Thursday, August 28, 2008

Politics: So Tired of the B.S.

I'm tired of the bs. The rhetoric on both sides of the political spectrum, has gotten so thick that I need boots to wade through it. And I'm learning towards getting some taller boots with a boat attached.

This week, the democrats had their national convention, to officially declare their candidate for President of the United States. The Republicans will do the same for their candidate next week. The reality is that both parties could do us all a favor and condense this all down to one day.
They wont do this though. This is their time to give some of the privileged few their chance to voice their feelings and/or to vent and/or to make themselves heard and seen in hopes of getting enough attention for future political ambitions. No serious discussion of the issues is done here. It's all cheerleading. It's all rhetoric. It's all lies, distortions, half-truths.

This week, Hillary Clinton spoke about her pet issues. She mentioned jobs being sent overseas, making it sound like it was Bush's fault. After all, everything is Bush's fault. The crowd lapped up her every word. The truth is, she was lying. It was her husband that signed into law the tax credits for companies like IBM to off-shore jobs. It wasn't George W. Bush. It was Bill Clinton.

Joe Biden, the running mate for Barak Obama, chose his own rants against McCain as well as the Bush Administration. It's not like some of the rants aren't deserved, but what Biden was doing was putting it on extra thick, with no serious imparting of the facts. It was all rhetoric again.
Biden had suggested that McCain was wrong because he was for keeping troops in Iraq, and now the Bush Administration as well as the Iraqi government as discussing a time table for troop redeployment. Biden suggests that he was right and that Obama was right, and that McCain was wrong. On the surface, that seems like a good argument. But wait a minute. According to this argument, Bush was right as well. However, lets go further into the issue. The whole reason there is any discussion by the Bush Administration or by the Iraqi government about troop redeployment, is because of the troop surge. McCain was for it. Biden was against it. Obama was against it. So in that line of thinking, Obama was wrong. Biden was wrong. Bush was right. McCain was right.
It all depends on how you look at it.

The bottom line is that we all wish that we hadn't gotten into the war to begin with. Everyone agrees with that. However, unlike Obama, Biden voted for the war. So how much credibility does he have in bringing up the issue?

And then there's Bill Clinton. Slick Willie was at his best again, doling out the soundbites. Anyone on the left lapped them up unquestioning. Everyone else were hoping for an enema.

Clinton suggests that just as it is suggested that Obama was too young and inexperienced to be president, that they had said the same thing about him; how much of an argument is that really? For one thing, Clinton had been a two-term governor. Obama hasn't. And, to tell the truth, Clinton did nothing to curb al Qaeda, and the result was no response regarding repeated attacks on Americans, including an attack on a US battle cruiser, the Cole.

Clinton points to his own foreign policy in dealing with tyrants, and the fact that he made peace agreements with countries like North Korea. However, he fails to point out that after the agreement, North Korea violated the deal in secret and were developing nuclear capability. So how affective was his policy? He calls the Bush policy a failed policy, but his certainly was no better.

And while we're talking about foreign policy, it was during the Clinton Administration that over 750,000 innocent civilians were murdered in Rwanda while the Clinton Administration sat by waiting for the UN to do something. The UN did nothing. In fact, the UN did have a few soldiers in Rwanda, but when the massacres went on, the UN (Belgian soldiers) ran away. The civilians were slaughtered. Do we really consider this to be a successful policy?

And Clinton points to the deficit. Yes, this is something I agree on. Bush spent worse than any Democrat (to date) had. However, if Obama gets all the things he says he wants, the spending will be even worse. So how could Clinton even suggest that this policy would be any different?
Clinton went on to talk about the tax cuts for the rich. What he was mostly talking about is the capital gains taxes. What he fails to mention is that the reduction in capital gains taxes is what boosted investment and helped the economy after it was slumping during the end of the Clinton years and into the Bush years. That slump was due to the failed dotcom era and little investor confidence in the tech sector. The cuts in capital gains provided additional revenue into our economy, as well as additional jobs that had been on the decline.

Hint.  This economy grows because of investment.  Investment brings capital into the economy.  Without it, there is recession.  The economy grows with capital, not with taxes.

Clinton went on to talk about the economy, which I agree could be better if not for Bush's spending out of control, but again, the democrats want to spend more. They want to take away the incentive to invest. They want to take away the incentive to create real jobs (not government jobs). And in addition, during the Bush years, the growth rate has still been a higher percentage above the overall economic output of the nation, in comparison to that of the Clinton years. So as bad as the Bush economic policy has been, Clinton's was worse and he knows it.

Clinton mentioned education as well as did Biden. Ted Kennedy mentioned it briefly as well. The thing is, none of them pointed out that Bush spent more on education than any president previously (including Clinton). In addition, Bush not only gave Sen. Kennedy the education bill that he wanted, but even gave him additional funding for it. And to hear them talk, it's not enough. If true, then they're failures too and certainly a part of the problem.

Several of the speakers mentioned the torturing of prisoners, eluding to prisoners held at Guantanamo Bay. These are men that would kill Americans if given the chance. Some have already killed Americans. These politicians seem very concerned about the rights of these men, but show no concern for the rights and well-being of unborn babies in this country. They're not even on the radar because it's not politically correct.And to be truthful, was McCain not one of the Senators opposed to torture? So how serious is this discussion really?

The purpose of these speeches, for the most part, was to fire up the audience and to get them excited about being at the convention. However, the real purpose of the convention was to tally the delegate votes to determine who the candidate would be, and we knew before the convention who that would be. Did we not?

AT&T gave millions of dollars to the democrats (to the republicans too). In return, (including a vote by Barak Obama who at first was opposed), they voted to keep telecom companies from being sued if they had co-operated with government investigations regarding wire taps. Is this the kind of change this candidate speaks of? It seems that he has become what he has been preaching against. He has catered to the privileged few who have the money to buy from government what they want.

The truth is that neither party leaders really understand the average person on the street and what we want in a government. They are both selling us out as far as our economic and territorial sovereignty. Neither show any concern for the average working man in this country. They just talk about it.

When Obama was running for the Senate, he got organized labor's support because he said that he'd renegociate NAFTA. After he got into office, the subject has never been mentioned again. Is this the sign of a man that represents change? If its a change in what he'll do versus what he'll promise in order to get a vote, then yes, it's change. Is it good for the country? No.
The truth is that in every election, these guys just want to get elected. They talk about a few key issues that they feel people are interested in. These include the military (if we're at war), education, the economy, civil rights, the environment, etc. And to tell the truth, the environment is only an issue on election years. The rest of the time, it's business as usual. If you don't believe me, start watching your typical liberal and what cars they drive, how they drive, and what they're really concerned about as far as air pollution, global climate change, natural resources, etc. You'll see that it's just an issue to "talk" about but in reality, only a few people really care enough to live what they say.

There are probably people in both parties that actually care about one or more of these subjects, but they typically have a different approach to solving these problems, or they have a different priorities on which problems should be solved first (and how much money should be spent). For the most part, this is little difference between the leaders of both parties, as these are politicians first, party second and American's third. (I could say elite American third, and American citizen fourth). That's their priorities.

The Republicans will have their convention next week. I have no reason to believe that the rhetoric will be any different. I have lost hope that it will.

Where are the statesmen (and women)?

Friday, August 15, 2008

Soundbites Rule / Solutions Fall On Deaf Ears

Soundbites rule nowadays. Politicians only care about getting elected or re-elected. No real solutions are pursued.

Goals without plans are just wishes.

Obama used a soundbite from T.Boone Pickens recently, in discussion the energy problem and oil. He quoted Pickens as saying "Drilling isn't the answer" and then proceeded to demonize anyone that suggests that we should have more domestic drilling. This is the perfect example of the soundbite, because the audience nodded their heads in agreement, even though the fact is that he intentionally misquoted Pickens.

What Pickens actually said is "Drilling alone, isn't the answer". In an interview after the Obama speech, Pickens made a point to re-iterate his original statements, and to clarify that he feels that every reasonable avenue of energy exploration should be pursued, but that any one solution is not a solution at all. That's what he said, but that's not a soundbite. Soundbites get easy votes. Explanations fall on deaf ears.

Soundbites make people smile. The win elections. They don't solve problems.

Wouldn't it be nice to get a politician that didn't care about being re-elected? Of course, these aren't politicians. They're called statesmen. It's really hard for a statesman to be elected, because people want soundbites. They want some simple little blurb that makes them feel better, and that makes them feel smarter and/or more virtuous than people they disagree with. Feelings don't provide solutions. They never have. They never will.

Sunday, August 3, 2008

Ungrateful (So-Called Adult) Children

I thought my wife and I were alone, but we're not. The more we compare notes and read what other parents' experiences are, we realize that we're not the only ones with an ungrateful adult child. Isn't that an oxymoron? Adult child? Of course it is, but it is an accurate description, nonetheless.

Today we were given yet another account of a young woman who's parents are in an almost constant state of woe for the past couple of years. It seems to get worse for them, not better.

First, this young woman is living with this guy that wont work, and has told her from the very beginning that he will "never" marry her. He says that he "doesn't believe in it". Evidently, he doesn't believe in supporting his family either, because he'll barely keep a job.
Recently, he had minor surgery while by all accounts, he should be back to work within a week. Instead, he is riding this gravy train for all it's worth and is staying off work for three weeks. And this is three weeks that he will not be bringing in a paycheck for this young woman, and their infant child. He doesn't care. If he can't pay the rent or feed the family, the grand parents will have to chip in like they've been chipping in for the last couple of years.
Last month, their phone bill was over $200 and was in arears, so the phone service was cut off. To get it back on, the grand parents paid, and this month, there's another $200 bill.

In addition, this young couple has had transportation issues, and so the parents lent them a car, and even filled the tank with gasoline for them (you do know what gasoline prices are right now?).
Well when told this over the phone, this young woman said to her mom, "On your way over here, could you stop and get us a large pizza with everything on it?"

When is enough enough?
These people are not wealthy people. They are strapped for cash but are helping their daughter, who has an infant child and is living with this deadbeat that wont support them. They're providing them a car and even filled the gas tank and was bringing the car over to them; and yet it wasn't enough. I couldn't believe she had the gall to ask for a large pizza to be brought over.

When you're poor and living on a budget, you buy groceries and cook and eat at home as much as possible. This is crazy.

Well, upon getting home, I began to reflect on these ungrateful kids. I did a google search, just out of curiousity, and I was amazed at the number of parents that are having to put up with ungrateful adult kids. There's even a whole discussion group for it (at http://www.eons.com/groups/topic/849237-one-out-of-the-bunch).

I'm not going to say that we feel lucky after hearing about what these other people are going through. It tends to make me angry that we're having to put up with (in our own home) the abuse that we do from our own grown child. However, being a parent, you have to ignore the anger adn the disgust, and figure out a way to be a parent; not to coddle, but to motivate. We have made our son's life too comfortable and he is abusing us. We're cutting that off, and I urge every parent of an ungrateful adult child to do the same.