Ketchikan (International) Airport

Ketchikan, Alaska is not a large town, with perhaps 8 or 9 thousand within the city itself with another 7 thousand living outside it but on the same island.  Though you have to take a boat or plane to reach Ketchikan (as you cannot drive there by car), you can imagine that the airport at Ketchikan is not all that big.

As I mentioned in my prior post, I’ve been to Ketchikan twice.  During my visit this June, our tour guide pointed out that the locals get to brag that their airport is an “international”  airport.  The story of the “international” designation dates back to September 11, 2001, the day 4 commercial passenger jets were hijacked by terrorists and crashed into the World Trade Center in New York City, the Pentagon in the Virginia suburbs of DC, and a farm field in Pennsylvania.

All planes were ordered to be grounded across the USA and Canada that day.  International flights bound for the USA that day were re-routed to Canada.  A Canadian commercial passenger jet en-route between two Canadian locations happened to be closer to Ketchikan’s airport, so when the plane was ordered to be grounded, the plane was told to land in Ketchikan.  The pilot looked down at the relatively short runway in relation to the size of the aircraft he was flying.  Reportedly, his reaction was, “I have to land THIS on THAT????”  The plane landed safely.  That’s the story of Ketchikan’s first international flight arriving and departing from their humble airport.

Since that time, the runway has been lengthened for purposes of homeland security in case jets have to make emergency landings there in the future.

The Ketchikan airport is not located on the island that the city of Ketchikan is on.  Instead, the airport is located on an island populated by 50 persons, but the airport’s island is close to Ketchikan’s island.  There is just a narrow channel of water separating the two islands.  People going back and forth between the airport and Ketchikan must take a ferry across that channel.  There once was some talk of building a bridge to link the two islands, but that idea was shot down, as that proposed bridge was the infamous “bridge to nowhere.”

Perhaps that story might offer a slight idea of why certain politicians might have been for the bridge before they were against the bridge.

“Where men are men and women win the Iditarod”

My favorite quote from Sarah Palin’s speech at her homecoming in Alaska was the one that appears in the title.  Alaska is the state “where men are men and women win the Iditarod.” One of the feelings one gets from a Palin speech is a feeling of empowerment.

An Obama speech on the economy is one that is deflating, as he drives home a message that we just can’t make headway on the economy without the Federal government (led by an Obama-Biden White House, a filibuster-proof Democrat majority in the U.S. Senate, and a Democrat supermajority in the U.S. House of Representatives) rescuing us.  I don’t have confidence in our Congress.  So, if Obama and Biden tell me that they will partner with Congress to improve our economy, I have to say to myself that the outlook is quite bleak.  There is nothing empowering in the message of Obama.  It is a message of dependency designed to lure us toward greater socialism, and that path leads away from individual liberty.

Individual liberty is what has made us the best country on Earth, a position in the international pecking order that every other nation on earth envies.  The other nations will not become greater than America so long as their governments choose to retain more power than they relinquish to their people, and so long as we don’t allow our government to usurp more of the people’s power.

The reform message of McCain and Palin is an empowering one because it is couched in the candidates’ confidence in the people, not confidence in the government.

I am sure that the MSM, looking for dirt on Palin in Alaska, will find dirt.  Palin is not a perfect person, so I’m sure she’s made mistakes.  But she is not following in someone’s footsteps.  She’s blazing a new trail because the path that prior Alaskan governors took was one that led through quagmires of corruption.  There are times in my life that I blazed a new trail without a mentor, without footsteps of predecessors to tread in.  I made mistakes.  But I am so happy that I pushed back my horizons–those are the times in my life that are marked by achievements.  So, instead of looking at Sarah Palin to discover her mistakes, I’m looking at where the trail she blazed leads to.  It leads to government that subordinates itself more to the people.

Palin’s approval ratings hover around 80%.  It would be more useful for the MSM to discover what Palin is doing right than to only seek out the mistakes, and nothing more.  All the rest of the states have governors who make mistakes.  They could use a few pointers about how to do the job right.

The MSM thinks Palin’s approval ratings are an anomaly, an inexplicable phenomenon.  So they send their reporters to Alaska, commissioned with the task of finding Palin’s mistakes.  With those blinders on, the MSM will miss the explanation behind the approval ratings.  Let me assure the MSM that Sarah Palin did not arrive at the mountain top of public approval ratings by falling to the summit.  She climbed there.

I have been blessed to visit Alaska, the Last Frontier, on two occasions so far.  Alaska is very alluring.  I heartily recommend vacationing there.  I visited in July 2003 and in June of this year.  Let me give you a tiny peek at the land where men are men and women win the Iditarod.

DanielDouglasIsland

In Ketchikan I rode in a small boat over the waves (lots of small jellyfish visible in the water) to an abandoned cannery that now serves as a museum where tourists become acquainted with Alaska’s fishing industry.  I attended a lumberjack show where log-rolling, pole-climbing, and other extreme sports feats (some of which get televised on ESPN from time to time) take place in an outdoor arena where audience members become acquainted with the lumber industry.  Most striking of all Ketchikan tours, though, is a journey into the folklore of some of Alaska’s indigenous peoples, the Tlingits, as exhibited by the finest totem-pole carving in the world.

In Juneau, I visited the state capitol (without any tour guide), marveled at the wares in the numerous souvenir shops, took a tram ride up Mt. Roberts, toured some ghost town ruins on Douglas Island (the photo is from the shoreline of Douglas Island looking back across the channel to the mainland near where Juneau is situated), and most amazingly of all, took a bus past Mendenhall Glacier to board a boat to have an encounter with humpback whales.  When the captain of the boat spotted some orca and some humpback whales, he cut off the engines and passed around binoculars so we could glimpse these magnificent creatures.  He explained that Federal law required them to stop a certain distance away from the whales.  We watched a pod of humpback whales surround a school of herrings, and the captain remarked how rare it was that we, as tourists, happened upon a collective feeding ritual that professional marine biologists wait for hours and days to catch a glimpse of.  Our delights did not end there.  Three humpback whales decided to come meet our boat!  They swam to us!  They not only approached closely enough to touch them with an extended arm (we restrained ourselves from doing so), but they swam under the boat and emerged on the other side!  What a thrill!

I had the opportunity to take a ferry from Skagway to Haines.  From Haines, we studied the wildlife, from the tidal basin, to the grassy meadows, to the steep mountain slopes.  Bald eagles soar through the skies, bears forage for food, and mountain goats defy gravity as they clamber up steep cliffs.

Also from Skagway, we took a ride on the White Pass and Yukon Scenic Railway, with a voice over an intercom pointing out natural wonders, such as thundering waterfalls and seismic fault lines, while telling us the tales of the Klondike gold rush of 1898.  The cog railway took us from sea level in a valley scooped out by glaciers, up a steep grade along mountain cliffs to the summit of the White Pass at the Canadian border.  Our journey also proceeded through portions of British Columbia and the Yukon Territory before returning us to our cruise ship docked in the fjord at Skagway.

I’d like America to feel a little more like Alaska, a place where you can sense exhilarating freedom. America, where men are empowered to be men, women are empowered to win, and the people are sovereign.

Agents of change

McSame?  Sorry, Obama, that tag line isn’t working with me.

Frankly, there’s a lot of things you’ve been trying in the past week or so that doesn’t work with a lot of people.

You haven’t figured out where to take your campaign from this point on.  You are lashing out in several directions hoping something will stick.  The MSM is trying to help as much as they can, but they don’t know which direction to focus their attacks on, because you aren’t providing the leadership to point out the avenue that they should pursue.  The bloggers of the left, seeing that you aren’t directing the message, are stepping forward to try to help you out.  They are imaginative, as the left-blogging rumor mill is generating leads for the MSM to track down.  Unfortunately, the MSM has been arriving at dead ends on stories such as Palin mandating creationism instruction in Alaska’s public schools.  The rumors turn out not to be true.  The only clear message that America is getting from this consortium of your campaign, the MSM, and the left blogosphere, is that the Palin witchhunt is on.

And since we Americans can see that it is a witchhunt, the poll numbers show that a number of us are changing our minds about who the real change agents are.  Not only will the McCain ticket NOT be eight more years of the same, your ticket is now attempting to return us to the politics of personal destruction of past campaigns.  So much for change we can believe in.

Your words may say, “McCain-Palin does not represent change,” but your bewildered reactions say, “Whoa!  Too much change!”

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac

Note to Congress:  Don’t do it.  Don’t bail them out.

Yes, dominoes will topple in the economy.  People will blame you, the Congress, when our financial house of cards tumbles.  I know you see a bailout as a way to redeem yourselves, to at least stave off the blame.  But, guess what?  The American people don’t approve of your performance, anyway.  Look at it this way:  When it comes to Congressional approval ratings, you’ve got nothing to lose.  Go ahead and take the blame, and let Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac collapse.  Let the marketplace correct itself.

Congress, if you bail out Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, do you know that it will cost $2 trillion?  If you spend $2 trillion, what will it do to the budget deficit?  What will it do to the national debt?  What items in our Federal budget will be displaced if you commit that much money to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac?  Will it kill our defense budget at a time that we are waging a war on two fronts?

Guess what, Congress?  If you bail out Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, how many more industries will you be bailing out?  The message you sent by bailing out Bear Stearns will only be magnified a hundred times when you bail out Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.  How many more Wall Street firms will ask for a bail out?  How many more of Bear Stearns ilk?  How many more banks?  Automakers?  Airlines?  Will you print more money to cover these trillions of dollars for the bailouts?  What will the increase in the money supply mean?  A worthless dollar?  Inflation that will put prices of household goods beyond the purchasing power of household budgets?  Will taxes have no choice but to go up?  Or will the interest on the national debt end up consuming more than whatever revenue the Federal government scrape together, and then find our Federal government in default?

When we let Enron go under, there was an economic earthquake in Houston.  But guess what?  Now, Houston is one of the best places to earn a wage and support a family.  When average wages are compared with the cost of living, Houston is tops in the nation for letting people take a crack at the American dream.  We let the market correct itself.  After the darkness, there will be a new dawn.

Congress, these firms that want to be bailed out engaged in bad behavior.  Terrible behavior.  Horrendous behavior.  They cheated in an attempt to get ahead.  They had their day in the sun.  Now it’s time to pay the piper.  Why should we let good money chase after bad?  We shouldn’t.  If our taxpayer dollars have to be spent on subsidizing anything (which I don’t think it does) in the private sector, why the worst performers?  Why not the best?

Trust capitalism to work out its own kinks.  Don’t socialize industries so huge that they’re too big for the Federal government to swallow.  The communist nations like the old Soviet Union fell because they let good money chase after bad, shoveling rubles into the money pit of industries that were corrupt, grossly inefficient, and totally lacking in innovation.

It is better for Wall Street to go belly up than for the nation, itself, to go belly up.

So I implore you, Congress, just don’t do it.  Don’t.

Lorain’s transportation grid

Word of Mouth, a blog for all things pertaining to the city of Lorain, Ohio, has recently revisited the discussion of Lorain’s shipping port on Lake Erie.  I feel it’s worthwhile to point my readers in that direction to weigh in on the discussion.  As WoM notes, I’ve written for their blog in the past.  Included in my past writings at Word of Mouth are my own thoughts about Lorain’s transportation infrastructure needs, presented in 3 installments: Part 1; Part 2; and Part 3.

Lorain

Here is a map to help visualize some of the improvements I proposed.  The existing limited-access divided highway routes are shown in magenta.  I proposed adding some limited-access divided highways, and those are mapped in red.

Bob Barr, Ron Paul, Barack Obama, and Sarah Palin

Barack Obama isn’t the only one who is trying to figure out how to step out of the shadow of Sarah Palin.  I think Bob Barr and Ron Paul have to be concerned, as well.

I was among the Republicans who might have cast a vote for Bob Barr in November had John McCain picked a liberal VP nominee.  If Bob Barr had siphoned off enough Republican votes, Barack Obama could win the election with a minority of the popular vote, just like Clinton did when Ross Perot was in the running.  I think the Republican base has been so energized now, with Palin on the McCain ticket, that Bob Barr will lose traction with those who had entertained thoughts of defecting.

By all accounts, Ron Paul had a successful convention of his own in the Twin Cities.  But when the roll call at the RNC was taken, there were less Ron Paul delegate votes than anticipated.  Ron Paul supporters certainly recognize that Washington has gone astray.  By choosing Sarah Palin, John McCain has underscored his message that Washington is wayward, in dire need of reform.  John McCain’s acceptance speech included barbs against the Beltway Republicans that were every bit as stinging as Ron Paul’s barbs.  There are still vast areas of disagreement between the McCain camp and the Paul camp, but I think Paul supporters have to feel a bit more reassured about McCain after the Palin pick than they were before the Palin pick.

McCain’s Republican base has clearly become more solidified and energized, stealing thunder from Barr and Paul, thus allowing McCain to turn his attention toward independent voters and give Obama a run for his money.

CNN headed down same path as MSNBC

It’s a Johnny-come-lately to group think in comparison to MSNBC, but CNN is definitely defending Barack Obama and putting Sarah Palin in the cross-hairs.  Of course, some CNN personalities were always known to be on the left, like Carl Bernstein, Fareed Zakaria, Christiane Amanpour, and Jack Cafferty.  While some “impartial” CNN personalities, like Lou Dobbs and Larry King, remain above the fray, others, that used to appear to be independent, are now showing their true colors, including Campbell Brown, Soledad O’Brien, and Anderson Cooper.

Campbell Brown takes issue with Palin’s tale of the Alaskan Governor’s jet.  Palin put it on E-Bay.  Campbell Brown pointed out that the jet had to be sold at a loss to a broker because it didn’t sell on E-Bay.  What Campbell Brown doesn’t own up to is that Palin was truthful about putting the jet up for sale on E-Bay.  In fact, three attempts were made to sell the plane on E-Bay, so the Palin story is very true.  When no one came up with the minimum bid on E-Bay, it was sold at a loss to a broker, but at least the state of Alaska recouped some of the money put into the plane, let alone putting an end to the mounting price tag for fuel, maintenance, storage, etc., that the state was footing the bill for.   Wouldn’t it be nice if CNN did a survey of all the states to see which ones possessed a luxury jet that taxpayers financed for the use of their respective governors?  Or surveying which governors in recent history divested themselves of perks?  Such investigative reporting might reveal the secret to Palin’s high approval ratings.  Fat chance.  I don’t see CNN trying to figure out why the rest of the country doesn’t support their state governors as much as Alaska supports Palin.

Soledad O’Brien has taken the lead among CNN anchors investigating Sarah Palin on the parenting front.  Odd how male candidates and Hillary Clinton have never been under the gun by Soledad on the topic of parenting.  Clearly Palin is being singled out.  Soledad O’Brien and Campbell Brown have had to backpedal on these issues.  Erica Hill, among others, has been given the task of assembling focus groups in an attempt to justify O’Brien and Brown in their wielding of the double standard.

Then there’s the “trooper-gate” story being investigated by Drew Griffin.  The sound bites from this story will be circulated throughout the CNN broadcast day.  The full interview of the trooper reveals nothing that would disqualify Palin from office or answer the question of whether Palin abused her power.  An ex-administrator alleges that Palin fired him because he resisted firing the trooper.  The ex-administrator, Walter Monegan, was first given an opportunity to transfer to another position.  Instead, he chose to accept the termination and use it as a soap box to accuse Palin of interfering in personnel matters for personal reasons.  So far, reports only give us a “he said/she said” view, but Campbell Brown suspects the worst, because she assumes, according to what she said to Drew Griffin, that Palin doesn’t want the state legislature to wind up their investigation prior to the election.  She asked Drew Griffin if Palin had contrived any ways of postponing the resolution of the investigation until after the election.  Drew Griffin said, instead, that the legislature would likely try to move up the final disclosure date to October 10th.  I find the tag “trooper-gate” problematic because it suggests strongly that Palin did wrong even though the final conclusion on the matter has not been reached.  I would like to suggest that “good old boys” who get ousted from power are likely to not go quietly, and those on the wrong side of Palin’s reforms in the state legislature may be reveling in this opportunity to assign a demerit to Palin.

CNN is eager to use this unresolved “trooper-gate” to poke holes in McCain’s assertion that Palin is an accomplished reformer.  Uninvestigated by CNN is the whole Chicago political machine in dire need of reform that Obama would rather use as-is than shake up.  CNN is straining at gnats and swallowing camels.  Palin has clearly undertaken reforms that other politicians across the nation haven’t bothered to undertake.  CNN could reveal why voters are prone to distrust politicians in the first place by showing the prime examples of politicians who had the power to clean things up, but didn’t.  CNN shouldn’t be trying to disparage the reforms Palin has accomplished, because it sends a message to other politicians to not attempt reforms, because once one has caught the eye of the MSM for reforms, the MSM will try to tear the politician down.  Voters want politicians who will undertake reforms, and we don’t want the MSM to stand in opposition to them.

As for Campbell Brown’s much-ballyhooed interview of Tucker Bounds, McCain spokesperson, regarding Palin’s command role of the Alaska National Guard, it may be worthwhile to know the role that any state governor plays in being commander-in-chief over the National Guard.  However, Tucker Bounds is not the person who is likely to be the source of that information, and Brown (who knows that) wanted to run up the score on a spokesperson who was not thoroughly briefed on the matter.  Bounds should have anticipated the question, yes, but Brown should have shown better sportsmanship, and perhaps asked for a referral to someone who was qualified to answer the question.  Instead of locating the information by other means, CNN continues to air the same clip over again with the questions left unanswered.  I suggest that CNN isn’t interested in providing an answer.  They are interested only in a game of “gotcha,” where they managed to ask a question of a spokesperson that went unanswered.  Also, CNN ignores that Barack Obama has never had a command role over the National Guard, so they turn a blind eye to Obama’s glaring deficiencies, not acknowledging the emperor has no clothes.

MSNBC has chosen a liberal path as a way to boost their pathetic ratings.  CNN has much better ratings, and following the path of MSNBC will only erode their viewership.  CNN needs to reassess their commitment to the motto “no bias, no bull.”

RNC wraps up

I predict that McCain’s speech at the conclusion of the Republican National Convention was better received among Ohio’s rank-and-file Republicans than it was among the audience in attendance in Saint Paul, Minnesota.  I say that because of the audience responses to McCain’s promises of reform, which were warmly received in Saint Paul but would have been wildly and enthusiastically cheered in Ohio.  While McCain clearly showed that he never approved of the excesses perpetrated by Republicans in Washington, a lot of the people who DID approve of those excesses were in the Saint Paul audience, dampening the crowd response.

In other words, the Republicans of the much-reviled Bush Administration were very well represented in the convention hall.  I think that’s a shame.  It clearly is time to turn the page.

Ohio’s rank-and-file Republicans have suffered embarrassment for the last 4 years, as scandals tainted the Republican brand when Bob Ney, Bob Taft, Joe Deters, and others, turned out to be undesirables.  We rank-and-file Republicans in the Buckeye State are still dismayed by some of our state legislators and Congressional Representatives who still adhere to the principles of pay-to-play politics.  We are hungry for a better crop of Republican officeholders.  Clearly, if there are any Republicans anywhere in this nation eager for the McCain-Palin reform message, they are here in Ohio.

Several of the early speeches of the day were dreadful.  How in the world does Kansas put up with its singularly uninspiring U. S. Senator Sam Brownback.  His speaking manner was absolutely annoying.  I was at the point of turning away from C-Span coverage.  He was followed by a speaker that was nearly as bad: Oklahoma Congresswoman Mary Fallin.  They need professional help to improve their speaking abilities.  It’s a good thing the other networks talked over top many of these early speakers, because whatever lift Giuliani and Palin provided last night would have been quickly deflated if everybody heard those speeches.

McCain should have had nothing but passionate reform, reform, reform speakers tonight in order to keep the ball rolling from last night’s performances.  Speaking without passion and detouring from the reform message by some of the earlier speakers was dampening enthusiasm.

I think many of those Beltway Republicans in attendance were subtly trying to sabotage McCain by not reacting enthusiastically to the McCain reform message, like when he talked about the spending, the earmarks, the corruption, the selfishness.  Some of those selfish Beltway Bandits may be hoping that McCain falters this year, mistakenly thinking that they can be leader of the pack in 4 years.  Brownback certainly performed that way.  Some Beltway Bandits haven’t figured out that ordinary Americans are not proud of their behavior (and some may be in for a rude awakening when they’ve lost re-election bids this November).  Other Beltway Bandits (like U.S. Senator Ted Stevens of Alaska) perversely feel that they will not be denied the spoils, no matter what, and those are the ones that will sabotage McCain and welcome Obama as President.  Those are the ones that were resisting McCain’s message in Saint Paul.

I think it was necessary for McCain to own up to the fact that our Republican representatives in Congress have let down the voters, despite the bad vibes it caused among GOP bigwigs in Saint Paul, and even though it could be used as cannon fodder by Obama.  In order to give McCain any credibility at all for the prospects of reform, especially for any independents that may have been paying attention, McCain had to clearly show he was not going to lead the nation through 4 more years of a Bush Administration.

Overall, I think the McCain speech was effective, and I’m hoping that most viewers didn’t tune in until the later portions of the evening.  I did feel that stir of patriotism within me as McCain spoke with conviction of his solemn commitment to our nation.

Community organizers are . . . ?

CNN has picked up the gauntlet thrown down by Sarah Palin last night.  This morning, pundits on CNN are talking about the work of community organizers.

The description these pundits are giving of community organizers sounds to me like the description of social workers.  I’ve always thought of the two as distinctly different.  Am I mistaken?  Or are the job descriptions being purposely blurred to widen the scope of who should feel victimized by Palin’s comments?

Sarah Palin quipped that being a small-town mayor was sort of like being a community organizer, except that a mayor has real responsibilities.

Social workers absolutely were not included in the punch line.  Social workers often help people with special needs, and Palin has a child with special needs.  She promised families with special needs that if the Republican Presidential ticket is elected, they’d have an advocate in the White House in the person of Sarah Palin.

Social workers often serve as case managers that help disadvantaged people do many things, like, figure out how to navigate through household budget shortfalls, obtain re-training for displaced workers, address chronic medical issues, or assist with job searches.

This morning, the pundits were describing community organizers in the same terms.  My own assumptions, which may be wrong, were that community organizers often work for non-profits that have a specified mission, a defined scope, and that they try to cobble together advocacy groups within that scope so that lobbying local and state governments for the issues within that scope becomes more effective because it adds voices from the community to the voices at the non-profit, thus swelling the ranks of those calling for government action.

I welcome input.  Feel free to enlighten me.

Giuliani, Palin, stars of the RNC

I’m glad C-Span exists.  It’s so wonderful to hear the speeches of the conventions without the pundits talking over them all.  Unlike the DNC, where few non-prime time speeches were noteworthy, I’ve really enjoyed all the speeches of the RNC, even the early ones delivered (for two days running) by U.S. Senator Norm Coleman of Minnesota.

Of course, the first night of the RNC was cut short and pointed attention toward Hurricane Gustav.

The second night non-primetime speeches were about service.  These were speeches that were truly American, very much human, and not at all partisan.  Many of the speeches on service brought tears to my eyes.  I wish all Americans had a chance to hear those speeches.  There really wasn’t much partisanship in evidence until primetime, when former U.S. Senator from Tennessee, Fred Thompson, took the stage.   Thompson did a good job, in contrasting the Democrat Presidential ticket with the Republican Presidential ticket, but better speeches were to come.

Hawaii Governor Linda Lingle, former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, former Maryland Lieutenant Governor Michael Steele, and former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee all stirred the convention crowds with their speeches.

But the keynote speech by former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani was magnificent.  I was cheering line after line after line.  Giuliani struck the right note time after time after time.  His speech, to me, seemed exactly right.

Sarah Palin’s speech wasn’t as steeped in criticism of Obama’s candidacy as Giuliani’s, but Palin clearly took ownership of the spotlight.  Her speech also scolded the media, and we’ll see how that challenge unfolds, as CNN and MSNBC lost no time at all in picking up the gauntlet.  We know sports events can get ugly when the referees take sides, and this election could get uglier, as some in the media were signaling that they were taking off the black-and-white-striped referee shirts and putting on player uniforms getting ready to take to the court themselves in order to beat Palin.

If the American people get the opportunity to view the Palin speech without commentary, it’ll resonate.  The media, I predict, is going to run interference with the Palin message, and it remains to be seen whether the American people can see through the smoke and mirrors.

Clearly, though, Giuliani and Palin were masterful.

McCain personality

Obama has seized upon a quip by a senior campaign advisor to McCain about fleshing out a portrait of McCain based on his personality rather than his views on the issues.  How disingenuous.  Of course, views on the issues are extremely important when running in a legislative race.  There is a place for defining character traits when running for the executive branch.

Obama, in making his campaign all about judgment, has certainly put personality front and center.

McCain has wanted to address the issues much more than Obama has.  McCain invited Obama to make a series of joint townhall appearances so that voters could get an apples-to-apples comparison between the two major party nominees on the issues, but Obama rejected the invitation.

If Obama wants to turn the campaign back to issues, then, by all means, resurrect the notion of joint townhall appearances.  Obama doesn’t want to be pinned down on issues.  He wants McCain to speak out on issues first so that Obama can find fault with what McCain says no matter how McCain says it.

Why has the McCain camp made a recent effort to flesh out McCain’s personality during the convention?  I think it’s an opportunity to push back against Obama’s biggest lie:  McCain is Bush and Bush is McCain.  If anyone is paying attention, McCain is laying to rest any notion that he is Bush.

McCain, I am certain will be happy to leave behind the “McCain is Bush” narrative to more fully address the issues, but Obama would have to abandon the “McCain is Bush” refrain.  Obama would have to agree to joint townhalls or, at the very least, more debates.  Obama has shown no inclination to move beyond “McCain is Bush,” so his criticism of the McCain camp for defining McCain’s personality is nothing but a gimmick.

Lorain labor

One reason why some Republicans view me as a RINO is because of my support of organized labor.  I grew up in a UAW household, and, for a few years, was even a UAW member, myself.  In some ways, my political views are reminiscent of the Bull Moose Republicans of a century ago.

Unions have been instrumental in securing human rights for workers from unscrupulous employers.  Child labor laws, overtime work hour laws, worker safety laws, collective bargaining laws, and many other laws to protect laborers from one abuse or another have come into existence because of the advocacy of unions.  Labor Day, a federal holiday, is an appropriate time to reflect on the contributions of labor, and particularly unions, to our society.

Nevertheless, there are those, and I acknowledge that many of them are within my political party, who show no gratitude whatsoever toward labor unions.  This is unfortunate.  I wish they would compare their working conditions with the work conditions of those who live in foreign countries, especially countries that have no labor unions.  Would they want to live that kind of life?  Would they want to work for such unscrupulous employers as exist in other nations?  I don’t think so.  Among the many things that make America great are the working conditions we enjoy on the job, and labor unions have a lot to do with it.

Accountability is a buzzword in Republican circles.  Republicans expect accountability from government.  What about accountability in business?  In light of ethics lapses at major firms in America (like Enron, Arthur Anderson, Bear Stearns, Freddie Mac, and Fannie Mae), I believe businesses need to be every bit as accountable as government.  Unions do provide a check and balance against employers that definitely increase accountability on the part of the business.  Some would argue that there’s less accountability from union workers, but, if the truth were known, employers who follow due process can discipline and dismiss union workers, so long as they collect evidence to support their reasons for doing so.  Collective bargaining is useful for making sure that employees obtain equal pay for equal work without regard to gender or office politics.  In the at-will employment world, office politics and personality clashes have much to do with who gets a raise, who gets disciplined, who gets fired, etc.  In the at-will employment world, de facto job performance often doesn’t count for much if a boss just doesn’t like you.  Similarly, it’s easy to get passed over for promotion if someone is sleeping with the boss, no matter how much harder you worked.  Collective bargaining agreements curb such excesses.

What would family life be if there were no overtime pay for overtime work?  Isn’t it hard to keep your marriage vibrant when you spend more time at work than you do at home?  Isn’t it hard to raise children when you’re never around?  When employers have to pay above and beyond your normal rate of pay, it is a disincentive that prompts them to keep your overtime hours to a minimum.  Efforts to roll back overtime pay laws are not just anti-worker, they are anti-family.

Some of the most ardent union-bashers are evangelicals of the religious right.  I often wonder why.  If they read the Old Testament story of Moses, who confronted the Pharaoh of Egypt about the working conditions of the Children of Israel, isn’t it obvious that Moses was a prototype of a union leader?  When Moses told Pharoah to let Israel go, wasn’t it a prototype of a strike notice?  When Israel fled Egypt, wasn’t it a prototype of a workers’ strike?  Why wouldn’t the religious right be opposed to worker oppression?  I haven’t figured that out.

However, on the flip side of the coin, labor unions have branched out to support causes that have nothing to do with the rights of workers.  These days, it appears that they support every plank of the Democrat party, even when it makes no sense to do so.  Many union members are gun owners, yet the unions give material support to candidates and campaigns that strive to implement more gun control measures.  In this part of the country, many union members are Catholics who firmly believe that abortion isn’t right, yet the unions give material support to candidates and campaigns that promote abortion.  As a result, many Republicans, who might have looked upon unions with some favor, instead see that the unions are merely a caucus within the Democrat party rather than an independent organization that is strictly concerned with workplace issues.

And that brings me to Lorain.

Barack Obama has said, “There is not a red America and a blue America.  There is just the United States of America.”

Sorry, Barack, but yesterday, I found Blue America.

I went to Black River Landing in downtown Lorain yesterday.  For more than a dozen years now, labor unions in Lorain have sponsored the largest labor celebration in Ohio held during the Labor Day weekend.  The Labor Day Family Celebration draws tens of thousands of people.  Each union has its own exhibit booth with freebies that they distribute to the festival-goers.  There are amusements for the children, like laser-tag, pony rides, and a giant slide. There are refreshment stands selling the usual gyros, sno-cones, funnel cakes and other festival food favorites.  There are live bands performing on an outdoor stage.  And there are politicians.  Several featured politicians are granted some time to address the crowds from the main stage.

Black River Landing is public land owned by the city of Lorain.  I was surprised to see signs posted that read, “No Soliciting. NO campaigning or distribution of campaign literature.”

lorain08312008

Flashback to my state rep campaign of 2002. A public event was taking place in Veterans Park in Lorain.  I was introducing myself, shaking hands, and handing out campaign flyers.  Local elected officeholders were making speeches at the occasion.  The Chief of Police confronted me after a few minutes and told me to stop campaigning on the premises.  Of course, the local elected officeholders were Democrats, and I was a Republican.  What ever happened to my 1st Amendment rights of freedom of speech?

Fast forward to the Democrat National Convention in Denver and the Republican National Convention in Saint Paul, which sandwich the Labor Day weekend this year. Republicans are in Denver to get their message out, unmolested by the throngs of Democrats crowding into the convention venues.  Democrats are in Saint Paul, and Republicans have promised to extend the same standard of civility to the Democrats.

Back to yesterday in Lorain. Despite the sign prohibiting campaigning and distribution of literature, the Democrats were out in full force.  They had their own booth on the grounds, emblazoned with signs of the various candidates up for election this fall.  They were passing out stickers with Democrat candidate names on them.  The printed program is chock full of Democrat print advertisements.  Democrat politicians monopolized the main stage when the time for public speaking arrived.

lorain8312008

I happened to see a booth with volunteers that were attempting to register people to vote.  The volunteers were wearing shirts that read “Reclaim Lorain.”  I chuckled.  Who are they going to reclaim Lorain from?  The Republicans?  Laughable.  There aren’t any Republicans holding public office in Lorain.  Surely, they don’t mean to reclaim Lorain from the Democrat “Machine” because, in addition to the registration forms, they were compiling a supplementary list of addresses of voters for the Get-Out-The-Vote drives in October and November.

From the stage I could hear a politician shouting out “McCain is Bush.  Bush is McCain.”  (spoken as if from the Orwellian Ministry of Truth)

Now, I don’t mind if a politician shouts “Obama is better than Bush,” because that’s an opinion.  I don’t mind if a politician shouts “Obama is better than McCain.”  That’s an opinion, too.  Everyone is entitled to an opinion.  But I mind when someone says “Bush is McCain.  McCain is Bush.”  That’s just a flat-out lie.  Somehow, repeating falsehoods over and over again never bothers the consciences of these Democrat politicians.  I find the falsehoods enfuriating.  Democrats don’t think they can win by stating only what’s true?  I suppose if they started telling the truth they’d have to include the fact that the Palin household is the only union household on either major party Presidential ticket.  They might also have to recognize that the off-shoring of jobs rapidly accelerated during the Clinton administration and hasn’t abated since.  OK, I can see why they resort to lies.

I’ve taught on a substitute basis in Lorain City Schools.  I think about the children who won’t apply themselves in school, who don’t academic support from home, who are at risk of dropping out and who may never enroll in college, let alone get a college degree.  These kids have such a limited world view.  What are these children exposed to, politically?  A steady diet of Democrat maxims and icons.  They grow up in a decaying town with a failed government monopolized by the Democrat “Machine,” and their minds will never branch out far enough to look beyond the Democrat Party as a means of finding solutions for their community.

Someone I know well who is a member of the teachers’ union remarked to me, “I don’t think there are as many people here today as I’ve seen in past years.”

I said, “Republicans don’t come here any more.”

She asked, “Why?”

I showed her the sign that prohibited campaigning.

“But the Democrats are here,” she observed.

“Yes, they are.  Republicans don’t come anymore because their isn’t free speech here.  Just censored speech.  Filtered speech.”

I’m Republican.  I was there.  But I’ve paid union dues.  My attendance should be begrudged by no one.  I nearly had an altercation, though, as someone spotted my “Brusky for Commissioner” t-shirt (Nick Brusky is a Republican candidate for Lorain County Commissioner this fall), and started to make a beeline for me.  A third person swept by and put his arm around the angry man and led him in another direction, engaging him in conversation.  Close encounter of a hostile kind.

Other Republican candidates stopped going to candidate forums sponsored by the local unions when I ran the 2nd time for state rep in 2004.  In 2002, Republicans were always invited to speak before the unions, but were always shouted down and vilified.  By fall of 2004, when I was the only Republican to show up, they thanked me for coming, and wondered aloud why the other Republicans didn’t come.  I haven’t been a candidate since.  Democrats have swept the local elections.  Now, not only won’t Republicans come to union events, they mostly don’t even run for office anymore.

I’m still willing to advocate for labor unions.  I still want to weigh in on issues that affect working conditions.  I’m willing to take on politicians within my own party while doing so.  The unions are going to have to adopt a view of America that is not just a Red America taking aim at their Blue America.  They’ll have to open the channels of discourse.  They’ll have to reprimand the “Machine” for putting up signs that forbid campaigning that are meant to silence Republicans and that Democrats are permitted to ignore.  Heaven help me, when I show my face again in union environs and have it slapped, to turn the other cheek and renew my efforts to build that bridge between the unions and the GOP.

[UPDATE] More discussion at Word of Mouth appears in these two posts.

Small town mayor criticism = bitter, cling to guns, religion?

The first Obama campaign response to McCain’s VP announcement of Alaska Governor Sarah Palin didn’t highlight that she was a governor.  Instead, it belittled her as a small town mayor.  This morning, I finally remembered what Barack Obama said to his San Francisco peers about small-town-America.  Is he trying to communicate that Sarah Palin is one of those bitter Americans, so bitter that her reason for clinging to guns and religion is self-explanatory?  My goodness, what if she gets elected, and actually brings her guns to Washington with her?  What if she starts each day on the job as VP with prayer?  Can we afford to have a bitter American as VP who will turn Washington on its head like Palin would?

Maybe I’m way off base.  Hugh Hewitt has written a compelling blog entry at Townhall.com that offers an alternative explanation of the Obama camp’s urge to tear Sarah Palin apart, and I recommend that everyone read it.

Fed up with the left’s charges of “tokenism”

The left cannot escape the mindset of identity politics, despite Obama’s talk of post-racial, post-gender, post-ideological, and post-generational politics.

When they look at Sarah Palin, the only thought that comes to their mind is that she’s a woman.  To the left, if a woman can’t pass muster with Emily’s List, she can’t be taken seriously.  Thus she’s a token.

I have a challenge for the political left:  Name a governor with higher approval ratings than Sarah Palin.

I’m waiting.

Waiting.

Waiting.

Time’s up.

I submit to you that the reason why Sarah Palin’s approval ratings reach up to 80% is because she is superb at doing her job.  Performance on the job is her qualification.

She’s cleaning up the excesses of her corrupt predecessors.  Do you think that fact would leap to the attention of Senator McCain, who was so stung by “Keating 5” that reform has been his mission ever since?  I think so.

She’s vetoed bill after bill after bill to force the legislature to weed the pork out of the budget.  Do you think that fact would leap to the attention of Senator McCain, who has fought earmarks in Washington?  I think so.

She’s appointed Republicans, Democrats, and independents to positions in her administration and gotten more accomplished in 2 years than her gubernatorial predecessor did in 12 years.  Do you think that fact would leap to the attention of Senator McCain, who has railed against gridlock and reached across party lines to get things done?

Among the things she’s gotten done is a natural gas pipeline project that sat on the drawing board for 30 years is finally getting underway.  She’s shown a commitment to finding more energy solutions in an environmentally responsible manner.  Do you think that fact would leap to the attention of Senator McCain, who has campaigned for America’s energy independence?

Let’s be clear: There is no one more qualified to be on a McCain ticket than Sarah Palin.  McCain sees elements of himself in the impressive resume of Sarah Palin.

Choosing the governor who is doing better at her job than any other in America is not tokenism!

And why wouldn’t the best governor be among those ready to be President at a moment’s notice?

The political left is being entirely dishonest about the charges of tokenism, entirely dishonest about the talk of a new, unifying, brand of politics, and entirely dishonest about changing Washington.

The change ticket I believe in is the one that has ACCOMPLISHED change, not the one that only has talk.

Palin’s quality of experience

I was watching On The Record with Greta Van Susteren on Fox News Channel when an Alaskan journalist explained that Sarah Palin’s approval ratings as governor were above 80% because she’d accomplished more in less than two years than the previous governor had accomplished in 12 years (spanning 3 full terms).  She’s a “go-getter” who “doesn’t let the dust settle around her.”  Apparently, she has a talent for multi-tasking, which means DOING things, not just talking on a stage with help from a teleprompter.

So for the Obama camp to belittle her accomplishments because she has less than two years experience as governor, with a prior stint as a small town mayor, fails to really capture what she can do for America.  She took on the “good old boys,” but, unlike me, she actually won AND the “good old boys” were within her own party.  She exposed their corruption, and that may partly be why Sen. Ted Stevens is under indictment right now.  Besides policing the corruption, she ramrodded through ethics reforms, got a natural gas pipeline construction project off the ground, and trimmed earmarks out of the state budget through prodigious use of the gubernatorial veto power.  She’s visited Alaska’s National Guard troops while they were deployed in Kuwait and Iraq.  All departments of the state answer to her, and she makes decisions of great consequence many times every day.

Her 2 years equal more than her predecessor’s 12 years.  Let’s not just look at this in a quantitative way.  If we look at it in a qualitative way, you can begin to appreciate why the Republican base is so happy to have her on the ticket, especially the OHIO Republican base, which was demoralized by GOP scandals leading up to the disastrous elections of November 2006.  This woman is not just a McCain gimmick, as the Obama camp so savagely derides her to be.  She represents the solution to a problem that has plagued Ohio and has definitely plagued Washington.  Much has been made of the President’s low approval ratings, but the ratings of Congress are even worse.  Sarah Palin is the dynamic individual that represents the prescription for what ails us.

I don’t know what terrifies the Obama camp more:  the fact that the Republican base is now unifying and getting motivated; or the prospect that if the McCain-Palin ticket is elected, Washington will have its secrets exposed and have to finally clean up their act.  I think there may be a lot of shenanigans Sen. Biden might have some awareness of (since he’s been there for 36 years) that have to be straightened out.

I ran for state representative twice in Ohio’s 56th House District, in 2002 and in 2004.  I had no prior experience holding elective office.  The incumbent I was running against had nearly 30 years of experience in office.  I remember having to debate the issue of experience with the editors of the Elyria Chronicle-Telegram, who place great importance on experience when weighing endorsement experience.  I explained that qualifications for serving in the legislative branch are different than serving in the executive branch.  I said that experience (and a resume) DOES matter for executive (and judicial) branch offices, but positions on issues should be the main deciding factor for choosing legislative candidates.  Our constitution has checks and balances not just between the three branches of government, but also checks and balances between professionals and amateurs, in order to make sure we have government of the people, by the people, and for the people.  Amateurs make the laws in order to make sure that laws are fair for everyone.  It’s ideal to have a cross-section of people representing us in legislatures.  You don’t want legislators to serve in office for too long because you don’t want them to develop an “inside the Beltway” mentality where they become less connected and less sensitive to the will of the people.  But while amateurs make the laws, professionals in the executive branch enforce the laws.  In the judicial branch, their are judges, prosecutors, and defense attorneys that are all professionals, but there is still a check and balance by amateurs who form a jury of peers.  Running for state representative has no qualifications other than residing and being registered to vote in the district where you are running. The relative brevity of legislative terms is another demonstration of how legislators were envisioned to be amateurs by the framers of the Constitution.  I told the Chronicle-Telegram editors that I was fully qualified to run for the legislature, and that they were adding unnecessary criteria when making their selection.

I also spoke to the Chronicle-Telegram editors about the poor quality of experience of the incumbent.  With all the quantity of experience, measured in years, that the incumbent had logged, there was a dearth of accomplishments.  I not only talked about the volume (or lack thereof) of legislation produced by the incumbent, I also cited the condition of the 56th District (crime, blight, pollution, poverty, education deficiencies, unemployment, etc.) as evidence that the incumbent had really done very little to advance the cause of the people he represented.  Why not take a chance on a newcomer when there’s a lack of productivity from the incumbent (despite the quantity of experience) and when I’m not running for an executive or a judicial branch office?

The office of U. S. President, however, is an executive branch office.  One needs a resume.  Being that it’s the highest executive branch office in the land, a candidate ought to have experience in a lesser executive role in order to make the case that they are up to the task of tackling the highest office.  John McCain had a command within the U. S. Navy.  Sarah Palin has been a mayor and a governor.  As Governor of Alaska, Sarah Palin was at the helm of a state that is larger than many nations, with a GDP greater than that of many nations.  McCain and Palin have both been exemplary.

Senator Obama and Senator Biden have legislative experience.  Legislators are amateurs that represent the people.  Obama and Biden have, in a way, bastardized the legislative capacity in which they serve  by way of becoming professional politicians.   Professional politicians have a place in the executive and judicial branches, but a cross-section of common people, ideally, were to serve for relatively short stints.  Legislators take stands on issues, write legislation accordingly, debate issues, gather support for issues, vote on issues, and serve constituents.  They don’t carry out the law.  They don’t enforce the law.  They don’t administer the law.  Administration requires professional specialized skills.  Legislating requires skills any literate person can perform.  The legislative experience of Obama and Biden, while appearing voluminous, really amount to virtually nothing when measured against the requirements of the executive branch, especially for the highest executive office in the nation–kind of like how cotton candy can occupy a large volume of space, but when you bite into it, there’s really not much of anything there.

So this is a masquerade.  Obama and Biden are masquerading as though they really have the experience necessary to be President.  The reality is that McCain and Palin are the ones who possess the quality of experience capable of suggesting that they are ready to tackle the challenge of the Presidency.

In the end, while Obama and Biden talk a good game of CHANGE, and mock Palin as being more of the same (along with McCain being more of the same), Palin has actually effected CHANGE.  Talking change on the one hand versus accomplishing change on the other . . . I have to conclude that the McCain-Palin ticket is the superior ticket.