Posted on 06/25/2010 5:51:02 AM PDT by Yosemitest
I will agree the JD Commercial dig was unnecessary, and better left unsaid. The fact is he speaks often about the Progressive McCain. When Sarah did his TV show one of the first things he said was, you have to get away from that Progressive McCain.
The maybe you should DVR his program, then you could keep up. Just because you haven't heard him on the issue, doesn't mean he hasn't pointed them out.
The court has already ruled, that the Administration has the authority to read all eMails, without any warrant, they have also ruled that you have no right to privacy of location, meaning they can track you car, phone, whatever you have. That would also include all the danged cameras they have taking pictures.
But...I thought Beck was just a right-wing conspiracy extremist (nutjob)....
Pffft. The truth hurts, doesn’t it, you lefty scumbag radicals???
The truth is incontrovertible, malice may attack it, ignorance may deride it, but in the end; there it is.
Winston Churchill
I disagree. I think he was on point regarding the McChrystal affair and Generals MUST respect the CIC, regardless of who it is. It’s it the position they respect, not the person holding it.
Also, two wrongs don’t make a right, so if he (McChrystal) acted like Obama (disrespect, etc), how would that make it right?
Beck tells it like it is and I don’t think for a minute, that he’s playing both sides. He’s libertarian, after all. And he also believes we can solve our gov’t problems without taking up arms. Sometimes he can be wrong.
He has been confirming for me that the stuff I've been afraid was happening, the stuff I've been accused of being paranoid about, is happening and it's worse than I dared think it could be.
We place first reliance on physical force. A system of revenue production and a system to implement physical force are the bases for every government, even the most democratic governments. We devote vast resources to military forces and police forces. We rely on physical force to implement our will, when necessary, both internationally and domestically. Even those among us who fervently believe in the value of leadership as a means to an end are not prepared to forego military and police forces. Leadership as a means to an end has not been perfected to a degree that would allow us to have sufficient confidence to rely on it for crucial matters of state.
Historically, physical force, including torture, has been a primary tool used by governments, criminals, and even business if we include the institution of slavery. And, sadly, physical force has too often been used in family and personal relations. The idea that government could regulate physical force and govern the application of physical force by law has been in the process of refinement for centuries. Leadership, as a means to achieve ends, is a relatively new intellectual concept, even though leadership may have been practiced, successfully, by thousands of leaders over the centuries.
Would a leader rely on physical force? Probably. But physical force is not leadership. It is merely one tool among many used to achieve an end.
Although we routinely rely on physical force, we are frequently distressed by the result of the application of physical force and generally believe it should be used, infrequently, for the defense of society. Hence, we perceive a need for other means to accomplish our objectives.
After force we place reliance on authority. Authority may be backed by force though not necessarily. We vest people who head organizations with the authority deemed necessary for successful operation of those organizations. We do not rely on leadership. Such vesting includes authority to hire and fire, promote or not, transfer, design or abolish jobs, and control funds. Business, governmental, and charitable organizations are routinely vested with various degrees of authority. We have, in Western societies, attempted to limit the use of physical force to specific institutions, individuals, and defined situations. The license to use physical force is carefully restricted. Authority, however, is available to a much wider range of people. Authority is a powerful tool to compel human behavior. But authority is not leadership. We might be content to be subjected to authority were authority perfectly executed. Unfortunately, authority, although necessary, is imperfectly executed by fallible human beings.
There are other "carrot and stick" techniques used to shape behavior which are neither force, authority, nor leadership. Coercion is one of those means. Coercion, as used here, is basically a request wherein the requester has a capability to punish non-compliance. The punishment is often indirect, but real. Coercion is fairly common. Coercion is a means to achieve an end. It is not leadership.
Intimidation is another tool used to exact desired human behavior. Intimidation is exploitation of fear. Leaders allay fear. They do not exploit fear. Fearless people cannot be intimidated. But fearlessness is not always wise. Many individuals have very limited capabilities, especially compared to wealthy and powerful organizations, and those people may be vulnerable to intimidation. Naive people may also be intimidated by awe. Intimidation is not an act of leadership. Exploitation of fear is not leadership.
Threat is a tool used to gain compliance. A threat may be direct or implied and may be backed by a real capability or it may be a bluff. Threat makes good Hollywood entertainment when the good guys tell the bad guys how it is going to be. But in real life, leaders do not threaten. There are confrontational situations in international affairs where future actions are announced to preclude misinterpretation and unintended military conflagration. These actions may exhibit characteristics of threat but have a broader purpose.
Blackmail is a means sometimes used to influence human behavior. It is a derivation of threat, usually a threat to reveal embarrassing information. It is definitely not a leadership tool.
Flattery is another means to shape attitude. Flattery is insincere or unwarranted praise. Leaders certainly extend justified praise but never flatter.
Deceit may be used to affect human behavior. When discovered it destroys trust. Deceit is not a leadership tool. Deceit is the practice of misleading people which, by definition, is not leading.
Bribery, the payment of something of value to effect a particular behavior, is not a leadership tool.
Humiliation of others is sometimes used to shape human behavior, but not by leaders.
Fear is a prime motivator of human behavior, but leaders do not exploit fear. Leaders allay fear.
Hatred is a prime motivator of human behavior. Leaders do not exploit hatred.
Acceptance and rejection, both formal and informal, are means to shape human behavior. Acceptance into a group or rejection from the group can be a powerful factor in shaping behavior. It is a leadership tool only if the acceptance or rejection is based on legitimate, accepted rules of the group governing acceptance or rejection.
Praise, promise, promotion, and reward are means that a leader uses if warranted, but only if warranted. Misuse of these means is not an act of leadership.
Persuasion is a legitimate means of influencing human behavior and is used by leaders, but a caveat is needed. A confidence man uses persuasion to "con" his victims. We shall return to the subject of persuasion.
Imagine that you awaken and discover that you are the only human being on the planet. Everyone else has disappeared. You own everything. You own all of the luxury homes, resorts, hotels, restaurants, businesses, entertainment industries, airlines, automobiles, cruise ships, all of the gold, diamonds, cash, stocks and bonds, manufacturing industries, minerals, productive farm land and forests. It's all yours. Are you wealthy? No, you are impoverished. Who will generate your electricity? Who will pilot your airliner? Who will grow your food? Who will prepare your gourmet meals? Who will provide your medical care? Who will produce your entertainment? Who will manufacture your clothing? Ownership of physical objects and financial instruments is not wealth per se. Wealth is the power to compel people to do what you want them to do. If each of us possessed equal wealth, no one would be wealthy. It would not be possible to compel other people to do the grunge work. Without substantial numbers of non-wealthy people, wealth does not exist. Use of wealth to get people to do what we want them to do may be benign or harmful, but in either case, it is not leadership. It is a different means to achieve an end.
We can list most of the means that are not force or authority and not leadership under the generic term, manipulation. Deception and manipulation are common practices. We find it very easy to convince ourselves that the end justifies the means. Civilization is, in part, recognition that only carefully defined and approved means of influencing or controlling behavior are acceptable.
Most writings about leadership fail to distinguish among the various means that may be used to gain compliance. Differentiation among those means is essential if we are to understand leadership. An analogy may explain the need for precise differentiation. At some point in human history our ancestors began to recognize that diseases might be caused by microorganisms they loosely called germs. It was a useful insight, but accurate knowledge of disease prevention and cure awaited differentiation between bacteria and viruses, and further differentiation among the many types of each as well as the environment required for each type of organism. And, of course, refinement of the differentiation goes much further. The capability to distinguish differences, great and subtle, is a necessary part of the advancement of science and civilization. Our concept of leadership is meaningless unless we distinguish the things that constitute leadership from other means used to cause people to act at our behest. We can effectively teach leadership only when we clearly understand what it is and, quite importantly, what it is not.
We have examined some of the things that do not constitute leadership. We will now look at what does constitute leadership.
Yep! Beck talks all the time about what a PROGRESSIVE McCain is. He’s just as bad as Obama...just would have implemented things slower.
Me too. It’s an eye opening, blood shooting out of your eyes, head exploding, something, to behold, isn’t it?
OK, so what is your executive summary? What would you say to a radio audience?
How does helping John McCain square with Becks stated conservatism?
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Wait until Beck starts shilling for Romney.
We have stopped shopping at CVS for the same reason.
I’m with you. ;)
Nothing new here. Libs have always been afraid of contests against conseratives in the battlefield of ideas. Much easier to simply brand your opponent a “hater” or a “bigot”, and then saturate the media with likeminded opinions from fellow travelers. Saves them from the messy and intellectually frustrating chore of actually debating anyone on the issues. Mostly because leftist ideas debating conservative ideas is like a one hundred pound weakling challenging the Olympic heavyweight powerlifting champ to an armwrestling contest.
We actually had Directv. You will find that they are all about getting new customers. We were with them for 10 years (back in the day when you bought your own equipment). They wanted to raise our rates to 60.00 a month. That was basic with a few simple add ons (Military channel, boomerang, nothing premium). I tried to negotiate a better rate. When I couldn’t, we dropped pay tv all together.
All I miss is Beck. The kids shows we get over air from Canada and there is tons on Netflix, Hulu, YouTube and streaming sites. My hubby added a tower to our plasma and we are good to go.
Yes, Glen, Godspeed
Keep going after The Laughable Left: the worst of the hypocrites.
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