Posted on 05/23/2006 8:41:29 AM PDT by FerdieMurphy
And practically 50% of Americans fall for this nation destructing garbage.
and let's not forget those Men In Black (a la Supremes) who want to use International Law & Precedents to make up laws in the USA.
They are ignorant of the facts and the MSM dare not let the facts out. If they did only 12%-16% would support them and they would disappear politically.
What escapes my understanding is why our republican comrades do not label them and their policies as loudly and with great frequency as often as possible If that was the only thing they did the democrats would lose half their party as they only have gotten this far by hiding that fact.
57 MILLION VOTERS DID LAST ELECTION!!! It is not the Islamic jehadists that scares me. It is the 57 MILLION ENEMIES WITHIN that can vote. Plus the other 15-20 million ILLEGALS. Now, count your puny 61 million Bush votes and you lose by 11-15 MILLION VOTES when the illegals get voting rights, which they are going to do when AMANISTY IS VOTED IN BY THE STINKING LIBERAL U.S. CONGRESS!!!
bttt
I agree. After all, the Rats howl incessantly that our civil liberties are being eroded when it is clear to me that if they were in power they would be doing the same thing and saying it is just fine. After all, I just got a statement of my IRA account that informed me that the custodian is sending the value of my IRA to the GOVERNMENT. So what is this privacy thing the Rats are talking about. The big government they have erected over the last 70 years and continue to support unwaveringly, has all sorts of info on me.
So,yes, why don't the Pubbies get on the offensive and start making assertions about the Rats. At least with the info in this article they would be armed with the truth!
This past Sunday at my daughter's commencement (Doctor of Pharmacy Ohio Northern University, thank you very much.). The speaker was James Dicke of Crown Mfg. He made the statement that "Central Planning has been relagated to the ash heap of history".
I guess he missed Hillary Clinton's speech in Chicago (4/11/06) last month. She supports the Central Infrastructure Planning Agency.
Look up Radfest and the topics, participants, etc.
It is a communist/socialist propaganda fair. They work on methods to further their agenda across the US.
I am glad to see someone else noticed the socialists and their work.
Right on target!
ping
underbyte:What escapes my understanding is why our republican comrades do not label them and their policies
Exactly! This is precisely what needs to be done. Imagine the impact if Americans read the following statements:
"American Communists Seek Impeachment of President Bush"
"Communist Democrat Party Pushes for Open Borders"
ping
Redundant - Redundant - Redundant
///Chief among Backbone Campaign sponsoring organizations is the Progressive Democrats of America, who are committed to: dismantling the military industrial complex. (ibid)//
I am for this too - but not without dismantling the welfare state, including corp subsidy, as well.
The constitution called for a Navy but NEVER a standing Army, for that is the militia comprised of We the People.
The Progressive commie bastards, starting with TR's war against Spain, when in fact the Maine sank on her own, and his socalled trust busting that did the reverse.
What this article painfully leaves out is that the Progressive era push for bigger Govt to benefit Big Biz at taxpayer expense has been largely foisted upon us by progressives of BOTH parties going on 100 years now - just look at Ike & Nixon, and in some ways W.
The Reps never got their limited Govt mind's right until AU-H2O, followed by RWR, then Newt. All the rest might as well be Rats for the lack of good they've done us.
It was the nation's correct perception that the Reps represented Big Biz and the trusts, and is why Wilson, then FDR and the Rat party controlled both houses of Congress for 44 of the 48 yrs between 1932 & 1980 - 92% of the time.
The progressives made a good point of Big Biz getting Govt favors, except for their idiotic embrace of Marxist central planning to concentrate power in the FedGov in the guise of the genl welfare which increasingly became anything but genl as would be a battleship.
In fact - FA Hayek, Reagan & Thatcher's favorite economist, foretold that the collectivism he saw in early 30's Germany, would transform into tyranny as it had before in history. This is the guy FDR dissed in favor of Keynes. Smart Brits sh@tcanned him, and their economy took off way before ours did.
Bogus Rights - By Walter Williams
Do people have a right to medical treatment whether or not they can pay? What about a right to food or decent housing? Would a U.S. Supreme Court justice hold that these are rights just like those enumerated in our Bill of Rights? In order to have any hope of coherently answering these questions, we have to decide what is a right. The way our Constitution's framers used the term, a right is something that exists simultaneously among people and imposes no obligation on another. For example, the right to free speech, or freedom to travel, is something we all simultaneously possess. My right to free speech or freedom to travel imposes no obligation upon another except that of non-interference. In other words, my exercising my right to speech or travel requires absolutely nothing from you and in no way diminishes any of your rights.
Contrast that vision of a right, to so-called rights to medical care, food or decent housing, independent of whether a person can pay. Those are not rights in the sense that free speech and freedom of travel are rights. If it is said that a person has rights to medical care, food and housing, and has no means of paying, how does he enjoy them? There's no Santa Claus or Tooth Fairy who provides them. You say, "The Congress provides for those rights." Not quite. Congress does not have any resources of its very own. The only way Congress can give one American something is to first, through the use of intimidation, threats and coercion, take it from another American. So-called rights to medical care, food and decent housing impose an obligation on some other American who, through the tax code, must be denied his right to his earnings. In other words, when Congress gives one American a right to something he didn't earn, it takes away the right of another American to something he did earn.
If this bogus concept of rights were applied to free speech rights and freedom to travel, my free speech rights would impose financial obligations on others to provide me with an auditorium and microphone. My right to travel freely would require that the government take the earnings of others to provide me with airplane tickets and hotel accommodations.
Philosopher John Locke's vision of natural law guided the founders of our nation. Our Declaration of Independence expresses that vision, declaring, "We hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness." Government is necessary, but the only rights we can delegate to government are the ones we possess. For example, we all have a natural right to defend ourselves against predators. Since we possess that right, we can delegate authority to government to defend us. By contrast, we don't have a natural right to take the property of one person to give to another; therefore, we cannot legitimately delegate such authority to government.
Three-fifths to two-thirds of the federal budget consists of taking property from one American and giving it to another. Were a private person to do the same thing, we'd call it theft. When government does it, we euphemistically call it income redistribution, but that's exactly what thieves do redistribute income. Income redistribution not only betrays the founders' vision, it's a sin in the eyes of G-d. I'm guessing that when G-d gave Moses the Eighth Commandment, "Thou shalt not steal," I'm sure he didn't mean "thou shalt not steal unless there was a majority vote in Congress."
The real tragedy for our nation is that any politician who holds the values of liberty that our founders held would be soundly defeated in today's political arena.
No doubt about it, Hayek's The Road to Serfdom was explosively controversial from the beginning, especially his case that all forms of collectivism lead to tyranny. The book was first published on 10th March 1944 by Routledge in Britain.
Nobel Prize winning economist Ronald Coase recalls that during Britain's July 1945 parliamentary election, Winston Churchill cited Hayek in his dramatic campaign speeches, to help show that a Labor Party win would mean tyranny. Labor Party leader Clement Atlee ridiculed Hayek and defeated Churchill. Soon afterwards, Atlee began seizing coal, steel, railroads, ports and other businesses, and began extending rationing to basic foods such as potatoes, even though war was over.
Opposition to Hayek's ideas was fierce in the United States, and a number of publishers rejected the book, but there were friends of freedom who worked wonders. Hayek authorized fellow Austrian economist Fritz Machlup, then working in Washington, to try finding an American publisher, but he was unsuccessful. He gave a copy of the Routledge page proofs to University of Chicago economics professor Aaron Director who met Hayek in 1943 when both were teaching at the London School of Economics. Director passed the page proofs to Frank Knight, founding father of the "Chicago School." Knight apparently gave them to William T. Couch, a classical liberal friend at the University of Chicago Press which agreed to publish the book on September 18, 1944. But since nobody expected it would sell many copies, the initial printing was only 2,000. It was a little wartime edition about 4- 7/8ths by 6-3/4 inches.
To help the book gain a hearing, the publishers asked John Chamberlain, respected book editor for Harper's magazine and a devout libertarian, to write a foreword. His name appeared prominently on the cover.
The initial reception was cool. On September 20, 1944, New York Times daily book reviewer Orville Prescott called it a "sad and angry little book."
But then New York Times economics editorial writer Henry Hazlitt weighed in with a home run: a 1,500 word blockbuster review on the front page of the Sunday New York Times Book Review, September 24, 1944. Hazlitt declared that "Friedrich Hayek has written one of the most important books of our generation." The University of Chicago Press ordered another printing. The book sold 22,000 copies by year-end and sold this much again by spring 1945.
Meanwhile, Reader's Digest editors DeWitt and Lila Acheson Wallace expressed interest in publishing an excerpt from the book, and the University of Chicago Press, eager to reach a popular audience, seems to have given away those rights for nothing. Hayek later remarked he never got a penny. In any case, The Road to Serfdom filled the first 20 pages of the April 1945 Reader's Digest under a banner headline drawn from Hazlitt's review: "One of the Most Important Books of Our Generation." This brought Hayek's story to about 8 million people in the U.S. alone. Subsequently, Book-of-the-Month Club distributed some 600,000 copies of a condensed edition.
Sales records are incomplete, but there were a good many more printings after that, and the book eventually sold at least 230,000 copies in the U.S. Hayek went on a U.S. lecture tour, including prestigious places like Harvard University, and he decided he rather liked being a lightning rod for freedom. He expressed his views in popular publications like the Chicago Sun, Boston Traveler and New York Times Magazine. He met many friends of freedom with whom he was to collaborate in later years. Three dozen friends joined him to found the international Mont Pelerin Society.
One of Hayek's friends, Milton Friedman, recalls that "From the time I first read some of his works, and even more from the time in the mid-1940s that I first met Friedrich Hayek, his powerful mind, his moral courage, his lucid and always principled exposition have helped to broaden and deepen my understanding of the meaning and the requisites of a free society."
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