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Barry Goldwater’s ‘Conscience of a Conservative’ Chapter 2

by coldwarrior ( 107 Comments › )
Filed under Barry Goldwater, Democratic Party, Open thread, Politics, Republican Party at August 26th, 2013 - 3:00 pm

Barry Goldwater’s ‘Conscience of a Conservative’ Chapter 1

So…onto chapter 2. ‘The Perils of Power’

Goldwater’s opening paragraph hits with both fists.

The New Deal, Dean Acheson wrote approvingly in a book called “A Democrat Looks at His Party’ , “conceived of the federal government as the whole people organized to do what had to be done .” A year later Mr Larson wrot A Republican Looks At His Party , and made much the same claim as in his book for Modern Republicans. The ‘underlying philosophy’ of the New Republicanism, said Mr Larson, is “that is a job has to be done to meet the needs of the people, and no one else can do it, then it is the proper function of the federal government.’

Let that sink in.

Both parties utterly and completely repudiate the founding principle of limited government. Things have not changed either. Many in the GOP and the Dems both are for larger and larger government. One is just for slower growth of government. The end result is the same, Leviathan without a defined limit, an endlessly expanding monster fed by both sides of the aisle! What of the founding principles?

He continues: ‘…and they propound the first principle of totalitarianism: that the State is competent to do all things and is limited in what it actually does only by the will of those who control the state.’  .
This view, both from the democrats and republicans is in direct conflict with and total disrespect for the Constitution that is intended to limit the functions and scope and size of government!
This same expanding government, be it run by democrats or many of the GOP, cannot outrun the historical legacy that government is the single most powerful and ‘chief instrument for thwarting man’s liberty’.

So, we are back to the Hobbes v Locke arguments again. Goldwater says that State power preforming the legitimate functions of government should not restrict freedom, but absolute power always does, this creates a sliding scale from true anarchy to police state.  A government that ‘can’ restrict freedoms ultimately will. Lets place Obamacare and the recent NSA spying in this box. Power is the drug, the sex, in DC.

The founders lived through the single authority, state as master, absolute political system. They understood that the natural tendency of government is to move toward absolutism. The founders created a system where power is separated and spread on several layers of government that should always be protective of its own power and by being that, check the other branches of government. Sadly. This has failed, especially in the relationship between the States and Fedgov.

So, how to measure Fedgov? First, size of financial operations as a percent of GDP over time. We don’t have to get into this here as it is known by all. Second, scope of activities in things like land ownership, medicine, insurer, mortgage broker, employer, debtor, taxer and spender, ponzi scheme manager in Social Security. Third, how much of the people’s earning, their blood and sweat, does Fedgov take in the form of taxes? Fourth, what is the extent of government interference in the day to day lives of the citizens? We are no longer a country of law, we are a country of regulation where each individual has to operate every day in a smaller and smaller box of compliance. Everyone on this blog has heard me rail about this.

SO how did we get here? Easy, both sides lied to us. the Dems lied to us on how far and how big government would be expanded and the GOP lied that it would cut the size of government down in real terms. We are suckers of the first order. Lets just spend a little on this, hey, you like this program…well, everyone likes their own pets. We have traded liberty for security since 9/11. We have failed Franklin’s tests. First: “A Republic, if you can keep it”, and second, ‘They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.’

How do we step back and reverse the ever larger and ever intrusive government that will in the end become the Leviathan? Goldwater offers this, “The turn will come when we entrust the conduct of or affairs to men who understand that their first duty as public officials is to divest themselves of the power that they have been given.”

Are there any out there?  Who will take this to the stump:

“I have little interest in streamlining government or in making it more efficient, for I mean to reduce its size. I do not undertake to promote welfare, for I propose to extend freedom. My aim is to not pass laws, but to repeal them. It is not to inaugurate new programs, but to cancel old ones that do violence to the constitution, or that have failed in their purpose, or that impose on the people unwarranted financial burden. I will not attempt to discover whether legislation is ‘needed’ before I first determine if it is Constitutionally permissible. And if I should ever be attacked for neglecting my constituents’ ‘interests’ I shall reply that I was informed their main interest is liberty and that in that cause I am doing the very best I can.”

Personal liberty, State’s right’s, and smaller government. Is that so much to ask?

The Russians Understand the Problem Here

by coldwarrior ( 216 Comments › )
Filed under Democratic Party, Economy, Politics, Republican Party, Russia at January 18th, 2011 - 4:30 pm

The Russian immigrant community understands the problem here in the U.S.; while we natural born citizens, well at least 52% of we citizens don’t understand the problem that the United States is facing and the perils of the path that we are on. I have a feeling that the Cubans in Florida and other immigrants from former communist countries that live all around America understand the problem here in the U.S. while we slide toward Socialism:

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — Many Russian immigrants to the “red borough” of Staten Island are flocking to the Republican Party, saying that the national Democrats’ “socialistic” policies remind them too much of the top-down oligarchy they fled in their native land.

With many of the borough’s Russian arrivees already owning businesses and active in civic organizations, their muscle could help the Island GOP solidify electoral gains made this year, when the party took back congressional and Assembly seats.

Businessman Arkadiy Fridman said that the newly formed Citizens Magazine Business Club, a confederation of more than 50 Russian-owned businesses here and in Brooklyn, has aligned itself with the Molinari Republican Club (MRC) in an effort to increase the Russian community’s political and economic clout…Fridman said that the Democrats “are going in an absolutely different direction,” focusing on “income redistribution” and rich-versus-poor “class war.”

The Citizens Club, formed earlier this month, looks to support and grow local businesses here; introduce Russian firms to the borough’s existing business and political communities, and promote Russian community representatives to serve in elected office.

MRC president Robert Scamardella has actively been courting members of the Russian community this year.

“One of the main initiatives I have pursued has been to expand the base of the party by reaching out to diverse potential constituencies and securing their support and involvement,” said Scamardella, an attorney.

“This decision by leaders of the local Russian community illustrates the effectiveness of this approach. We will continue to reach out to other communities and seek their association with the Republican Party.”

Former Borough President Guy Molinari, the MRC’s namesake, said he’d noticed over the years that Russian immigrants here tended to register Republican.

Molinari called the affiliation with MRC “a natural marriage.”

“They want to be involved, be part of the community,” Molinari said. “They come from a country where they weren’t able to express themselves, didn’t have the right to organize or vote. They appreciate it more than some of us who were born here.”

Brooklyn attorney David Storovin said that the fact that the MRC is made up of business professionals “who are successful in their own right,” also made the match an attractive one.

He said that he and other Russian immigrants are also drawn to the GOP’s traditional veneration of flag and country.

Reflecting the American Dream ideal that has drawn immigrants here since the county’s founding, Storovin said that many Russians are “grateful” for the religious, business and travel freedoms the United States provide, and want to show it.

“We do feel patriotic,” Storovin said.

Yevgeniy Lvovskiy, of the ZHL Group development firm, said that many Russians here also are looking to break ethnic stereotypes that paint Russia as being all about “Siberia, beer and vodka.”

“We are looking for an opportunity to prove ourselves,” said Lvovskiy, who came to the United States in 1999. “If you work hard, and do the right thing, you get rewarded. We want to show people we are normal.”

It’s that self-starting stance, he said, that makes Russians here more in line with GOP orthodoxy.

I would like everyone to compare the above attitudes with the attitudes that people who represent La Raza, CAIR,  and the like. In this case, the group want to become productive Americans wants to assimilate and wants the U.S. not to slide into the very Socialism from which they escaped. And yet, some our very own citizens and many of our elected officials just refuse to understand what is happening:

State Sen. Diane Savino (D-North Shore/Brooklyn) said she understands the Russian aversion to anything that looks like big government, but thinks the criticism of the Democratic Party is off-base.

“You can’t ignore the fact that the Russian population here came of age during the Soviet era,” said Ms. Savino, who counts many Russians among her Brooklyn constituents.

“They have different thoughts on what communism and socialism mean. They are a little more sensitive to it.

“But, that being said,” she added, “you can’t compare the policies of the Democratic Party with communism. It’s absurd.”

Tell me, State Senator, why is comparing what the Democratic Party stands for and does every day with the old Communists an absurdity?

Gangsta Government

by Deplorable Macker ( 161 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Democratic Party, Elections 2010, Music, Progressives, Satire at September 24th, 2010 - 4:30 pm

FINALLY! A Rap song I can relate to…and so can you!


Not since Open Season by Stuck Mojo has there been such a strong reaction to the Force of Evil. This particular tune deals with Президент Оба́ма and his Demo☭rat cronies.

You can download this song for FREE at gangstagovernment.org.

BREAKING NEWS: Byrd Dead

by Deplorable Macker ( 40 Comments › )
Filed under Democratic Party at June 28th, 2010 - 5:48 am


From Breitbart:

WASHINGTON (AP) – Sen. Robert Byrd of West Virginia, the longest-serving senator in U.S. history, has died at age 92.
Spokesman Jesse Jacobs says Byrd died peacefully at about 3 a.m. Monday at Inova Hospital in Fairfax, Va.
Byrd was elected to the Senate in 1958, after spending six years in the House. He was the Senate majority leader for six years during the late 1970s and 1980s and was third in the line of succession for the presidency. As either chairman or the senior Democrat on the Appropriations Committee for 20 years, he steered billions of dollars in federal spending to West Virginia.
Byrd became more frail after the death of his wife, Erma, in 2006. By 2009, aides were wheeling him to and from the Senate floor in a wheelchair

Our prayers go to his family.