nChrist
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« Reply #1 on: April 17, 2010, 07:56:10 PM » |
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________________________________________ The Patriot Post Brief 4-12-2010 From The Federalist Patriot Free Email Subscription ________________________________________
The Gipper
"And now today we find ourselves involved in another struggle, this time called a cold war. This cold war between great sovereign nations isn't really a new struggle at all. It is the oldest struggle of human kind, as old as man himself. This is a simple struggle between those of us who believe that man has the dignity and sacred right and the ability to choose and shape his own destiny and those who do not so believe. This irreconcilable conflict is between those who believe in the sanctity of individual freedom and those who believe in the supremacy of the state." --Ronald Reagan
Reader Comments
"Amen Mark, another excellent essay on what we need to do to restore this once great nation of freedom and liberty. You'll be glad to know I'm in the process of distributing 100 Essential Liberty guides -- a number of which will be distributed this Sunday as part of my Sunday School lesson, 'Rediscovering God in America' with credit to Newt Gingrich and his fantastic book which I highly recommend. I believe it's going to take the next great spiritual awakening to achieve this restoration. Putting God back in the center where our founders intended is first and foremost..." --Matt
"On the issue of civil disobedience; what would happen if all conservatives, libertarians and anyone else who wanted to participate, increased their W4 dependents to say, 10? What if we were so unified that we defunded the tyrants in DC and at least temporarily prevented them from financing their leftist agenda? I'm sure they would simply borrow more money and even dream up some new social programs, but wouldn't it give them a wake up call? Then, with all of the extra money in our paychecks, we could implement phase 2 of our unified plan. Buy guns and ammo." --Rick
"I'm not surprised that doctors are inundated with calls from their patients about how to get all that new 'free ObamaCare.' That's what BHO promised during his campaign, if you strip out all the obfuscating verbiage. That's the 'hope 'n' change' a lot of people voted for -- free health care for all. When they find out what they REALLY got, the tea is gonna hit the fan (to mix metaphors)." --Wendy
Government
"What makes the Obama census campaign different from other census programs? First, its naked, left-wing special interest pandering. The White House is championing a 'Queer the Census' movement by pro-gay marriage groups, for example, and the Commerce Department is working with open-borders leaders who want to use the census as leverage to stop all immigration raids. The electoral stakes are high. Some $400 billion in federal funding and, most importantly, the apportionment of congressional seats are up for grabs. Instead of straightforward enumeration of the American population, Obama and the left's identity politics-mongers are turning the $1 billion, taxpayer-subsidized census public relations drive into a government preferences lobbying bonanza. More galling: the White House manipulation of census worker employment to goose the jobless rate. Last week, the government touted employment figures bolstered by the hiring of temporary workers for Census 2010. The Census Bureau anticipates it may add nearly 750,000 workers to its payroll by May. Liberal economist Heidi Shierholz exulted in The Hill: 'This is the best-timed census you could ever dream of.' And Team Obama plans to milk it for all it's worth." --columnist Michelle Malkin
The Last Word
"Ah, springtime has arrived in Washington, D.C. The National Cherry Blossom Festival is under way. The cherry trees, 3,700 of them given to America by the Japanese in 1912, are in full bloom. It reminds me why Americans are so wary of Washington. In the spring of 1999, you see, some culprits had been chopping down cherry trees. The National Park Service, in a state of high alert for days, finally identified the tree fellers: three beavers, who decided to construct a dam in the Tidal Basin. In a normal city, this situation would have been dealt with swiftly. The beavers would have been trapped, transported to another location and released. ... But Washington is no normal city. ... The hullabaloo went on for some time before the Park Service finally hired a professional trapper. The trapper caught the beavers and they were carted off. You'd think that would have been the end of it. But not in Washington. Activists, suspicious of what the Park Service really did with the beavers -- were they relocated to Guantanamo Bay? -- demanded their location be divulged. That prompted the Park Service to issue a statement. It said that, due to the publicity surrounding the case, the beavers were moved to a 'safe house,' which, apparently, is some kind of beaver witness protection program. The beaver incident illustrates how convoluted and confusing things can get in Washington -- simple ideas and solutions that work everywhere else are twisted and contorted and made unrecognizable there. That's why the fellows who founded this country had the right idea when they sought to keep most of the decision-making out of Washington -- keep it among the people and within the states. But the birds running the government right now don't see it that way. They have Washington butting into every aspect of our lives, health care being the most recent. Alas, springtime has arrived in Washington. The sun is shining, the birds are chirping and the cherry trees are in full bloom. And all I can do is worry about what that nutty town is going to meddle with next." --columnist Tom Purcell
(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.)
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