About Me

Name: Frigglesnitz
Biography
Loading...

Create Your Own Blog Find Other Townhall Blogs

Comments

HOMELAND INSECURITY

Looking into the eyes of Janet Napolitano as she announced to the world that the system "worked" gave me an uneasy feeling that if she was so satisfied with the way things were, she should board the next planes to -- and from -- Yemen.  All systems "go." 

Later, when Ms. Napolitano made an announcement that the system was -- and I paraphrase -- left over from the previous administration, I knew my first instincts were correct, and that my uneasiness had been justified.  When will this administration stop blaming Bush? 

I wrote a letter to one of my Senators (the Republican), saying that Ms. Napolitano had as much business being Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security as I did.  Which was none at all.  I have no such qualifications; I am qualified to see that she lacks those qualifications as well. 

I then suggested to my Senator that it had occurred to me that perhaps the Secretary had been chosen by the current administration precisely because of her exquisite incapability to hold that office. 

That is not a comfortable way to feel about the handling of safety concerns of the citizens of the United States of America.  However, that is what I have come to believe:  Napolitano and many others holding high executive offices in the administration are exquisitely unqualified, and that was the basis of their being chosen.  I hope it is proven to be an incorrect belief. 

  
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

WISE SOUTHERN WHITE WOMAN

I would hope that a wise Southern white woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than any male who hasn't lived that life. 
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

LET THE OTHER GUY DO IT

Maybe I'm cynical. 
 
Here's what I think about Obama's refusal to give the torture photos to the ACLU.  I believe that Obama, in his heart of hearts, would love to give the ACLU all the pictures, but that it is not politically expedient to do so.  His reputation for putting the safety of Americans first might be slightly tarnished. 
 
Hence, Obama is leaving it to the ACLU to take the case to the Supreme Court, which I think Obama believes will rule in the ACLU's favor. 
 
Therefore, Obama can have his cake and eat it too.  He will have been able to say that the Supreme Court made him do it. 
 
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (1) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

AN AFTERWORD TO INFRASTRUCTURE ECONOMIC JUMP-START

As an afterword to the earlier blog on this subject, I was reminded of the Works Progress Administration (WPA) which, pursuant to some research (http://www.indiana.edu/~liblilly/wpa/wpa_info.html), "was a relief measure established in 1935 by executive order ... and was redesigned in 1939 when it was transferred to the Federal Works Agency....[S]upplied with an initial congressional appropriation of $4,880,000,000, it offered work to the unemployed on an unprecedented scale by spending money on a wide variety of programs, including highways and building construction, slum clearance, reforestation, and rural rehabilitation.  So gigantic an undertaking was inevitably attended by confusion, waste, and political favoritism, yet the 'pump-priming' effect stimulated private business during the depression years and inaugurated reforms that states had been unable to subsidize....By March, 1938, the WPA rolls had reached a total of more than 3,400,000 persons; after initial cuts in June 1939, it averaged 2,300,000 monthly, and by June 30, 1943, when it was officially terminated, the WPA had employed more than 8,500,000 different persons on 1,410,000 individual projects, and had spent about $11 billion.  During its 8-year history, the WPA built 651,087 miles of highways, roads, and streets; and constructed, repaired, or improved 124,031 bridges, 125,110 public buildings, 8,192 parks, and 853 airport landing fields." 
 
"(Sources:  Encyclopedia of American History, 7th Ed., Jeffrey B. Morris and Richard B. Morris, eds., 1996.  The Oxford Companion to American History, Thomas H. Johnson, 1966)" 

From my own personal experience I am able to report that some of the WPA projects lasted and lasted and lasted until at least one of them was torn down, probably in 1995 or 1996 -- presumably in the name of progress.  This particular project was a brick retaining wall parallel to and west of Soldier Field in Chicago.  I noticed that wall many, many times from the windows of my train during my Chicago commute to work.  Some of the bricks bore the carved initials "WPA" and a year. 
 
While the wall was being reduced to rubble, I wondered at the time if any of those carved WPA bricks had been saved.  What a memento that would have been!  I also wondered if any of the workers engaged in the dismantling of the wall had any sense of its history.  While glancing at those bricks on those commuter trips, I also believed it remarkable that the wall still stood after all those years.  Yes, some grass had begun to grow between them, but taken as a whole, the bricks seemed impervious to the ravages of time and the bitter Chicago winters and blistering Chicago summers. 
 
I believe those WPA workers worked as though their lives depended upon it.  They probably did. 
 
 
Tags: economy   WPA  
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

INFRASTRUCTURE ECONOMIC JUMP-START?


OK. So we want to jump-start the economy -- get people working again. One way tossed about as a means by which to do this is by building, rebuilding and repairing the nation's infrastructure.

I'm good with that. We do need to address some of our crumbling infrastructure -- bridges, roads, railroads, all roads. They need attention.

It simply seems to me that it is primarily other business and industry rather than infrastructure building, repair, etc. that actually create jobs.

In the main, who is it that pays for the building, rebuilding and repair of infrastructure? Is it "the Government"?

Who is "the Government"? Is "the Government" some nebulous bunch in Washington, D.C.? Are they going to pay for all this building and rebuilding?

All right. Say we go on the assumption that "the Government" is made up of citizens of the U.S. Does that mean that U.S. citizens, through taxes, will pay for all this building and repair?

My understanding is that the president-elect would like to set aside a $50 billion clump simply to begin all this activity – rather in the line of some type of down-payment. From whence does this $50 billion derive? And from whence the remainder?

Taxes! They will pay for contracts, negotiating contracts (lawyers' fees and disbursements); they will pay the contractors; contractors' employees; employees' FICA and tax commitments; employees' health care insurance; employees' workmen's compensation; employees' vacation and sick time; they will pay for all the materials needed by the contractors; and they will pay the contractors for their equipment and the insurance on the equipment, etc., ad infinitum.

I have a question, which is this: why is road-building, etc., being treated by the incoming administration as some new way to get the economy off to a flying start? In addition, how does the new administration propose to pay for the parts of the planet upon which the new infrastructure, etc., will repose? Umm, maybe, uhhhh, taxes?
 
As an afterword to the above, I was reminded of the old Works Progress Administration (WPA) which, pursuant to some research (http://www.indiana.edu/~liblilly/wpa/wpa_info.html), was a relief measure established in 1935 by executive order
 
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

LEGISLATING LISTENING

   That's my view of the Fairness Doctrine:  a doctrine attempting to legislate listening.  It would also seem to be an attempt at legislating liking broadcasts containing liberal views, but even the loopiest left-winger knows better than that. 
 
I understand that radio show hosts such as Rush Limbaugh and Laura Ingraham are successful and have big audiences because people like them and like to listen to them. 
 
I simply question whether there could be liberal-type radio hosts that could create content so interesting or fascinating that it could garner any sizable audience, thus attracting sponsors with money to blow on such shaky foundations. 
 
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (4) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

CHINA AND PRESCRIPTION DRUGS AND DANGER -MY CHINA RANT CONTINUES

I hope everybody has read or will read all about it:  Heparin and China and the FDA.  The news was out this morning, 4/30/08.  I hope some dark, smelly matter will hit the fan.  Lord knows there needs to be a clean-up anyway. 
 
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (5) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

FOR DOC STEECH'S EDIFICATION

There are many subjects to discuss, but I will not discuss all of them.  My life is not long enough.  This is not important enough.
 
I had left TH -- for about a month, from about the middle of March to about the middle of April.  Then I was notified by e-mail on 4/19/08 that Doc Steech had made a comment on my 4/14/08 blog "A New 'Entitled' Class."  I thought the comment odd in more ways than one.  In the first place, it had absolutely nothing to do with "A New 'Entitled' Class."  In the second place, the message itself was completely astonishing.  I wondered, "well, what brought that on?"
 
The title and message of that 4/19 Steech comment went as follows: 
 
"You are still hostile to Big Pharma 
"...Friggs, which makes you anti-American. 
 
"And a socialist.
 
"Give the pharmaceutical industry some slack, they develop life saving drugs, and you want them to give it away.  By force of the government.
 
"You are a communist, Friggs. 
 
"Shame on you, Friggles.  Shame on you."
In the first place, the comment had nothing to do with the blog entry it followed.  Second, it was in my opinion enough to make any red-blooded American seethe.  And seethe I did.  Third, the entire comment was a lie.  I am not anti-American.  I am not a socialist.  I understand that the pharmaceutical industry has developed life-saving drugs.  I do not want the industry to give it away, although I understand it is beneficent toward those who truly cannot afford their medications.  I certainly do not want them to give it away by force of the government.  That is perfectly ludicrous. 
 
Steech stated in a blog comment on 4/21/08 at 8:45 p.m. that my "drugs are too expensive, and she wants to stomp her feet, pound her fists and make them cheaper.  Good luck with that, F.  We get it, Friggles.  Drugs are expensive.  You want the prices to come down.  Vote for Republicans, and maybe it can come about.  You want others to pay for your drugs.  This is America.  Pay for your own drugs, or do not use them.  Period.  To lobby against this great industry, and to suggest that their profits are blood money, crooked, tainted, etc. is just plain wrong.  It is just plain anti-American.  You are a Socialist.  What you argue is what Socialists argue:  from those according to their ability, to those according to their need:  where have we heard these haunting words before?  Simple enough?  You already know I am sympathetic to this industry.  I understand the issues.  You don't." 
 
Well, now.  Let's start at the beginning of this tirade:  my drugs are too expensive.  That much I'll give you.  I want to stomp my feet, pound my fists and make them cheaper?  Hardly.  And I have no memory of ever stomping my feet to get anything.  If I did when I was a child, I would have had the snot slapped out of me.  The only result that could happen if I become angry enough to slam a fist on a table is that things would bounce on the table.  I make very few moves that aren't necessary.  And I happen to be an adult.  I could hardly pound my fists and stomp my feet with the idea of bringing down the price of drugs.  That, too, is ludicrous.  Can't you just see it?
 
Vote for Republicans?  I've done so perhaps 98 percent of my voting life, beginning with none other than Nixon, with an occasional cross-over for a really good Democrat Senator or Representative.  The one big adverse effect that has had on my life in recent years is that it has given me the much-hated, much-resented Medicare Prescription Drug Plan, and I believe I have described in excruciating detail about how hard I worked against it.  That is a socialist plan, if I ever heard of one.  I didn't want it.  It does help me, but it doesn't help the poor working stiffs.  However, the swarms of pharmaceutical lobbyists on hand for the vote, Tommy Thompson hanging around on the floor of the House "to answer questions" (yeah, right, Tommy) and many other underhanded shenanigans went on that night to assure the PDPs would be right there.  Big Pharma was, I believe, wetting its pants in anticipation of the money to begin rolling in from use of the PDPs.  Oh, and dear old Billy Tauzin.  After that vote, and, I believe, after his term was up, after a decent time lapse, he became President of PhRMA (Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America) at a salary of $2M a year.  Nice work if you can get it.  Reckon there was ANY quid pro quo going on that night of the vote?
 
Everybody knows, too, about that revolving door between Congress and the industry. 
 
Now as far as wanting somebody else to pay for my prescriptions, hey, that would be nice, too.  But I am here to tell the world that since becoming a self-sufficient adult I have paid for every drug I ever took except a few samples here and there, many, many of which wound up being dumped. 
 
You've mentioned an expression with which I am unfamiliar:  from those according to their ability, to those according to their need.  I never heard them from anyone but Steech, so maybe he can explain it to me. 
 
Steech said that I already knew he was sympathetic to the pharmaceutical industry.  Actually, I had always thought he was one of those "drug detailers" rolling around from doctor to doctor.  He may be, for all I know.  The one thing of which I had absolutely no knowledge was the fact that his wife was a Big Pharma exec.  Sarge mentioned in a comment that Steech was defending his wife about all this.  As I said, I had had no idea Steech's wife had any connection with the drug industry, but, rather, believed that Steech was, indeed, one of those "drug detailers."
 
Another clarification I'd like to make before this is all finished, kaput, gone, six feet under, etc., ad infinitum, is that, contrary to what Steech has said, I am anything but a one-issue blogger.  The issue did consume much of my free time before the PDPs came into being, but my interest really dwindled after that.  And I believe the PDPs to have preceded my becoming a blogger here.  Not even I could write 82 or whatever number blogs about the "greedy, evil drug companies."  And, honestly, I can't say I believe them to be evil. 
 
Now.  It's getting late, I weary of this subject, and want to be shut of it. 
 
The last comment from Steech stated as follows: 
 
"OK, sorry for the communist remark
"That was a knee jerk and over the top response after reading what I felt was your trashing of my wife's industry. 
 
"How's that?  Are we done?
 
"Doc"
This was written after Steech had asked if we could call a truce, as we had about a year ago.  I explained that it was not a truce, but, rather, I'd said "I'm done"; his reply was "I'm done, too" (or something similar).  That's a far cry from a truce.
 
I told him something to the effect that the only thing that would deaden this subject forever was his apology for calling me those hideous names.  What you see above is his apology, presumably.  What I'd hoped for was a simple "I'm sorry for calling you a socialist, communist, anti-American, and pinko commie."  Inasmuch as I have never called him a name -- at least one as repugnant as the ones he'd called me, I could not respond in like manner. There were many, many, many names I thought of, but I refrained from doing something so totally ignorant and graceless and, besides, would tar me with the same brush with which Steech had tarred himself. 
 
However, I simply wanted to say that this is finished. 
 
There is one other thing I wanted Steech to know:  all this time he has been verbally sparring with someone who has only a public high school education from one of the most illiterate states in the Union:  Louisiana. 
 
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (6) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

MY UNFORGETTABLE LOVE AFFAIR WITH JOE MCCARTHY

 
When I was a young teen and Joe McCarthy was holding forth at Congressional hearings concerning Communists, I was in love.
 
I was in love with Joe McCarthy.  Joe was animated.  Joe was at his best at badgering those summoned to answer interrogations. 
 
Joe had the blackest black hair and the most startlingly electric blue eyes I had ever seen in a male human being.  As I said, I was in love, totally, and he was reminiscent of a traveling evangelist at tent revivals -- complete with sawdust on the floor.  I could practically smell the interior of those chambers from where I lived, Louisiana. 
 
It is fairly well known that women, girls and, in some cases, men, are so caught up in a messenger that the message he brings is almost irrelevant. 
 
However, I was caught up in the messenger and the message.  Although I had never really paid any attention to the word "communist" prior to Joe's examinations, whatever he said about them was the absolute truth. 
 
I learned from Joe that being a communist was a very bad thing to be.  After I grew older, I did not feel it necessary to delve into the matter of communism.  I knew enough, because Joe described its repugnance so perfectly that it was unnecessary to dig any further. 
 
I knew this, however:  I was a born-again Christian, and born-again Christians were not communists in my opinion.  They are mutually exclusive terms.
 
This dictum has carried through for all my years since that time.  Therefore, when there is an entity who calls me a communist, as "Doc Steech" has done so frequently of late, seemingly with so much pleasure, I do tend to respond with feelings of intense anger.  Then I'm transported back all those years to the irrepressible Joe McCarthy and the affection I felt for him in attempting to rid my country of a rancid evil. 
 
Later in my life, I was ambivalent about Joe for all the harm it was perceived that he had done, and I was ashamed of the fact that he had probably unnecessarily ruined the lives of many people.
 
I never read the Ann Coulter column or columns a few months back about the good that Joe McCarthy had done.  I simply was not interested.  At that time, my love affair with Joe McCarthy was remembered affectionately, and his message stuck with me.  Perhaps now I shall go back and read the Coulter column or columns. 
 
For the record, D.S. and the world at large, I am not now, nor have I ever been, a member of the communist party.  Nor will I ever be. 
 
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (11) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

COMMENTS TO ANDREWS



Andrews:  I know quite well I'm out of your league in the IQ range -- you're probably off the chart.  However, I really don't know anything about pharmaceutical regulations.  It's other aspects of the industry where my opinion differs from others'.   
 
My quarrel has to do with the countless pharmaceutical lobbyists and the lawyers who hire them and the pharmaceutical companies that hire the lawyers. 

In many ways I believe the drug industry to be somewhat unethical.  If you see a doctor, watch for the individual who comes into the waiting room, is fairly well-dressed, is pulling a large cart stacked with a couple of very large briefcases, goes up to the sign-in window, and does not have to cool his heels long before being shown into the inner sanctum -- while patients may have been cooling their heels for as long as an hour or more.

Look around the waiting room.  It will be stocked well with facial tissues, informational brochures, sometimes entire magazines and other materials, each advertising some drug. 

You may go into the examining room and find that the paper covering the examining table has the name of a new drug plastered all over it.  There was one such I remember, and as of the present time the drug has been yanked.  You know, probably some death or some other minor thing. 

I had done quite a bit of research on the industry before the Medicare Prescription Drug Plans came to be, but after that my interest in them largely dwindled.  I was against the PDPs.

Now my interest has been rekindled because of the part China plays in drug manufacturing.  According to the GAO, there are more manufacturing plants in China than any other foreign country.  The FDA can't keep up. 

I'm now reading a transcript of the GAO's Testimony Before the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, Commitee on Energy and Commerce, House of Representatives, subject:  "DRUG SAFETY -- Preliminary Findings Suggest Recent FDA Initiatives Have Potential, but Do Not Fully Address Weaknesses in Its Foreign Drug Inspection Program."  It's GAO-08-701T.  It's easily accessible through the Government Accountability Office Web site.  It's not happy reading. 
 
I've asked myself why it is the FDA's (in other words, taxpayers') responsibility to check the safety of foreign drug manufacturers.  There is only one conclusion as far as I am concerned. 
 
Fifty percent of the drugs Americans take are imported from other countries. 
 
Now I'll ask you:  why is it the taxpayers' responsibility to check the safety of foreign drug manufacturers?  Why should it not be the responsibility of the drug maker having it manufactured?  Any way you slice it, it means that Americans will be paying more. 
 
And as I said to Beltway Girl, I surely do not have a beef against American companies making a profit.  I do, however, shrink from the idea of profiteering. 
 
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

COMMENTS ABOUT COMMIES AND SOCIALISTS

I'm a wife, mother, grandmother, sometimes-blogger, and because I intensely dislike some of the characteristics of a particular industry, this blogger "Doc" has called me anti-American, communist and socialist. They're terms I don't especially like, now that I've looked them up to clarify in my mind what they mean. I have written a blog entitled "Hostility, Truth in Labeling," simply to make sure everyone knew who it was that had been calling me these names. Toward the end of the blog I said that I wanted truth in labeling; then I proceeded to write out the Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America. And I do pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America. And mean it.

This person has made many misstatements about me, implying that I want others to pay for my medications, among other things. I simply want to refute that one misstatement for now: I have paid for all the drugs I have taken all my adult life. Toward the end of the year I get a "break" in the cost of my meds because I am paying for one of those Medicare Prescription Drug Plans, against which I had fought fiercely. I had written approximately 25 letters to the editor (printed), and umpteen letters to my representatives in Congress, against the PDPs because they would be bad for the country, even if possibly good for me. When the PDPs were signed into law, I wrote to the paper one more time on the subject, thanking everybody and their children and grandchildren for their largesse. I am still against the PDPs, but I do take advantage of them, much as other self-sufficient adults take advantage of employer-sponsored health and prescription drug plans.

I had health insurance, employer-sponsored, most of my life. Many people do. Many people get a real break on prescription drugs, but they don't know it. They will know it when they do – if they do – begin to pay full price for them.

One of my reasons for being against the PDPs was that they super-inflated the cost of drugs in order to pay for the inordinate numbers of middlemen who would be involved: Social Security increased personnel and equipment and space, insurance companies' increased personnel and equipment and space, and drug company increased personnel, space and equipment. And drug companies are certainly not in the business of charity, any more than insurance companies or Microsoft. Nobody wants them to be in the business of charity. They all need to make a profit for their stockholders. My contention, however, is that many of these people are unnecessary middlemen; if we eliminated the need for them, it is possible the price of drugs could be lowered.

Also, just for the record, I am for making a profit. However, I am against profiteering.

Just a thought from a U.S. citizen who loves her country desperately and is not asking for a handout from anybody. For anything.

I have attempted to keep this nasty "difference of opinion" above the name-calling stage, but it is beginning to be increasingly difficult.
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (2) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

MY DEAREST "MILLION-DOLLAR BABY" DAUGHTER

   My "million-dollar baby" daughter, who named herself "twocentsfor you," possibly aimed at the writer of a blog comment to "Hostility and Truth in Labeling," was fairly angry at some comments he made to her mother.  

   My daughter is rather unlike her mother in that she is more direct, doesn't pussyfoot around or beat about the bush to make a point.  

   I'm very proud of her.  She is very protective about her family and about her animals -- four dogs and two cats.  She is passionate about animal rights -- and people rights -- and, as I said, is quite direct about these matters.  

   This all came about accidentally, when we spoke on the telephone and I described what I was doing -- probably composing some comment.  She wanted to see the blog entry to which it applied, and after I went through the torture of succeeding in forwarding a blog entry to her, I believe her sense of protectiveness went into overdrive.  I did make the point to her, however, that the word "JERK" should not have been separated from "Have a nice day."  She is forgiven in that I believe anyone who is perceptive enough knew exactly what she meant to say:  "Have a nice day, JERK." (She is also unfamiliar with blog and comment formats, to her greater good.)

   I am the mother of "twocentsfor you," and I approve this message -- and hers.   As I said, I am very proud of her.  I had no idea her protectiveness instinct went so quickly into overdrive.  Thank you, my "twocentsfor you."  I love you. 
 
 
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

NO MISUNDERSTANDING, PLEASE, TOWNHALL

   Just so there would be no misunderstanding about my immediately preceding blog post, that has been revised so that the person about whom the post is written can be known to anyone having an interest.  Also, I wished it to be known that my immediately preceding post had been in response to an unacceptable comment that person had made to an earlier blog post by me having to do with a new "Entitled Class."  

   As noted, I believe his comment to have been completely unacceptable.  It was perilously close to being flagged as offensive, which it certainly was; however, I felt it absolutely necessary to defend my honor and my integrity and my allegiance to these United States of America.  And it would have been illogical to attempt to delete that to which I was responding. 

   I believe it is possible to differ with another blogger without calling him or her unacceptable and inflammatory names.  However, apparently some people are utterly incapable of doing so.  Perhaps it has something to do with a limited vocabulary or limited means of written communication. 
 

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (14) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

HOSTILITY, TRUTH IN LABELING

I have been labeled "anti-American" by "Doc" Steech. 

I have been labeled "socialist" by "Doc" Steech.

I have been labeled "communist" by "Doc" Steech. 

In other words, I have been labeled by this labeler (hereinafter referred to as "Mr." "labeler") as opposed to things American.

In other words, I have been labeled by "Mr." "labeler" as someone who advocates state ownership of industry.

In other words, I have been labeled by "Mr." "labeler" as someone who promotes a form of socialism that abolishes private ownership. I have been labeled by "Mr." "labeler" as someone who, according to my trusty Oxford University Press dictionary/thesaurus, "advocates that the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole." Stated another way, by my trusty Webster's New World Dictionary and Thesaurus, I am a person who espouses "theories or systems of the ownership and operation of the means of production and distribution by society or the community rather than by private individuals, with all members of society or the community sharing in the work and the products."

I wanted to make sure I understood as completely as possible the reasons for my new labeling.

First of all, I dare anyone on this earth, including "Mr." "labeler," to call me anti-American. I have written essays by the dozen about the freedom to create, the like of which is evident nowhere in this world more than the United States of America. The United States of America is known around the world for creativity's freedom in all the arts and sciences. I have written essays I deemed would please any President of the United States to present in speeches at any time now or in the future.

As a matter of fact, "Mr." "labeler," I embrace those American ideals and rules and Amendments and Bill of Rights and Constitution that make it possible for me – or even you, "Mr." "labeler" – to own property. I own property both tangible and intangible. I own copyrights to literary compositions. I own real property and other tangible property. I would defy anyone to attempt to take them away from me. Loosely describing the rights accorded me by the Second Amendment, I have a right to protect my property and my person or anyone in my household from assaults and sieges of any description. I would take full advantage of that right.

And now, "Mr." "labeler," I wish to point out one thing, knowing full well that the subject may in your opinion (differing from mine, doubtlessly) be far from exhausted.

The point I wish to make, "Mr." "labeler" is that neither the government nor the taxpayers of the United States of America have assisted me in creating anything I have written. Neither the government nor the taxpayers of the United States of America have assisted me in any of my purchases of tangible property.

There are, however, industries operating in the United States of America that have had my assistance as well as the assistance of untold numbers of United States taxpayers, from back in history until the present, with absolutely no end in sight.

If those industries cannot create or operate without the help of taxpayers of the United States of America, they can label themselves at the very least greedy blood-suckers (like leeches), and anti-American to boot. (By the way, I found it amusing to look up the definition of "leech.")

Also by the way, I hope China does not kill us by micrograms before we finally develop a useful brain cell for purposes of dealing with that country in its extraordinary degree of assistance to those American industries that depend so unappreciatively upon American taxpayers' undying generosity.

I want truth in labeling, too, "Mr."  The following is a pledge I make proudly.  Hardly a day goes by that I do not think of that pledge and the country to which it refers.   
 
I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America, and to the Republic for which it stands, one Nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all. 
 
Speaking of "labeler," change one letter of that word and see what you find. 
 
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (34) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

A NEW "ENTITLED" CLASS

 

The entitled few. I suppose that several years ago it may have been a good thing to be among that group of the entitled.

Now, however, a new entitlement class has replaced the simply "entitled." The new class of those now in line for entitlements are illegal aliens.

We, the People, are paying for the upkeep of the approximately one-fourth of our prison population made up of illegal aliens.

We, the People, are paying for much of the healthcare of illegal aliens. We have the closed hospitals to prove it.

We, the People, have been replaced as employees by illegal aliens, who can be hired at such a lower wage than a citizen. Just think of the savings if no job benefits are necessary to be provided by employers. The new employment possibilities are attractive enough to illegal aliens, who are simply grateful, apparently, to have the job.  Forget about any benefits that may have been available to employees who are citizens of the United States.

We, the People, who elected those people in Washington for our fair representation in government, must sit dumbly as those very people we elected fail miserably in the problems that are the side effects of the swarms, droves, millions of illegal aliens now mixing among us while refusing to be a part of us.  Rather, the illegal aliens want to turn my country into their country. 

 I am at a total loss to understand how it is that while "we the People" have made it more than abundantly clear that we want an end to illegal immigration; that we want as many illegal aliens deported as possible; that we would love to have monumental fines slapped on employers having the gall to employ illegal aliens; and that we want an immediate end to a prohibition against what is laughably called "profiling," the people we have hired to work on our behalf pay no more attention to us than a gnat.  Instead, they sit on their cushy chairs, rock, have assistants write conciliatory notes to constituents, have meetings, form committees, call people to testify, perform a few more studies, and idly watch TV reports of illegal aliens breaching the borders.  And maybe scratch. 

 These illegal aliens form the new entitled class in the United States.  The people we have hired to work for us in Washington have, in effect, said, "A pox on all your houses." 

 I am sick of it. 

 This blog post was, surprisingly to some I'm sure, inspired by the 4/14/08 column by Burt Prelutsky, "Visitors from a weird planet."  The link is as follows: 

http://www.townhall.com/columnists/BurtPrelutsky/2008/04/14/visitors_from_a_weird_planet

 

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (10) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive
« Previous123456Next »