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The Patriot Post Brief 9-30
From The Federalist Patriot
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____________________________ THE GIPPER"Governments that set out to regiment their people with the stated objective of providing security and liberty have ended up losing both. Those which put freedom as the first priority find they have also provided security and economic progress." --Ronald Reagan
OPINION IN BRIEF"Today, many in Congress are again saying they are outraged at the possibility of 'targeted killings' of al Qaeda leaders by U.S. intelligence operatives. Why this should be so is puzzling. America's military forces have properly and legitimately been hard at work killing terrorists and destroying their capabilities since the murderous attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Obviously, however, in the war on terror, al Qaeda leaders do not conveniently dispose themselves on military battlefields, so the intelligence community's clandestine efforts appear perfectly suited to the 'war in the shadows' that terrorists typically employ very well. Surely the terrorists care little whether they are being killed by CIA agents disguised as peasants or by grunts in camouflage uniforms and dirty combat boots. America was attacked with deadly force on Sept. 11 and before, and we are entitled to respond in self-defense, including using deadly force, until the threat from the terrorists and their state sponsors is ended. These are principles both moral and legal in the United States. Americans think their government should provide for their 'common defense,' in the Constitution's phrase, and they have little patience with politicians who cringe at taking the necessary steps to do so, in both defense and intelligence. The Obama administration ignores this widespread and entirely understandable thinking at its peril." --former U.S. ambassador to the UN John Bolton
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR(To submit reader comments visit our Letters to the Editor page.)
Editor's Note: Mr. Alexander leaves for Alaska today, but has provided analysis in response to Obama's accusations about police "acting stupidly" when they arrested his old friend, Henry Louis Gates Jr. Stay tuned for Alexander's Essay to be published later this afternoon.
"I read my first Patriot Post essay moments ago -- Alexander's Second Amendment defense. I teach World History at Texas' largest public educational institution and consider myself well spoken and a student of our wonderful Constitution. Yet, with the most humble respect, I must take a moment to praise Mark Alexander's article! I owe a family member dinner for introducing me to The Patriot Post." --Austin, Texas
"Are not the courts the constitutionally authorized arbiters of the constitution's meaning? I checked, and Alexander is not on the Supreme Court." --Cambridge, Massachusetts
Editor's Reply: The courts have ruled both ways, for and against incorporation. However, I do not need the courts to inform me of those rights "endowed by our creator" because our Founders enumerated them in the Bill of Rights. In fact, what the courts are doing now is precisely why many Founders argued against the enumeration of such rights.
"The Constitution notes, in Article IV, Section. 1, 'Full Faith and Credit shall be given in each State to the public Acts, Records, and judicial Proceedings of every other State. And the Congress may by general Laws prescribe the Manner in which such Acts, Records and Proceedings shall be proved, and the Effect thereof.' If my driver's license is good in all 50 states, why not a concealed carry permit?" --Port Republicm, Maryland
Editor's Reply: This point has been argued, but I would add that the Bill of Rights does not enumerate "driving" as a fundamental right endowed by our Creator! It does enumerate the right to keep and bear arms.
"While we are supposed to be ultimately protected by the Second Amendment in our right to bear arms, we can no longer depend on the courts to provide us that protection. I'm all for using the Second Amendment as a permit to carry, but am not willing to sacrifice my family's financial security while I sit in a prison cell for carrying 'illegally.' I provide physical security for my family through (dubiously) legal means by obtaining a carry permit from my state. I wish I had your faith in our 'justice' system." --Auburn, Michigan
Editor's Reply: If I implied that I have faith in the courts or our justice system, let me dispel what you inferred: I DO NOT.
"I, for too long, did not understand the right to keep and bear arms. I used to believe the argument of reasonable restrictions on weapons as a necessity for ordered society, until I realized it is of no concern of the State what I chose to possess. It is anathema to my right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness to restrict my ability to protect my inalienable rights. More fundamentally, it is of no concern to my fellow citizens what I deign to keep and bear as long as I do not exercise my rights at the expense of another's rights. For the State to place any restriction on my right to keep and bear arms is tyranny." --Albany, New York
"Hi, my name is Jessie. I'm 11 and I live in Maine. Me and my dad both read The Patriot. I think the Patriot helps explain what my dad is talking about all the time. I also thinks it makes sense. I find Patriot Humor very amusing. Thank you!" --Winter Harbor, Maine
THE LAST WORD"Just as people use vastly different amounts of gasoline, they also use vastly different amounts of medical care -- especially when an appointment with a highly trained physician costs less than a manicure. Insurance plans that force everyone in the plan to pay for everyone else's Viagra and anti-anxiety pills are already completely unfair to people who rarely go to the doctor. It's like being forced to share gas bills with a long-haul trucker or a restaurant bill with Michael Moore. On the other hand, it's a great deal for any lonely hypochondriacs in the plan. ... You don't have to conjure up fantastic visions of how health care would be delivered in this country if we bought it ourselves. Just go to a grocery store or get a manicure. Or think back to when you bought your last muffler, personal trainer, computer and every other product and service available in inexpensive abundance in this capitalist paradise. ... Isn't food important? Why not 'universal food coverage'? If politicians and employers had guaranteed us 'free' food 50 years ago, today Democrats would be wailing about the 'food crisis' in America, and you'd be on the phone with your food care provider arguing about whether or not a Reuben sandwich with fries was covered under your plan. Instead of making health care more like the DMV, how about we make it more like grocery stores? Give the poor and tough cases health stamps and let the rest of us buy health care -- and health insurance -- on the free market." --columnist Ann Coulter
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Veritas vos Liberabit -- Semper Vigilo, Fortis, Paratus, et Fidelis! Mark Alexander, Publisher, for The Patriot's editors and staff.
(Please pray for our Armed Forces standing in harm's way around the world, and for their families -- especially families of those fallen Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, Marines and Coast Guardsmen, who granted their lives in defense of American liberty.)