need and it's too bad about those Northern States. John Kerry will have to figure out a way to keep them warm.... 

6. Computer Industry - we currently lead the nation in producing computer chips and communications--small companies like Texas Instruments, Dell Computer, EDS, Raytheon, National Semiconductor, Motorola, Intel, AMD, Atmel, Applied Materials, Ball Miconductor, Dallas  Semiconductor, Delphi, Nortel, Alcatel, etc, etc. The list  goes on and on. 

7. Medical Care - We have the largest research centers for cancer research, the best burn centers and the top trauma units in the world, as well as other large health centers. Dallas and Houston has some of the best hospitals in the United States . 

8. We have enough colleges to keep us going: U niversity of Texas , Texas A&M, Texas Tech, Rice, SMU, University of Houston , Baylor, UNT ( University of North Texas ), Texas Women's University, etc. Ivy grows better in the South anyway. 

 9. We have a ready supply of workers. We could just open the border when we need some more. 

10. We have essential control of the paper industry, plastics, insurance, etc. 
 
11. In case of a foreign invasion, we have the Texas National Guard and the Texas Air National Guard. We don't have an Army, but since everybody down here has at least six rifles and a pile of ammo, we can raise an Army in 24 hours if we need one. If the situation really gets bad, we can always call the Department of Public Safety and ask them to send over Chuck Norris and a couple of Texas Rangers. 

12. We are totally self-sufficient in beef, poultry, hogs, and several types of grain, fruit and vegetables, and let's not forget seafood from the Gulf. Also, everybody down here knows how to cook them so that they taste good. Don't need any food. 

This just names a few of the items that will keep the Republic of Texas in good s hape. There isn't a thing out there that we need and don't have. 

Now to the rest of the United States under President Obama: 
Since you won't have the refineries to get gas for your cars, only President Obama will be able to drive around in his big 9 mpg SUV. The rest of the United States will have to walk or ride bikes. 

You won't have any TV as the Space Center in Houston will cut off satellite communications. 

 You won't have any natural gas to heat your homes, but since Mr. Obama has predicted global warming, you will not need the gas as long as you survive the 2000 years it will take to get enough heat from Global Warming. 

Signed, The People of Texas  
 
P.S. This is not a threatening letter - just a note to give you 
something to think about! 
 
SLEEP WELL TONIGHT THE EYES OF TEXAS ARE UPON YOU!! 

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Riding the Dragon

I bought myself a Teal and Black 1998 Honda Valkyrie Tourer last Friday night about 10pm. I had never seen this bike before about 9:30, nor sat my big butt on a Valk before that. I rode that big girl around the neighborhood in Dallas, then rode back and finished the deal.

It took about 20 minutes to get 'er strapped down on the U-haul motorcycle trailer, then 4 hours to get 'er back to Houston.

I gotta say my opinion of this bike changed 30 seconds after starting 'er up. What a machine!

This bike has 8600 miles on 'er and has sat up most of the last 3 or 4 years. The guy I bought 'er from got 'er in a trade and only had 'er long enough to have the carbs worked on and a new Dunlop Elite 3 tire put on the back.

I trailered 'er over to my mechanic to have 'er gone through before I really start riding 'er:

New front tire, air filter, plugs, oil and filter, coolant change, replace the brake and clutch fluid, final drive oil change.

Anything else that jumps out as an issue with so few miles?

I have had Victorys for the last 7 or 8 years. I had a 99, 00, 01 and 02. [What can I say...I am compulsive and I got very good deals!] Anyway, all but the 00 flooded and then burned during Hurricane Ike on Galveston.

Don't get me wrong, I love the Vics, but Victory stopped making all the bikes I liked. So I was looking around... And I wanted something different.

I had stumbled upon Daniel Meyer's articles on line about Darksiding his Valkyrie. That interested me and I took my 02 Victory Touring Cruiser to the Darkside. I loved it and had about 6000 miles on the car tire before I lost the bikes. But in the back of my head I was remembering how much Daniel Meyer liked his Valkyrie. So....
 
Now I have one.  The title?  I have found that Valkyrie riders call the Valks "Dragons".  After test riding mine I understand why now.
 
The pictures below don't do 'er justice, but they at least give you an idea.  She is one beautiful lady.  Even my ex and her daughter think so!
 
 
 
 
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2nd Day of My Fast

Yesterday I had over 1 gallon of water and about 40 oz. of coffee I think.

I have not yet started the vitamins and fiber. I will start this as soon as I can stop at the drug store. I did take typical medicines that I am prescribed to take.

As last time, I was not hungry at all, not for a single second. I did get tired of running to the bathroom all day long. There was one touch and go moment on the long drive home but I found a service station before I exceeded my critical holding capacity.

I feel great. It is all good.

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A New Fast

I have decided to start a new fast today.
 
I did another fast, just about a year ago.  I fasted for 42 days and lost 48 pounds.  It was a fantastic experience and I was never hungry for one moment.  I finally decided to stop the fast over the long New Years Eve weekend, so I would have 4 days to acclimate myself to eating again.
 
Well, it has been almost a year and I have gained miost of the weight back.  So I am going to undertake another fast, this time for longer, unless I experience some negative problem.
 
 My philosophy of fasting is based on the following points:
  1. The natural condition of the human species is hunger, possibly near starvation.
  2. Most of what is known about fasting is either not well understood, not well communicated, or just plain wrong.
  3. The human body was not designed to require a “balanced” diet. In fact, a “balanced” diet is detrimental to the good operation of the human body.
  4. Despite what you hear, during fasting an obese body draws calories from fat rather from lean muscle mass: http://jn.nutrition.org/cgi/content/abstract/112/10/1862
  5. The body needs vitamins, electrolytes and bulk to function properly, even when drawing energy from stored reserves.
  6. Men use about 12 calories per pound to operate their bodies in day to day life, while women use about 11 calories per pound.
  7. A person’s hunger impulse is exacerbated by an empty stomach. Drinking a gallon or more of water or other fluid per day will help minimize this.
  8. The body does really well when it gets a great amount of water. This lets the body dilute waste chemicals appropriately and minimizes retention of water.
  9. When the body is living off of stored fat, it does this by converting this fat into chemicals in the blood called “ketones”. Your body LOVES ketones and will use them for energy before sugar, alcohol or anything else. Tests have shown that your mind literally works faster on ketones. [Don’t confuse this with ketone acidosis which can occur if your body is burning ANY type of energy without enough oxygen.]
This is the program I followed last time - very successfully.
Morning
  1. Drink 16 oz of water with 2 tablespoons of fiber. 
  2. Have a couple of cups of coffee or tea.
  3. Take a multi-vitamin, a B-complex vitamin, a couple of aspirins. Any other medicine you need to take.

During the Day

  1. Total for the day, drink a minimum of 1 gallon of fluids, preferably 1 ½ gallons. Coffee or tea is ok.
  2. Feel free to take a vitamin or an aspirin, whatever other medicines you need.
  3. Drink a sugar free electrolyte drink, like Replinish.

Evening

  1. Continue to drink more fluids, as much as is comfortable
  2. Take a multi-vitamin, a B-complex vitamin, a couple of aspirins. Any other medicine you need to take.

I will try to update this blog to advise how things are going.

 
 
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8 Foot Miracle on Galveston, TX.

 

I have not written about it here before but I had some problems in the recent Hurricane Ike that hit Galveston, Texas. At first, I was not going to leave the island. Hell, it was only a Level 2 Hurricane. What is the big deal? Seriously, the island gets brushed by hurricanes just about every year and there is almost never much of a problem.

But, I figured I would not have power for 3 or 4 days and that is no fun. So, I put up the storm shutters to keep the windows from being broken. I got the 2 cats and made sure they had enough food and water to last a week. I made sure to lock the kitty door so they couldn’t get out into the weather. I packed a suitcase and left the island to go stay with my ex-wife who was kind enough to offer to let me stay there. 

So about 2 pm Friday I left the island. Hmmmmm. I noticed that the tide was up quite a bit as I was leaving. Well, there WAS a hurricane on the way, so no big deal, right?

Well, the hurricane hit late that night around midnight, I think. It turned out to be a BIG storm, affecting a huge area of southeast Texas, including where I was staying at the ex’s house. So, no power. No Power all day Saturday, either. 

And apparently a fair portion of the island had gotten water in the houses. That had NEVER happened in that house in 60 years so I was only a little worried, but…

Sunday, they were apparently NOT allowing residents back on the island. But I drove down anyway, and sold the cop on the (true) story that I had 2 cats in my house I needed to rescue. He asked me what I was thinking leaving them during a hurricane, but he let me on.

As I drove toward the house, I could see some sign that there had been quite a bit of water on the island, finally seeing waterlines on the outside of some of the buildings…maybe as much as 5 feet of water! But, not in our house, surely!

So I finally got to our street, 3 blocks away, I could see residue from the storm on steps of the houses…dang. 

Finally, I get to our block and there are waterlines on the outsides of a couple of houses…5 feet high. Oh my.

As I come up on my house, I look through the clump of trees in the front yard…what the heck is that on the front porch?

It is the roof of the front porch. The house not only flooded…it burned to the ground.

I stop my pickup and sit there literally open-mouthed, just gaping. Let me tell you, the last thing you expect to find when inspecting your hurricane ravaged house is that it flooded AND burned. It just leaves you confused, befuddled. Can’t think straight.

Literally, everything in the world that I owned was destroyed, except one small suitcase full of shirts and underwear.

Then it hit me. I had locked my 2 cats in that house. Trying to keep them safe from bad weather I had ensured their death either from drowning or the fire. That was a hard thing.

Losing everything I owned is one thing. I estimate it was probably $100,000 to $150,000 worth of stuff. But it was just stuff. I can get more stuff. 

But I had just killed my cats.

Let me explain something. In my opinion, when you take a pet, you accept the responsibility to provide and care for them. It is not like kids, but they are poor dumb animals that love you and you owe them the best you can reasonably do for them.

I had tried to do right by them, or thought so, but I had failed about as miserably as it is possible to do. It is hard to describe how badly I felt.

I left the island and was not allowed back on the island by city officials for 10 days. There are a lot of other things going on at this time, but I am going to stay on this story line.

After 10 days, my ex and I drove back on the island. We drove by the house, both open-mouthed this time. We spoke to a neighbor who was there cleaning up his property. Much to our surprise, he said he had seen our orange and white cat “Fat Cat”! He was feeding a number of cats on his porch as he was the only person in the neighborhood living there at the time. And Fat Cat was one of them! I am stunned.

I KNOW I “cat-proofed” the house. I shuttered the windows. I locked the people doors. And I KNOW I locked the kitty door. There is no way this cat could have gotten out. 

But we drive around the neighborhood, over to where he is feeding the cats, and my ex SEES Fat Cat! We can’t catch him, but she sees him.

Long and complex story skipped here. I set a live-trap for the cat, visit the island every day to check and re-set the trap. About 3 weeks pass and I catch 3 other cats, 2 opossums, but no Fat Cat. Finally, I set the trap and walk across the street to talk to another neighbor, who says he is pretty sure he has seen our black cat “Ashes”! I am thinking, “Wow is that possible?”, when I SEE Fat Cat across the street in the yard where the trap is. I ease over to him, calling and talking to him. After a minute, he comes to me! I put him in the truck and we go to the ex’s house, Celebrations all around!

But now I have another mission. I have to find Ashes. So I reset the trap, checking every day. No Ashes. Another cat, another opossum, no Ashes.

Another 3 weeks or so goes by, almost 2 months since the hurricane. I am wearied by these cat-trap trips, but not bowed. But I get sick for about a week. I am working 10 hour days and driving a total of about 4 hours a day, and I am just worn out.

So I miss the trips for about a week.

Last weekend the ex meets a childhood friend returned from California who is in to visit the island where her folks still live and to help them rebuild. This is 2 months after Hurricane Ike devastated Galveston Island. The ex and friend drive by the burned-out house, walk around…and there is Ashes! The ex eases over to her, calling and talking, and catches Ashes! So ex and friend box the cat up and put her in the car and she returns home. Celebrations all around!

So here is the deal. Yeah, we were hit pretty bad with the hurricane. I lose my stuff, all replaceable, but….we get back our cats.

I don’t know how they got out. Maybe the wind blew off a shutter and broke a window. Maybe I got mixed up and screwed up locking the kitty door, although I double checked it.

As far as I am concerned, God reached down and saved the lives of these two beloved pets. That is all I can say. Two cats x four feet per cat = 8 feet of miracle on Galveston Island.
 
Dear Lord
 
Thank you for watching over us
For the sea is so wide and our boat is so small.
 
Amen.
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The NEW Republican Party - per Ronald Reagan Feb. 6 1977

Remember that this was written while Jimmy Carter was President and Russia was still the USSR.  There was still a wall in Berlin.  Despite this, the thinking about what needs to be done to turn around the Republican Party has already been done...by someone who made it work.+
 
 

The New Republican Party

Governor Ronald Reagan (R-CA)

Conservative Political Action Conference

Washington, DC

February 6, 1977

I’m happy to be back with you in this annual event after missing last year’s meeting. I had some business in New Hampshire that wouldn’t wait.

Three weeks ago here in our nation’s capital I told a group of conservative scholars that we are currently in the midst of a re-ordering of the political realities that have shaped our time. We know today that the principles and values that lie at the heart of conservatism are shared by the majority.

Despite what some in the press may say, we who are proud to call ourselves “conservative” are not a minority of a minority party; we are part of the great majority of Americans of both major parties and of most of the independents as well.

A Harris poll released September 7, 1975 showed 18 percent identifying themselves as liberal and 31 percent as conservative, with 41 percent as middle of the road; a few months later, on January 5, 1976, by a 43-19 plurality, those polled by Harris said they would “prefer to see the country move in a more conservative direction than a liberal one.”

Last October 24th, the Gallup organization released the result of a poll taken right in the midst of the presidential campaign.

Respondents were asked to state where they would place themselves on a scale ranging from “right-of-center” (which was defined as “conservative”) to left-of-center (which was defined as “liberal”).

  • Thirty-seven percent viewed themselves as left-of-center or liberal
  • Twelve percent placed themselves in the middle
  • Fifty-one percent said they were right-of-center, that is, conservative.

What I find interesting about this particular poll is that it offered those polled a range of choices on a left-right continuum. This seems to me to be a more realistic approach than dividing the world into strict left and rights. Most of us, I guess, like to think of ourselves as avoiding both extremes, and the fact that a majority of Americans chose one or the other position on the right end of the spectrum is really impressive.

Those polls confirm that most Americans are basically conservative in their outlook. But once we have said this, we conservatives have not solved our problems, we have merely stated them clearly. Yes, conservatism can and does mean different things to those who call themselves conservatives.

You know, as I do, that most commentators make a distinction between [what] they call “social” conservatism and “economic” conservatism. The so-called social issues—law and order, abortion, busing, quota systems—are usually associated with blue-collar, ethnic and religious groups themselves traditionally associated with the Democratic Party. The economic issues—inflation, deficit spending and big government—are usually associated with Republican Party members and independents who concentrate their attention on economic matters.

Now I am willing to accept this view of two major kinds of conservatism—or, better still, two different conservative constituencies. But at the same time let me say that the old lines that once clearly divided these two kinds of conservatism are disappearing.

In fact, the time has come to see if it is possible to present a program of action based on political principle that can attract those interested in the so-called “social” issues and those interested in “economic” issues. In short, isn’t it possible to combine the two major segments of contemporary American conservatism into one politically effective whole?

I believe the answer is: Yes, it is possible to create a political entity that will reflect the views of the great, hitherto [unacknowledged], conservative majority. We went a long way toward doing it in California. We can do it in America. This is not a dream, a wistful hope. It is and has been a reality. I have seen the conservative future and it works.

Let me say again what I said to our conservative friends from the academic world: What I envision is not simply a melding together of the two branches of American conservatism into a temporary uneasy alliance, but the creation of a new, lasting majority.

This will mean compromise. But not a compromise of basic principle. What will emerge will be something new: something open and vital and dynamic, something the great conservative majority will recognize as its own, because at the heart of this undertaking is principled politics.

I have always been puzzled by the inability of some political and media types to understand exactly what is meant by adherence to political principle. All too often in the press and the television evening news it is treated as a call for “ideological purity.” Whatever ideology may mean—and it seems to mean a variety of things, depending upon who is using it—it always conjures up in my mind a picture of a rigid, irrational clinging to abstract theory in the face of reality. We have to recognize that in this country “ideology” is a scare word. And for good reason. Marxist-Leninism is, to give but one example, an ideology. All the facts of the real world have to be fitted to the Procrustean bed of Marx and Lenin. If the facts don’t happen to fit the ideology, the facts are chopped off and discarded.

I consider this to be the complete opposite to principled conservatism. If there is any political viewpoint in this world which is free from slavish adherence to abstraction, it is American conservatism.

When a conservative states that the free market is the best mechanism ever devised by the mind of man to meet material needs, he is merely stating what a careful examination of the real world has told him is the truth.

When a conservative says that totalitarian Communism is an absolute enemy of human freedom he is not theorizing—he is reporting the ugly reality captured so unforgettably in the writings of Alexander Solzhenitsyn.

When a conservative says it is bad for the government to spend more than it takes in, he is simply showing the same common sense that tells him to come in out of the rain.

When a conservative says that busing does not work, he is not appealing to some theory of education—he is merely reporting what he has seen down at the local school.

When a conservative quotes Jefferson that government that is closest to the people is best, it is because he knows that Jefferson risked his life, his fortune and his sacred honor to make certain that what he and his fellow patriots learned from experience was not crushed by an ideology of empire.

Conservatism is the antithesis of the kind of ideological fanaticism that has brought so much horror and destruction to the world. The common sense and common decency of ordinary men and women, working out their own lives in their own way—this is the heart of American conservatism today. Conservative wisdom and principles are derived from willingness to learn, not just from what is going on now, but from what has happened before.

The principles of conservatism are sound because they are based on what men and women have discovered through experience in not just one generation or a dozen, but in all the combined experience of mankind. When we conservatives say that we know something about political affairs, and that we know can be stated as principles, we are saying that the principles we hold dear are those that have been found, through experience, to be ultimately beneficial for individuals, for families, for communities and for nations—found through the often bitter testing of pain, or sacrifice and sorrow.

One thing that must be made clear in post-Watergate is this: The American new conservative majority we represent is not based on abstract theorizing of the kind that turns off the American people, but on common sense, intelligence, reason, hard work, faith in God, and the guts to say: “Yes, there are things we do strongly believe in, that we are willing to live for, and yes, if necessary, to die for.” That is not “ideological purity.” It is simply what built this country and kept it great.

Let us lay to rest, once and for all, the myth of a small group of ideological purists trying to capture a majority. Replace it with the reality of a majority trying to assert its rights against the tyranny of powerful academics, fashionable left-revolutionaries, some economic illiterates who happen to hold elective office and the social engineers who dominate the dialogue and set the format in political and social affairs. If there is any ideological fanaticism in American political life, it is to be found among the enemies of freedom on the left or right—those who would sacrifice principle to theory, those who worship only the god of political, social and economic abstractions, ignoring the realities of everyday life. They are not conservatives.

Our first job is to get this message across to those who share most of our principles. If we allow ourselves to be portrayed as ideological shock troops without correcting this error we are doing ourselves and our cause a disservice. Wherever and whenever we can, we should gently but firmly correct our political and media friends who have been perpetuating the myth of conservatism as a narrow ideology. Whatever the word may have meant in the past, today conservatism means principles evolving from experience and a belief in change when necessary, but not just for the sake of change.

Once we have established this, the next question is: What will be the political vehicle by which the majority can assert its rights?

I have to say I cannot agree with some of my friends—perhaps including some of you here tonight—who have answered that question by saying this nation needs a new political party.

I respect that view and I know that those who have reached it have done so after long hours of study. But I believe that political success of the principles we believe in can best be achieved in the Republican Party. I believe the Republican Party can hold and should provide the political mechanism through which the goals of the majority of Americans can be achieved. For one thing, the biggest single grouping of conservatives is to be found in that party. It makes more sense to build on that grouping than to break it up and start over.

Rather than a third party, we can have a new first party made up of people who share our principles. I have said before that if a formal change in name proves desirable, then so be it. But tonight, for purpose of discussion, I’m going to refer to it simply as the New Republican Party.

And let me say so there can be no mistakes as to what I mean: The New Republican Party I envision will not be, and cannot, be one limited to the country club-big business image that, for reasons both fair and unfair, it is burdened with today. The New Republican Party I am speaking about is going to have room for the man and the woman in the factories, for the farmer, for the cop on the beat and the millions of Americans who may never have thought of joining our party before, but whose interests coincide with those represented by principled Republicanism. If we are to attract more working men and women of this country, we will do so not by simply “making room” for them, but by making certain they have a say in what goes on in the party. The Democratic Party turned its back on the majority of social conservatives during the 1960s. The New Republican Party of the late ’70s and ’80s must welcome them, seek them out, enlist them, not only as rank-and-file members but as leaders and as candidates.

The time has come for Republicans to say to black voters: “Look, we offer principles that black Americans can, and do, support.” We believe in jobs, real jobs; we believe in education that is really education; we believe in treating all Americans as individuals and not as stereotypes or voting blocs—and we believe that the long-range interest of black Americans lies in looking at what each major party has to offer, and then deciding on the merits. The Democratic Party takes the black vote for granted. Well, it’s time black America and the New Republican Party move toward each other and create a situation in which no black vote can be taken for granted.

The New Republican Party I envision is one that will energetically seek out the best candidates for every elective office, candidates who not only agree with, but understand, and are willing to fight for a sound, honest economy, for the interests of American families and neighborhoods and communities and a strong national defense. And these candidates must be able to communicate those principles to the American people in language they understand. Inflation isn’t a textbook problem. Unemployment isn’t a textbook problem.   They should be discussed in human terms.

Our candidates must be willing to communicate with every level of society, because the principles we espouse are universal and cut across traditional lines. In every Congressional district there should be a search made for young men and women who share these principles and they should be brought into positions of leadership in the local Republican Party groups. We can find attractive, articulate candidates if we look, and when we find them, we will begin to change the sorry state of affairs that has led to a Democratic-controlled Congress for more than 40 years. I need not remind you that you can have the soundest principles in the world, but if you don’t have candidates who can communicate those principles, candidates who are articulate as well as principled, you are going to lose election after election. I refuse to believe that the good Lord divided this world into Republicans who defend basic values and Democrats who win elections. We have to find tough, bright young men and women who are sick and tired of cliches and the pomposity and the mind-numbing economic idiocy of the liberals in Washington.

It is at this point, however, that we come across a question that is really the essential one: What will be the basis of this New Republican Party? To what set of values and principles can our candidates appeal? Where can Americans who want to know where we stand look for guidance?

Fortunately, we have an answer to that question. That answer was provided last summer by the men and women of the Republican Party—not just the leadership, but the ones who have built the party on local levels all across the country.

The answer was provided in the 1976 platform of the Republican Party.

This was not a document handed down from on high. It was hammered out in free and open debate among all those who care about our party and the principles it stands for.

The Republican platform is unique. Unlike any other party platform I have ever seen, it answers not only programmatic questions for the immediate future of the party but also provides a clear outline of the underlying principles upon which those programs are based.

The New Republican Party can and should use the Republican platform of 1976 as the major source from which a Declaration of Principles can be created and offered to the American people.

Tonight I want to offer to you my own version of what such a declaration might look like. I make no claim to originality. This declaration I propose is relatively short, taken, for most part, word for word from the Republican platform. It concerns itself with basic principles, not with specific solutions.

We, the members of the New Republican Party, believe that the preservation and enhancement of the values that strengthen and protect individual freedom, family life, communities and neighborhoods and the liberty of our beloved nation should be at the heart of any legislative or political program presented to the American people. Toward that end, we, therefore, commit ourselves to the following propositions and offer them to each American believing that the New Republican Party, based on such principles, will serve the interest of all the American people.

We believe that liberty can be measured by how much freedom Americans have to make their own decisions, even their own mistakes. Government must step in when one’s liberties impinge on one’s neighbor’s. Government must protect constitutional rights, deal with other governments, protect citizens from aggressors, assure equal opportunity, and be compassionate in caring for those citizens who are unable to care for themselves.

Our federal system of local-state-national government is designed to sort out on what level these actions should be taken. Those concerns of a national character—such as air and water pollution that do not respect state boundaries, or the national transportation system, or efforts to safeguard your civil liberties—must, of course, be handled on the national level.

As a general rule, however, we believe that government action should be taken first by the government that resides as close to you as possible.

We also believe that Americans, often acting through voluntary organizations, should have the opportunity to solve many of the social problems of their communities. This spirit of freely helping others is uniquely American and should be encouraged in every way by government.

Families must continue to be the foundation of our nation.

Families—not government programs—are the best way to make sure our children are properly nurtured, our elderly are cared for, our cultural and spiritual heritages are perpetuated, our laws are observed and our values are preserved.

Thus it is imperative that our government’s programs, actions, officials and social welfare institutions never be allowed to jeopardize the family. We fear the government may be powerful enough to destroy our families; we know that it is not powerful enough to replace them. The New Republican Party must be committed to working always in the interest of the American family.

Every dollar spent by government is a dollar earned by individuals. Government must always ask: Are your dollars being wisely spent? Can we afford it? Is it not better for the country to leave your dollars in your pocket?

Elected officials, their appointees, and government workers are expected to perform their public acts with honesty, openness, diligence, and special integrity.

Government must work for the goal of justice and the elimination of unfair practices, but no government has yet designed a more productive economic system or one which benefits as many people as the American market system.

The beauty of our land is our legacy to our children. It must be protected by us so that they can pass it on intact to their children.

The United States must always stand for peace and liberty in the world and the rights of the individual. We must form sturdy partnerships with our allies for the preservation of freedom.

We must be ever willing to negotiate differences, but equally mindful that there are

American ideals that cannot be compromised. Given that there are other nations with potentially hostile design, we recognize that we can reach our goals only while maintaining a superior national defense, second to none.

In his inaugural speech President Carter said that he saw the world “dominated by a new spirit.” He said, and I quote: “The passion for freedom is on the rise.”

Well, I don’t know how he knows this, but if it is true, then it is the most unrequited passion in human history. The world is being dominated by a new spirit, all right, but it isn’t the spirit of freedom.

It isn’t very often you see a familiar object that shocks and frightens you. But the other day I came across a map of the world created by Freedom House, an organization monitoring the state of freedom in the world for the past 25 years. It is an ordinary map, with one exception: it shows the world’s nations in white for free, shaded for partly free and black for not free.

Almost all of the great Eurasian land mass is completely colored black, from the western border of East Germany, through middle and eastern Europe, through the awesome spaces of the Soviet Union, on to the Bering Strait in the north, down past the immensity of China, still further down to Vietnam and the South China Sea—in all that huge, sprawling, inconceivably immense area not a single political or personal or religious freedom exists. The entire continent of Africa, from the Mediterranean to the Cape of Good Hope, from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean, all that vastness is almost totally unfree. In the tiny nation of Tanzania alone, according to a report in the New York Times, there are 3,000 people in detention for political crimes—that is more than the total being held in South Africa! The Mideast has only one free state: Israel. If a visitor from another planet were to approach earth, and if this planet showed free nations in light and unfree nations in darkness, the pitifully small beacons of light would make him wonder what was hidden in that terrifying, enormous blackness.

We know what is hidden: Gulag. Torture. Families—and human beings—broken apart. No free press, no freedom of religion. The ancient forms of tyranny revived and made even more hideous and strong through what Winston Churchill once called “a perverted science.”

Men rotting for years in solitary confinement because they have different political and economic beliefs, solitary confinement that drives the fortunate ones insane and makes the survivors wish for death.

Only now and then do we in the West hear a voice from out of that darkness. Then there is silence—the silence of human slavery. There is no more terrifying sound in human experience, with one possible exception. Look at that map again. The very heart of the darkness is the Soviet Union and from that heart comes a different sound. It is the whirring sound of machinery and the whisper of the computer technology we ourselves have sold them. It is the sound of building, building of the strongest military machine ever devised by man. Our military strategy is designed to hopefully prevent a war. Theirs is designed to win one. A group of eminent scientists, scholars and intelligence experts offer a survey showing that the Soviet Union is driving for military superiority and are derided as hysterically

making, quote, “a worst case,” unquote, concerning Soviet intentions and capabilities.

But is it not precisely the duty of the national government to be prepared for the worst case? Two Senators, after studying the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, have reported to the Armed Forces Committee that Soviet forces in Eastern Europe have the capability to launch, with little warning, a “potentially devastating” attack in Central Europe from what is termed a “standing alert.”

Reading their report, one can almost see the enormous weight of the parts of the earth that are under tyranny shifting in an irresistible tilt toward that tiny portion of land in freedom’s light. Even now in Western Europe we have Communists in the government of Italy, France appeasing terrorists, and England—for centuries the model or the sword of freedom in Western Europe—weak, dispirited, turning inward.

A “worst case”? How could you make a good case out of the facts as they are known? The Soviet Union, poised on the edge of free Europe, capable of striking from a standing start, has modern tanks in far greater numbers than the outmoded vehicles of NATO. We have taken comfort from NATO’s superiority in the air, but now the Soviet Union has made a dramatic swing away from its historic defensive air posture to one capable of supporting offensive action. NATO’s southern flank is described in the Senate report with a single word: shambles.

The report is simply reality as it was, with different names and faces, in Europe in the late 1930s when so many refused to believe and thought if we don’t look the threat will go away.

We don’t want hysteria. We don’t want distortion of Soviet power. We want truth. And above all we want peace. And to have [recognition] that the United States has to immediately re-examine its entire view of the world and develop a strategy of freedom. We cannot be the second-best super-power for the simple reason that he who is second is last.

In this deadly game, there are no silver medals for second.

President Carter, as a candidate, said he would cut five to seven billion dollars from the defense budget. We must let him know that while we agree, there must be no fat in our armed forces. Those armed forces must be capable of coping with the new reality presented to us by the Russians, and cutting seven billion dollars out of our defense budget is not the way to accomplish this. Some years ago, a young President said, we will make any sacrifice, bear any burden, and we will, to preserve our freedom.

Our relationship with mainland China is clouded. The so-called “Gang of Four” are up one day and down the next and we are seeing the pitfalls of making deals with charismatic personalities and living legends. The charisma fades as the living legends die, and those who take their place are interested not in our best wishes but in power. The keyword for China today is turmoil. We should watch and observe and analyze as closely and rationally as we can.

But in our relationships with the mainland of China we should always remember that the conditions and possibilities for and the realities of freedom exist to an infinitely greater degree with our Chinese friends in Taiwan. We can never go wrong if we do what is morally right, and the moral way—the honorable way—is to keep our commitment, our solemn promise to the people of Taiwan. Our liberal friends have made much of the lack of freedom in some Latin American countries. Senator Edward Kennedy and his colleagues here in Washington let no opportunity pass to let us know about horrors in Chile.

Well, I think when the United States of America is considering a deal with a country that hasn’t had an election in almost eight years, where the press is under the thumb of a dictatorship, where ordinary citizens are abducted in the night by secret police, where military domination of the country is known to be harsh on dissenters and when these things are documented, we should reject overtures from those who rule such a country.

But the country I’m describing is not Chile—it is Panama.

We are negotiating with a dictatorship that comes within the portion of that map colored black for no freedom. No civil rights. One-man rule. No free press.

Candidate Carter said he would never relinquish “actual control” of the Panama Canal.

President Carter is negotiating with a dictatorship whose record on civil and human rights is as I have just described and the negotiations concern the rights guaranteed to us by treaty which we will give up under a threat of violence. In only a few weeks we will mark the second anniversary of the death of freedom for the Vietnamese. An estimated 300,000 of them are being “re-educated” in concentration camps to forget about freedom.

There is only one major question on the agenda of national priorities and that is the state of our national security. I refer, of course, to the state of our armed forces—but also to our state of mind, to the way we perceive the world. We cannot maintain the strength we need to survive, no matter how many missiles we have, no matter how many tanks we build, unless we are willing to reverse:

The trend of deteriorating faith in and continuing abuse of our national intelligence agencies. Let’s stop the sniping and the propaganda and the historical revisionism and let

the CIA and the other intelligence agencies do their job!

Let us reverse the trend of public indifference to problems of national security. In every congressional district citizens should join together, enlist and educate neighbors and make certain that congressmen know we care. The front pages of major newspapers on the East Coast recently headlined and told in great detail of a takeover, the takeover of a magazine published in New York—not a nation losing its freedom. You would think, from the attention it received in the media, that it was a matter of blazing national interest whether the magazine lived or died. The tendency of much of the media to ignore the state of our

national security is too well documented for me to go on.

My friends, the time has come to start acting to bring about the great conservative majority party we know is waiting to be created.

And just to set the record straight, let me say this about our friends who are now Republicans but who do not identify themselves as conservatives: I want the record to show that I do not view the new revitalized Republican Party as one based on a principle of exclusion. After all, you do not get to be a majority party by searching for groups you won’t associate or work with. If we truly believe in our principles, we should sit down and talk.

Talk with anyone, anywhere, at any time if it means talking about the principles for the Republican Party. Conservatism is not a narrow ideology, nor is it the exclusive property of conservative activists.

We’ve succeeded better than we know. Little more than a decade ago more than two-thirds of Americans believed the federal government could solve all our problems, and do so

without restricting our freedom or bankrupting the nation.

We warned of things to come, of the danger inherent in unwarranted government involvement in things not its proper province. What we warned against has come to pass.

And today more than two-thirds of our citizens are telling us, and each other, that social engineering by the federal government has failed. The Great Society is great only in power, in size and in cost. And so are the problems it set out to solve. Freedom has been diminished and we stand on the brink of economic ruin.

Our task now is not to sell a philosophy, but to make the majority of Americans, who already share that philosophy, see that modern conservatism offers them a political home.

We are not a cult, we are members of a majority. Let’s act and talk like it.

The job is ours and the job must be done. If not by us, who? If not now, when?

Our party must be the party of the individual. It must not sell out the individual to cater to the group. No greater challenge faces our society today than ensuring that each one of us can maintain his dignity and his identity in an increasingly complex, centralized society.

Extreme taxation, excessive controls, oppressive government competition with business, galloping inflation, frustrated minorities and forgotten Americans are not the products of free enterprise. They are the residue of centralized bureaucracy, of government by a self-anointed elite.

Our party must be based on the kind of leadership that grows and takes its strength from the people. Any organization is in actuality only the lengthened shadow of its members. A political party is a mechanical structure created to further a cause. The cause, not the mechanism, brings and holds the members together. And our cause must be to rediscover, reassert and reapply America’s spiritual heritage to our national affairs.

Then with God’s help we shall indeed be as a city upon a hill with the eyes of all people upon us.

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Clothespin Republican

Let's walk carefully here.

Let me say that I have been a Conservative since Richard Nixon's last campaign. I wrote in Ronald Reagan. As I grew a bit older I considered myself more of a Libertarian. Now as I mature further, I have become what I term a Libertarian Conservative.
It galls me that the Republican candidate for President expresses so many ideals of the Democrat party, apparently really considered being John Kerry's running mate and sticks his thumb in the eye of Conservatives every chance he gets.

Don't get me wrong, I will vote for him. But I have started a new wing of the Republican Party. I am what I call a Clothespin Republican. I will vote for him, but I have to hold my nose as I do so.

I am concerned that many, many core Republican voters will not be so forgiving as I am.  A clothespin just may not be enough.
 
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Celebrate the 4th by Exercising your 2nd!

 

If you haven't got anything planned, or even if you do, the 4th of July would be a wonderful day to get the kids or the grandkids and the wife and head to the range and exercise YOUR Right to Keep and Bear Arms.

Maybe you go a couple of times a week, or maybe it has been a couple of years since you have been, but taking the family out and making them more comfortable and capable with firearms will be a fun and educational experience.  I took my 14 year old son, 16 year old daughter and her boyfriend, and my ex-wife out yesterday and they all just enjoyed the heck out of it. 

If you have never taken them, it is an even better time.  You can discuss the reasons why our Founding Fathers felt this was a vital part of their own freedom, and why it remains so today.  AND do discuss the significance of the recent Supreme Court decision that owning a handgun is an INDIVIDUAL right.  Duh!

Heck, you may never have been yourself.  Well, it will never get any cheaper nor more important than 4 July, 2008.  There will be lots of stores open that would be glad to sell you ammo or even a shiny new gun for you, your wife or even the kids and grandkids.  I very much support the local stores in your own neighborhood, but often even Walmart stocks guns.  If you have never bought a gun before, you can't go wrong with a new Marlin Model 60 22 rifle or maybe a Ruger Model 10/22.  I recommend the stainless for ease of maintenance, but the blue guns are sweet, also.

Don't think about it, just get up and do it.

And let me ask you to do something else.  Post something similar on a couple of other websites.  Or maybe even a link to this one.  It would be great for the country if the turnout was so big you had to spend a few minutes chatting with your neighbor at the range before you and your son or daughter got a chance to punch a few holes.

Remember that the 2nd Amendment has just been adjudicated an individual right, and one you could lose if you don't exercise it and remember it when you next vote.
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Let Them Go Their Way - Ronald Reagan 1975

Let Them Go Their Way

Governor Ronald Reagan (R-CA)

Conservative Political Action Conference

Washington, DC

March 1, 1975
 
Since our last meeting we have been through a disastrous election. It is easy for us to be discouraged, as pundits hail that election as a repudiation of our philosophy and even as a mandate of some kind or other. But the significance of the election was not registered by those who voted, but by those who stayed home. If there was anything like a mandate it will be found among almost two-thirds of the citizens who refused to participate.

Bitter as it is to accept the results of the November election, we should have reason for some optimism. For many years now we have preached “the gospel,” in opposition to the philosophy of so-called liberalism which was, in truth, a call to collectivism.

Now, it is possible we have been persuasive to a greater degree than we had ever realized. Few, if any, Democratic party candidates in the last election ran as liberals. Listening to them I had the eerie feeling we were hearing reruns of Goldwater speeches. I even thought I heard a few of my own.

Bureaucracy was assailed and fiscal responsibility hailed. Even George McGovern donned sackcloth and ashes and did penance for the good people of South Dakota.

But let’s not be so naive as to think we are witnessing a mass conversion to the principles of conservatism. Once sworn into office, the victors reverted to type. In their view, apparently, the ends justified the means.

The “Young Turks” had campaigned against “evil politicians.” They turned against committee chairmen of their own party, displaying a taste and talent as cutthroat power politicians quite in contrast to their campaign rhetoric and idealism. Still, we must not forget that they molded their campaigning to fit what even they recognized was the mood of the majority.

And we must see to it that the people are reminded of this as they now pursue their ideological goals—and pursue them they will.

I know you are aware of the national polls which show that a greater (and increasing) number of Americans—Republicans, Democrats and independents—classify themselves as “conservatives” than ever before. And a poll of rank-and-file union members reveals dissatisfaction with the amount of power their own leaders have assumed, and a resentment of their use of that power for partisan politics. Would it shock you to know that in that poll 68 percent of rank-and-file union members of this country came out endorsing right-to-work legislation?

These polls give cause for some optimism, but at the same time reveal a confusion that exists and the need for a continued effort to “spread the word.”

In another recent survey, of 35,000 college and university students polled, three-fourths blame American business and industry for all of our economic and social ills. The same three-fourths think the answer is more (and virtually complete) regimentation and government control of all phases of business—including the imposition of wage and price controls. Yet, 80 percent in the same poll want less government interference in their own lives!

In 1972 the people of this country had a clear-cut choice, based on the issues—to a greater extent than any election in half a century. In overwhelming numbers they ignored party labels, not so much to vote for a man or even a policy as to repudiate a philosophy. In doing so they repudiated that final step into the welfare state—that call for the confiscation and redistribution of their earnings on a scale far greater than what we now have. They repudiated the abandonment of national honor and a weakening of this nation’s ability to protect itself.

A study has been made that is so revealing that I’m not surprised it has been ignored by a certain number of political commentators and columnists. The political science department of Georgetown University researched the mandate of the 1972 election and recently presented its findings at a seminar.

Taking several major issues which, incidentally, are still the issues of the day, they polled rank-and-file members of the Democratic party on their approach to these problems. Then they polled the delegates to the two major national conventions—the leaders of the parties.

They found the delegates to the Republican convention almost identical in their responses to those of the rank-and-file Republicans. Yet, the delegates to the Democratic convention were miles apart from the thinking of their own party members.

The mandate of 1972 still exists. The people of America have been confused and disturbed by events since that election, but they hold an unchanged philosophy.

Our task is to make them see that what we represent is identical to their own hopes and dreams of what America can and should be. If there are questions as to whether the principles of conservatism hold up in practice, we have the answers to them. Where conservative principles have been tried, they have worked. Gov. Meldrim Thomson is making them work in New Hampshire; so is Arch Moore in West Virginia and Mills Godwin in Virginia. Jack Williams made them work in Arizona and I’m sure Jim Edwards will in South Carolina.

If you will permit me, I can recount my own experience in California.

When I went to Sacramento eight years ago, I had the belief that government was no deep, dark mystery, that it could be operated efficiently by using the same common sense practiced in our everyday life, in our homes, in business and private affairs.

The “lab test” of my theory – California—was pretty messed up after eight years of a road show version of the Great Society. Our first and only briefing came from the outgoing director of finance, who said: “We’re spending $1 million more a day than we’re taking in. I have a golf date. Good luck!” That was the most cheerful news we were to hear for quite some time.

California state government was increasing by about 5,000 new employees a year. We were the welfare capital of the world with 16 percent of the nation’s caseload. Soon, California’s caseload was increasing by 40,000 a month.

We turned to the people themselves for help. Two hundred and fifty experts in the various fields volunteered to serve on task forces at no cost to the taxpayers. They went into every department of state government and came back with 1,800 recommendations on how modern business practices could be used to make government more efficient. We adopted 1,600 of them.

We instituted a policy of “cut, squeeze and trim” and froze the hiring of employees as replacements for retiring employees or others leaving state service.

After a few years of struggling with the professional welfarists, we again turned to the people. First, we obtained another task force and, when the legislature refused to help implement its recommendations, we presented the recommendations to the electorate.

It still took some doing. The legislature insisted our reforms would not work; that the needy would starve in the streets; that the workload would be dumped on the counties; that property taxes would go up and that we’d run up a deficit the first year of $750 million.

That was four years ago. Today, the needy have had an average increase of 43 percent in welfare grants in California, but the taxpayers have saved $2 billion by the caseload not increasing that 40,000 a month. Instead, there are some 400,000 fewer on welfare today

than then.

Forty of the state’s 58 counties have reduced property taxes for two years in a row (some for three). That $750-million deficit turned into an $850-million surplus which we returned to the people in a one-time tax rebate. That wasn’t easy. One state senator described that rebate as “an unnecessary expenditure of public funds.”

For more than two decades governments—federal, state, local—have been increasing in size two-and-a-half times faster than the population increase. In the last 10 years they have increased the cost in payroll seven times as fast as the increase in numbers.

We have just turned over to a new administration in Sacramento a government virtually the same size it was eight years ago. With the state’s growth rate, this means that government absorbed a workload increase, in some departments as much as 66 percent.

We also turned over—for the first time in almost a quarter of a century—a balanced budget and a surplus of $500 million. In these eight years just passed, we returned to the people in rebates, tax reductions and bridge toll reductions $5.7 billion. All of this is contrary to the will of those who deplore conservatism and profess to be liberals, yet all of it is pleasing to its citizenry.

Make no mistake, the leadership of the Democratic party is still out of step with the majority of Americans.

Speaker Carl Albert recently was quoted as saying that our problem is “60 percent recession, 30 percent inflation and 10 percent energy.” That makes as much sense as saying two and two make 22.

Without inflation there would be no recession. And unless we curb inflation we can see the end of our society and economic system. The painful fact is we can only halt inflation by undergoing a period of economic dislocation—a recession, if you will.

We can take steps to ease the suffering of some who will be hurt more than others, but if we turn from fighting inflation and adopt a program only to fight recession we are on the road to disaster.

In his first address to Congress, the president asked Congress to join him in an all-out effort to balance the budget. I think all of us wish that he had re-issued that speech instead of this year’s budget message.

What side can be taken in a debate over whether the deficit should be $52 billion or $70 billion or $80 billion preferred by the profligate Congress?

Inflation has one cause and one cause only: government spending more than government takes in. And the cure to inflation is a balanced budget. We know, of course, that after 40 years of social tinkering and Keynesian experimentation that we can’t do this all at once, but it can be achieved. Balancing the budget is like protecting your virtue: you have to learn to say “no.”

This is no time to repeat the shopworn panaceas of the New Deal, the Fair Deal and the Great Society. John Kenneth Galbraith, who, in my opinion, is living proof that economics is an inexact science, has written a new book. It is called “Economics and the Public Purpose.” In it, he asserts that market arrangements in our economy have given us inadequate housing, terrible mass transit, poor health care and a host of other miseries. And then, for the first time to my knowledge, he advances socialism as the answer to our problems.

Shorn of all side issues and extraneous matter, the problem underlying all others is the worldwide contest for the hearts and minds of mankind. Do we find the answers to human misery in freedom as it is known, or do we sink into the deadly dullness of the Socialist ant heap?

Those who suggest that the latter is some kind of solution are, I think, open to challenge. Let’s have no more theorizing when actual comparison is possible. There is in the world a great nation, larger than ours in territory and populated with 250 million capable people. It is rich in resources and has had more than 50 uninterrupted years to practice socialism without opposition.

We could match them, but it would take a little doing on our part. We’d have to cut our paychecks back by 75 percent; move 60 million workers back to the farm; abandon two-thirds of our steel-making capacity; destroy 40 million television sets; tear up 14 of every 15 miles of highway; junk 19 of every 20 automobiles; tear up two-thirds of our railroad track; knock down 70 percent of our houses; and rip out nine out of every 10 telephones. Then, all we have to do is find a capitalist country to sell us wheat on credit to keep us from starving!

Our people are in a time of discontent. Our vital energy supplies are threatened by possibly the most powerful cartel in human history. Our traditional allies in Western Europe are experiencing political and economic instability bordering on chaos.

We seem to be increasingly alone in a world grown more hostile, but we let our defenses shrink to pre-Pearl Harbor levels. And we are conscious that in Moscow the crash build-up of arms continues. The SALT II agreement in Vladivostok, if not re-negotiated, guarantees the Soviets a clear missile superiority sufficient to make a “first strike” possible, with little fear of reprisal. Yet, too many congressmen demand further cuts in our own defenses, including delay if not cancellation of the B-1 bomber.

I realize that millions of Americans are sick of hearing about Indochina, and perhaps it is politically unwise to talk of our obligation to Cambodia and South Vietnam. But we pledged—in an agreement that brought our men home and freed our prisoners—to give our allies arms and ammunition to replace on a one-for-one basis what they expend in resisting the aggression of the Communists who are violating the cease-fire and are fully aided by their Soviet and Red Chinese allies. Congress has already reduced the appropriation to half of what they need and threatens to reduce it even more.

Can we live with ourselves if we, as a nation, betray our friends and ignore our pledged word? And, if we do, who would ever trust us again? To consider committing such an act so contrary to our deepest ideals is symptomatic of the erosion of standards and values. And this adds to our discontent.

We did not seek world leadership; it was thrust upon us. It has been our destiny almost from the first moment this land was settled. If we fail to keep our rendezvous with destiny or, as John Winthrop said in 1630, “Deal falsely with our God,” we shall be made “a story and byword throughout the world.”

Americans are hungry to feel once again a sense of mission and greatness.

I don ‘t know about you, but I am impatient with those Republicans who after the last election rushed into print saying, “We must broaden the base of our party”—when what they meant was to fuzz up and blur even more the differences between ourselves and our opponents.

It was a feeling that there was not a sufficient difference now between the parties that kept a majority of the voters away from the polls. When have we ever advocated a closed-door policy? Who has ever been barred from participating?

Our people look for a cause to believe in. Is it a third party we need, or is it a new and revitalized second party, raising a banner of no pale pastels, but bold colors which make it unmistakably clear where we stand on all of the issues troubling the people?

Let us show that we stand for fiscal integrity and sound money and above all for an end to deficit spending, with ultimate retirement of the national debt.

Let us also include a permanent limit on the percentage of the people’s earnings government can take without their consent.

Let our banner proclaim a genuine tax reform that will begin by simplifying the income tax so that workers can compute their obligation without having to employ legal help.

And let it provide indexing—adjusting the brackets to the cost of living—so that an increase in salary merely to keep pace with inflation does not move the taxpayer into a surtax bracket. Failure to provide this means an increase in government’s share and would make the worker worse off than he was before he got the raise.

Let our banner proclaim our belief in a free market as the greatest provider for the people.

Let us also call for an end to the nit-picking, the harassment and over-regulation of business and industry which restricts expansion and our ability to compete in world markets.

Let us explore ways to ward off socialism, not by increasing government’s coercive power, but by increasing participation by the people in the ownership of our industrial machine.

Our banner must recognize the responsibility of government to protect the law-abiding, holding those who commit misdeeds personally accountable.

And we must make it plain to international adventurers that our love of peace stops short of “peace at any price.”

We will maintain whatever level of strength is necessary to preserve our free way of life.

A political party cannot be all things to all people. It must represent certain fundamental beliefs which must not be compromised to political expediency, or simply to swell its numbers.

I do not believe I have proposed anything that is contrary to what has been considered Republican principle. It is at the same time the very basis of conservatism. It is time to reassert that principle and raise it to full view. And if there are those who cannot subscribe to these principles, then let them go their way.



 
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My Daddy Died Thursday

My Daddy, Dalton Joseph Brouillette, died last Thursday, May 22, 2008 and was buried Sunday, May 26, 2008.  Below is the eulogy I gave at the funeral and lastly is the obituary from the Texarkana Gazette.

 
Eulogy for Dalton Joseph Brouillette:
 
My brothers and sister and I were extraordinarily lucky to grow up with my daddy and momma as parents.  Momma and Daddy doled out a balance of love and discipline.  Momma usually doled hers out with a switch on her calves, but Daddy felt there was a more direct connection running from our butts to our brains!  Looking back, I don't think either was ever inappropriately harsh.  I guess it worked because none of us ever robbed a bank or sold drugs.  And we all loved our Daddy.
 
I was surprised a few years ago to find out that some of my buddies were kind of afraid of my Daddy.  He had a penetrating gaze and a voice of command, and when he said "Stop", well you better by God, stop! 
 
But my Daddy was never mean to anyone in my whole life.  He did not demand respect...he commanded respect.  I believe my Daddy was respected and admired by just about everyone that knew him:  his family, his friends, the people he worked with and people he did business with.  My brother reminded me that even 20 years after he had retired, folks would tell my brother that my Daddy was the best boss they ever had.
 
Daddy was unfailingly polite to folks, always saying "Yes, Sir" or "No, Ma'am" to clerks or waitresses.  My Daddy was a gentleman.
 
They say you become your parents as you grow up.  I flatter myself believing I have learned to emulate my Daddy in some few respects.  But the way he cooks and bakes, I think my brother Gary has become Momma in some ways!
 
Daddy was very proud of his kids.  If he was alive today, he would grudgingly admit that I WAS the favorite child.  It's understandable, and honestly I accept the petty jealousies of the other kids!
 
Daddy loved to fish and hunt.  When I was a kid we would often get out to the lake and wet a hook.  As the years passed he concentrated more on hunting.  he loved to squirrel hunt.  be sure and ask my sister Denise which part of the squirrel she liked the best!  It gave him great joy to get out early and still-hunt the woods at D & Z [Day and Zimmerman, operating contractors at Lone Star Army Ammunition Plant where Daddy worked and retired] for deer.  Those are some of my favorite memories of Daddy.
 
What made Daddy happiest was that his kids are successful:
 
One, (the favorite) is an engineer.
Denise runs a live theater in Austin.
Gary is an RN here in Texarkana (the call him an angel!)
Brian is an accountant in the Federal Prison System, but he is out today and here for this service!
 
Daddy's health had gradually declined over the last 10 years or so.  I thank Ruby [his wife] and her family for their love and efforts on his behalf. 
 
Daddy told me a couple of weeks ago that his health was never going to improve and life was just not that good anymore.  This is hard but it is not a tragedy.  Daddy lived a long, full life and I know he felt it was time to go.
 
I heard an explanation recently of why God lets hard things happen:  "Tragedy brings people closer to God and brings God closer to people".
 
I want to share a short prayer that I really like called "The Sailor's Prayer":
 
Dear Lord,
 
Please watch over my Daddy,
Because the Sea is so wide,
And his boat is so small.
 
Amen
 
 
 
Obituary for:

DALTON BROUILLETTE


DALTON BROUILLETTE

Dalton Joseph Brouillette, 81, of DeKalb, Texas, died Thursday, May 22, 2008, at his home.

Mr. Brouillette was born July 9, 1926, in Moncla, La. He was a retired supervisor at Lone Star Army Ammunition Plant, a real estate agent, a Catholic, a volunteer with Wadley Hospital, a former member of Texarkana Optimist Club and THEOS; a member of Hubbard United Methodist Church; and a Navy veteran. He was preceded in death by one wife, Laura Mae Brouillette.

Survivors include his wife, Ruby Pirkey Brouillette of DeKalb; three sons, Jeffery Dalton Brouillette of Galveston, Texas, Gary Reed Brouillette of Texarkana and Brian David Brouillette of Austin; one daughter, Janann Denise Brouillette of Austin; two stepchildren, Randy Pirkey and Sheri Peek of DeKalb, Texas; two granddaughters, Bailey Morgan Brouillette of Austin and Caroline Elizabeth Brouillette of Texarkana; seven stepgrandchildren; four stepgreat-grandchildren; and a number of other relatives.

Services will be 2 p.m. today at East Funeral Home, Moores Lane, with the Rev. Tony Hoefner officiating. Burial will be in Hillcrest Memorial Park.

Online registration is at http://www.mem.com/Story.aspx?ID=2457364
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Battle Hymn of the Republic Applicable Today

The history of this great song is well known.  It was penned by Juliet W. Howe in 1861 during the Civil War after she had visited a Union troop encampment.  Being a son of Texas and the South I recognize that this was a prayer praising God's support of the the Union Army against the Confederates.  Apparently it was effective.
 
Read through this hymn, my friends, and absorb these words.  They seem completely appropriate to be used today in our war to defeat international Islamic Terrorism.  Also below is a link to the Mormon Tabernacle Choir singing the hymn.
 
 
 
Battle Hymn of the Republic
Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord;
He is trampling out the vintage where the grapes of wrath are stored;
He hath loosed the fateful lightning of His terrible swift sword;
His truth is marching on.
Glory! Glory! Hallelujah! Glory! Glory! Hallelujah!
Glory! Glory! Hallelujah! His truth is marching on.

I have seen Him in the watch fires of a hundred circling camps
They have builded Him an altar in the evening dews and damps;
I can read His righteous sentence by the dim and flaring lamps;
His day is marching on.
Glory! Glory! Hallelujah! Glory! Glory! Hallelujah!
Glory! Glory! Hallelujah! His day is marching on.

I have read a fiery Gospel writ in burnished rows of steel;
“As ye deal with My contemners, so with you My grace shall deal”;
Let the Hero, born of woman, crush the serpent with His heel,
Since God is marching on.
Glory! Glory! Hallelujah! Glory! Glory! Hallelujah!
Glory! Glory! Hallelujah! Since God is marching on.

He has sounded forth the trumpet that shall never call retreat;
He is sifting out the hearts of men before His judgment seat;
Oh, be swift, my soul, to answer Him! be jubilant, my feet;
Our God is marching on.
Glory! Glory! Hallelujah! Glory! Glory! Hallelujah!
Glory! Glory! Hallelujah! Our God is marching on.

In the beauty of the lilies Christ was born across the sea,
With a glory in His bosom that transfigures you and me:
As He died to make men holy, let us live to make men free;
[originally …let us die to make men free]
While God is marching on.
Glory! Glory! Hallelujah! Glory! Glory! Hallelujah!
Glory! Glory! Hallelujah! While God is marching on.

He is coming like the glory of the morning on the wave,
He is wisdom to the mighty, He is honor to the brave;
So the world shall be His footstool, and the soul of wrong His slave,
Our God is marching on.
Glory! Glory! Hallelujah! Glory! Glory! Hallelujah!
Glory! Glory! Hallelujah! Our God is marching on.

 
 
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Hillary (Woman of the People) Takes Obama to Task

Just in:

(2008-04-13) - Sensing an opportunity to portray Sen. Barack Obama as
elitist and out of touch after his remarks about "bitter" rural
Americans who cling to guns, God and xenophobia, Sen. Hillary Clinton
stopped after church today at an indoor gun range, where she fired
roughly 300 rounds through a handgun she said she carries concealed
everywhere she goes.

Her lower lip bulging from a dip of Skoal, Sen. Clinton put her Bible in
her handbag and drew out her own Para Ordnance Warthog .45 caliber
pistol.

As reporters looked on, the Democrat presidential candidate emptied one
10-round magazine after another, with fair accuracy, at a human
silhouette target.

"Small town folk like us," said Sen. Clinton, "don't cling to God or
guns because we're bitter about the economy as my opponent suggests. We
believe in God because He's real, and we keep and bear arms as the best
insurance against tyrants who would strip our freedoms if they didn't
fear our collective power."

As for the economy, the candidate said, small-town people haven't been
sitting on their hands since the steel and textile mills closed 25 years
ago.

"We're Americans," she said, "We're not a bunch of cry-babies. Things
change. We deal with it. We suck it up, learn a new skill, and do
something else to earn the money we need to buy stuff, you know, like
Bibles and bullets...."
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War on Poverty to last 100 years?

I understand Mr. Obama is pledging to commit $845 BILLION to fight global poverty.
 
My questions is:  When are we going to pull back our troops in the War on Poverty? 
 
Obama recently had to pull back the false claim that John McCain suggested we might be at war in Iraq for 100 years.  We have already been in a War on Poverty for 45 years with untold TRILLIONS of dollars down the drain with (according to liberals) more folks in poverty than ever.
 
So when are we going to pull back our troops, save our tax money and put our people back to work? 
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Pennsylvania a Part of the South

Mr Obama made a recent slam against the residents of small towns in Pennsylvania.  The gist of the comment was that small town folks are bitter and turn to guns, God and racism to feel better.
 
On the occasion of this incident, I would like to welcome Pennsylvania to the South.  This is the way the South is portrayed by Big Media all the time.
 
Ya'll come on down!
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Fasting for 40 days - First Journal Report

I woke up the morning of November 18th and decided I was going to fast...for 30 days.  So I started.  No preparation, no planning, no nothing.  I went into the kitchen drank a big glass of water and started.

That was 12 days ago.  But I guess I officially started fasting at 9:30 Saturday night which was when I finished a big burger, fries and 2 margaritas with my buddy James.

So as I type now I am 30 minutes shy of 13 days.

During that time I have eaten exactly nothing.  I drink about 1.5 gallons of fluid a day, but no food and VERY few calories.  The calories I have consumed consist of coffee creamer, 5-10 calories (sometimes) per 16 ounce bottle of flavored water, and 5-15 calories per cube of bullion.

All told I am averaging less than 50 calories per day, less than 500 total for 13 days.  I estimate I have lost over 25 pounds, over 20 by the scale, but I didn't weigh the first couple of days, and won't weigh until first thing tomorrow morning.

You may have noticed that the title of this post indicates a 40 day fast but in the first sentence I indicated a 30 day fast.  The fact is that when I looked on the internet later about fasts I found a whole lot of info (most worthless gibberish) about 40 day fasts.  So in keeping with my amount of preparation, I shifted from 30 days to 40 days.  So that is my goal.

I have been pleasantly surprised to find that I am not hungry.  Not at all.  Not for one minute in 13 days have I been hungry.  And I have not sufferred any.

On the contrary, I am awake, aware, excited.  I have been walking between 1/2 and 1.5 miles per day this week.  I have been working out my upper body on the home bowflex-wanna-be that I have.  I have great energy and feel fantastic.

I am taking a multi-vitamin, a B-complex vitamin and 4 asprin morning and night.  I also take my allergy pill in the evening.  I have stopped taking my Type2 diabetes medicine because my blood sugar has dropped below the level requiring medication.  I believe that "normal" blood sugar levels are 110-126.  The last week my blood sugar level is reading between 98 and 118!

I will write more in a day or so, my plans for this, for breaking fast, etc.  But for now it is enough to know I have decided to take a positive step in my health.





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