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By Al Campbell
Tuesday, Nov 11 2008, 01:47 PM
A Journal Sentinel editorial this morning implored us to take this time to read or re-read the Bill of Rights, the first ten amendments to our Constitution. That seemed a very good idea during this time of political transition and on a day honoring veterans who have served to defend our constitutional rights.
Amendment I
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.
Amendment II
A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.
Amendment III
No soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered in any house, without the consent of the owner, nor in time of war, but in a manner to be prescribed by law.
Amendment IV
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
Amendment V
No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the militia, when in actual service in time of war or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.
Amendment VI
In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the state and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the assistance of counsel for his defense.
Amendment VII
In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by jury, shall be otherwise reexamined in any court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law.
Amendment VIII
Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.
Amendment IX
The enumeration in the Constitution, of the certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.
Amendment X
The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.
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By Al Campbell
Tuesday, Oct 28 2008, 09:19 AM
There is more and more speculation as to the potential that we'll see a 'clean sweep' by Democratic candidates on Tuesday, November 4th at both the state and federal levels. I hope that isn't the way it turns out, but I'm tiring of being beaten about the head and shoulders every time I read a newspaper article or watch the bulk of the television news items. Maybe that is the intent. If us conservatives can be sufficiently demoralized, maybe we'll just stay home. Not this conservative!
What do I mean by 'clean sweep'? I refer to the potential that both the Assembly and the Senate in Wisconsin will see a sufficient Democratic majority that will be able to pass anything they wish in spite of the number of Republican votes that could be massed, with assurances on most such items that those will be signed into law by the Democratic Governor Doyle.
Similarly, I refer to Democratic victories in both the U.S. House and Senate that will be Republican-proof and that will likely find favor with a Democratic President Obama.
Jay Weber has done a good job on setting forth 23 items that could be part of the triumvirate of Sen. Harry Reid (D), Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D) and a President Obama and you can find those by clicking here. Things included on Jay's list include renegotiating NAFTA, ending secret ballots in union organizing, government-run healthcare encroachments, reintroduction of the 'Fairness Doctrine' to control conservative access to the airways, and so on.
At the state level, we could easily see state-run health care, the increase in costs of education, ever larger portions of our income going to state and local taxes, more and more loss of personal freedoms and so.
There has been, in most of our history, a certain "check and balance" relationship in most of our governments so that not everything that was proposed was ever likely to be passed. That 'protection' could disappear for years if we see the 'clean sweep' at the state or federal levels, or both, as the result of our national election on November 4th. Our country tends not to flourish well under such governments regardless of party in power.
Vote your conscience next Tuesday!
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By Al Campbell
Tuesday, Oct 14 2008, 09:15 AM
ACORN, the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, has been in the news for several of the past election cycles and finds itself there again. Is this simply a politically-driven campaign or does ACORN merit this attention? How does ACORN influence elections, if it does?
The Journal Sentinel editorialized yesterday on this subject, and essentially took the position that this is much ado over nothing. The editorial staff cites the recent revelation that ACORN hired seven felons to serve as 'deputy registrars' and justifies this with its further discussion about how the registration cards are subjected to review before being handed over to the election officials, etc.
That seems to miss the fact that 49 'deputy registrars' in Milwaukee were referred to the authorities for possible voter registration irregularities discovered by the Election Commission.
It is interesting to me that ACORN has no political agenda but seems to somehow find itself registering Democrat-leaning voters in over 95% of the cases. It specifically targets parts of the communities in which it works that typically vote heavily for Democrats. Barack Obama's campaign actually donated some $832,000 to an ACORN affiliate to 'get out the vote'. It originally tried to obfuscate the reason for the payment but finally admitted that it was to be used to 'get out the vote'. We can surmise which voters that money will be used to identify and push to the polls.
Why did the first 'solution' offered to end the economic crisis in our economy include an automatic funding mechanism to get more and more money to ACORN? Do you think there might be a political agenda at work here? That was removed as the result of the initial failure of that 'solution' to get sufficient votes. That speaks well for Jim Sensenbrenner voting no. Yes, I know that the Democrat in Appleton voted no, as well, but he was given permission to do that only because he is in a tough race for re-election at the end of his first two years in the House of Representatives and Ms. Pelosi needs to be able to count on his re-election.
Finally, there are legal actions being taken against ACORN in other parts of the country over the issues that have dogged this organization for years. Why were only the 'deputy registrars' referred for legal scrutiny while the organization proper again was given a pass in our state?
Why has the state Government Accountability Board not required voter registration lists be checked for irregularities since early-August of this year? Why have voter registration officers across the state been told to not cross-reference with the motor vehicle department database? There was time for that yet it didn't happen...it isn't being permitted even where community officials have asked to be able to do the verification.
The action brought, finally, by the Attorney General has been 'slow-walked' through the system so as to assure there'll be nothing to interfere with the 'system' until at least after the race for President is decided.
Beyond all this lies a simple solution, so far blocked by the party in power in Wisconsin (Democrat if you've any question).
What is that simple solution? It is voter photo identification. It also could be a dose of 'no same day registration' that would give our officials the opportunity to verify the information provided by those who register at the pools the same day as they vote.
Last, but possibly most important is this: Wisconsin voters are so evenly divided as to make any illegally-cast votes significantly more important to the outcome. If we again have a difference of a few thousand voters deciding the outcome, a few thousand illegally-registering and voting people could easily change the outcome thus impacting every honest vote in the state. And, there can be no credible argument that illegal votes do not occur. We all know better...or should!
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By Al Campbell
Wednesday, Sep 17 2008, 08:41 AM
Much is being written and discussed during this Presidential election period about health care reform. Barack Obama prefers a government-run version of reform. John McCain prefers a private market reform that would use tax law changes to accomplish nearly-universal coverage...the stated goal of both approaches.
I saw a news report this morning that serves as a great reminder of one of the things we need to be mindful of if we are going to move to government-run health care. Here is that article:
Medco CEO argues for federally mandated end of life care protocols for Medicare patients.
CQ (9/17, Weyl) reports that in a recent speech at the National Press Club, chairman and CEO of Medco Health Inc., David B. Snow Jr., said that "the federal government should set protocols based on medical science to guide Medicare treatment for patients at the end of their lives." Snow elaborated that "30 percent of Medicare spending -- about $130 billion per year -- is spent on patients in the last year of their lives, often when recovery is no longer possible." But, nearly all of that money could be saved by establishing guidelines "of when to forgo further treatment." Snow also proposed "increasing electronic medical coordination, passing tort reform, promoting healthy lifestyles, and encouraging compliance among patients," which would save an estimated "$1 trillion per year, or half of current healthcare spending."
I have written of the "R" word before. Rationing is a very common practice where tax dollars are used to fund health care. I recall the situation recently reported from Oregon where a patient with cancer was not accorded medicines that likely would prolong life, but would be accorded coverage for 'assisted suicide' since that is legal in Oregon.
This isn't intended as a debate on the efficacy of withholding treatment that would extend life. It is intended to provoke some thought about the need for such decisions if we go down the government-run health care road. There will never be enough tax money available. We see that in the debate over a new school building, and in road repair discussions and so on.
When there is not enough money in a government-run health plan, the patient will pay the price. The organizational structure won't be pared down and taxes won't be increased because it is politically unpalatable. The weakest link in this chain is the patient who has no way to fight the decision. A "dispassionate" board who have never met the patient will make "an informed" decision and move on to the next agenda item.
Medicare is government-run healthcare. Medicaid is government-run health care. Between the two programs, more than 50% of the people in the United States already have health care coverage provided by the government.
So, we debate the question all the while that government-run health care grows essentially unchecked. The next step in Wisconsin, by the way, after BadgerCare Plus is to be BadgerCare Connect...if the politicians on the Democrat side of the aisle in Madison have their way.
Incrementalism is alive and well in Wisconsin. It reminds me of the old saw that asks how one eats an elephant? The answer, of course is: one bite at a time.
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By Al Campbell
Monday, Sep 1 2008, 11:20 AM
Labor Day has arrived and signals the 'end of summer' as nights get chillier and children and grandchildren go back to their respective schools. Ideally, we will enjoy a luxurious fall season with leaves ablaze and many beautiful days before snowflakes once again arrive.
Labor Day was formally decreed across the United States in 1894 by then President Grover Cleveland. The new federal holiday was swiftly approved by Congress and has been with us since.
Labor Day has, like so many special holidays, lost a lot of its meaning for many people. For some, it is simply another three-day week-end. For others, it is the time when the Muscular Dystrophy fund drive is hosted by Jerry Lewis, and so on.
I have never been a member of organized labor, unless by accident during my six-week 'career' at the Estwing hammer plant in Rockford, IL in the early 1960s. I have friends who were and still are members of unions. I have many acquaintances who were and/or are members of unions. My feelings about the labor movement tend toward the position that they were very important during the later years of the Industrial Revolution and during the early third of the 20th century. Since that time, I am convinced that unions, in general, have lost the essence of what made them so dominant during those times. Child labor laws have curtailed that practice. Employers have come out of the dark ages in most cases and recognize they must treat their employees as humans who are part of the reason for the success or failure of their business.
Among the strongest unions today is the SEIU (Service Employees International Union) run by Mr. Andy Stern. He has proved to be a consummate organizer and is one of the brightest people in organized labor today of which I'm aware. I see entities such as 9 to 5 with the soon to be held referendum that would bind employers in Milwaukee to offering sick leave for all employees. These organizations tend to signal the changes that have been occurring in our country. The strongest union is one that organized workers in the 'service' sector. The old United Auto Workers (UAW) struggles with the malaise felt throughout that industry. Coal miners no longer have the clout that once was theirs.
I see the Democrats in Congress still carrying the water for labor with such things as the open vote effort that would certainly favor organizers and quiet the opposition. Political power changes hands periodically and that has a great deal to do with the ebb and flow of organized labor. Labor organizations still have the ability to mobilize tens of thousands of 'volunteers' to get out the vote. Republicans can only stand in the shadows and lament that they do not have similar clout.
I wonder where organized labor will be in a decade or two or three. I don't know but I do recognize that change will continue at the same or a faster pace. Will organized labor find ways to make inroads in India or China? Will those governments permit such organizing? If the government of China permits organizing, I wonder at what cost to the workers? Will unions in the U.S. come together to maintain a level of strength that many have already lost individually? If so, where will the new leaders come from? I doubt that heavy industry will be the source of leadership; it more likely comes from the service sector of our economy given the massive shifts in employment in our country.
At any rate, I trust you will have or have had a very pleasant Labor Day 2008.
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By Al Campbell
Monday, Aug 25 2008, 09:06 AM
You and me are really great people. Why is that? Well, we seem to help bail out just about everything that bangs on Washington's door.
A short time ago, the sub-prime mortgage companies received their bail out; likely the first of their bail outs since Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are still in the throes of that mess.
Now the automobile industry is in the queue for what yesterday was about $25 billion and today has already climbed to $40 billion according to the press.
Is this a proper use for the tax dollars that are extracted from each of us? Should we be funding these bail outs for industries that essentially have gone bad because of their own doing? If you or me were responsible for these 'disasters', we'd probably step up to the plate and take what was coming to us. But we didn't force people to be too gullible and let people sell them homes they couldn't afford. We didn't cause the oil price jump because we didn't approve new refineries for thirty years or drill for new fields of oil?
If any of us should be paying 'the price', it seems that the finger of blame needs to be pointed at Washington and the people we send there to represent us. That group has caused these issues to surface through favors to those putting money into their campaign accounts. That group has caved in to the environmental groups that are fanatical to the extreme in their pursuit of the ultimate goal they espouse.
Oh, that's right. We are to blame because we continue to return the same people to Washington in spite of what they do and don't do. We don't require any 'reparations' for their actions.
Maybe we all need to get a little more involved and a little more vocal starting with our upcoming local elections. Too may of us simply shake our heads and fume; we really need to be more active in our precincts and districts and villages or cities, and in our counties and states.
I saw a quote in the past few days that went along these lines: "Too many people have died for our freedoms for us to not vote."
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By Al Campbell
Friday, Aug 22 2008, 10:01 AM
Cigarette Taxes...
The state raised cigarette taxes to $1.77 per pack and promptly budgeted/spent all the new money that would bring in. The only problem is that this 230% increase in the tax rate only generated a 48% increase in the tax money received! Now, we're stuck with a lot of people circumventing the tax entirely by buying cigarettes out-of-state or over the Internet. And, we have added to an already staggering budget shortfall.
Makes a lot sense, huh?
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Clean Air Act Gone Wild...
One of my favorite agencies, the EPA, has decided that it now has free rein over so-called greenhouse gases. This came to pass as the result of a 'namby-pamby' U.S. Supreme Court decision last year that didn't go quite far enough to ward off this rampant agency. EPA has now released its Advanced Notice of Proposed Rule-making, an ANPR in the jargon, and this is astonishing. EPA would regulate airplanes, trains, ships, boats, tractors, farm and mining equipment, lawn mowers, garden equipment, portable power generators, fork lift trucks, construction equipment and logging equipment.
EPA estimates that more than 500,000 new permits will be required. Among the supposed new requirements are these:
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Lawn mower standards: "...each application could require a different unit of measure tied to the machine's mission or output-such as grams per kilogram of cuttings from a 'standard' lawn for lawn mowers."
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Truck speed standards: "Speed limiters are generally available on new trucks or as a low cost retro-fit..."
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Single family homes become polluters: "...we believe that small commercial establishments...and indeed, a large single-family residence could exceed this [CO2 pollution] threshold."
All of this means that our taxes go up exponentially since the EPA will be forced to grow staff and facilities to handle this new found mission. And, it means that we'll all pay more for products and services.
And, none of this was ever the intent of Congress nor has it had the opportunity to inject itself to this point.
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Compact Fluorescent Bulbs...
Regular, nice old incandescent light bulbs (starting with 100 watt bulbs) become illegal to manufacture in 2012. The National Center for Policy Analysis (NCPA) points out that this means we can forget about spending 20 cents or so for the old bulb while buying the new CFLs for something on the order of $3.00+ (remember that these are usually subsidized today).
While CFLs save energy, they have costs associated with them that make all this really questionable:
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The average lifetime is not 10,000 hours, but "up to 10,000 hours"
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The energy savings and lifetime of CFLs has been exaggerated in some applications
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The CFL only achieves the claimed efficiency if burned continuously for long periods
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If left on for only 5 minute periods, the CFL will burn out just as fast as an incandescent bulb
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CFLs dim over their lifetime and do not deliver what is promised
And, we're adding mercury to the environment which supposedly will be handled by proper disposal. Yeah, sure! How many of us has disposed of a burned out CFL improperly already? How is that ever going to be policed?
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Clean Water Restoration Act...
The EPA is back again. The original Clean Water Act of 1972 had gotten to be very broadly interpreted under various EPA rulings. "Navigable waters" had morphed into isolated wetlands, dry lake beds and drainage ditches, for example. Now, two Democrat members of Congress have introduced the bill named in the title. It would replace the phrase "navigable waters" with the phrase "waters of the United States" This means "all waters subject to ebb and flow of the tide, the territorial seas, and all interstate and intrastate waters and their tributaries, including lakes, rivers, streams (including intermittent streams), mudflats, sloughs, prairie potholes, wet meadows, playa lakes, natural ponds and all impoundments of the foregoing". Reason magazine, August/September 2008
If this bill were to pass in its current state, it would very likely result in massive new regulations for boaters, fishermen, hunters, and even conservationists. This act would leave it to the courts to decide what constitutes "waters of the United States".
Thanks to Ronald Bailey for writing the article "Feds in a Fishbowl" in Reason.
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Anti-Meat Campaign...
Finally, from the Heartland Institute, this on global warming activists' latest efforts. They are launching new efforts to restrict meat production and consumption, building on prior efforts to restrict various agriculture activities that supposedly would reduce 'greenhouse gases'.
More on this can be found on the worldchanging.org website.
If we continue to have a ban on drilling more oil, we won't be able to buy meat anyway, so maybe this isn't as bad as I first thought.
Maybe we really do have too many crackpots in Congress...or too many people are being paid through campaign contributions and don't have the commonsense necessary to sort out the good from the crazy.
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By Al Campbell
Thursday, Aug 14 2008, 10:08 AM
Oregon has had government involved in health care for quite a few years. The state electorate also approved the concept of state sanctioned suicide several years ago.
Recently, the board that reviews the medications that are approved for state residents made a determination that was controversial...in my mind if no where else. The board, in essence, said that, given the cost of a certain medication, it would approve suicide for this patient but would not approve use of the medicine given its relative newness and the lack of convincing data as to the outcome. It had essentially set a price on the human life involved.
Today I read the story concerning Denver Children's Hospital and heart transplants in infants that use the heart from another infant that died a 'cardiac-related death'. This differs from a heart harvested from a brain-dead infant in which that heart is beating until removed from the donor body. A decision has been made that the donor that has been pronounced dead and has been in that state for only 75 seconds, is a valid heart donor for purposes of this new program. The earlier line that had existed required death be determined only after some five minutes during which time the heart did not re-start itself. In this instance, the length of time a person had been deemed 'dead' had been reduced to assure that the harvested heart had a decent chance of functioning in the new body. The three cases in which this approach has been employed resulted in three infants alive today. The decisions to withdraw life support were made by the parents in all three instances.
We know so much more today than we did a decade ago. We can do things from a medical perspective that were impossible then, and these procedures have become commonplace now. We are, in this area, pushing the envelope as it has never before been pushed.
I know there are at least two sides to these issues. I have good friends whose daughter lives today because of transplanted organs that were available on a timely basis. I can't even begin to comprehend being placed in the middle of such decisions, and I earnestly hope that never befalls me.
And this leads to my general question: Is there a line we dare not cross? If so, where is or was that line? Am I comfortable with an appointed board making life and death decisions about me? Who among us can claim the right to make such a decision? How do medical ethicists deal with these kinds of issues?
I don't profess to have the answers to these questions. If you do, and you're willing to share, I'd appreciate your comments.
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By Al Campbell
Friday, Aug 8 2008, 08:56 AM
Is 'perversion' too strong a term? I don't think so.
The EPA has turned down attempts by the State of Wisconsin to relax the ill-conceived S.E. Wisconsin requirement for 'reformulated' gasoline even as we are virtually in full attainment. That was probably dwarfed by comparison to the decision it announced that it was denying the State of Texas' request for a cutback on the amount of ethanol required to be blended with gasoline.
There is a radio commercial playing in our market that is sponsored by the ethanol lobby that makes the case, in essence, that we, who question the use of corn to make ethanol, are over-reacting and need to check our facts. I am angered every time I hear that commercial, including this morning as it played while I was shaving...with a blade. That could've hurt!
The simple facts are being ignored by the EPA, Congress and the President. And, these aren't stupid people. This is intentional ignorance. Our food prices are going up, and it is caused in part by the insistence that ethanol be blended with gasoline even as us taxpayers pay the price for the ethanol support being paid on every gallon. The other part of the increase is obviously that caused by the fact that Democrats have so far refused to relax their stance against oil drilling here and now.
Back to ethanol. It is causing many cattle ranchers to reduce their herd size because they can't afford the feed to grow them for market. The prices for chicken and beef are rising at a rapid pace. I looked at flank steak a few days ago since it always used to be a relatively lower priced cut of meat. That is a thing of the past. I bought chicken breasts a few days ago and was astounded at the prices I saw on the packages.
I know that my mileage with reformulated gas is less than it was before that edict; about 10% worse. I know that ethanol is much less efficient in terms of the energy it generates than is gasoline. So, I am burning more and getting less. A double-whammy in our part of Wisconsin.
The EPA stated that there was "no compelling evidence" that the mandate for ethanol is causing "severe economic harm". That had to have been spoken by a federal employee who is reimbursed for his or her mileage...from our tax dollars These people simply have no contact with reality, or manage to suppress the lessons they really learn in order to be a "dutiful servant of the people".
As if all this isn't enough to put me into a deep funk, I am confronted with the idiocy that is called political campaigning where people talk about wind power, sun power, and bio-fuels while not mentioning oil or coal or nuclear power. How in the world are we supposed to leap forward a decade or more when technology is not yet even available to soften our landing?
We are in real danger of becoming a third world nation if the current policies are not changed and changed quickly! Our economy simply cannot withstand the political assault it is under. And this is not a political assault from another country...it comes from within.
So, I don't think calling the EPA the Environmental Perversion Agency is much of a reach.
And I, for one, am very, very tired of the elected people we all put into office forgetting who it is they represent, and what it is we want.
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By Al Campbell
Monday, Jul 28 2008, 08:25 AM
Have I lost my mind? I hope not.
My concern is this: With gas prices dropping and now at the mid $3.80s per gallon, will we lose our impetus to keep the pressure on our elected officials to get more drilling going and to relax the myriad rules on new refineries?
We are a strange group, we humans. We got used to paying $4.20 per gallon for regular for a week or two and now we're "saving" nearly $.40 a gallon. We forget very quickly that only a year or so ago we were paying a dollar or more less for our gas.
We seem to forget that we were upset over ethanol and its impact on our mileage and on our food prices.
We seem to forget that reformulated gas is costing us more and causing lower miles per gallon.
Are we going to meekly go about our daily business now until prices go back up? Are we going to give our politicians a 'free pass'?
Are we going to let the presidential candidates avoid dealing with this issue...even though they'll make promises that'll probably be forgotten in a week or two?
Are we going to demand that our state representatives push hard to get the ethanol lobby off our backs?
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By Al Campbell
Friday, Jul 11 2008, 08:29 AM
The people have spoken; loudly and clearly. There is now a roughly two-thirds majority across all political lines that want oil drilling and refining capacity increases to commence immediately. That two-thirds majority has had enough of the 'fluff' that passes for 'bipartisanship' in politics today. That two-thirds majority fills its tanks every week and is very cognizant of the sacrifices it has been forced to make while its elected representatives in Congress dither.
Demagoguery has run rampant...even more so than has come to be the usual level of demagoguery in Washington, D.C. We witness the daily back and forth of polite name-calling that passes for bipartisanship. I have yet to be able to understand why it is that conservatives almost always end up on the wrong end of the 'bipartisanship stick'. Why is it that a conservative-driven effort is demagogued by the liberals but a liberal-driven effort is almost always labeled a 'bipartisanship' effort?
Now we see an almost amazing display of partisan chutzpah with Nancy Pelosi's pronouncement yesterday that the Republican efforts to increase drilling are "a hoax" designed to take the peoples' minds off other Republican problems. Even the poorly-equipped Senate Majority Leader, Harry Reid, has softened his rhetoric in the face of public sentiment. But not the erstwhile Nancy Pelosi who is re-elected by her ultra-liberal San Francisco district by super majorities in the 70%+ range.
Nancy Pelosi will continue to be a member of Congress for so long as she wishes, and needn't give a whit about the will of the people...other than for the ultra-liberals in her home district. How are these 'reigns of terror' to be dealt with under our constitution? By the sacking of Nancy Pelosi as the Speaker of the House by the Democrats who elected her to that position. Even Steny Hoyer would seem good by comparison!
The House Dems are frightened to death by the power of Nancy Pelosi. So much so, in fact, that they willfully ignore their own constituents who are part of that two-thirds majority. Unless and until the other Democrat members of the House of Representatives feel the real passion of their constituents on the subject of oil drilling and refining capacity, nothing will happen to improve prices at the pump on a long-term basis. We have five of those people in Wisconsin. We also have two Democrat Senators who might just seek a meeting with Nancy Pelosi to express their concern...if they have any real concern about what you and I pay for our gasoline.
The all too short and simple explanation is this: they don't care about you and me except when we cast our votes. And, they have come to understand that they'd have to commit some horrific act in order to be defeated after serving two terms in office. They couldn't care less about you and me because they are beholden to Nancy Pelosi for their committee appointments and they know that she can influence their campaign funding situation come election time.
That is another thing that is problematic. Our Members of the House of Representatives are in constant campaign mode. They are campaigning for re-election even before being sworn in for the next term to which they've just been elected or re-elected. The reverse problem exists with our Senators; they know that we have short memories so they can easily vote against our will for four years and then 'straighten up and fly right' for two years to get re-elected. It has happened so regularly that we could nearly do away with re-election and simply wait for retirement to open a seat.
Now, we are looking at the very real possibility that the President and both houses of Congress will be under Democrat control. We are looking at the very real possibility that both houses of Congress will also be 'veto proof' if the Democrats sweep as they suspect they will.
This seems to me to be too great a price to pay for the reminder that we shouldn't ever be so silly as to permit this to occur. But...it seems we never learn. It seems we love to be taught the same lesson over and over again. It must be akin to our need to push on a sore spot or bite down on the tooth that aches.
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By Al Campbell
Monday, May 26 2008, 06:35 AM
I just read the 2007 version of this Memorial Day Blog once again. Not a lot has changed except that we may be even further polarized politically than we were a year ago. That is to be expected when we find ourselves in the midst of presidential campaigning, fighting an economic slowdown, watching fuel and food prices escalate almost daily...and as we watch flags in our village and state being flown at half-staff.
The one thing that has stayed constant is the resolve and spirit of our fighting men and women who are posted in many countries of the world. Those of us who would criticize the U.S. for being the 'policeman of the world' need to step back and ask themselves these questions: If not us, whom? If not us, where would the world be today? If not us, where would we be today?
Can we survive and prosper in an isolationist world? I doubt seriously that this would be possible. We cannot rely on the United Nations to send a military contingent here and there as hot spots erupt. We are the military contingent that gets sent wearing blue helmets. Those other 'wanna be' world powers simply do nothing but respond in token fashion, or respond with more behind-the-scenes-political maneuvering to worsen already aggravated situations. Russia is on its way back into the early twentieth century courtesy of Vladamir Putin and his new puppet president.
Against this backdrop, we watch as our politicians posture to take best advantage of the wind's direction that day. They 'debate' various things, always with an eye toward whatever camera appears in the room. They say whatever is convenient at the moment and then backfill as they trip over their words a day or a week later.
The one constant is the resolve and spirit of our fighting men and women. That is as it has been and always will be so long as our freedom endures.
We remember those who have given their lives that we may live in freedom. We remember those who gave limbs and sight so that we might live in freedom. We remember young families without a dad or without a mom or a son or daughter or a brother or sister so that we might live in freedom.
When was the last time you walked up to a person wearing the uniform of one of our branches of service and thanked them for their service and their sacrifice. Too long ago I'd wager.
We remember the more than 50,000 who gave their all in Viet Nam. We remember Korea and World War II and World War I. We remember those who protect us today from the spread of world terrorism, and who will again report to that theater of operations for another tour.
Please take a moment of your freedom to say a prayer for those men and women both past and present. Please take a moment of your freedom to walk up to someone wearing the uniform of the United States military and thank them for their dedication, their bravery and their courage and their readiness in the face of every threat so far seen by our country.
And, please take a moment to let your elected officials know just how important it is to you that they continue to truly support our military; not through lip service and posing for 'holy pictures', but truly support our men and women. These are not something akin to chess pieces that become political playthings. These are not the illiterate and underclass of our country. These are the best and the brightest. These are the true defenders of our freedoms, not those who serve in some government capacity or other that too often is a hindrance rather than a help to our men and women in uniform.
Thank you!
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By Al Campbell
Friday, May 23 2008, 09:02 AM
We are, by all signs, involved in an oil cost run-up driven by demand being greater than supply. It is exacerbated for us Americans because our monetary policy has seen an intentional softening of the dollar (our money is worth less than other peoples' money, so it takes more of it to buy a barrel of crude oil). I paid $4.20 per gallon yesterday with the price of crude oil standing at about $130 +/- per barrel. Predictions of crude oil prices of $150 per barrel or more are seen or heard regularly now. And, the cost of oil could well be higher than that by year-end.
How did we get to this point? We got there by congressional law making, by presidents rolling over and signing those bills, and by our country's increasing needs/demand for gasoline and diesel fuel. Why would we permit ourselves to become part of such a quagmire?
Politics! Politics played by those on both sides of the aisle. Conservatives seem to have lost their voices. Liberals never seem to lose their voices.
Laws were re-written more than thirty years ago to make it nearly impossible for a new refinery to be built. Those were the result of congress being rolled by the environmentalists and presidents either believing the rhetoric of the day or fearing the backlash should they stand up to the rhetoric. This has continued to this very day. We are forbidden from drilling within 200 miles of the California and Florida coastlines but the Chinese are already doing so as we sit on our thumbs. We are unable to pursue the shale oil deposits that span our northern plains and southwestern states. We have ample untapped resources that are readily available but our laws don't permit us to make use of those resources.
We see the 'global warming' group and the 'environmentalist group' driving our economy into the ground...and we have not found the moral outrage/courage to stand up to them and say "no more"! We could easily build new refineries in any number of locations around our country but we're not permitted to do so. We know how to drill and refine today without ruining our world. It takes from 6 to 10 years to bring a new refinery on-line so the time to have declared a moratorium on the rules that made it impossible to build new refining capacity has come and gone. But, the typical congressional response of "that will take ten years" should remind us that if we don't roll back those silly laws today, it'll take ten years from whenever we do roll back those silly laws. The time to begin is now, not next week or next month.
We witnessed the ridiculous 'hearings' held by congress in the past few weeks. We watched as Sen. Herb Kohl embarrassed himself by chiding the 'big bad oil companies' for making a profit. He is a former businessman who certainly understands that profit must be derived in order for businesses to exist and grow. He knew how that worked when he ran Kohl's Food Stores. He certainly must have some comprehension as the owner of the Milwaukee Bucks. His statement to the oil company executives that their profits didn't seem fair gives one a lot of insight. He knows better but he will play/pander to the crowd he favors. He 'feels' as do most liberals. He doesn't necessarily reason. He has his millions, so he can set out to control everyone else who aspires to similar success.
Sen. Kohl is but one of the 535 members of congress. Too many of those men and women are too intent on keeping their offices to actually vote the way they probably know they should. You have probably heard the old phrase that states you must "go along to get along". That should be inscribed over the doorways leading to the House and the Senate chambers since it is the rule that is followed by the vast majority of people who walk through those portals. That is true on the national stage, the state stage and the local stage.
The people who go to Washington and who do not give in and play by the Washingtonian rules are few and very far between.
Whose fault is this dilemma in the final analysis? Yours and mine.
We're the men and women who have permitted this to happen. We don't vote in the House or the Senate, but we do elect those who do...and we do not seem to unelect people very often once they've gotten into office. Rep. Steve Kagen (D) from the Appleton area stands for re-election this November. He is at his most defeatable point historically. If he survives the first re-election campaign and keeps his seat, he is likely to be in that seat for so long as he desires without regard to how he votes or doesn't vote.
We're so unconcerned about our vote, it seems, that we don't even think voting is sacrosanct enough to require valid photo identification before we're permitted to cast a ballot.
So, all this angst has been brought to us by us. Remember that the next time you buy gasoline or diesel fuel. Remember that the next time you go to the grocery store and try to make your food budget stretch. Remember that when you ponder whether or not you'll be able to take a vacation this year, or buy new school clothing for your children, or go out for a fish fry. Remember that when you try to stretch your retirement income to cover your basic needs.
And, when you've gotten yourself all 'cranked up', if that happens, make a resolution to get involved and stay involved and to talk with your elected representatives at every level of government and let them know what you think and what you want them to do on your behalf. And, if they fail you, fire them with your vote at the polling place.
Had you and I done that two decades ago instead of simply going with the flow, maybe we'd not be in the situation we find ourselves in today.
Filed under: Taxes, MATC, Healthcare, Wisconsin, U.S., Village Board, School Board, Political, County Board, Economy, Quality of Life
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By Al Campbell
Wednesday, May 7 2008, 08:41 AM
The benchmark oil prices closed at just under $122 per barrel yesterday due to unrest in Nigeria and slumps in Russia's production. 'Experts' predict that prices for crude oil could go as high as $150 this year. And, that would translate to about $4.50 per gallon prices at our pumps.
What to do, what to do?
A bright young Congressman has some ideas. He is Representative Paul Ryan who was born and raised in Janesville and who has seen the impact of gas prices on the GM plant there that builds Tahoes among other vehicles. You have probably heard that GM is laying off 750 employees due to poor sales. The 'ripple effect' has already begun taking other suppliers' jobs out of the market with an announcement by one that it would lay off 132 employees. Those layoffs will continue.
Ryan issued a press release on Monday with some simple and straight-forward language (which is not always the case for government press releases). He recognizes that Congress has had a big hand in creating the mess we find ourselves contending with today. And, he has five examples of what can be done to alleviate these problems:
One: Drill for oil. There are reportedly some 10.4 billion barrels of crude to be found beneath the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWAR). Instead of begging the other oil producing nations to increase their production, we could solve our own problems and handle this nasty 'supply and demand' thing. We could keep all the oil we produce from our land mass.
Two: Build more refineries. Congress can streamline the process for building new refineries. More than thirty years has passed since a new refinery was built in the U.S. Instead, we have gone offshore for refining capacity. That not only increases our costs but it actually could be a very poor strategic move in case one of the other large countries in the world decided to take us out economically rather than militarily. Can you spell C-H-I-N-A?
Three: Streamline fuel blends. Congress could end the mandates for so-called 'boutique fuels' such as that we burn in SE Wisconsin. Those boutique fuels actually cost more and perform more poorly. Then, when ethanol is added to that mix, the power production is further reduced and the cost to consumers is increased.
Four: Don't rely on food for fuel. Congress just passed an energy bill that quintupled the ethanol mandate. The average grocery bill for Americans is reported to have risen by $70 per week in the last year as the result of the ethanol mandate. Recall that I said a few days ago that Congress had played with the marketplace and had broken it? This is an example of the dastardly 'unintended consequences' that we all know too well.
Five: Stop stoking inflation. The added impact of Federal Reserve actions to drastically reduce the interest rates has softened the dollar to the point that we pay far more for crude oil than other countries. It takes more dollars than euros to buy a barrel of crude. It takes more dollars than yen to buy a barrel of crude oil.
Rep. Ryan's final paragraph is an important one:
"The flaws and failures of Congress have done much to contribute to our current energy crisis. There are concrete steps that Congress can take that will move us toward a coherent approach to a sustainable energy policy and put immediate downward pressure on energy prices. The American people have rejected gas price pandering and finger-pointing; you deserve responsible leadership and must demand it."
There are some moves going on today in Congress that need citizens' boosts. An Ethanol reduction act is winding its way and has about twenty-four sponsors. If you and I put enough pressure on our elected officials, we can make a difference and get some of these things moving more rapidly. If you and I demand that our presidential candidates 'get real' about these issues, we can cause some movement.
On the other hand, if we expect the other person to do the heavy lifting, then we'll get what we deserve. Each of us is but a small voice. But we all know what a choir of a hundred small voices sounds like. We all know what the cheers of 50,000 small voices sounds like. You can call, write and email your representatives. And you can do it over and over again. You can encourage friends and relatives who are represented by other officials to do the same. This is called a 'grass roots' movement and many, many politicians find themselves in office today because of grass roots movements.
It may not seem to you that elected officials listen to you, but they do if they're intelligent. They especially listen when they hear the same thing in differing words from many people. The words don't need to be fancy. They do need to be heartfelt Our Congressional representative is Jim Sensenbrenner and he is one of the originators of the Ethanol reduction act that I mentioned earlier. Tell him you're behind him, too.
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By Al Campbell
Friday, Apr 18 2008, 08:32 AM
Nearly all of us are bombarded with information tidbits from the time we awake until we retire at the end of our day. We live in the world of 24 hour news cycles unlike our forefathers. We have electronic access virtually no matter where we find ourselves. We are truly the 'plugged in' generations...and I submit we may well be too 'plugged in'.
If you're old enough, you may remember Mad magazine and the caricature character who graced its cover...Alfred E. Neumann. The caption that accompanied the picture was..."What? Me Worry?" This was published before we became so well connected, back when print was more the primary conveyance for information. I sometimes think back to Alfred E. Neumann and wonder if he would've been the happiest person on earth today, or if he would've also succumbed to what I've chosen to call "Subliminal Self-Fulfillment".
Again, if you're old enough, the term 'brainwashing' may carry memories. This was supposedly a technique of erasing certain memories and replacing those with new memories. It often involved the steady bombardment of the senses over many months and years. Prisoners of war returning from the Korean 'Conflict' (thank goodness it wasn't a real war) were sometimes thought to have been the victims of brainwashing.
You, me and most everyone else in our world are subjected to a steady stream of messages that cannot help but be absorbed by most of us. For example, 'Global Warming' has become "fact" even without scientific evidence confirming the theory. That has largely occurred as the result of constant hammering by the press and the rest of the disciples for that movement. For example, we seem to have talked ourselves into an economic 'recession' even though it very closely resembles an economic 'slowdown'. For example, we feel the need to reward people who made bad home-buying decisions by bailing out Wall Street bankers that knew better but also knew that Uncle Sam would most likely bail them out...and they were right.
We seem to now believe that 'ethanol' is the savior for our country's appetite for gasoline to power our vehicles even though it is costing us a tremendous increase in the cost of our food stocks as well as costing us in the decreasing 'miles per gallon' arena. Even though this product is being subsidized by our tax dollars and mandates since none of us would likely be inclined to pay more for something that delivers less than we were accustomed to receiving.
On top of all this 'noise', we find ourselves in that cycle of presidential campaigning...and there can be absolutely nothing good achieved by the administration currently in office no matter the political party involved. It seems that we no longer have three years 'off' in between presidential elections. Almost as soon as the President is sworn in, the opposition mounts the proverbial loudspeakers on the trucks and begins parading up and down the streets in our neighborhoods with the 'gloom and doom' message they desire to have implanted on our collective psyche.
This is what I choose to label 'subliminal self-fulfillment'. We have become like the sheep following the 'bellwether'. We have become like Pavlov's dogs. Are we now nearing the point where we give up thinking for ourselves and simply let whatever others will to happen because we simply don't want to be involved?
Have we neared the point of becoming a nation of Alfred E. Neumanns? Have we crossed over the mid-point?
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By Al Campbell
Wednesday, Apr 9 2008, 08:32 AM
The Center on Wisconsin Strategy and the Wisconsin Council on Children & Families, both found in Madison, have released a report that reaches the startling conclusion you see in the headline above.
Wow! What a surprise! Further into the article in today's Journal Sentinel that discussed this amazing statistic, we find out that Wisconsin actually ranks quite well so far as this measurement is concerned...but apparently not well enough to make these groups comfortable. The report shows that the gap in Wisconsin is actually smaller than on average across the country. The report found that Wisconsin actually ranks 11th out of the 50 states in this regard, and that means the gap between top and bottom fifths of the population are lesser.
But, there are the usual suggestions made to 'correct' this terrible situation:
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Increase the minimum wage and then index it to inflation.
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Improve worker skills and education.
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Expand subsidized childcare and health care for low-income workers.
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'Update' unemployment insurance.
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Make taxes 'more progressive'.
This 'minimum wage' canard is so old and tiresome but it just keeps coming back. There are positions in the workforce that do not command more than the current minimum wage. Every time the minimum wage is increased, it displaces workers at the bottom end of society because the jobs simply go away. The majority of minimum wage jobs are held on a part-time basis by students and homemakers, and not be sole bread winners.
Improving worker skills and education is a noble undertaking, it is one that we are engaged in already, and it speaks to the need to get MPS working since it seems intent on not graduating 53% of its students thus relegating them to those minimum wage jobs and/or welfare programs (except that you have to read for many of those, so I guess that is out).
I don't know where the people have been who built this study, but every time we turn around, we are expanding childcare and health care for low-income workers. Look at BadgerCare and BadgerCare Plus. Listen to the radio commercials begging people to come in to sign up for welfare programs.
Apparently unemployment insurance should be 'updated' (read increased) so the people who are unable to hold jobs get more money until the benefit runs out. Maybe a better tax climate in our wonderful state would prompt the creation of more jobs and remove the increasing need for the unemployment insurance program 'update'.
Finally, the ultimate liberal solution for every ill to be found in society: let's take more money away (tax increases) from 'the rich' and give it to the poor. This class warfare shot is being heard all too often in the current presidential campaign, and it fails to define just who the 'rich' are; be careful middle class; you may be rich. We don't need to resort to the use of this class warfare tactic in Wisconsin. In case the 'ruling class' hasn't figured it out, our taxes are already too progressive.
These studies drive me nuts (as is plainly seen from this Blog). Lower our taxes as Texas has done for its citizens and employers, and watch what happens to unemployment, etc.
What a surprise. The rich get richer faster than the poor. The real surprise is that liberals have yet to figure out how cause and effect function in this equation!
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By Al Campbell
Saturday, Apr 5 2008, 10:11 AM
Our politicians are dancing along merrily plotting to see just how they can use your money and mine to reward less-than-desirable behavior. They have forgotten, if ever they knew, that when we reward bad behavior, we get more bad behavior. On the other hand, if we permit some kind of 'pain' to follow poor decisions, we tend to see modified behavior.
What has this to do with the sub-prime mortgage debacle? Plenty!
First, our government swooped in to help save the mortgage bankers that had encouraged this irrational activity given the lax oversight of federal agencies. And, it continues down that same path. What lesson will be learned from this? Simple: we can continue to do stupid things with money because the government will bail us out just like always.
Second, the politicians fell all over themselves to earn 'points' (also known as votes) from the people who had over-extended and gotten themselves into this mess voluntarily.
What will be learned when a couple earning less than necessary to support the payments, is 'given' a mortgage loan using the adjustable rate feature in spite of credit scoring? And who, when the rates went up, were given a 'pass' on the deal? The lesson being taken away when there is no 'pain' associated with the decision is this: it's okay to do things like this because the government won't let us hurt ourselves!
The answer is that each of us has to pay the price for our decisions. If we are not forced to pay a price, we will repeat the same behavior or worse. We can all remember that 'little urchin' in the neighborhood who could do no wrong in the eyes of his or her parents. They were the worst little kids in the neighborhood. We can probably each remember how we 'got away' with something, and we can likely remember just how that experience tempted us to continue doing whatever it was that we had 'gotten away with'.
Why is it that politicians think the way too many of them do in these situations? Because, if they can succeed in getting the majority to think like this, they will have achieved their goal. What is that goal? The goal is to get the majority to believe that without big government involved in every decision we take in our daily lives, even if we hurt ourselves, it doesn't matter; it doesn't matter because big government is there looking out for our best interests.
This is a decidedly liberal point of view. We don't often hear conservatives espousing this kind of action. The solution to this 'slippery slope' mentality seems obvious to me: elect conservatives and re-elect other conservatives if the first group loses sight of reality from having been in office in Germantown, West Bend, Madison or Washington for too many terms. This is how we influence the direction of our community, our county. our state and our country in a representative form of government!
Our ignoring such problems is how the politicians who want the 'nanny' state to evolve past the tipping point get that to happen. And it will happen at the rate our country is moving down that pathway. Once it happens, there will be no turning back.
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By Al Campbell
Monday, Mar 3 2008, 09:20 AM
Eliot Spitzer was the New York State Attorney General before he became Governor of that state. Spitzer has the well-deserved reputation as a 'pit bull'. The Wall Street Journal editors brought up his trail of carnage (my term) today discussing what he did to major organizations in America with his 'pit bull' style of threatening companies with enough damage to cause them to 'voluntarily' do as he directed they do. He made himself the investigator, the accuser, the judge and the jury.
The two companies mentioned this morning are AIG, the world's largest insurance organization, at least at that time, and Marsh & McLennan, a leading U.S. insurance brokerage organization. Spitzer's threats caused both companies to fire their Chairmen. Both companies have been on a downhill slide ever since costing shareholders huge sums of money in retirement funds, stock portfolios and so forth. Many of these investors are you and me, whether or not we know it.
Those were companies caught up in Mr. Spitzer's web in New York City. There was another that is much nearer and dearer to many in the Milwaukee area. Strong Funds, and the related companies in Dick Strong's business holdings at the time, found themselves caught up in the Spitzer meat grinder. The charges were of a questionable nature but that didn't stop the meat grinder that was Eliot Spitzer. The Strong organization's good name was soon damaged beyond repair.
In the end, Dick Strong was forced to sell his companies at essentially 'fire sale' prices. He paid significant fines for the trading activities in which he supposedly engaged. The remains are now operated as part of the Wells Fargo organization. The hundreds and hundreds of Strong employees who lost their jobs have, I hope, found their way into other organizations and may have forgotten much of the anguish they were personally subjected to by the Spitzer meat grinder.
Dick Strong, who was, and is, one of the finest men our community could hope to have in it, has survived. Certainly his personal wealth probably has diminished somewhat although he is not in danger of losing a home or having nothing to eat. There are some who will look at his situation and feel good because one of the 'haves' got what he deserved. Those people are sadly misinformed and will simply have to live with their misshapen ideas.
The real loss has been for our community. The companies Dick ran were major contributors to the community. Those companies are gone and I doubt that Wells Fargo has taken over the philanthropy that was once the domain of the Strong group of companies. Few buyers would have done so. I am sure that Dick is still doing good works because that is who he is.
All this because a man named Eliot Spitzer managed to bull his way through the office of Attorney General of New York state in his quest for the Governor's chair and maybe even a run for President at some point in his political career. I'll remember to my last day, and I'll remain saddened over what this man brought upon us...in the name of justice.
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By Al Campbell
Sunday, Feb 17 2008, 12:03 PM
Back in my Blog of January 23rd, I tried to work through the choice of the person of conservative bent whom I would favor with my vote during our primary elections. I had, at that point, devolved to Mitt Romney as 'my candidate'. Then, Mitt determined that he wouldn't make the cut and removed himself from the fray. He was statesmanlike, and, I believe, was placing party and country above self. That's part of what attracted me to him, and still is.
So now, I watch 'liquid snow' and have realized that I no longer have a decision to make. My three choices are Ron Paul, Mike Huckabee and John McCain.
I realize I am offending some of the most rabid political backers alive today when I say that Ron Paul is still a loose cannon and that I cannot vote for him. (I saw a fixed wing airplane towing a Ron Paul banner yesterday over the Milwaukee area. That struck me as strange since there were no large outdoor gatherings to attract viewers.) There are some values that he espouses in the Libertarian mode that have appeal to me, but I simply do not believe that he is the right person with the right values to lead us today.
I believe that Mike Huckabee is also not right for our country today. He has no real chance and yet he persists in continuing to run because he is able to do it 'on the cheap' and because he either thinks he'll be a player in a 'brokered' nomination, has a shot at the 'Veep' slot or is simply creating name recognition for his follow-up race in four or eight years. He seems to me to be in the race for himself and not for the country. I do not yet see the 'statesman' who recognizes that he is, at best, a spoiler, and therefore removes himself from the race to help the party coalesce around the obvious candidate.
The 'obvious candidate' is John McCain as much as I wish it might be Fred Thompson or Mitt Romney. I cannot bring myself to vote for Hillary to try to somehow stem the Obama tide. Either of the candidates on the other ticket frighten me; it is simply a matter of degrees of frightfulness.
I still have misgivings about McCain, but he is the only choice for me on the critical issue of freedom. He will continue to be the tough fiscal conservative, and Lord knows we need that today. I would like a tougher stance on the issue of illegal immigrants already in the country, but that has to take a back seat to our country's safety. I would like for him to not have co-sponsored 'McCain Feingold', but he did. I would like a more controlled temper, but I'll have to presume that he'll have solid advisors with whom he'll take counsel before making major decisions.
How he will fare against Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama remains to be seen. I suspect that he might have a better chance against Hillary than Barack, but I'm not in the position to make that decision, so I'll just have to take my chances.
This has been a difficult decision-making process and I'm almost grateful that the final decision was made for me.
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