Brief
The Foundation
“Nothing so strongly impels a man to regard the interest of his constituents, as the certainty of returning to the general mass of the people, from whence he was taken, where he must participate in their burdens.” –George Mason
Government
“In 2008, the slogan was ‘Yes We Can.’ For 2011-12, it’s ‘We Can’t Wait.’ What happened in between? Candidate Obama, the vessel into which myriad dreams were poured, met the reality of governance. … Never mind that you had control of the Congress for two-thirds of your current tenure. It’s all the fault of Republican rejectionism. Hence: ‘We Can’t Wait.’ We can’t wait while they obstruct. We can’t wait while they dither with my jobs bill. Write Congress today! Vote Democratic tomorrow! We can’t wait. Except for certain exceptions, such as the 1,700-mile trans-USA Keystone XL pipeline, carrying Alberta oil to Texas refineries, that would have created thousands of American jobs and increased our energy independence. For that, we can wait, it seems. President Obama decreed that any decision must wait 12 to 18 months – postponed, by amazing coincidence, until after next year’s election. Why? Because the pipeline angered Obama’s environmental constituency. But their complaints are risible. Global warming from the extraction of the Alberta tar sands? Canada will extract the oil anyway. If it doesn’t go to us, it will go to China. Net effect on the climate if we don’t take that oil? Zero. … ‘The administration,’ reported The New York Times, ‘had in recent days been exploring ways to put off the decision until after the presidential election.’ Exploring ways to improve the project? Hardly. Exploring ways to get past the election. … Sure, the pipeline would have produced thousands of truly shovel-ready jobs. Sure, delay could forfeit to China a supremely important strategic asset – a nearby, highly reliable source of energy. But approval was calculated to be a political loss for the president. … We can’t wait.” –columnist Charles Krauthammer
What do you think of Obama’s decision to punt the pipeline decision until after elections?
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Opinion in Brief
“As the clock ticks toward … Wednesday’s deadline for the 'super committee’ on deficit reduction to come up with $1.2 trillion in savings, it’s looking increasingly likely that the panel will fail. … But the failure of the ‘super committee’ raises a broader question, particularly if the triggered cuts get overridden: is it actually possible for Congress to cut spending? The problem Congress always runs into is that immediate spending cuts are seen as too disruptive, so even when members propose to reduce spending, they typically push for phasing in any cuts over time. Yet by doing that, they’re putting the actual task of implementing cuts in the hands of future Congresses. And history has shown that such cuts are often undone when it comes time to make them. In 1996, for instance, the new Republican congress voted to phase out farm subsidies over seven years, but by the end of that period, was doling out more subsidies than ever before. … Follow the spending debate now, and even the proposals that are considered the most ambitious … all rest on the assumption that the current Congress will be able to dictate the behavior of future Congresses. … [T]he hard truth is that it may take a Greece-like collapse for the nation to cut spending, but by that point it’ll have to be done in a state of emergency, and likely accompanied by drastic tax hikes.” –The Washington Examiner’s Philip Klein
The Gipper
“[I]t doesn’t require expropriation or confiscation of private property or business to impose socialism on a people. What does it mean whether you hold the deed or the title to your business or property if the government holds the power of life and death over that business or property? Such machinery already exists. The government can find some charge to bring against any concern it chooses to prosecute. Every businessman has his own tale of harassment. Somewhere a perversion has taken place. Our natural, inalienable rights are now considered to be a dispensation of government, and freedom has never been so fragile, so close to slipping from our grasp as it is at this moment.” –Ronald Reagan
For the Record
“On Jan. 5, the new House of Representatives convened. … On March 1, the Republican-majority House approved a continuing resolution to keep the government-funded from March 4 through March 18. … Since March 4, federal spending has been the result of a Republican-Democrat partnership. Liberals and establishment media figures often decry ‘gridlock’ in Washington and suggest the system does not work because Congress does not enact more legislation. But what we have had in Washington this year is the opposite of gridlock. We have had free-flowing spending, authorized by legislation approved by the leaders of both parties. … By the close of business on Nov. 14, the federal debt had climbed to $14,977,884,880,834.39. That equaled about $127,430 for every household in the country – or an increase of about $6,766 per household during the period the Republican House had an effective veto over federal spending. During that time, House Speaker Boehner also negotiated a deal with President Obama to increase the legal limit on the national debt by as much as $2.4 trillion. … We are as much in need of great leaders today as at anytime in our history. We will not find them among those who now run Congress.” –columnist Terence Jeffrey
Insight
“I believe that if the people of this nation fully understood what Congress has done to them over the last 49 years, they would move on Washington; they would not wait for an election. … It adds up to a preconceived plan to destroy the economic and social independence of the United States!” –senator George W. Malone (1890-1961)
Essential Liberty
“The signs of a gathering storm can be detected if one is paying attention. The 9/11 attacks, for example, surprised us all, but they were hardly a bolt out of the blue. ‘In August 1998, Osama bin Laden’s Afghanistan-based terrorist network bombed U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania,’ Middle East expert James Phillips wrote in a paper published by The Heritage Foundation in July 2000. ‘Yet Afghanistan has still not received the high-level attention that it deserves as the world’s leading exporter of terrorism, Islamic revolution, and opium.’ We’d also seen the USS Cole bombed while it lay in port in Yemen. And let’s not forget the first bombing attack on the World Trade Center in 1993. … It’s easy to forget sometimes that the president is also the commander-in-chief. … [W]hen you consider our position in the world, and what it takes to make sure that we remain secure, we see the need to be prepared – not just in a general sense, but to anticipate specific threats and figure out how to deal with them.” –Heritage Foundation president Ed Feulner
Re: The Left
“Can you imagine how differently our political climate would be if the mainstream media had the slightest inclination toward fairness and balance? The liberal media have never, to my knowledge, shined the spotlight on Obama’s many embarrassing gaffes. They have rarely called attention to his deceit, broken promises and policy failures. Part of the reason is their presupposition that because he’s a credentialed left-winger, he is brilliant, and any departure from that is a mere aberration, an exception that couldn’t possibly detract from his presumptive brilliance. And as a bona fide ‘progressive,’ he is imbued with superior moral standards, and his misdeeds must be excused in exchange for his dedication to policies the liberal media deem are ethically unassailable. From the mainstream media’s perspective, conservatives, on the other hand, are presumptively dimwitted or morally bankrupt, because you can’t be intelligent and conservative unless you’re morally depraved.” –columnist David Limbaugh
How would elections look different today if the MSM were fair and balanced?
Political Futures
“[A]ccording to Public Policy Polling, Newt Gingrich is now at the top of the GOP field. And for understandable reasons: he’s performed quite well in the debates, he’s generally excellent during television interviews, he’s targeted the press in almost every debate, and he hasn’t gotten into any spitting matches with the other candidates. … The danger for Gingrich is that he’s something of a target-rich environment, from his personal life (including cheating on two previous wives), to his commercial with then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi raising concerns about climate change, to his past support for the Medicare prescription drug plan and an individual mandate in health care, to the $300,000 he received from embattled government mortgage agency Freddie Mac, to much more. Some of the coverage will be tough and fair; some of it will be tough and unfair. But tough it will be.” –columnist Peter Wehner
Culture
“On its website, the American Psychological Association brags, ‘Since 1975, the American Psychological Association has called on psychologists to take the lead in removing the stigma of mental illness that has long been associated with lesbian, gay, and bisexual orientations.’ It once considered such behavior otherwise and while even most conservatives no longer regard homosexuality as a mental illness, many still regard it as sinful. That theological diagnosis, too, has been discarded in our increasingly secular and anomalous society where everything is to be tolerated except those people who assert that, according to a standard higher than opinion polls, some things remain intolerable. … What we tolerate and promote we get more of and what we discourage and reject we get less of. … The message at Penn State was that we live in a culture that forbids almost nothing. … In the last verse of the Old Testament’s book of Judges, there is this: ‘In those days Israel had no king; everyone did what was right in his own eyes.’ That could have been the motto at Penn State. Increasingly, it appears to describe contemporary America as well.” –columnist Cal Thomas
Reader Comments
“I have just made my small donation to your fall/winter campaign. I am so grateful every day to receive my Patriot Post email. Like many others I’m on a limited income and can only donate a small amount to your campaigns. Like the others I wish I could give more. You have done so much for the American Cause. Keep up the great work for the American Spirit!” –Martha
“Mark Alexander’s essay, Tank Man: Genuine Courage v Juvenile Cowardice was a great article! Thank you for saying what others don’t have the courage or integrity to say.” –Rob
“The so called ‘Occupiers’ are nothing more than a granola bar, if you take away all of the nuts and fruits, all you have left are a bunch of flakes.” –Bill
“Elena Kagan was nominated because she interprets the Constitution as a living document, promotes limits on freedom of speech and press, supports unlimited abortion and gay rights, dislikes and disrespects the military, and is willing to give false testimony for her client. She does not have either the principles or the judicial background to serve on the highest court in the land, let alone to recuse herself for conflict of interest.” –Renelle
“Are conservatives crazy? Only liberals are crazy, if they think conservatives are crazy. After all liberals are supporting those crazy WSO people. I use the term ‘people’ lightly.” –Bill
The Last Word
“Congratulations, average American! It’s your turn to be blamed for President Obama’s – and America’s – problems. … Last week at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit, Obama explained that, ‘We’ve been a little bit lazy over the last couple of decades. We’ve kind of taken for granted – "Well, people would want to come here” – and we aren’t out there hungry, selling America and trying to attract new businesses into America.’ … In September, the president reflected in an interview that America is ‘a great, great country that has gotten a little soft, and we didn’t have that same competitive edge that we needed over the last couple of decades.’ Shortly after that, he told rich donors at a fundraiser that ‘we have lost our ambition, our imagination and our willingness to do the things that built the Golden Gate Bridge and Hoover Dam.’ … The point of all this is pretty obvious. Obama has a long-standing habit of seeing failure to support his agenda as a failure of character. … And in the context of the country’s economic doldrums, Obama sees a lack of ambition, softness, laziness, etc., in anyone who doesn’t support his agenda. … But, yes, by all means, let’s blame our lack of competitiveness on the American people.“ –columnist Jonah Goldberg
Semper Vigilo, Fortis, Paratus et Fidelis!
Nate Jackson for The Patriot Post Editorial Team