Pics from DC on 9/12: It was crowded

Here’s my pictorial recap of the events of 9/12 during my trip to Washington DC.

This first picture is blurry, but that’s because I’m standing in a moving subway car as I’m snapping the photo.

dcsubway

When I stepped on the DC Metro’s Red Line subway in Rockville, Maryland, I encountered several people from Norwalk, Ohio, who had boarded the subway at the Shady Grove station. The reason for their subway trip was obvious by the protest signs they held: They were on their way to the 9/12 rally. They spotted me and said “There’s somebody from Ohio!” I made an excellent choice in choosing to wear an Ohio State Buckeyes t-shirt on 9/12, because I was greeted by Ohioans everywhere I went. Not only did I meet Ohioans from Norwalk, I met them from all over the state: Amherst, Lorain, Cleveland, Youngstown, Columbus, Cincinnati, Sharonville, Mason, Delaware, Toledo, Newark, Marion, Portsmouth, Lebanon, Lima, Moraine, Akron, Sidney, Perrysburg, Maumee, Westlake, North Olmsted, Fairborn, Beavercreek, Enon, New Carlisle, Lancaster, Powell, and so on and so forth.

When the subway rolled into DC to pick up local commuters, you should have seen the looks on the faces of the locals. I don’t think they’d ever before seen such a collection of independents and conservatives descending upon the capital in droves. I think they’d only seen liberals march on Washington before. The look on faces of the locals? They looked like they were seeing ghosts.

When we hopped off the subway, I guess we had supposed that the rally would be like a political party convention, grouped by states.  We were more amateur than that.  It was messier than that.  We combed through crowds, looking at everyone’s signs, seeing if there was a designated gathering point for Ohioans.  Apparently, there wasn’t.  Whoever the speakers were for the rally, it didn’t matter, because the low, faint rumble emanating from the feeble sound system wasn’t intelligible in the ruckus of the oversized crowd that couldn’t even fit onto Freedom Square.

onthemarch2

After a while, some got tired of milling around the square unable to hear the audio, so they began heading down Pennsylvania Avenue toward Capitol Hill about half-an-hour to an hour ahead of schedule.  It was good that they got underway, even though it was early, because there wasn’t enough space for all of us to converge on Freedom Square at once, anyway.

onthemarch3

After people started marching down Pennsylvania Avenue, I caught a glimpse of Ohio’s distinctively-shaped State Flag, and I gravitated toward it, as many Ohioans followed suit.

onthemarch4

Do you see the Ohio flag held high aloft between two lamp posts on the right half of the photo? There’s another Ohio flag on the left half of the photo, not held quite so high, as well as an OSU Buckeye banner almost dead center above the crowd. I tried to stay within about three blocks of the flags. When I, and others, were concerned that we’d strayed beyond the Ohio contingent, we’d reassure ourselves that we were still surrounded by fellow Ohioans by shouting “O-H,” which would receive the thunderous response of “I-O!” That’s how we stayed in touch with each other through the densely-packed mayhem of the march to the Capitol.  It was plainly evident to me that thousands, yes, thousands, of Ohioans were present, not to mention that I encountered individuals from all 50 (57?) states during the day’s events.

onthemarcdh1

Can you see the Capitol’s dome in the chasm between the buildings that line Pennsylvania Avenue?

During the march, cheers erupted as marchers beheld the side of a building which had the words of the First Amendment etched into the stone.

first amendment

The steps of the Capitol were cordoned off, so there were limits as to how closely we could approach. Also, near the Capitol, I encountered a C-Span staffer who was bemoaning his plight to a DC security officer. Apparently, the crowd was so packed, the C-Span staffer couldn’t wend his way to the media camera banks, and, in fact, he told the security officer he wasn’t exactly sure where the camera banks were set up, as he hadn’t even been able to catch a glimpse of the camera banks.  I briefly accosted the C-Span staffer to ask if it was possible for the public to tour the C-Span studios.  He said “no,” that one must know somebody on C-Span staff to gain access to the network’s facilities.

capitol dome

I feel sorry for the families who brought their kids along on the march, as public toilet facilities were so scarce that I don’t know how people with little bladders were going to make it through the day’s activities. Yes, there were a few port-a-potties, but the operative word is “few.” Just as the sound system was inadequate for the size of the crowd, so was the number of port-a-potties.

Despite the inadequacy of the sound system, there was a moment on the Capitol Hill lawn when the whole crowd took notice of a sound that came from the microphone. Someone had started to sing our national anthem, “The Star-Spangled Banner,” and everyone stood at attention and doffed their hats. The crowd joined in the singing, but the crowd sang along in a whisper, whether to avoid drowning out the singing that could be faintly heard from the microphone, or whether from the inability to sing louder on the account of being emotionally choked up, it was hard to say. For me, I was emotionally choked up, and I silently mouthed the words during the occasions when my voice faltered. Applause erupted at the conclusion of the song, and faint garbled speech resumed.

The ground is fairly level in DC, so it was impossible for me to access a vantage point where I could snap a picture to encompass the entire crowd, but I tried.

capitol rally

Though I was in attendance, I really have no idea how many people were there. If you’re looking for a discussion of the numbers in attendance, I suggest that you take a look at Pajamas Media, where Charlie Martin has two articles, here and here, that attempt to estimate the size of the crowd.

The imminent rebellion: States vs the Federal government

Note:  This is a guest blog entry submitted by James Williamson, one of my younger brothers, who is an Ohio native currently residing in Utah.

Not long ago while listening to KSL radio in Salt Lake City I heard that the state legislature was proposing an unusual move if the US congress passes the “Obamacare” bill:  nullification.  While this concept is not new it has been a while since we have seen it surface in this country from legitimate sources.  The state legislature here discussed passing a measure that would nullify the federal law and put in its place a state law.  I am not sure of the legal arguments for such a move but it seems our legislature here in Utah is not alone.

This quote is lifted directly from Wikipedia after searching for secession movements in the United States:

“On April 1, 2009, the Georgia State Senate passed a resolution 43-1 which affirmed the right of States to nullify Federal laws. The resolution also included the assertion that if Congress took certain steps, including restricting firearms or ammunition, the United States government would cease to exist ”  http://www.legis.ga.gov/legis/2009_10/fulltext/sr632.htm is listed as the reference and contains the full text of the resolution.

Why the Georgia state legislature felt the need to pass this resolution is becoming increasingly apparent.  A few of our legislative and executive branch leaders have apparently lost touch with reality. Voter rage was already on the rise with the passage of the TARP bailout in the fall of 2008.  Unfortunately it was not sufficient to create a significant change in the landscape of the congress.  The White House changed hands but it did not take long to find a new source of public outrage sponsered by the White House in the health care reform debate.  Rather than respond to the voters a few of our “fearless leaders” have decided to bully and intimidate congressmen and senators that do not share the view of our new “politiboro”.  This has been tried many times in the past in other countries with varying degrees of success but it is a rare occurence here and is one of the things that keeps our country free and makes it so great.

This political freedom of expression in terms of votes is now in real danger as there is a large disconnect between the will of the voters and the will of the elected.  Thus the drive to get things done quickly, hoping that things will improve before the next election and the voter rage will have time to cool.  In this I believe the hope of the current oligarchy will fail.
Consider the next statement by the governor of Texas (lifted from the same Wikipedia page):

“In April 2009, Rick Perry, the Governor of Texas, raised the issue of secession during a speech at a Tea Party protest: “Texas is a unique place. When we came into the union in 1845, one of the issues was that we would be able to leave if we decided to do that…My hope is that America and Washington in particular pays attention. We’ve got a great union. There’s absolutely no reason to dissolve it. But if Washington continues to thumb their nose at the American people, who knows what may come of that.”[39] After Perry’s comments received considerable attention and news coverage, Rasmussen Reports polled Texans and found that 31% of them believed that Texas has the right to secede from the United States, although only 18% would support secession.”  Reference: “In Texas, 31% Say State Has Right to Secede From U.S., But 75% Opt To Stay“. Rasmussen Reports. 2009-04-17. http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/states_general/texas/in_texas_31_say_state_has_right_to_secede_from_u_s_but_75_opt_to_stay. Retrieved 2009-04-19.

Secession movements have always existed in this country to some extent, but when the governor of the third most populous state (and right now perhaps the most solvent) starts talking secession someone in Washington ought to think twice about what they are doing.  This statement was made in April.  It is now August and the disconnect between the ambitions of the White House, Speaker, and Pro-tempore and the public will only seem to be growing daily.

Not long ago a Russian former KJB financial analyst (his name escapes me) predicted that the US would break up over the growing discontent of the financial inequity among the states.  Specifically that the states that have the greatest revenue gap (send more in taxes than they receive from the federal government) would stop sending tax revenue to Washington and that would cause a collapse of the system.  Ohio is the poster-child for this problem.  While unemployment escalates and economic activity stagnates Ohio continues to shoulder much more than its fair share of the financial burden imposed by the federal government exacerbating the difficulty of lasting economic recovery, while California is on the receiving end.  Why the preferential treatment for California?  Could it be the number of congressional votes?  Could it be the large population of “undocumented” immigrants that bloat census district populations but have very little political voice and are easily bought with things such as immigration reform promises and free healthcare for mothers who deliver “anchor babies”?  These inequalities cannot persist forever and if our government doesn’t wake up and smell the coffee soon they will wake up to the smell of burnt toast…

I don’t know who first coined the phrase “ObamaNation” but they forgot two words:  “of Desolation”..

$876,831

Take a guess what that number means.  Need a hint?  The source of that number comes from the Contra Costa Times, of Contra Costa, California.

Have you figured it out yet?

It’s what one person earned last year.  But these weren’t the earnings of a celebrity, nor were they the earnings of a lottery jackpot winner, nor were they even the earnings of some evil capitalist.

This person works for the government.  Not the federal government, mind you.  Not even a state government.  This person works for local government, but at a regional level rather than a municipal level.

According to the story in the Contra Costa Times, this person is the chief executive officer of the Washington Township health district of Alameda County, California.  The news organization is working on compiling a database revealing salaries of all public employees in the San Francisco Bay area, and they’ve provided two links for those who wish to peruse the database: here and here.

I have two thoughts that spring to mind.

First thought:

Umm . . . are we talking about  . . . the PUBLIC HEALTH sector?  You, know, the health sector that’s NOT capitalistic, that’s supposedly compassionate yet efficient and not overly expensive?

And after you look through more of that database for that one small segment of the country called the Bay Area, and you eyeball some other salaries of public health officials, could it make you question whether Obamacare will bring any improvement?  Oh, and, how about that PUBLIC OPTION?  Hmmm?  Will that add up to savings?

Second thought:

Regionalism.  Yuck.

Talking heads in the Cleveland area have been talking about regionalism.  There are already some regional bureaucracies in place in Northeast Ohio.  (NOACA comes to mind . . . yuck!)

Here’s the rub:  What kind of input do voters have on regional bureaucracies?

Would this CEO of a regional public health district in California be raking in $876,831 (her base salary, alone, is $633,393) if the voters had a say in the matter?

Don’t regional bureaucracies lend themselves to patronage appointments that are untouchable by voters?  What accountability mechanisms would voters have at their disposal?

From what the Contra Costa Times reports, it was like pulling teeth just to get these salaries disclosed to the public.  The fight went all the way to California’s Supreme Court in 2007 just to clarify that these salaries are matters of public record.  Beyond salaries, what other information might be lingering in the shadows of regional bureaucracies?

And when thinking about what reforms you’d like to see in Cuyahoga County government, be wary of proposals that place emphasis on appointed rather than elected officials as key to the reforms, because appointed officials are a step removed from voters.  Appointments don’t make government less political, nor do they make government less prone to scandal.  I still think the best remedy for Cuyahoga and other Ohio counties would be simply to change the election years for commissioners to odd numbered years.

Give this Democrat his own TV show

I’ve seen soundbite interviews with Pat Caddell, a self-described liberal Democrat and former pollster for McGovern and Carter, and wanted to hear more of his down-to-earth insightful analysis.

Why?  Because he’s not happy with Washington DC . . . and, quite frankly, neither am I.

So I did a google search hoping to find something longer than a soundbite, and I found one (though it’s more than two weeks old).  This interview with Pat Caddell is over 22 minutes long, and it engrossed me so much, I thought I’d share a link to it with my readers.

Hey, Fox News (or any other network, for that matter), will you please give Mr. Caddell his own TV show?  I guarantee you, this guy is not astroturf, and I’d like more of the featured voices from the left to be genuine and thoughtful, not cloned by Axelrod and knee-jerk.  He has so much information to share, soundbite appearances just don’t cut it.  He needs a lengthier format.

Sutton creating myths about reform?

Is Betty Sutton, Ohio’s 13th Congressional District Representative (D-Akron), using teleconference calls to fabricate tall tales about what’s in the Obamacare bill that would otherwise be called into question if she were holding a town hall in an arena or stadium?

That she only addressed 9 questioners in one hour is, in itself, a slap in the public’s face.

Read the rest of this entry »

IRS dispute resolved

Bottom line:  No additional tax liability.

Read the rest of this entry »

Mr. Williamson goes to Washington

In my post titled “Uproar over health care: some Democrat myths need to be busted,”  I wrote the following sentence:

“But if members of Congress, instead, are derelict in their duty by turning a deaf ear to the people, and letting us have no voice, I swear I’ll trek to Capitol Hill this fall and make some noise.”

I’ve decided not to hold my breath.  I’ve booked a flight to Washington DC.  I’m going to pay Capitol Hill a visit sometime next month.

New Hampshire undeserving of first primary

From Obama’s town hall in New Hampshire, it appears the voters have become too brain-dead to conjure up the tough questions that need to be asked.  Why do they get to weigh in first on presidential candidates?  Is it because New Hampshire’s residents are the most carefully groomed to serve as presidential lap dogs?

Either that, or the crowd in attendance was very carefully handpicked.

Obamacare hysteria

Yes, there’s definitely hysteria being expressed by Obamacare opponents.  Obamacare supporters are claiming that Obamacare opponents have mischaracterized what the reform plan is, and with misleading rhetoric, have whipped mobs up into a frenzy.  Among the most noteworthy examples that Obamacare supporters like to point to are Sarah Palin’s recent remarks suggesting that Obamacare will eventually lead to a government bureaucracy that Palin called a “death panel,” that would make final determinations over which health care treatments will be prescribed for you, and which will be summarily denied.

If you think my purpose in writing this blog entry is to urge my fellow Obamacare opponents to adopt a more calm, impassionate, emotionally-detached, and less provocative tone in this debate, while restricting the scope of the health care dialogue to exactly what’s contained in the Congressional bill’s 1017 pages, you’d be . . . WRONG!

Instead, this blog entry is intended to offer a few highlights about why it’s perfectly OK to get hysterical in our opposition to Obamacare.  In recent years, we, the people, have been paying closer attention to how our federal government operates, and here are some of the lessons we’ve learned that inform our approach to Obamacare:

  1. The final bill won’t be 1017 pages. We know this from watching what happened to other high-profile bills, such as the bailouts, and cap-and-trade.  All kinds of amendments are attached, and additional pages get inserted, constantly changing the content of the bill, so it’s silly to insist that we limit the health care reform dialogue to reflect only what’s written on 1017 pages.
  2. Members of Congress don’t even author legislation anymore. Let’s not pretend that a member of Congress, or even multiple members of Congress crafted the wording of this or any bill.  Congress receives pre-fabricated pieces of legislation, and then nit-picks over it.  Who pre-fabricates the legislation?  Special interest groups, White House staffers, Congressional staffers, etc.  Even if there was a Thomas Jefferson among the ranks of members of Congress who was capable of drafting language as powerful and well-thought-out as the Declaration of Independence, I guarantee that none of them personally cranked out these 1017 pages during the time that has elapsed since the start of the Obama administration.  And because the words contained in this legislation are the handiwork of scores of anonymous grunts, and did not originate with the members of Congress themselves, we don’t trust members of Congress to be able to speak authoritatively about it, particularly not the nuances of the semantics.
  3. Changes to legislation are made in the middle of the night and the wee hours of the morning, just hours before the final floor vote on the bill. It’s impossible to predict in advance what these last-minute changes will entail, and there’s no window of opportunity to scrutinize the changes.  The fact that an additional 300 pages can be inserted into legislation between the time that floor debate has wrapped up and the time that the votes are cast further illustrates that members of Congress are not original authors of legislation, and that legislation arrives pre-packaged from other sources, and that portions of legislation are strategically withheld from public view until after the bill’s passage.
  4. We don’t even assume that our Congressional representatives have read the legislation that they vote on. Again, when legislation runs into the hundreds and thousands of pages, not only is it safe to assume that members of Congress were too busy to write the legislation themselves, we also have to wonder if they even read the legislation themselves.  We end up having to specifically ask our Congressional reps whether they’ve personally read through specific bills or not.  How many times have we faulted a member of Congress for a law’s unintended consequences, and the member of Congress, in turn, responds that they hadn’t the faintest idea that it was included in the legislation they passed?  If they aren’t reading the legislation, they definitely didn’t write it.
  5. There’s no way to hold the nameless, faceless, anonymous grunts accountable for slimy pre-packaged legislation that they feed Congress. We can try to hold members of Congress accountable, but members of Congress have shown that they can be quite slippery when we, the people, try to nab them.  Members of Congress are adept at playing the blame game and passing the buck to Rush Limbaugh, or some other imaginary demon, and letting themselves off the hook.  Meanwhile, the chief culprits who remain faceless, nameless, and anonymous, keep churning out the sausage that makes us all sick to our stomachs.  They face no reprisals.  We, the people, take it on the chin.
  6. Too many members of Congress are lawyers. They insert ambiguities into the law that are intended to reap a windfall for their own profession.  Disagreements over the meaning and intent of a law are decided in a courtroom.  Cha-ching.  Therefore, as applied to Obamacare, much of the meaning of the legislation won’t be truly known until long after the law has been enacted, as lawsuits wind their way through courthouses throughout the land.
  7. Obama seeks to appoint activist federal attorneys and judges. Following on the heels of the previous point, since the full meaning of the law won’t be known until the conclusion of court litigation, the outcome depends partly on who the personnel are inside the courtroom.  If Obama appointed those who were strict constructionists in interpreting the Constitution, we might have some gauge as to what the outcomes would be, as they would more closely conform to our understanding of the Constitution.  Activist attorneys and judges, however, may seek to impose something very far afield from what a reading of  the Constitution might indicate, adding uncertainty to the outcome.
  8. Even if Congress had an up-or-down vote on the 1017 pages, Bill Clinton has taught us that even the meaning of the word “is” can be interpreted in multiple ways. Thus, the debate even limited to the contents of the 1017 pages must envision all the ways in which meanings of words can be stretched.  So if it seems Obamacare opponents have an overactive imagination, there’s good reason for it.
  9. Even when meanings of words are agreed upon, it still doesn’t ensure the federal government will conform to expectations. Another lesson from the Bill Clinton era:  Perjury may be an impeachable offense, but it doesn’t rise to the level of criminal behavior that warrants removal from office.  Personally, I think it did warrant removal from office, but that’s not how the Senate voted.  The upshot is, key people in our federal government can lie, and the only penalty they will suffer is embarrassment.  The government can also cheat.  Note that Senator Dodd will not be penalized for his VIP mortgage deal from Countrywide, and that Tim Geithner was treated with much more leniency by the IRS than a non-VIP would receive.  The biggest players in Washington are cheaters, and we, the people, have little confidence in Washington’s integrity.
  10. The Beltway insulates the federal government from the people. Those inside Washington’s Beltway don’t live like the rest of us.  The more time they spend inside that cocoon, the less their motives match our own.
  11. Lobbyists have more access to the federal government than citizens do. The reason we have a captive marketplace for health insurance instead of a free marketplace has everything to do with the access that lobbyists have and the detachment from citizens that government officials feel.  And why do lobbyists have more access than we do?  Because they bundle campaign donations far more effectively than we do, and because they are physically present inside the Beltway while we inhabit the hinterlands.  Money talks, and the lobbyists have it, so they do the talking.  Campaigns treasuries have to fill their coffers somehow.  Citizens don’t get health care reformed in the way that we want it to be reformed because no lobbyists will cough up campaign donations for implementing the reforms that we, the people, would favor.
  12. Even as lengthy as legislation is, much of the rule-making is left to bureaucrats within the executive branch. So even if we identify the culprits who pre-packaged the legislative sausage for us and held them accountable, we have to take the additional step to identify the nameless, faceless, anonymous bureaucrats within the agencies of the Obama administration in order to address the federal administrative code that would follow on the heels of the passage of legislation.  Once those persons are identified, they still can’t be held accountable.  They are out of reach, and only a formidable outcry in the court of public opinion can get them booted from power.  On the other hand, public outcry seems to have little effect with this White House, as Tim Geithner getting the Treasury Secretary job illustrates.
  13. Problematic legislation is almost never repealed.  Instead, additional legislation is piled upon it, ostensibly to mitigate the problems, but invariably compounding the problems, until a crisis is declared, clearing the way for sweeping changes that result in yet another power grab by federal authorities. You’d think with advances in literacy, science, and technology, our society would be far better equipped to devolve power back to the people than when the Constitution was first drafted.  Counterintuitively, power has been increasingly consolidated in Washington over the past two-plus centuries.  Fixing problems is often the ruse used for Washington’s power grabs, even if the problems were caused by Washington in the first place.  In fact, we, the people, have to wonder whether enactment of flawed legislation is deliberate sabotage intended to trigger the “justification” for a bigger government role.

So, we, the people, have great difficulty communicating with Washington over top of the competing voices of lobbyists.  The members of Congress are passengers on a runaway train of legislation that they didn’t craft, perhaps didn’t even read, and probably don’t understand.  We have no clue what the final version of the legislation will be.  After the legislation leaves Congress, we don’t know what the resulting rules will be that are concocted and enforced by Obama’s bureaucrats.  After that, we don’t know what the lawyers will take issue with, and what the courts will decree in response.  Even once everything is hammered out, we can’t be assured that the federal government will keep up their end of the bargain as they’ve demonstrated a capacity to lie and cheat while dodging real accountability.

As far as I’m concerned, any interpretation of Obamacare is fair game, as it’s too fluid, too nebulous, not concrete enough to possess a set definition.  Sarah Palin is perfectly within reason to refer to Obama’s proposed health care regime as a “death panel.”  Obamacare supporters cannot credibly claim that something is or is not applicable to the health care reform debate, as nothing can be ruled out at this point.

I recommend that Obamacare opponents sound off on any and every possible concern they may have about health care granted by government decree.  If we don’t stake out our positions, if we don’t draw the line on what is and is not acceptable, if we do not make our voices heard, we are bound to discover that this legislation will take on a shape that we abhor.  We absolutely must raise a ruckus.  The magnitude of our mass hysteria must overpower the evil designs of Washington powermongers who would trample the authority of the people.

We edge ever closer to the crossroads that mark a defining turn of events in the future of our nation.  Liberty, itself, hangs in the balance.  We, the people, must rise to the challenge.

Uproar over health care: some Democrat myths need to be busted

I generally blog about what I want to blog about.  I generally prefer to blog about Ohio issues instead of national ones.  Lately, I’ve been on fire over gambling, both Strickland’s flip-flop, and the pending casino ballot issue.

However, my friends and family members have been pestering me day after day to blog about health care reform.  My friends and family are not nearly as political as I am, so it’s unusual for me to see them so fired up and passionate about something political.  My youngest sister (I’ve got 4 sisters and 5 brothers) is the only one out of all these people who hasn’t fully formed an opinion on the topic of health care.  Everyone else who’s emailed me is adamantly opposed to the direction that Obama and the Democrats are taking us in.  About two weeks ago, I emailed them all back and said that I’d already blogged about my own stance on health care last year, along with a string of blog entries expressing my agony that our nation is marching down the path of socialism.  My health care stance basically stipulates that we need to switch from a captive marketplace to a free marketplace where consumers make the choices among private sector competitors, similar to the auto insurance marketplace.  I encouraged them all to contact their Congressional representatives to let them know how they felt about the direction of health care reform, but I told them I was weary of the topic, myself, and didn’t plan to blog much more about it.

Yesterday at Michelle Malkin’s blog, I happened to see an eye-popping video of an AARP meeting in Dallas, so I included a brief blurb about it on my blog.  Voila.  I wrote my obligatory health care post.  ‘Nuff said.

I moved on to other tasks around the house, with a load off my mind.

Later, I came back to my computer to see what was going on in Ohio’s blogosphere, hoping to see who else might be writing something about the gambling issues in Ohio when I saw a post from Dayton OS that got me totally riled up.  It wasn’t about gambling.  It was about health care.  The Democrats are telling each other lies about the opposition to Obamacare.

How thick-skulled the Democrats are.  No matter how much they’re  bludgeoned with the truth about how we really feel about Obamacare, the truth doesn’t get through their thick skulls.

So here I am, seething with anger over Democrat lies, blogging about health care reform.

What lies are the Democrats telling each other?  That opposition to Obamacare is nothing but an astroturf campaign wholly concocted by the health insurance lobby, and there is no genuine grassroots opposition to Obamacare.

A conclusion that Democrats draw from their own lies is that there’s no need for Congressional representatives to pay any attention to any feedback from constituents on Obamacare.  They’ve convinced themselves that the grassroots all want Obamacare, no matter how much noise we make.

I can’t think of a greater dereliction of a Congress member’s duty than to turn a deaf ear to the people.  If opposition to Obamacare is nothing but astroturf, then overwhelm it.  Have all 535 members of Congress hold town hall meetings in their hometowns all over the country at the exact same times on the exact same days so that there’s no way that the health care lobbyists can be in all places at once.  If opposition turns up everywhere at once, then you’d better be listening, because that’s grassroots, not astroturf.  But if members of Congress, instead, are derelict in their duty by turning a deaf ear to the people, and letting us have no voice, I swear I’ll trek to Capitol Hill this fall and make some noise. I might even bring a pitchfork with me.

I am not in league with health care lobbyists.  If anyone cares to read my blog entry on health care reform, I expressed displeasure with the health care lobby and with pay-to-play legislators who got us to the point where we are now, with a very uneven playing field in a very uncompetitive health care marketplace.  I’m not against health insurers earning a profit in a free marketplace, but we don’t have a free marketplace.  We have a captive marketplace.  To get to a free marketplace, we have to repeal scores of laws that legislators enacted in exchange for campaign contributions from the health care lobby.  The real reason we can’t have the health care reform that Americans want is that members of Congress are too concerned about campaign fundraising and holding on to power.  Legislators won’t get PAC donations for repealing sweetheart deals so that we can free the marketplace.

It’s an insult to me to suggest that I, as an opponent of Obamacare, have been bought by the health care lobby for the sole purpose of an astroturf campaign.  I first started talking about marketplace reforms of health care when I first ran for state rep in 2002.  My health care plan blog entry from last year was very nearly a cut-and-paste of the same health care plan I touted in a campaign email newsletter that I circulated during my 2nd state rep run back in 2004.  I staked out my position on the issue long before Obama ran for President, let alone before Obamacare was placed before us.  No health care lobby has been orchestrating my opposition to Obamacare.  It’s Congress and the state legislatures that have been influenced decade after decade by the health care lobby that we’ve arrived at the mess we’re in.  It’s the height of hypocrisy for legislators to suggest that Obamacare’s opponents have all been bought by lobbyists.

“Their goal is to disrupt and shut down legitimate conversation.”

What a crock!  We’d like a conversation to begin, and we’d like it to be open and frank, and we’d like to be a part of it.

If Democrat members of Congress embrace these lies, and turn a deaf ear to us, despite their Constitutional duty to represent us, there won’t be a conversation.  If that happens, things could get really ugly.

AARP not working for the seniors

Mega hat-tip to Michelle Malkin for this astonishing post (complete with video clip) about an AARP town hall in Dallas that didn’t go according to plan.  The AARP staffer had an agenda different from grassroots seniors.  The AARP agenda?  Obamacare.  The staffer was asked by a senior, “Do you work for us?  Or do we work for you?”  The staffer pulled the plug on the microphone, said the meeting was over, and left, but the seniors continued with their forum after the AARP staff walked out the door.

Voinovich press release about Lee Fisher’s posturing on health care reform

Again, I’m in copy and paste mode.  Ohio’s Lieutenant Governor, Lee Fisher, is a 2010 Democrat candidate for U.S. Senate who has intra-party competition for the 2010 nomination from Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner.  I’m not a fan of Brunner, but I’m not a fan of Fisher, either.  In all his years of politics, I’m not sure what Lee Fisher brings to the table other than posturing and keeping a finger in every pie.

U.S. Senator George Voinovich (R-Ohio) will be retiring from the U.S. Senate at the end of his current term.  To his credit, the moniker “lame duck” does not apply to Voinovich.  He still stays in touch with constituents, and he still is very active, engaged, and vocal on Capitol Hill.  Senator Voinovich’s contact information appears here.

On to the press release:

SEN. VOINOVICH STATEMENT ON LEE FISHER POLITICAL GAMES

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator George V. Voinovich (R-OH) has issued the following statement in response to Lee Fisher’s attempt to play political games when it comes to our nation’s health care debate:

“I am extremely disappointed that Lee Fisher is politicizing our nation’s health care debate.

“I believe we need a bipartisan solution to our nation’s health care crisis and am hopeful that a bipartisan solution can be reached in the Senate Finance Committee. Nancy Pelosi and other members of the Democratic leadership are attempting to steamroll a trillion dollar health care bill through Congress – a bill with which many in the Democratic Party have significant concerns. According to Douglas Elmendorf, Director of the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office, the bills being debated will make our current budget situation worse – adding to our deficit and national debt. Our deficit is expected to be more than $2 trillion by the close of 2009, money that our children and grandchildren will have to pay off, and debt that is increasingly owned by foreign nations that do not have our country’s best interests at heart.

“Additionally, in some of the proposals, government health care is expanded through increasing the size of Medicaid. This has raised significant concerns with a number of governors. Lee should know that Ohio is having trouble just meeting the state match for Medicaid as it is.

“Lee ought to be encouraging the Democrats to find a solution to the long-term fiscal calamity we face. He should be joining President Obama’s call for the creation of a commission where “…everything is going to have to be on (the) table” when it comes to examining our tax and entitlement systems. My Securing America’s Future Economy (SAFE) Commission Act, which I have been pushing since 2006, will do exactly that. It is not too late to de-politicize the process, find long-term solutions, and put our nation on sound fiscal footing.”

“Why aren’t more women at the forefront of the GOP?”

I’ve put the headline in quotes, because it isn’t my question.  It’s a question more often posed by those who are left of center.  It’s not my question, because I know that Republican women can do whatever they want to do, in the political arena, or otherwise.  I’ve met some very capable, perceptive, resourceful, creative, intelligent, skilled, and motivating Republican women.  The left-of-center questioners are hoping that Republicans answer in this fashion: “Because the men of the GOP hold them back.”  I don’t think that’s the truth.

So why aren’t more women at the forefront of the GOP?

One of the factors might be how such women are treated by the left.  Think especially about how the left treated Sarah Palin last year.  She was courageous enough to follow through, and so was her family, despite being maliciously slimed with rumor, innuendo, fabrications, and outright lies.  Other courageous women are up to the challenge of leading within the GOP, also.  But . . . there are other women . . . who might be rightfully apprehensive about charging into the fray and taking a leadership stance in the GOP.  I welcome them to take that chance, and if I can do something to help defend them against the merciless onslaught, I’m willing to help.

But if you thought the left’s treatment of Sarah Palin was an aberration not to be repeated again, you’re wrong.  Check out this article by Vicki McClure Davidson at Frugal Cafe Blog Zone.  The main target of a lefty troll, who wrote a frighteningly vicious magazine article, is one of my favorite conservative bloggers, Michelle Malkin, who had some reflections of her own.  That lefty troll has a lot of company, too.  I don’t know if you’ve noticed or not, but the number of left-of-center blogs listed in my blogroll is a fairly small number, and the main reason why some don’t make it to my blogroll is because some of them are overly coarse, vicious, vulgar, mean-spirited, and potty-mouthed.

Elected officials guest blogging at WMD

WMD is the abbreviation for Weapons of Mass Discussion, a blog among many fine blogs appearing in the blogroll sidebar under the heading of State of Ohio Blogger Alliance.

The Congressional Representative from Ohio’s 5th District, Bob Latta, shares his views on cap-and-trade policies that are supposedly designed to help the environment, but, if implemented, are sure to have negative ramifications for heavy industry in our nation.  How does it help the global environment to shove industries out of our country to some other country where they will pollute far more than they do here?  Latta hits the nail on the head when he discusses the economic forecast under such a cap-and-trade regime.  I, personally, think the United States does the world a favor by being the home of heavy industry where we have the means, the technology, and the conscience to minimize negative environmental impacts, but the cap-and-trade proposals would impose costs that will absolutely chase industries out of the USA, meaning that those industries will relocate to nations which do not have the means, the technology, nor the conscience to miminize negative environmental impacts in the manner in which we do in our own country.

Another guest column appears at WMD courtesy of Warren County Prosecutor Rachel Hutzel, who supports state legislation to use E-Verify as a tool to help employers make sure that the applicants they hire are legally permitted to work here.

It’s so nice to get news and views straight from the “horse’s mouth,” so to speak.  Kudos to WMD for making it happen.

Glenn Beck: “You are not alone”

I remember when Glenn Beck was a virtual nobody on the radio, and he didn’t always seem to have a message that was in focus.  As time has passed, it seems that he’s really finding his voice, and there’s much more consistency in his views of the issues.  If any program on the cable news networks sounded a cautionary note far in advance of the bursting of our nation’s housing bubble, it was Glenn Beck during his 7 pm and 9 pm time slots on CNN’s Headline News.  I noticed that more and more people who I encountered in daily life were identifying themselves as Glenn Beck fans.

Then there was an announcement that Glenn Beck had reached an agreement with Fox News Channel that he’d be airing a program weeknights at 5 pm.  Immediately, Glenn Beck disappeared from Headline News.  There was a lull among Glenn Beck fans, with no TV show to watch, and with the radio broadcasts difficult to locate on radio dials (and perhaps at a time of day when one isn’t available to listen in) but it was a lull with baited breath, as Glenn Beck fans counted down the days anticipating Glenn Beck’s return to television.

I thought that a 5 pm air time would knock some wind out of Glenn Beck’s sails, since he no longer had air times that were considered prime time.  That doesn’t seem to be the case.  If anything, the audience interest is intensifying, and I’ve encountered even a greater percentage of people that I bump into are taking notice of Glenn Beck.

A case in point:  Last Friday, I watched Glenn Beck’s show on Fox News.  But I didn’t watch it at my house.  Instead, I watched it amidst a small gathering of people who’d assembled together for the express purpose of watching Glenn Beck together.  I wasn’t the ringleader behind the effort to gather for a Glenn Beck program, either.  Usually, I’m the one who’s dragging others to political events, not the other way around.  This time, others invited me, . . . and my dad, and my mom, and my brother, too.  Others were taking the initiative.

Is it just my imagination?  Or is Glenn Beck really motivating people at the grassroots to engage each other in discourse about our communities, our states, and our nation?  OK, maybe the numbers are still small . . . maybe I’m making a mountain out of a molehill, but there’s one thing I did get a sense of while watching Glenn Beck:  I’m not alone.  For Glenn Beck, that was a primary purpose behind the desire for people to view Friday’s program at gatherings rather than staying home to watch.  His message of “You are not alone” was designed to demonstrate that I’m not the only person up in arms over the erosion of the maxim that government in our nation is “OF the people, BY the people, and FOR the people.”  I sometimes wonder at the loneliness of my soap box perch at Buckeye RINO, with its modest traffic count of perhaps one page view per month, wondering if my disdain for bailouts and for socialist takeovers registers with anyone.  Well, others may not be reading Buckeye RINO, but I did find myself gathered among like-minded individuals who share my concern that the people need to reassert their sovereignty over the government . . . thanks to Glenn Beck.

Besides assuring me that I’m not alone, there were a couple of other things Glenn Beck wanted to achieve.  One of those was to remember the way we all felt on September 12, 2001.  To that end, Glenn Beck invited all to check out a website titled THE912PROJECT.COM.  I don’t want to have to explain what it is, so just click on the link and see.  OK?

One other thing that we could achieve by gathering was to make plans for what we, individually and collectively, could do along a civic vein in the spirit of September 12th.  After watching Glenn Beck, our gathering took a short break, drove over to a local restaurant, and reconvened for supper where we discussed being involved in local campaigns and local politics.  I thought I would be the one most eager to get revved up for local political advocacy, but not so.  Others seemed quite eager to take the bull by the horns.

One more thought:  For those who think this recent smattering of “Tea Parties” in various cities around the country are just a hiccup, that’s not the vibe I’m picking up.  I think it’s the tip of the iceberg.  I think there is more fervor among the right-of-center grassroots now than there was a year ago, and the fervor seems to be growing, not waning.