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Miscellaneous meanderings and philosophical ramblings. The title from a spiral notebook I used to jot down my thoughts on religion and other matters some years ago. I like to write, think and express my views on various issues. Robust discussion is welcome.


Chris of Rights and Charles Martin <-- Lists of debunked Sarah Palin rumors

"Lan astaslem."
I will not submit. I will not surrender.

Sunday, January 27, 2008

OTA Open Trackback 01.28.08


As the lovely Samantha Burns says:

Please use this space to trackback your best, main page articles (I just require a link to this article, as always). Also, if you have something to discuss, it is welcomed here as well.

ADVICE: Trackback main blog page articles to showcase your work (and it will help to attract readers).

Yep, I was in a plagiarizing mood ;-) Nevertheless, it's a good way to draw more attention to your blog, so trackback away :-) I'll have one of these each Monday, because, well, I hate Mondays ;-p

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Friday, January 25, 2008

Irrational atheists and their groupies


I wonder if Dr. Helen thought her post about a new book would generate so many comments at her blog. Whatever the case may be, the book she highlights will eventually find its way to my library, for at the very least having tweaked some anti-theists into knee jerk, shoot themselves in the foot entertainment for the rest of us.

The book is titled, Dissecting the Unholy Trinity of Dawkins, Harris, and Hitchens and she has this to say about the author:

You might know Vox Day from his blog and interesting take on feminist issues--he always has something provocative to add to that particular conversation and his book proves to be just as stimulating in regards to religion and faith. (source)

Be sure to read the rest of her post and then take a trip through her comments. You may want to get some popcorn first, as a would be critic of the book displays his foolishness very quickly and Vox Day weighs in as well. A small taste of the ensuing entertainment:

Vox said:

There's little wonder William's student did such an incompetent job in attempting to critique a four-year old, 750-word op/ed column in lieu of a new, 320-page book, given a professor like William. William is an embarrassment to the academy, as the number of his factual and logical errors are nearly equal to the number of points he attempts to make in criticizing a book he admits he has not read.

[...]

I doubt that critic's ignorance will be so subtle as to be missed, but to save everyone time, as the comments section is currently up to 118, William is the one to look for, as his student is dispatched rather quickly before Vox even makes the comment excerpted above. Just make sure you're not chewing or swallowing your popcorn and reading at the same time, William's work is rather LOL snort worthy, to say the least.

Now perhaps some will be tempted to dismiss Dr. Helen's positive take on the book, perhaps she's just a Christian might be the thought. As far as I know, she's agnostic, but needless to say some will be tempted to dismiss it on that ground as well. Unfortunately for that mind set, Vox Day has an atheist review of his book posted, here's an excerpt:

Suffice it to say that by the end of the chapters dealing with the individual authors, I was happy that it was over. It was a thorough, detailed, dispassionate (with a little snarky levity thrown into the footnotes for flavor), and completely disheartening take-down of some of the best arguments that the godless have put into print - on their own terms, without using the Bible (in the first part of the book, that is), or any other sacred text to do it with. Amazing. And depressing. It is not my place to defend their books. I truly hope that they do find time to defend and clarify their books, specifically to the counter-arguments and claims made by Vox Day in TIA, though, because they really need to. Trust me, it wasn't pretty....

[...]

I strongly encourage Dr. Dawkins, Dr. Dennett, Hitch, Harris, and M'sieur Onfray to respond to TIA. It is not your run-of-the-mill "flea" book looking to make a quick buck riding on the coattails of The Amber Heard Fan Club*. It's the real deal, it's substantive, meticulously researched, it brings up real problems, and it addresses these problems without falling into the trap that other fleas have fallen into in the past. (source)

It would seem this book is worth serious attention from those on both sides of the religion issue.

Serious being not addressing a much shorter op-ed in place of the actual book and its well referenced arguments. That being said, with the writer's strike still on I would like to thank those irrational atheists, William and his student, for the interlude of entertainment thus provided.

---

Filed under: Culture -- Religion -- Christianity

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Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Fred Thompson is out of the race


It disappointed me to hear this news today. What follows is Fred Thompson's statement ending his campaign and then my thanks to Fred Thompson for what he did for us.

Today I have withdrawn my candidacy for President of the United States. I hope that my country and my party have benefited from our having made this effort. Jeri and I will always be grateful for the encouragement and friendship of so many wonderful people. (source)

I would like to thank Fred Thompson for running and standing so well for conservatism as it is, rather than as what some would prefer it to be. He didn't pander, he spoke clearly and intelligently on the issues that matter most to the future of this country. I hope that he and Jeri will find some way to continue to keep conservative principles important to our elected officials and those aspiring to lead this country. Should you decide rather to lead a quite family life, I'll be saddened, but I'll also understand, it has been earned.

God bless you and your family in the days and years ahead.

---

Filed under: Politics -- News

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Michael Medved - rather stuck on himself


So stuck on distinguishing himself from the conservative talk radio pack, he neglects to mention important information.

I've enjoyed listening to Medved, until recently. He's now on this kick of saying ALL the republican candidates are good conservatives. Pardon me, but someone that says that Mike Huckabee is a strong conservative is not someone who's judgement I consider reliable on such a matter.

This brings me to Medved pimping for his guy, John McCain. A caller asked Medved for reassurance concerning John McCain and his appointing conservative justices. The caller was concerned in part because of the gang of 14. One could hardly blame him. Medved made the typical claim that the gang of 14 made sure the procedural option was available for Republicans and if I recall correctly, made sure the supreme court justices were confirmed. I know that's the claim of some McCain supporters. It may be certain that it's convenient for McCain supporters to repeat that claim, but it's not a certainty that such was the case as argued at the Corner.

It is pure post hoc ergo propter hoc for the Whites to contend that the Gang of 14 deal had anything to do with the confirmations of Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Alito. Supreme Court appointments are of a different dimension than nominations to the lower federal courts, even the Circuit Courts of Appeal. The public is far more engaged in them, and the political price of obstructionism is certain to be markedly higher.

As exhibited during their hearings, these two jurists were so patently qualified, it would have been suicidal for Democrats to try to block them by filibuster. They waved the flag for the base by asking nasty questions, raising inane objections, and casting futile votes against confirmation, but there was no way they were going to block a vote. The filibuster strategy, preserved by word and deed in the Gang of 14 deal, has been highly effective in thwarting qualified nominees, but it depends on public apathy. If it had been used it against Roberts and Alito, that would have called great attention to its use against Court of Appeals nominees, which might have cost Democrats dearly. That and the undeniable merit of the two justices involved, not the Gang of 14 deal, is why the high-court nominees were confirmed. (source - be sure to read it all)

However, what stuck out most to me was Medved saying that McCain had supported Justice Robert Bork when Ronald Reagan had nominated him to the Supreme Court. That sounds great, as long as one leaves out an important piece of information. Not more than two weeks before, on Mark Levin's show, Bork had this to say:

“I don’t think that Senator McCain or Governor Huckabee deserves to be called a conservative.”

Judge Bork said that if one of them is the nomination, the conservative moment is in trouble, because "neither one of them is remotely a conservative." (source, audio of that Jan. 11th show at Levin's website here)

Seems to me that changes the matter significantly.

Previous posts:

John McCain and illegal immigration
John McCain's record

---

Filed under: Politics

Trackposted to: Outside the Beltway, The Virtuous Republic, Rosemary's Thoughts, Stix Blog, Right Truth, Shadowscope, DragonLady's World, The Amboy Times, Leaning Straight Up, Adeline and Hazel, third world county, DragonLady's World, Pirate's Cove, Celebrity Smack, The Pink Flamingo, Dumb Ox Daily News, Stageleft, Right Voices, Big Dog's Weblog, Cao's Blog, Conservative Cat, Diary of the Mad Pigeon, Nuke Gingrich, Faultline USA, Allie is Wired, InvestorBlogger dot com, The Crazy Rants of Samantha Burns, The World According to Carl, Blue Star Chronicles, Wolf Pangloss, CORSARI D'ITALIA, and OTB Sports, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

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Fred Thompson - announcement tomorrow?


That's the expectation, so let's cut to the chase. Bob Krumm lays it out with this opening at his post.

“IF YOU WANT FRED TO WIN; IF YOU REALLY WANT CONSERVATISM TO CARRY THE DAY IN 2008. DONATE NOW!” (source)

He has much more to say, but that's the most important thing right now and I've contributed once again. This is the first time I've been motivated to help a campaign during the primaries and I've given several times before this. Heck, I even made a few phone calls for Fred Thompson which was quite painful for me to do.

He closes with:

IF YOU WANT FRED TO WIN; IF YOU REALLY WANT CONSERVATISM TO CARRY THE DAY IN 2008 DONATE NOW!

If Fred raises $1 million tomorrow (Tuesday), I’ll add another $1,000. So, if you’re going to complain that I’ve given up on Fred, don’t do it until you’ve spent at least that much money yourself. If you really want Fred to stay in the race, show him the money!

Let's do it! For conservatism as it really is, before others redefine it so much that it's meaningless and we're forced into the wilderness and facing years of crawling our way back to relevance.

Fred08 - Contribute Now

Fred Thompson's campaign site -- donate to Fred Thompson's campaign

Related posts:

Fred Thompson - South Carolina round up
Fred Thompson to rule them all
Fred Thompson endorsed by Reagan's favorite publication
Fred Thompson owns! SC debate
Fred Thompson, South Carolina and beyond
Fred Thompson wins NH debate
Fred Thompson - in his own words
Fred Thompson's red pickup
Fred Thompson - new campaign ad
A Christmas holiday message for our troops
Dayum! Fred Thompson refuses to pander in Iowa
Fred Thompson - prolife
Fred Thompson on illegal immigration
Another reason to vote for Fred Thompson
Fred Thompson on the issues

---

Filed under: Politics

Trackposted to: Outside the Beltway, The Virtuous Republic, Rosemary's Thoughts, Stix Blog, Right Truth, Shadowscope, DragonLady's World, The Amboy Times, Leaning Straight Up, Adeline and Hazel, third world county, DragonLady's World, Pirate's Cove, Celebrity Smack, The Pink Flamingo, Dumb Ox Daily News, Stageleft, Right Voices, Big Dog's Weblog, Cao's Blog, Conservative Cat, Diary of the Mad Pigeon, Nuke Gingrich, Faultline USA, Allie is Wired, InvestorBlogger dot com, The Crazy Rants of Samantha Burns, The World According to Carl, Blue Star Chronicles, Wolf Pangloss, CORSARI D'ITALIA, and OTB Sports, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

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Monday, January 21, 2008

OTA Open Trackback 01.21.08


As the lovely Samantha Burns says:

Please use this space to trackback your best, main page articles (I just require a link to this article, as always). Also, if you have something to discuss, it is welcomed here as well.

ADVICE: Trackback main blog page articles to showcase your work (and it will help to attract readers).

Yep, I was in a plagiarizing mood ;-) Nevertheless, it's a good way to draw more attention to your blog, so trackback away :-) I'll have one of these each Monday, because, well, I hate Mondays ;-p

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Friday, January 18, 2008

Fred Thompson - South Carolina round up


The South Carolina primary is tomorrow and Fred Thompson has picked up several more endorsements. Along with that, there is some news and analysis to consider as South Carolinians contemplate their vote on Saturday.

Fred Thompson endorsed by Limbaugh, David that is (Rush Limbaugh's brother).

Commentators are citing the unpredictability of the Republican primary contests as proof that Reagan conservatism is dead when precisely the opposite conclusion is warranted.

The main reason the conventional wisdom is being shattered in the primaries is that conservative voters, so far, have not been persuaded there is an electable, reliable conservative in the race.

But as I've stated before, I believe Fred Thompson is a reliable, consistent conservative. There are others in the field I could support, but not without some reservations. The more I learn about Fred and observe him in action, the more convinced I become that he's the right choice.

[...]

There is simply too much herd mentality among us about electability. We tell ourselves a candidate is not inspiring, then pretty soon we’re convinced he’s unelectable, and, voila, he almost becomes so. Yet, at that very moment, he’s proving to us that he is quite presidential, quite electable and quite motivated for the job — if we can only shed our predispositions against his “electability.” Since electability is often a matter of collective perception, it can turn on a dime, as with the reversal of the respective fortunes of screaming Howard Dean and somniferous John Kerry in 2004.(source, thanks to Stop The ACLU)

Be sure to read it all.

Alicia Colon endorses Fred Thompson.

...I've noticed the negligent media coverage of Thompson's campaign and it makes me wonder if the mainstream press considers him far more formidable than it would like. I've watched the debates, listened to the positions of all the candidates and I like Fred Thompson because he's running as an adult, not an entertainer.

When the moderator of the Iowa debate asked for a show of hands for those who believe that global warming is serious and man-made, Thompson immediately said, "I'm not doing a show of hands today". At least five of the other candidates had already raised their hands then lowered them when Thompson made his defiant stand against this juvenile request. It was clear who was a leader not a follower and isn't that whom we're supposed to be electing in November?

[...]

...according to Dick Morris, the Republican Party is fractured into three factions. The social conservatives are for Huckabee; the economic conservatives are for Romney and the national security crowd is for Giuliani. Oddly enough, Fred Thompson meets the criteria of all three blocs and sooner or later it's going to dawn on all these Republicans that they like Fred, too. (source)

Again, be sure to read it all, as she covers several issues issues important to the country, and how Fred Thompson has addressed them in contrast to the other candidates.

Move America Forward's chairman, Melanie Morgan endorses Fred Thompson. A small excerpt:

For the sake of this nation, I’m hoping that on Saturday the people of the Palmetto State punch the ballot for Thompson (no hanging chads, please).

Folks, it comes down to this basic premise:

The former Tennessee senator represents the best hope not just for Republicans and conservatives, but, most importantly, the best hope for America. (source, thanks to Stop The ACLU)

51 quotes about Fred Thompson

South Carolina will not decide the GOP nominee?

Eight years ago, winning South Carolina meant massive momentum headed into southern Super Tuesday states and, historically, the GOP nomination. Eight years ago, winning South Carolina meant you were the party of Reagan's mainstream conservative choice.

Today? When John McCain wins South Carolina — as he almost certainly will, for reasons to follow — it will mean almost nothing.

[...]

Instead of being the first state where the GOP’s natural conservative majority shapes the political field, South Carolina will be the final state of confusion, the last politically pointless stop on this wild 2008 ride. (source)

Fred Thompson can stay in the race past South Carolina.

Word from one of the Thompson Associates...

Whatever decision is made after South Carolina, the deciding factor on whether to continue and fight on or call it a race won't be money, the Associate says. Fundraising for the past several weeks has been solid, and they have enough to continue past South Carolina, although this Associate didn't know how many states they could afford to run ads in on Super Duper Tuesday. (source)

We may have a brokered convention. Will smokey back rooms decide how the GOP and conservatism will be defined? Will that make for a better result than a media driven, over-extended, front-loaded and crowded primary contest that began with open primaries?

With the possibility of a wide open race until the end, let's drop the "is it too late?" question. No matter the outcome in South Carolina, we need to do whatever we can to ensure that Fred Thompson is a well supported candidate. As long as he is in the race, it is not too late for anyone who has yet to vote. We can help Fred Thompson continue to be formidable with his presentation of principle and help spread his message, that he is the only consistent conservative in the race, that can unite and inspire all of the conservative coalition as no other candidate is able.

Fred08 - Contribute Now

Fred Thompson's campaign site -- donate to Fred Thompson's campaign

Related posts:

Fred Thompson to rule them all
Fred Thompson endorsed by Reagan's favorite publication
Fred Thompson owns! SC debate
Fred Thompson, South Carolina and beyond
Fred Thompson wins NH debate
Fred Thompson - in his own words
Fred Thompson's red pickup
Fred Thompson - new campaign ad
A Christmas holiday message for our troops
Dayum! Fred Thompson refuses to pander in Iowa
Fred Thompson - prolife
Fred Thompson on illegal immigration
Another reason to vote for Fred Thompson
Fred Thompson on the issues

---

Filed under: Politics -- News

Trackposted to: Outside the Beltway, Right Truth, Stix Blog, Shadowscope, The Amboy Times, Leaning Straight Up, Big Dog's Weblog, Conservative Cat, Adeline and Hazel, Diary of the Mad Pigeon, third world county, InvestorBlogger dot com, The Crazy Rants of Samantha Burns, The World According to Carl, Blue Star Chronicles, Pirate's Cove, The Pink Flamingo, Dumb Ox Daily News, Right Voices, and OTB Sports, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

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Mike Huckabee, his feet are definitely smaller than his mouth


They have to be, due to his ability to stick both into his oral cavity recently. Let's see how the best speaker in the race managed to do that.

Foot number one from HotAir:

”South Carolina people know true conservatism when they see it.You don’t like people outside the state telling you how you ought to raise your kids, you don’t like people from outside the state telling you what to do with the flag,” Huckabee said during a rally at a Myrtle beach airport hangar. “In fact, if somebody came down to Arkansas and told us what to do with our flag, we’d tell’ em where to put the pole.”

An excerpt of Bryan's comment in that post:

Classy. It was about as dumb a remark as Huckabee could have made. No one was talking about the perennial Confederate flag issue in South Carolina; now everyone is. The Democrats will use it once again to tar Republicans as racists... (source)

Pandering on a painful issue, selfish and short-sighted, good job pander boy.

Foot number two:

Huckabee says the Constitution is a "living breathing document" (video). Of course he was referring to the unrealistic, pandering amendments he touts, but that language is used by the left to justify activist courts distortion of the Constitution. I suppose a desperate supporter might say Mike Huckabee was merely clueless regarding the use of such words. Unfortunately, Huckabee's website says differently:

I firmly believe that the Constitution must be interpreted according to its original meaning, and flatly reject the notion of a “living Constitution.”

So, Huckster sticking his foot in his mouth, legitimizing language used by the left and forgetting his website rejected such language. The word shocking does not come to mind.

Fred Thompson also took issue with what the Huckabee said.

... I fear that this loose language about our Constitution calls into question Governor Huckabee’s appreciation and understanding of the issue of judicial activism and raises questions as to what kind of judges he would appoint were he to become President. (source)

Bonus, Mike Huckabee puts at least one hand in his mouth as well with this.

I personally wish that all of this was outlawed. I think that every candidates should speak for themselves, and that every thing that involves the candidate’s name or another candidate’s name should be authorized and approved by that candidate, otherwise it shouldn’t be spoken….

The point is that candidates can’t force these special interest 527 groups to stop. I wish we could. (source)

That's some real deep thinking from the Huckabee there. I guess he would outlaw this post and everything else I've said about him and the candidates. And we thought John McCain was bad with McCain-Feingold.

It matters not how well one can communicate if they haven't taken the time to think deeply about issues and what thoughts they've managed are quite shallow and consist mostly of sticking a wet finger in the air.

Clearly, Mike Huckabee is not ready for something as serious as being the President of the United States. He not only panders more than Mitt Romney, and now over a racially divisive issue, he can't even show awareness of rhetoric used by those who have no respect for the Constitution and which contradicts his own website.

Give him a talk show, but please, let's not have this guy be on the GOP ticket in either slot.

Previous posts:

Mike Huckabee and the three F's
Mikey and Chuckie
Who knows Christianity best?
Mike Huckabee - sincerity extraordinaire
Mike Huckabee, the results of service
A fool and his liar are soon parted?
Mike Huckabee - NH Fox News debate
Mike Huckabee - you have a shifty mentality
Mike Huckabee and foreign policy
Mike Huckabee thinks you're stupid
Mike Huckabee - illegal immigration flip flopper?
Huckabee - what kind of preacher is this?
Mike Huckabee - a twofer
Huckabee - Christian leader?
The taming of a shrewd
Evangelicals - short term thinkers?
It's a good thing I'm registered as an independent
Why I don't heart Huckabee

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Filed under: Politics

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John McCain and illegal immigration


He now says he's come around to what Americans want. He says secure the border first before.... what? dare we call it amnesty? John McCain certainly has come around to the notion that Americans don't support amnesty, but it seems his actions are to only define the word so as to desperately avoid admitting that he still supports a form of amnesty for illegal aliens.

What else can his constant rhetoric of not wanting to tell an American soldier that his mother is being deported, mean? It would seem John McCain has a reflexive longing for amnesty in some form and has learned admitting such is not a way to win votes. It certainly doesn't help that when critics disagree with his defining what he supported as not being amnesty, the senator and his supporters, rather than stating we simply disagree, instead labels us as liars. That sword can cut both ways sir.

It would seem that help for John McCain on this issue will not come from a scorecard compiled by NumbersUSA.

Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) scores the lowest overall. The ratings are based on how well a candidate's immigration stances would protect American workers, taxpayers, communities, infrastructure, individual freedom and the environment.

[...]

McCain is rated "abysmal" on amnesty... If we really want someone strong regarding illegal immigration, we certainly don't want a recent convert in words only, who also uses rhetoric that undermines the supposed conversion. We need to also reject one who has flipped dramatically from saying anti-illegal immigration legislation is un-Christian and un-American to saying all illegals will have to leave the country under "their" plan. I guess God decides things by the flip of the coin for that candidate.

This leaves us to consider Fred Thompson, who NumbersUSA rates higher than all the other candidates.

...according to NumbersUSA President Roy Beck's Presidential Grid that rates each candidate in 16 immigration categories, Fred Thompson scores the highest. (source, thanks to Ace)

Also, as I've noted in a previous post here:

A Fred Thompson type of plan is already showing it's effectiveness at the state level.

[...]

Remove incentives for coming here and there is no need for deporting them all, which no major pro-law, anti-illegal immigration proponent has pushed for anyway.

[...]

Fred Thompson supports proven means to reduce illegal immigration. He's presented his views with more than mere sound bites and without supporting amnesty outright or by foolishness resulting in sanctuary for law breakers. This would be part of the reason that conservative Iowa Congressman Steve King endorsed Thompson. This, among many reasons, is why I still support Fred Thompson for President.

Hopefully South Carolinians will carefully consider the candidate's records on the issue of illegal immigration, who has merely pandered at the last minute and who has actually presented a plan that has already met with success, when they vote this Saturday.

Previous posts:

John McCain's record

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Filed under: Politics

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Thursday, January 17, 2008

Mike Huckabee and the three F's


To quote Inygo Montoya - You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.

Mike Huckabee has spoken lately as if he now grasps the concept of federalism. Previously, Mike Huckabee had unequivocally supported a federal ban on smoking in the workplace. But now his campaign has stated the time isn't right for federal legislation.

Captain ed's analysis reveals Huckabee's thinking, what there is of it:

Huckabee had two problems with the Republican base in this issue, and he hasn't really resolved either one. His initial response gave him a reputation as a nanny-stater, someone who would use the power of government to remove personal choice in the name of protecting people against themselves. Smoking bans have begun to create animosity from private-property advocates who feel that the owners of establishments such as bars and restaurants have the right to serve smokers if they desire.

He didn't really address the federalism issue, either. The retreat from his August 2007 position doesn't say that the previous statement was wrong, but just that the conditions do not exist for the imposition of federal authority on private property. A federalist would say that such conditions rarely exist at all, and only when the interest comes directly from the federal government's attempt to meet its Constitutional duties for national security and interstate commerce. Saying that "sentiment for federal legislation doesn't exist at this time" clearly implies that Huckabee would ignore federalist limitations on action if he could gin up enough sentiment to extend federal power far beyond anything imagined at present.

This response does not address the key problems with Huckabee's earlier stance. It's a flip-flop with only minimal repositioning, which would seem to be the worst of both worlds in this case. Huckabee and his team need to seriously rethink the entire issue and try again. (source)

So now on federalism we have a Huckabee flip and in a manner that also shows his understanding of federalism is so misplaced as to be meaningless except for how meaningful an example it is of his shallow thinking. I know, INCONCEIVABLE, that Mike Huckabee, the Christian leader would pander, have little understanding of the important principles of limited government and help demonstrate that by recently speaking of amending the constitution to be more in line with God.

Again, Inygo Montoya's words come to mind.

Mike Huckabee's efforts to ban smoking in Arkansas make for interesting reading as well. You can find that here.

Regarding this flip and his misunderstanding of federalism, Mike Huckabee earns an F grade. It will be interesting to see if eventually he adds to these three F's with a flop back to his previous nanny state position. Unfortunately, his history in this campaign gives much reason to think that such is not inconceivable and only a matter of time and his being in front of the right crowd, drooling for his pandering shtick.

Previous posts:

Mikey and Chuckie
Who knows Christianity best?
Mike Huckabee - sincerity extraordinaire
Mike Huckabee, the results of service
A fool and his liar are soon parted?
Mike Huckabee - NH Fox News debate
Mike Huckabee - you have a shifty mentality
Mike Huckabee and foreign policy
Mike Huckabee thinks you're stupid
Mike Huckabee - illegal immigration flip flopper?
Huckabee - what kind of preacher is this?
Mike Huckabee - a twofer
Huckabee - Christian leader?
The taming of a shrewd
Evangelicals - short term thinkers?
It's a good thing I'm registered as an independent
Why I don't heart Huckabee

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Filed under: Politics

Trackposted to: Outside the Beltway, Blog @ MoreWhat.com, The Virtuous Republic, Rosemary's Thoughts, Right Truth, Shadowscope, Leaning Straight Up, The Amboy Times, Big Dog's Weblog, Conservative Cat, Adeline and Hazel, Allie is Wired, third world county, Woman Honor Thyself, The Crazy Rants of Samantha Burns, The World According to Carl, Pirate's Cove, The Pink Flamingo, Celebrity Smack, Dumb Ox Daily News, CORSARI D'ITALIA, Right Voices, The Yankee Sailor, and CatSynth.com, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

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Mikey and Chuckie


Hopefully Jack Bauer will protect me.

Michael Medved recently had Chuck Norris, aka Mike Huckabee supporter, on his radio show for an interview. I was struck by how Norris explained his attraction to Mike Huckabee as a candidate when mentioning the governors support for mandated arts courses in the schools. He mentioned the left/right brain dichotomy as justification for Huckabee's position. Huckabee's website also mentions this.

It is crucial that children flex both the left and right sides of the brain. We all know the cliché of thinking outside the box: I want our children to be so creative that they think outside the cardboard factory. (source)

Erm, sorry to break the news fellas, but that right/left brain segregation of logic/creativity is somewhat of a fallacy, often misused and misunderstood.

Hines (1987) states that the research on brain lateralization is valid as a research program, though commercial promoters have applied it to promote subjects and products far out of the implications of the research. For example, the implications of the research have no bearing on psychological interventions such as EMDR, brain training equipment, or management training. One explanation for being so prone to exaggeration and false application is that the left-right brain dichotomy is an easy-to-understand notion, yet is often grossly oversimplified and misused for promotion in the guise of science.[9] The research on lateralization of brain functioning is ongoing, and its implications are always tightly delineated, whereas the pseudoscientific applications are exaggerated, and applied to an extremely wide range of situations. (sources)

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Such brain-aching complexities mean that this new line in hemispheric research is still in its early days. But at least there seems no prospect of a return to the old left-right caricatures that inspired so many self-help books exhorting people to liberate their right brains and avoid too much sterile left-brain thinking. As Fink says, whatever the story about lateralisation, simple dichotomies are out. It is how the two sides of the brain complement and combine that counts. (source)

Now I'm all for such courses, however, local control of schools is better than federal and more accountable as well, let alone the lack of constitutional granting of such powers to the feds in the first place. Besides, do we really want a President who mandates government programs and increases federal government influence on local matters, based on such a misunderstood notion?

This isn't the only dubious item of government intervention Mike Huckabee pushed on Arkansas. He also mandated that Arkansas school children be tested and placed on the BMI scale and have the results sent to their parents. Just a few problems with that. The BMI is not very reliable, especially for those who are very fit or lean. Also, women with better than average hip to waist ratio can fall outside the healthy range of the BMI scale. The following sums up the potential problems quite well.

But using BMI alone doesn't give a full picture of a person's health and fitness level, said Larry Collins, a physician assistant at the University of South Florida department of orthopedics and sports medicine. "Just to use BMI ... is probably a little too simplistic," Collins said. BMI doesn’t take into account whether a person's weight comes from muscle or fat. At 6-3 and 220 pounds, Chris Brown — the NFL’s leading rusher in Week 1 of the 2007 season — has a BMI of 27.5; we wouldn't want to be the ones to tell Brown he’s technically overweight and heading toward obese. Indeed, the NFL disputed a 2005 study that found nearly all of its players were overweight and more than half obese according to BMI. (When the Associated Press found that nearly half of NBA players were overweight, the 7-1, 325-pound Shaquille O’Neal said: "I’ve read that same formula, but as an athlete, I’m classified as phenomenal," noting that he had 13 percent body fat. "You can look it up.") Collins said that for "somebody who has a high BMI but is relatively fit ... we don't know what the consequences of that are over the long term."

Other factors like a person's body fat, aerobic fitness and strength levels are better indicators of overall health and whether he or she is overweight, he said. (source)

Now, imagine a child being notified that they're overweight and that notification having the official seal of government behind it, even though it's based on something far too simplistic. Is Huckabee feeling good about making others follow his personal life example worth the obvious potential for kids being emotionally devastated because of a flawed methodology defining them?

It's bad enough that Mike Huckabee has intrusive, big government, nanny state tendencies, but on top of that, he has simplistic justifications or uses far too simple methodologies in these government intrusions into our lives. Is it any wonder that Mike Huckabee is not seen as conservative?

If you don't hear from me again, that just means Chuck Norris exacted his revenge in service to his simplistic, pseudo conservative mentor.

Previous posts:

Who knows Christianity best?
Mike Huckabee - sincerity extraordinaire
Mike Huckabee, the results of service
A fool and his liar are soon parted?
Mike Huckabee - NH Fox News debate
Mike Huckabee - you have a shifty mentality
Mike Huckabee and foreign policy
Mike Huckabee thinks you're stupid
Mike Huckabee - illegal immigration flip flopper?
Huckabee - what kind of preacher is this?
Mike Huckabee - a twofer
Huckabee - Christian leader?
The taming of a shrewd
Evangelicals - short term thinkers?
It's a good thing I'm registered as an independent
Why I don't heart Huckabee

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Filed under: Politics

Trackposted to: Outside the Beltway, Blog @ MoreWhat.com, The Virtuous Republic, Rosemary's Thoughts, Right Truth, Shadowscope, Leaning Straight Up, The Amboy Times, Big Dog's Weblog, Conservative Cat, Adeline and Hazel, Allie is Wired, third world county, Woman Honor Thyself, The Crazy Rants of Samantha Burns, The World According to Carl, Pirate's Cove, The Pink Flamingo, Celebrity Smack, Dumb Ox Daily News, CORSARI D'ITALIA, Right Voices, The Yankee Sailor, and CatSynth.com, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

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John McCain's record


With the South Carolina Republican primary being this Saturday, we find that John McCain is still holding on to the lead. If he wins South Carolina, he regains his momentum going into super Tuesday, when a number of States and delegates will be available to the candidates on a single day of voting, potentially deciding who will receive the Republican party nomination.

While John McCain is not the least palatable candidate for me, his working against conservative ideals in the Senate certainly does not make him my first choice. The following list by Mark Levin of John McCain's actions in the Senate sums this up very well. He begins thusly:

There’s a reason some of John McCain's conservative supporters avoid discussing his record. They want to talk about his personal story, his position on the surge, his supposed electability. But whenever the rest of his career comes up, the knee-jerk reply is to characterize the inquiries as attacks.

The McCain domestic record is a disaster. To say he fought spending, most particularly earmarks, is to nibble around the edges and miss the heart of the matter.

[...]

(source)

One of Levin's colleagues at NRO, Rich Lowry, responds to part of the critique with this:

I should add, though, that I think Brother Mark is off on one point on McCain. He wrote this the other day, "His supporters point to essentially one policy strength, McCain’s early support for a surge and counterinsurgency. It has now evolved into McCain taking credit for forcing the president to adopt General David Petreaus’s strategy. Where’s the evidence to support such a claim?" The fact is that McCain was calling early and often not just for more troops but the adoption of counterinsurgency tactics in Iraq. He participated in the AEI event last January releasing the Kagan/Keane plan. He did much behind-the-scenes work lobbying the administration on the surge that hasn't yet been written about. And when congressional Republicans went wobbly on the war last year, McCain stood in the breach and bucked up his colleagues, even as he was getting slammed by the mainstream media. If he had gone south, it would have been game over. On the surge, McCain was prescient, dogged, and brave. It is difficult to exaggerate his contribution and he deserves whatever credit he's taking for it. (source)

Mark Levin responds in detail here, concluding with this:

So, yes, credit given on the surge.  But there are caveats.

Levin has also interviewed Rick Santorum who offered his view of McCain, having worked with him in the Senate for some years. Kathryn Jean Lopez covers that interview here.

excerpts:

But Santorum’s criticisms cut to the heart of conservative concerns about McCain: that he’s not a conservative, that he’s been damaging to conservative causes while in the Senate, and that he would be no friend to conservatives — never mind being one himself — in the White House.

In an interview with Mark Levin on Levin’s radio show Thursday night, Santorum went so far as to call McCain “very, very dangerous for Republicans” on domestic policy. Santorum said: “I just have to tell you, as a leader, as someone who had to put these coalitions together, it was always hard and we very rarely on domestic policy had any help from the Senator from Arizona.”

Santorum told Levin: “The bottom line is that I served 12 years with him, 6 years in the United States Senate as leader, one of the leaders of the Senate — the number-3 leader — who had the responsibility of trying to put together the conservative agenda, and almost at every turn on domestic policy, John McCain was not only against us, but leading the charge on the other side.”

[...]

Although McCain has a largely pro-life voting record, Santorum — who led on pro-life and marriage issues in the Senate — cautioned against misunderstanding McCain’s public stance: “Not only was he wrong on embryonic-stem-cell research, but on a whole host of conservative issues, where he may have voted with us.” Santorum took radio listeners into the back-room workings of the Senate, emphasizing how the first step toward legislative success is finding time on the floor to discuss and vote on the issues: “That discussion is held in private, where you’re jostling and jockeying to get your legislation into the queue so that you can have your time on the floor to get something done. And I can tell you, when social-conservative issues were ever raised — whether it was marriage or abortion or a whole host of other issues — there were always the moderates who said ‘no, no, no, we can’t: they’re divisive, divisive, divisive.’ And more often than not, John McCain was . . . with them,” agreeing that these were divisive issues that the Senate should not bring to a vote.

Much has been made of McCain's conservative scoring being very close to Fred Thompson's. I think the mention of the backroom antics by McCain explains how that can be possible and yet many of us still don't see him as a conservative. That behind the scenes work has undermined conservative ideals in other ways as well:

But the roll calls don’t tell the full story, Santorum argues. He tells NRO: “just as importantly we didn’t have cloture votes on better policy because we knew we would lose.”

A McCain supporter on talk radio recently has touted McCain's voting against the Bush tax cuts as avoiding the problem that Reagan had when tax cuts were not followed up with promised spending cuts by Congress. They characterized this as a conservative position by McCain. But if John McCain had prevailed, we still would not have those tax cuts as Washington has yet to succeed at cutting overall spending and thereby would have lost the economic stimulus that resulted from tax payers having less of a tax burden. Furthermore, McCain used class warfare rhetoric to fight against the tax cuts, just like a good liberal democrat would. You can see 10 examples of such here.

While I could tolerate McCain being on the ticket, if forced to do so, he is not my first choice for obvious reasons. It matters not to me that Michael Medved considers John McCain to be a conservative, after all, Medved also says Mike Huckabee is a strong conservative, which indicates his judgement is a bit off on the matter. McCain has recently received a staunchly conservative Senator's endorsement, with that Senator mentioning McCain's fight against corruption and money influencing politics. Sorry, but there are more things than that to being a conservative, and in my view John McCain falls very short. I could still vote for him if he's on the ticket, if I must, however he may ruin that if he includes Mike Huckabee as well.

I've  yet to see McCain take on the Huckster directly and the same with Huckabee taking on McCain in a direct and public fashion. Ed Rollins, Huckabee's campaign manager, had this to say about McCain:

"McCain hasn't attacked us," said Ed Rollins, Huckabee's campaign chair. "We like McCain." (source)

I really hope that isn't a sign that the worst possible GOP ticket I can imagine this year is moving closer to actuality.

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Filed under: Politics

Trackposted to: Outside the Beltway, Blog @ MoreWhat.com, The Virtuous Republic, Rosemary's Thoughts, Right Truth, Shadowscope, Leaning Straight Up, The Amboy Times, Big Dog's Weblog, Conservative Cat, Adeline and Hazel, Allie is Wired, third world county, Woman Honor Thyself, The Crazy Rants of Samantha Burns, The World According to Carl, Pirate's Cove, The Pink Flamingo, Celebrity Smack, Dumb Ox Daily News, CORSARI D'ITALIA, Right Voices, The Yankee Sailor, and CatSynth.com, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

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Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Fred Thompson to rule them all


Since I obviously see Fred Thompson as the best candidate for President of the United States, I thought it would be interesting to consider where to place the other candidates in the administration.

My picks for how the candidates could best serve the country.

Fred Thompson - President of the United States

I bet that shocked everyone ;-)

Mitt Romney - Vice President of the United States

My reasoning is that Mitt has unfortunately been tagged as a flip flopper. While I think some of that is unwarranted and I could still vote for him, he needs a bit of time to overcome that for many people. Mitt is very competent and clearly skilled at problem solving and understanding policy details. It seems to me that he could serve well as the VP to a solidly conservative president. If he had one or two terms presenting and defending the policies of a conservative president, he would then have earned the necessary street cred on a national scale. He's young enough that he could then be in position to carry the conservative message forward as the next President.

John McCain - Secretary of Defense

The only hesitation I have is his reputation for being difficult to work with. As Sec. of Def. his referencing his service would be appropriate in response to critics, more so than as President or VP and he would be somewhat removed from domestic policy decisions (immigration, free speech, esc research) while still providing valuable service to the country. I'll go more into his record and why he isn't my pick for President in another post.

Rudy Giuliani - Secretary of State

He understands the Jihadi threat and I'm quite confident he won't be watered down as Condaleeza Rice has been (esp. regarding Israel), to the great disappointment of many. His experience in cleaning up New York city could be useful in cleaning up the State Department as well. heh

Bonus: John Bolton's mustache - back at the UN!

Duncan Hunter - Homeland Security

It's  unfortunate that he didn't gain traction. He's a strong advocate for actually building the fence at the border and he's served our country honorably. It would be a shame to lose this dedicated public servant. If we must have the Homeland Security bureaucracy, let's have someone who is serious about protecting our borders leading it.

Tom Tancredo - Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)

He did much to make sure that the illegal immigration problem stayed important in this election cycle. It also doesn't hurt that having him head ICE would also cause Michael Medved's head to explode, can't pass up that opportunity.

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The rest of the candidates:

Mike Huckabee

Just join the Democrats already. At one time I had thought Mike Huckabee would make a good VP, maybe prove to me that he was Presidential material as I learned more about him. I started to look at his record and continue to listen as presented his policies and responded to criticism. Unfortunately, he has only shown me that I wouldn't even recommend him as a pastor, despite his claim to being a Christian leader.

Ron Paul

Stay in Congress I suppose, but please try to stop giving libertarian ideals such a bad name, don't run for President again and don't print anymore newsletters.

Worst possible ticket

John McCain\Mike Huckabee or Mike Huckabee\John McCain

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Filed under: Politics

Trackposted to: Blog @ MoreWhat.com, Rosemary's Thoughts, Adam's Blog, Right Truth, Big Dog's Weblog, Leaning Straight Up, The Pet Haven, Conservative Cat, Adeline and Hazel, third world county, Allie is Wired, DragonLady's World, The World According to Carl, Pirate's Cove, Blue Star Chronicles, Celebrity Smack, The Pink Flamingo, Right Voices, and The Yankee Sailor, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

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