Wednesday, November 30, 2005

Reagan 2020

I've just stumbled across a fabulous website Reagan 2020 dedicated to Ronald Reagan's conservative philosophy and, most importantly, to preserve and promote it in the future. The website organization's opening explanation of their purpose sums it up perfectly:

Ronald Wilson Reagan was the first -- and last -- modern conservative President of the United States.

There is a ton of fascinating, persuasive, and positive information for Reagan-conservatives to be found at the website. Great idea and site!

Audio Book Review

Saving The Queen: A Blackford Oakes Mystery
Author: William F. Buckley, Jr.
Unabridged Fiction

As a first time reader of the Blackford Oakes series from legendary conservative writer William F. Buckley, Jr., I looked forward to a slightly different read. Oakes novels were billed as basic mystery/spy tales without all of the silly gadgetry and ridiculously unrealistic stories that abound in spy novels like the .007 series.

I was not disappointed in this regard. Buckley's writing style is intelligent, flows very well, and is intelligent without the pretense. This fact was most surprising, as Buckley's writing can at times be so over the top pretentious that it borders on hostile. That was not the case in this novel. While the story was not particularly exciting or creative (OK, it was fairly lame, but well-told in a brief book), the story was crisp and concise enough to make it worth a read/listen.

Newly recruited and trained, Oakes is dispatched to London with the assignment to weave his way into British high society with the cover of being a marginally wealthy, playboy American engineer. He excels at his assignment to the point of reaching the queen's side in no time at all, much to the delight of his handlers. The story is two-thirds how Oakes became a CIA agent and the actual mystery embodied in the title is really the playing field for this opener to how Black ford Oakes got started.

Next to Reagan, Buckley and his National Review magazine was probably the greatest influence in shaping my conservative philosophy. I recommend a reading excursion into the Blackford Oakes series. I know I will travel this road again.

Tuesday, November 29, 2005

The Problem with Fox News

The "Fair and Balanced" news network appears to believe that its catch phrase means that by having a definite right-leaning bias the network promotes "fair and balanced" coverage across the entire TV news genre. I'm not going to elaborate here on the fact that Fox News is slanted. Frankly, only the completely blind GOP or conservative activist could miss it. And, judging by the angry response I've gotten from some Fox defenders, I'm convinced that deep down they know it is true but don't like to have their comfy little biases revealed or challenged.

What really irks me is that on a morning when a U.S. Congressman pleads guilty to absolutely outrageous bribery charges that Fox News would bury the story as the fourth in a list of "Latest Headlines." Bad winter weather in the West leads.

Now on one hand, I could accuse Fox of downplaying the story because we are talking about a Republican congressman. OK, I'll do that. But even more frustrating is this network's obsession with entertainment over hard news. They have a good set of reporters and commentators that have the resources and capabilities to do solid research and reporting. However, they tend not to push these issues to the forefront for coverage.

Monday, November 28, 2005

Quote of the Day

"I won't be wronged, I won't be insulted, and I won't be laid a hand on. I don't do these things to other people and I expect the same from them." - John Wayne

Top 5% Pay Over Half Fed Taxes


Hat tip to Rush Limbaugh.

Friday, November 25, 2005

7 Weeks and Counting!


Seven weeks until Little Miss Maximus enters the world! Mr. & Mrs. Maximus can hardly wait.

Thursday, November 17, 2005

The Conservative Split

I have always said that I was a conservative first, a Republican second. In other words, it is the philosophies, policies, and objectives that make good societies, economies, governments and nations that are my primary concern. My experience has been that those who place party faithfulness first are interested primarily in the "game" and the pursuit of power. Not that they don't have ideas, just that these ideas exist more as items in a playbook to be played out on a sports field to achieve personal or party (tribal) supremacy.

Concerned Americans should participate in government and political action to achieve and implement ideas. Power should be sought and employed to achieve legitimate policy objectives, not primarily as a spoils system for the victors. Republicans and Democrats, once in power, basically behave the same in their focus on preserving power. The issues they talk about, the interest groups that support them, the places they spend the money may differ, but the arrogance, abuse of power, and growth of government can be counted on regardless of which party is in power. This occurs when either party is in power for too long and backed up by an establishment that cares only about access and the privileges of the majority.

The Republican party's control of Congress happened because of: (1) Democratic extremism, heavy-handed rule, corruption, lack of leadership, and a general intellectual arthritis; (2) a legislative revolution lead by Newt Gingrich, based upon a positive, conservative set of ideas with a foundation in decades of conservative intellectual work and grassroots politics from Goldwater through Reagan; and (3) grassroots politics fueled by intellectual vigor, cooperation, and money.

I was proud to be part of that revolution, how ever little part I played. However, I am no longer proud to be associated with the hangers-on, panderers, and establishment the Republicans have come to in Congress (and to a lesser extent, in the White House) today.

Since the late 1990's, the Congressional Republican party and the web of business and other institutions it has spawned in the nation's capital and beyond have taken us on a murky course to no where. Part of it is the lack of great ideas or great threats (the end of the Cold War, welfare reformed, taxes cut, etc.). Yes, we have a war in Iraq and terrorism underway, but this is not a war of economic and political factors. It is primarily one of religious-ideology where rationality is an afterthought.

Republicans in Congress have become obsessed with little more than their reelections and holding on to power. This White House has encouraged the behavior. Yes, Bush and the GOP Congress cut taxes (starving the beast), passed tort reform, and have appointed a number of conservatives to the courts. However, they have failed miserably to trim the size and scope of government. They have chosen to protect their political positions by pandering to issues and interest groups. There are no big ideas. Maybe Social Security reform was the last great one and the President deserves kudos for trying, but congressional Republicans proved they lacked any backbones to address it.

Big Government Republicanism, hiding behind a mask of conservative rhetoric, is a deplorable development and one worthy of tearing down.

Likewise, the GOP establishment's obsession with pandering to religious conservatives has really begun to bother me. Every speech, every column, every policy is couched in rhetorical terms of "faith", "values", "families", etc. Now I understand the strategy here - religion and appeals to faith are key associative factors for the Republican party at the grassroots level - but it has become so naked an approach that the pandering has become obscene and ought to appear more than a little insulting to Christians.

As a conservative activist, I have worked down in the trenches with religious conservatives on any number of campaigns, projects and objectives over the year. We came at issues and sought outcomes from a different set of priorities, but we worked together to advance real change, elect new leaders, and generally push a conservative agenda forward.

However, the leadership we put into place has become drunken with their own self importance and determination to stay in power. They scare the bee-geebers out of us by talking about "it would be a lot worse if the other party was in power..." We have to agree. In doing so, we reward their policy slothfulness. We encourage them to take us for granted. We appease them. Then when we demand they show some backbone and do the right thing (e.g. Harriett Miers, cutting spending, Medicare drug benefit, etc.) they scream bloody murder that we aren't being team players, care more about ideas than holding the majority from the barbarians, and generally being an unruly mob.

Let me take this point to an extreme that might offend and infuriate some. I believe that the Republican party's pandering to Christians with such strong and consistent religious rhetorical code words, is of the same approach as Democrats and African American leaders take to the black community. Code words, painting opponents as enemies, building up fortress mentalities that everyone is out to get them and only the self-appointed leadership speaks for them, fights for them, and can be trusted.

Religious conservatives are being insulted on a daily basis by Congressional Republicans and a White House that want to simply associate with their faith to hold them into the political camp, while not doing much at all to actually implement an agenda - whether it includes Christian priorities or a larger conservative philosophical/political agenda that they all pay lip service to.

A good friend of mine from Republican wars of the past is a decidedly economic conservative and social liberal. He warned me several years ago of a growing frustration with the GOP's social right obsession that drove him away. At the time, I wasn't very sympathetic because it was the religious conservatives who were providing the armies of workers who made possible the great policy work going on under Gingrich. We needed to keep the "big tent." But the great policy work has ended. The GOP establishment is all about protecting its power and privileges.

The Republican establishment has become adrift and has apparently chosen pandering to religious voters over actually taking on tough issues (Iraq isn't the only important issue, folks).

George Will has written a very thought provoking column What Next for Conservatives for publication today.

"It does me no injury,'' said Thomas Jefferson, "for my neighbor to say there are twenty gods, or no god. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg.'' But it is injurious, and unneighborly, when zealots try to compel public education to infuse theism into scientific education. The conservative coalition, which is coming unglued for many reasons, will rapidly disintegrate if limited-government conservatives become convinced that social conservatives are unwilling to concentrate their character-building and soul-saving energies on the private institutions that mediate between individuals and government, and instead try to conscript government into sectarian crusades.
But, then, the limited-government impulse is a spent force in a Republican Party that cannot muster congressional majorities to cut the growth of Medicaid from 7.3 percent to 7 percent next year. That "cut'' was too draconian for some Republican "moderates.''


Will goes on to make the case that the Republicans have failed to control spending and are making the Democrats look fiscally conservative. I won't go into the plethora of examples here.

No wonder that the Democrats are starting to use rhetoric about "fiscal responsibility" and putting the country's "house in order."

Congressional Republicans and their enablers in the White House and on K Street have become every bit as big a supporters of Big Government as the Democrats. The difference is, rather than cloaking it in class warfare, they use the rhetoric of "compassion," "opportunity," "values," and "faith."

Tuesday, November 15, 2005

Book Review

Born In Blood
The Lost Secrets of Freemasonry
Author: John J. Robinson

Can the origins of Freemasonry be found in the bloody suppression of a powerful Middle Ages Catholic order called the Knights Templar?

The Knights Templar was an order of Catholic monks, but not in the traditional images that come to mind. They were warriors, accomplished in the Crusades to the Holy Land, and a super-secret order. According to Robinson, they were also extremely wealthy and powerful, operating as a quasi bank of sorts in their day.

A major threat, whether perceived or real, to the Pope and the French monarchy, the Vatican sought to destroy the order in the early 14th century. Plotting with childhood friend and Vatican protector French King Philip, Pope Clement moved quickly on Friday the 13th in 1307 to have Templar Knights throughout Europe arrested. Outrageously charged with various blasphemous violations, the Knights were tortured horribly (and Robinson delights in the details) to solicit confessions. All were executed.

That is, except for the Templar that managed to escape. Needing to find protection from the Crown and the Vatican, they slipped deep into hiding. They also needed a means to network in secret and to protect each other. Robinson makes a strong case by demonstrating historical examples showing very plausible parallels between the Knights and Freemasonry. Basically, Robinson argues that Freemasonry was founded by the Knights Templar as a means to hide who they were and to provide some protection.

Just as the Knights Templar were condemned and persecuted (murdered) by the Catholic Church so as to maintain and enhance it’s own power, Freemasonry has been roundly condemned by the Vatican for centuries as a super-secret, anti-Christian institution (Masons require belief in a single god as part of their membership requirements, not necessarily Catholic dogma). The Masons have been a threat to the Church’s domination because they operated as a safe haven for religious men who stood up to Catholic persecution.

A very plausible argument, if you accept a lot of historical claims here that are somewhat suspect only in that they happened 700 years ago. Still, very interesting.

The most interesting (and shocking) element of the entire book can actually be found in the appendix. In 1884, Pope Leo XIII issued an encyclical Humanum Genus offering a sweeping condemnation of Freemasonry and urging Catholics everywhere to oppose it. Very, very weak on logic or valid arguments, the Pope’s absolute disdain for liberal democracy (surely with American and French versions in mind), the following passage made my blood absolutely boil:
Here naturalists teach that men have all the same rights, and are perfectly equal in condition; that every man is naturally independent; that no one has a right to command others; that it is tyranny to keep men subject to any other authority than that which emanates from themselves. Hence, the people are sovereign; those who rule have no authority but by the commission and concession of the people; so that they can be deposed, willing or unwilling, according to the wishes of the people. The origin of all rights and civil duties is in the people or in the State, which is ruled according to the new principles of liberty. The State must be godless; no reason why one religion ought to be preferred to another; all to be held in the same esteem.

Now it is well known that Free-Masons approve these maxims, and that they wish to see governments shaped on this pattern and model needs no demonstration. It is a long time, indeed, that they have worked with all their strength and power openly for this, making thus an easy way for those, not a few, more audacious and bold in evil, who meditate the communion and equality of all goods after having swept away from the world every distinction of social goods and conditions.

From these few hints it is easy to understand what is the Masonic sect what it wants. Its tenets contradict so evidently human reason that nothing can be more perverted. The desire of destroying the religion and Church established by God, with the promise of immortal life, to try to revive, after eighteen centuries, the manners and institutions of paganism, is great foolishness and bold impiety. No less horrible or unbearable is it to repudiate the gifts granted through His adversaries. In this foolish and ferocious attempt, one recognizes that untamed hatred and rage of revenge kindled against Jesus Christ in the heart of Satan.

This from Pope Leo XIII makes me boil in that it drips with such contempt for democratic ideals and stands as a naked condemnation of liberty and democracy in that it might challenge Vatican domination. That which is not the Church or is not done in furtherance of the Church - as the ultimate authority over the dominion of man - is evil and worthy of destruction. The parallels with Islamic radicalism are scary.

Wednesday, November 09, 2005

Quote of the Day


"Too often management recommends plans that look like Bob Hope’s nose or a hockey stick. The numbers go down the first year or so and then up in the later years. If you accept hockeystick plans, you will find they will be proposed year after year." - Donald Rumsfeld

Audio Book Reviews

Sleeping With The Devil
Audio version (abridged non-fiction)
Author: Robert Baer

Former CIA agent Baer is back with a timely opinion piece on the ins and outs of the Saudi kingdom, support for radical Islam, and big money and influence buying at the highest level of the U.S. political and business circles.

Baer leads off with a very sobering analysis on the importance of Saudi oil to the U.S. economy and the tremendous damage a terrorist disruption to the flow might cause. The intricate relationships between the Saudi royal family and U.S. officials is interesting and informative, but there really isn't much new information here. Baer has stretched the topic so thin in places and attempted to weave odd stories in that it appears he is straining to fill enough pages to rush out a book in a good market on middle east issues . . . particularly from a former CIA agent.

Not bad, but nothing earth shattering here.
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Anti-Americanism
Audio version (unabridged non-fiction)
Author: Jean-Francois Revel

Written by a best-selling French writer (and known American-supporter), the book is an interesting calling-out of European governments and "intellectuals" for their unending attacks on the U.S. and shameless hypocrisy. A refreshing in their face slap at French intellectuals and their unceasing American bashing to cover up their own faults and scheming, it is heavily rooted in modern day issues. However, you will find enough historical context to be useful, particularly in Europe's colonial history.

Written and published in France, the book had to be viewed as a vitroil attack. Hearing America's political and cultural systems enthusiastically defended is quite entertaining at times, although I was left wondering if a French intellectual hearing a similar attack by a Berkley liberal against the American system would find the same satisfaction.

Wednesday, November 02, 2005

Quote of the Day


History will be kind to me for I intend to write it.
-- Winston Churchill

Tuesday, November 01, 2005

Chavez Sides With Iran on Nukes

No, this isn't a joke. Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez has built a friendly relationship with the Iranians. Who is next? Zarqawi? Are we going to see Chavez in a video with Bin Laden blasting the vicious Americans?

Venezuela voted against the recent resolution of the International Atomic Energy Agency's Board of Governors to condemn Iran's nuclear programs.