Monday, October 18, 2010

My son cracks me up...

The other day I was watching a movie and he came into the room and asked:

Does this movie have a robot?
No.
(Looks at the the tv then back at me) A monster?
Nope.
A gorilla?
Not that either.
(He raises his arms with palms up) What's going on here?
(He starts to walk out of the room turns at the doorway points his finger in the air) A talking tree?
Nope.
(He shrugs his shoulders and goes on his merry way.)

And last night he came into the kitchen, where Kelly and I were talking, with a blanket on his head. He told us he was Jesus. He then asked if we knew where our son was. We said no as he ripped the blanket off his head revealing our son. He was very proud. He did the same thing as Yoda.

It's not often you hear yourself say, "Ian, Jesus and Yoda were just here looking for you."

Monday, October 11, 2010

From the WSJ editorials...

This should frighten the heck out of all of us...

If at first you don't succeed, get some friends in high places to shut your opponents up. That's the latest Washington power play, as Democrats and liberals attack the Chamber of Commerce and independent spending groups in an attempt to stop businesses from participating in politics.

Since the Supreme Court's January decision in Citizens United v. FEC, Democrats in Congress have been trying to pass legislation to repeal the First Amendment for business, though not for unions. Having failed on that score, they're now turning to legal and political threats. Funny how all of this outrage never surfaced when the likes of Peter Lewis of Progressive insurance and George Soros helped to make Democrats financially dominant in 2006 and 2008.

Chairman Max Baucus of the powerful Senate Finance Committee got the threats going last month when he asked Internal Revenue Service Commissioner Douglas Shulman to investigate if certain tax exempt 501(c) groups had violated the law by engaging in too much political campaign activity. Lest there be any confusion about his targets, the Montana Democrat flagged articles focused on GOP-leaning groups, including Americans for Job Security and American Crossroads.

Mr. Baucus was seconded last week by the ostensibly nonpartisan campaign reform groups Democracy 21 and the Campaign Legal Center, which asked the IRS to investigate whether Crossroads is spending too much money on campaigns. Those two outfits swallowed their referee whistle in the last two campaign cycles, but they're all worked up now that Republicans might win more seats. Crossroads GPS, a 501(c)(4) affiliate of American Crossroads supported by Karl Rove, is a target because it has spent millions already in this election cycle.

Last Tuesday, the liberal blog ThinkProgress, run by the Center for American Progress Action Fund, reported that the U.S. Chamber of Commerce had collected some $300,000 in annual dues from foreign companies. Since the money went into the Chamber's general fund, the allegation is that it could have been used to pay for political ads, which would violate a ban on foreign companies participating in American elections. The Chamber says it uses no foreign money for its political activities and goes to great lengths to raise separate funds for political purposes.

That didn't stop President Obama from raising the issue in a Maryland speech last week, saying that "groups that receive foreign money are spending huge sums to influence American elections." Within hours of the ThinkProgress report, the bully boys at MoveOn.org asked the Department of Justice to launch a criminal investigation of the Chamber. In a letter to the Federal Election Commission, Minnesota Senator Al Franken expressed his profound concern that "foreign corporations are indirectly spending significant sums to influence American elections through third-party groups." From the man who stole his Senate election in a dubious recount, this is rich.

Even Mr. Franken admits in his letter that the Chamber's commingling of funds in its general accounts is not "per se illegal," but apparently he thinks it's fine to unleash federal investigators because the Chamber cash might contribute to the defeat of fellow Democrats.

The outrage over the Chamber is especially amusing considering the role of foreigners in U.S. labor unions. According to the Center for Competitive Politics, close to half of the unions that are members of the AFL-CIO are international. One man's corporate commingling is another's union dues.

Unions and liberal groups are hardly cash poor this year in any case. The Campaign Media Analysis Group looked at the combined spending of candidates, their parties and outside groups and found that Democrats outspent Republicans $47.3 million to $40.8 million in a recent 60-day period.

Democrats claim only to favor "disclosure" of donors, but their legal intimidation attempts are the best argument against disclosure. Liberals want the names of business donors made public so they can become targets of vilification with the goal of intimidating them into silence. A CEO or corporate board is likely to think twice about contributing to a campaign fund if the IRS or prosecutors might come calling. If Democrats can reduce business donations in the next three weeks, they can limit the number of GOP challengers with a chance to win and reduce Democratic Congressional losses.

The strategy got a test drive in Minnesota earlier this year after Target Corporation donated $100,000 cash and $50,000 of in-kind contributions to an independent group that ran ads supporting the primary candidacy of Republican gubernatorial candidate Tom Emmer. MoveOn.org accused the company of being anti-gay, organized a petition, and crafted a TV ad urging shoppers to boycott Target stores. Target made no further donations, and other companies that once showed an interest have since declined to contribute.

***
Then there's the curious reference to the tax status of Koch Industries by White House chief economist Austan Goolsbee. In a late August conference call with reporters, Mr. Goolsbee cited the closely-held Koch as an example of "really giant firms" that pay no corporate income tax because they file under other tax rules. But how in the world would Mr. Goolsbee know Koch's tax status? Could his knowledge be related to the White House-liberal campaign against Koch for contributing to Americans for Prosperity, a group that is supporting free-market candidates for Congress this year?

In an August 9 speech, Mr. Obama personally trashed Americans for Prosperity, hinting that it was funded by "a big oil company." He had to mean Koch, which makes no secret of its support for Americans for Prosperity.

The White House didn't respond to queries about Mr. Goolsbee's remark for weeks until GOP Senators requested an investigation. The Treasury's inspector general for tax matters has since announced such a probe, and last week White House spokesman Robert Gibbs finally got around to explaining that Mr. Goolsbee's statement "was not in any way based on any review of tax filings" and that he won't use the example again.

We're glad to hear it, but pardon our skepticism given the ferocity of this White House-led campaign against businesses that donate to political campaigns. Faced with electoral repudiation as the public turns against their agenda, Democrats are unleashing government power to silence their political opponents. Instead of piling on, the press corps ought to blow the whistle on this attempt to stifle political speech. This is one more liberal abuse of power that voters should consider as they head to the polls.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

I think I've blogged about this before...

but it bears repeating.

Because of my illness, for those of you that don't know I had pneumonia, I was out of sorts for a long while. Almost two months.

Well, I finally made it back to church the past couple of weeks and I gotta tell ya, it feels good.

When I was in college I went a long time without attending a mass...a long time. Never missed it that much. Probably because I was in college and thought I knew better. Luckily I wised up.

It brings me peace and serenity to hear the word of God. To know that He will always be there no matter what I do or where I go is a pretty humbling concept.

I am human and I do things I shouldn't do...often...and repeatedly. Yet despite those frailties, He is there. Sometimes waiting. Sometimes embracing.

But always there.

Kelly gets on to me about how much I tell the kids about politics. For instance, they all know we don't like liberals. Why? Because they think they know better how to spend our money than we do.

But contrary to popular belief I know when to draw the line.

Last night we went to On the Border and they are partnering with the Susan G Komen foundation on the big walk for the cure. You can buy shirts and bracelets and knick knacks all to help the cause. We politely declined.

Madison asked why she couldn't have a shirt and why we wouldn't give money to that organization. I didn't tell her it was because Susan G Komen gives to Planned Pernthood the leading abortion provider in the US. No. I told her because we just didn't have enough money.

She doesn't need to be thinking about those things at her age. Too much.

But you're never too young to be weary of liberals.

Saturday, October 2, 2010

I have been derelict in my duties...

what with all the political postings, I have been remiss on regaling you with stories of what's going on with my family and me.

So...what's going on?

Nothin'

Except for Madison's birthday party a few weeks ago. She is 8 years old. She told us she wanted a book party. Apropos because she is a voracious reader. She reads all the time.

Kelly, as she tends to do, took this idea, ran with it and made it the best darn book party you could have imagined. She went to many Barnes and Nobles and asked if they had any children's book displays left over she could have for her daughter's birthday. We got tons of stuff. We also got tons of stuff from Madison's Aunt Kim.

On top of that, she asked that everyone come dressed as their favorite book character. All 24 guests came dressed up. That was really cool. They all dressed up.

We played pin the hat on the life size cat. Had a treasure hunt and played book bingo.

Madison was Junie B Jones.

It was a great party! Great idea! Great execution! Just Great!

Now if we travel further back in time, we can see, through the mist that always seems to accompany a travel back in time, our trip to Corpus Christi/San Antonio.

We had a wonderful time. Stayed at a Condo right on the beach. Weather was good. Except for the 101 degree temperature I was running, it was a grand trip.





This one's for you, dad. Aboard the USS Lexington.


Friday, October 1, 2010

This one even has me speechless...

Sort of.

What makes this fascinating is that the people who produce this dreck have no clue as to just how far removed they have become from normal human sensibilities, or at least they didn’t until the video began provoking the fully-predictable reaction. They have become so wrapped up in Gaia that they seem to have little connection to humanity.

The other, mainly unrelated point that comes to mind is that this represents a reductio ad absurdum of the view from the hard Left about how dissent gets treated by the mainstream American populace, vis-a-vis the Iraq war especially. Can you imagine the reaction had an organization like Move America Forward produced a video like this, where those who didn’t support a robust strategy for the war on terror were blown up by a button-pushing advocate for the strategy? Especially children in a classroom being terrorized by their teacher into compliance with the groupthink?

Very disturbing images follow