Archive for December, 2006

Pro-Choice

Wednesday, December 13th, 2006

Yes indeed, I whole-heartedly support the notion that the proprietors of The Heart Attack Grill (Tempe, AZ) and Eye-Candy Haircuts (Tulsa, OK) have the freedom to choose how to run their businesses in pursuit of their happiness.  In both cases, state agencies are at the forefront of efforts to make them change their business plans or to close their doors altogether.  In the first case, a state agency says that the owner  may not advertise that his waitresses are dressed-up as nurses because they are not, in fact, licensed nurses.  Duh?  As an adult of average intelligence, I know that and don’t need the state to insult my intelligence.  In the second case, a state agency doesn’t like the fact that I’m going to be staring (and maybe even drooling) at my hair stylist’s cleavage while I’m getting my hair done.  Like most men — or at least those who haven’t yet been de-balled — I just happen to like looking at a woman’s cleavage.

The owner of The Heart Attack Grill has chosen to serve all comers, while the owner of Eye-Candy Haircuts has chosen to serve only men over the age of eighteen.  If men don’t like to partake of heart-attack cuisine while women are present, his business will suffer.  If women wish to partake of [female] eye-candy as they have their hair done, let another entrepreneur serve that clientele.  I certainly don’t want to go into a place frequented by a bunch of dykes — and they might not want to frequent a place which serves Neanderthals like me.  We all have choices.  That’s the beauty of America — and why it has worked so well for so long. 

In neither case are the ladies who have chosen to work at these business forced into their skimpy outfits.  They are told (if they haven’t already figured it out for themselves) at the time of their application for work what will be required of them if they wish to be employed there.  In neither case are illegal activities allowed on the premises, i.e., “You may look all you want, but you may not touch.  If you can’t keep from touching, please don’t come in.” It works for me. 

If it doesn’t work for the business owners, they’ll try something else.  On a moral note…should they be operating as they do?  No.  But, this is not within the purview the state to decide.  It is for the men’s wives to “lay down the law.”  It is for our religious leaders to start doing their job properly — which will result in a change in our collective morality so that such business practices will cease to be profitable — and then such business practices will be ceased.

Remember prohibition?  We’re still suffering from all kinds of ills because of that failed effort.  On the other hand, there exists example after example throughout British and American history of bars and taverns closing their doors due to lack of business — and not from intervention by the state — after a spiritual revival in the land.   

 

Are US Laws Too Tough On Crime?

Sunday, December 10th, 2006

According to this story, our laws are just too darn tough…sending more people to prison in raw numbers and per capita than any other country in the world. Really? I don’t dispute the numbers; but, let’s not be so quick to pin down the ’cause’ for this condition.

Quoting from the article, “A U.S. Justice Department report released on November 30 showed that a record 7 million people — or one in every 32 American adults — were behind bars, on probation or on parole at the end of last year. Of the total, 2.2 million were in prison or jail. … More people are behind bars in the United States than in any other country. China ranks second with 1.5 million prisoners, followed by Russia with 870,000. The U.S. incarceration rate of 737 per 100,000 people in the highest, followed by 611 in Russia and 547 for St. Kitts and Nevis. In contrast, the incarceration rates in many Western industrial nations range around 100 per 100,000 people.” So, the numbers appear to add up…

All cultures are not created equal. Each one results in different patterns of public and private behavior. Alexis de Tocqueville said of us in 1832 after visiting the US the previous year, “America will be great as long as it is good. When America ceases to be good, it will cease to be great.” When the Constitutional Convention of 1789 had adjourned, a woman is reported to have inquired of Benjamin Franklin as he came out of the hall, “Sir, what kind of government did you give us?” To which it is said that he replied, “A republic, Ma’am…for as long as you can keep it.” Our republic operated well for over 175 years, and we were the envy of all.

Now look at us. Drug and alcohol abuse are at epidemic levels. Our adults are abusing our children, and our children are killing each other. Our lawmakers are forever on the take and selling us out to the highest bidder. Our media is not just biased as it always has been, it now pushes-out outright lies and acts so impudent when caught in the act. (Bias is not a bad thing. I choose to write about what interests me. If it doesn’t interest me, you won’t read about it here. That’s bias.) We now tolerate open homosexuality — no society has ever done that and remained around for long to revel in it.

Our republic, and the laws which we have written for ourselves, are founded on us being able to exercise self-control. That used to be a hallmark of our culture. That trait has been replaced by instant gratification. We’re no longer ‘good’. Mr. de Tocqueville told us what would come next. Anyone care to disagree that we are no longer ‘great’?

When self-control is not a trait of a culture, as is the case in most of the world, laws either do not address the ’small stuff’, or they’re simply not enforced. Our old judicial system has not yet gotten into synch with our new culture. That is why so many of my fellow citizens are in jail. (They’re not all my fellow citizens, as the article neglects to report that as many as 30 percent of federal inmates may be here illegally. I’ll bet the farm that similar numbers are found in state prisons.)

I don’t care what the ‘experts’ or the rest of the world thinks about the size of our prison population. In the short term, we may have to relax our laws. But, in the long term, my hope is that we return to being a ‘good’ people.

Goodbye…And Good Riddance

Saturday, December 9th, 2006

The Republican-controlled Congress has adjourned and gone home — and none too soon. Who, back in 2001, when they took control of both the House and the Senate, would’ve seen in their worst conservative nightmares the spending and intrusion into our everyday lives that we’ve seen in the past six years. The Patriot Acts aside, and similar measures aimed at conquering the spread of radical Islam, the purposes with which we can agree, although some of the methods are certainly open to dispute.

Yes, those wonderfully conservative Republicans gave us:

  • A $40 billion expansion of the Department of Education budget, with an attendant increase in its meddling into how we locals educate our children
  • McCain-Feingold “campaign reform”, a horrific censorship measure more aptly titled “The Incumbent Protection Act”
  • “Faith-based” disbursement of tax-funded welfare services, rather than the reduction in taxes to allow the faithful to have more of their hard-earned money with which to do their own charity work as they best see the needs
  • Additional socialization of our health care system under the guise of reduced-cost prescription drugs for seniors
  • The refusal to deal with the flood of illegal immigrants, except to try to reward them with work permits now and citizenship later for having broken our laws in getting here and continuing to break our laws once they’ve gotten here
  • The acceleration of Ross Perot’s “giant sucking sound”, as our manufacturing and technology infrastructure is dismantled and sent abroad

And, last, but certainly not least, in returning to the Patriot Acts, the military portion of the war on Islamo-fascism has been “fought” with both of our hands tied behind our back and our legs shackled together at the knees. Instead of sending in the Air Force to cut the enemy to shreds and then the Infantry in to collect up all the pieces and put things back together in our image, they sent in the Infantry to get cut to shreds by the enemy and the Air Force in to pick up the pieces of our soldiers after the enemy has turned the place into their image. We won’t even begin to discuss the diplomatic side of things…

Well, it looks like the next two years will finally give us conservatives what we expect from a Democrat Congress and a RINO in the White House. At least, this time we’ll not be disappointed by what comes out of Washington, DC. We’ll also get to see how the Democrats deal with their DINO’s — perhaps we ought to start taking notes.

Persona Non Gratis

Friday, December 1st, 2006

One of the latest supposedly American bastards who do not put US-First: Colin Powel.