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Posted by John Tate
Posted 11/18/09
Last updated 11/19/09
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A few weeks ago, we sent out an alert that Representative Mel Watt was attempting to water down H.R. 1207 in the House Financial Services Committee.

The latest reports we have received have informed us that a vote on the Watt amendment could come tomorrow!

There's still time for us to stop this attack on Audit the Fed! Click here to get a full list of Financial Services Committee members, along with their contact information.

Financial Services leadership seems determined to include Audit the Fed as part of a regulatory reform package instead of passing it as a standalone bill.

While C4L will still do everything in its power to fight for a standalone vote on Audit the Fed on the House floor, it is critical we challenge Watt's amendment in Committee.

It will become much easier for our representatives to claim they still support Audit the Fed on the House floor if the Watt version passes, when, in reality, Representative Watt's amendment puts restrictions on Government Accountability Office audits of the Fed.

For example, Watt's amendment prevents the GAO from auditing or reviewing decisions to authorize, modify, extend, or terminate loans or liquidity facilities.

Congressman Paul will offer an amendment in Committee restoring an audit of the Fed's entire $2 trillion balance sheet, but we have received word that some of the Democrat members may be waffling on their support for his amendment.

Help us turn up the pressure on these members! Below is the list of Democrats on the committee who have cosponsored H.R. 1207. Please call them and urge them to vote "Yes" on Ron Paul's amendment. Click on their names to get their web contact information.

1. Rep. John Adler, NJ (202) 225-4765

2. Rep. Travis Childers, MS (202) 225-4306

3. Rep. Steve Driehaus, OH (202) 225-2216

4. Rep. Alan Grayson, FL (202) 225-2176

5. Rep. Rubén Hinojosa, TX (202) 225-2531

6. Rep. Suzanne Kosmas, FL (202) 225-2706

7. Rep. Dan Maffei, NY (202) 225-3701

8. Rep. Brad Miller, NC (202) 225-3032

9. Rep. Walt Minnick, ID (202) 225-6611

10. Rep. Ed Perlmutter, CO (202)-225-2645

11. Rep. David Scott, GA (202) 225-2939

12. Rep. Brad Sherman, CA (202) 225-5911

13. Rep. Jackie Speier, CA (202) 225-3531

When contacting these members, remember that up to this point, they have been allies on this issue. A civil yet firm tone should be kept during these calls. They should be thanked for their cosponsorship, told that Mel Watt's changes to the bill are unacceptable, and urged to hold the line and honor their promise to support transparency at the Fed by voting "Yes" on Ron Paul's amendment.

And don't forget to click here to get a full list of Financial Services Committee members.

For more information on the Watt amendment, check out this article by The Huffington Post's Ryan Grim.

We are continuing our work to achieve a standalone vote on H.R. 1207 on the House floor, but we must first stop the Watt amendment in the Financial Services Committee.

Make sure the Financial Services Committee members hear from you as soon as their offices open Thursday morning!

A vote could come any time tomorrow. Call, email, and fax the Financial Services Committee members to vote "Yes" on Congressman Ron Paul's amendment.





Categories: Campaign For Liberty, Finance, Domestic Policy, Grassroots News, Economy, Monetary Policy
Tags: audit the fed

Comments (12)




Posted by JohnKern
Posted 11/04/09
Last updated 11/05/09
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Let me start by saying, I am in this for the long haul. I learned very quickly upon getting involved politically, that one must look at the big picture. Goals will not be achieved overnight, but this is not to say that goals will not be achieved. Through the hard work of every concerned citizen, we will accomplish our goals. What are those goals? to oversimplify it, they are to return the Federal Government of the United States back toward principles of Individual Liberty, Constitutional Government, Sound Money, Free Markets, and a foreign policy of Armed Neutrality (noninterventionist). Once this is done, States and localities will begin to pick up their proper roles again, and we can focus our efforts where they belong - at home, where it most affects us. This can only be completed if you and I educate ourselves and begin to tell others what we have learned. No one is going to do this for us, or even tell us where to start. That is why I am taking the initiative, and asking you to do the same. Together and with the help of Campaign for Liberty, we will help America find her way back to the principles that have made her great.

Like many other people involved in this effort, I was unengaged in politics prior to the 2008 Presidential elections. Although I have always voted since becoming eligible to do so, I never took the time to fully understand the issues facing our country. Besides occasionally listening to some talk radio, or picking up a local newspaper, I had few sources of information. Because of that, I followed those around me, many of whom where just as blind to the truth as I was. Blind leading the blind is a good way to describe the actions of many American's when it comes to politics. November 4, 2008 changed all that. I knew something was wrong with what I was hearing out of the mouths of both candidates vying for my vote. Every speech left me thinking "did he even say anything just now?". That sour taste in my mouth led me to seek out additional and better information. I bought a copy of "The Revolution - A Manifesto". Honestly I bought it because the cover caught my eye, and the synopses on the back sounded like it may be something worth reading. Despite not knowing who Ron Paul was, or having any recommendation to read the book, I did. "the red pill" is what I like to call that book. The pill that will awaken you from an unconscious stupor, and let you see America for what it truly is. Prior to reading that book, I don't know when the last time was that I really thought about Freedom and Liberty. Those were words on our money and in our pledge and stuff, but what did it mean to me? Now, I can't get those words off my mind. Everywhere I look, I see something that impedes my freedom, or Someone who doesn't care to defend their own. My eyes are forever opened.





Categories: Ron Paul, Campaign For Liberty, Education, Civil Liberties, Just For Fun, Revolution
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Posted by Matt Hawes
Posted 10/28/09
Last updated 10/28/09
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On Monday, November 9, Congressman Paul will return to South Carolina for the first time since the 2008 presidential campaign for one night only!

Campaign for Liberty is teaming with Young Americans for Liberty to host Dr. Paul at the Carolina Coliseum on the campus of the University of South Carolina.  The event starts at 7:00 pm eastern and is free and open to the public.

Click here for more details and to RSVP.

On Friday, November 13, C4L and YAL are again teaming up to hold a rally at the Benton Auditorium at Iowa State University Center's Scheman Bldg.  This event starts at 7 pm central, and it is also free and open to the public.

Click here for more information on Dr. Paul's full schedule in Iowa.

These events are sure to be packed with an exciting crowd.  To give you an idea of how much attention they are already generating, CNN and the LA Times are just two of the outlets to have picked up on the story.

Don't miss this chance to catch Dr. Paul in what are guaranteed to be great nights!





Categories: Ron Paul, Campaign For Liberty, Media, Grassroots News, Revolution
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Posted by CrystalEveritt
Posted 10/25/09
Last updated 10/25/09
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We were successful in promoting Campaign For Liberty at our four day Brevard County Oktoberfest booth. It could not have transpired without a comparable persevering, seven person crew to work the event. It would not have occurred at all, without our members that committed financially, to make our endeavor feasible. The name exposure alone would have made the labor involved in being part of this event, worth-while. Obtaining enthusiastic recruits is an enormous accomplishment for Brevard Campaign For liberty. The indisputable positive impact of this event on Brevard Campaign For Liberty will be felt for a long time to come.

Dan, Alex, Thomas, and Eric toiled though the light rain for the first two days, without abated enthusiasm in speaking to anyone that approached our booth.  We had such a superior parcel of real estate, giving us the maximum amount of foot traffic passing our booth. The event was in the evening, so we lit the banners with spotlights. It was energizing to see, that Campaign For Liberty already had some name recognition, as some people walked by exclaiming encouragement. Events like the Brevard Oktoberfest will increase public recognition even more. On account of Oktoberfest being a drinking festival, the crowd tended to be more social than average, making our endeavor easier. When we weren't active with the general crowed, the employees of the fair would approach to discuss the the need for smaller government.

Jonathan, Kim, David and myself worked the two sunny days of the Brevard Oktoberfest. We were able to sign up twenty-two people  that are desirous of getting involved with Brevard Campaign For Liberty.  Some people took the constitutions as gifts for friends or family. One lady stopped by to assert her belief in the public option. To my delight, She conceded that forced association is not appropriate. Numerous people came up to tell us how much they admired Ron Paul, and everything he stood for. A couple of people came by to tell us that although our message was commendable, what we sought was unattainable. David did a great job inspiring all of us in his list of our past achievements, including the Fed hearing that others said would never happen.

Despite half the event being in the rain, our accomplishments still add up to a great victory. The Brevard campaign For Liberty showed a colossal amount of devotion to getting our message to the people that attended Oktoberfest. We labored hard each of the four days, and had a heroic attitude in the face of private personal hardship.  I am absolutely certain we had a sizable impact on the future of Brevard Campaign For Liberty. I am eager to see some of the people we  signed up, work our next big event with us. The Brevard Campaign For Liberty is destined to grow exponentially.

 

 





Categories: Ron Paul, Campaign For Liberty, Education, 3rd Parties, Health Freedom, Election News, Grassroots News, Ethics, Current Events, Revolution
Tags: event

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It is generally accepted that one must wait several decades before looking back at an event or an era with sufficient "historical perspective."  Only from that vantage point can the significance and long-term effects of any piece of history be objectively observed, quantified, and analyzed.  However, there is a dilemma inherent in this long-standing tradition.  It is that there are always interested parties who wish to characterize significant events or eras in history in a way that suits their own agenda.  As a result, by the time sufficient time has passed to satisfy the need for "historical perspective," these interested parties have created an official story regarding the events in question and have had time to convince the majority of people that this official story is the truth.  By the time a generation has passed, the official story has become both accepted history for academia and "conventional wisdom" for average citizens.  Regardless of facts, reason, or any perspective whatsoever, the official story now is the truth.

Such has been the case countless time throughout American history.  It is universally accepted that America's Civil War started over slavery, and credits Abraham Lincoln with "freeing the slaves."  History and conventional also wisdom tells us that the quality of life of the working class in America declined during the industrial revolution, and credits the "progressive movement" for instituting needed reforms that saved the working class from capitalism.  Most relevant to our situation in America today, history blames the Great Depression of the 1930's on Herbert Hoover's "laissez faire capitalism" and "unregulated free markets," and credits FDR's New Deal with ending the Depression and restoring prosperity.

When presented in the textbooks of high school history or college survey courses, there is a certain logic and reasonableness to these versions of historical events that makes them very easy to understand and accept.  There is only one problem: none of them are true.

Americans are already familiar with the official story of our present crisis.  Too much laissez faire capitalism" has resulted in an unprecedented crisis caused by predatory lenders, irresponsible borrowers, speculators, and other market participants acting in an environment with too little regulation.  Without oversight, "unregulated free markets" naturally resulted in market players choosing short term profits over long-term prudence.  This process was fueled during the past decade by George W. Bush's "laissez faire policies."

There is only one problem with this story - none of it is true, either.  None of the problems we face today were caused by unregulated free markets and the policies of George W. Bush were in no way "laissez faire."  This is much more than an academic argument.  The premise that unregulated capitalism is to blame for our present economic crisis is the basis for every action that our government is taking right now.  If that premise is incorrect, then the results of action taken based upon it could be disastrous.

It is probably a good idea at this point to define some terms.  Assuming that "laissez faire capitalism" and "free markets" mean the same thing, what I mean when I use those terms is this: a market economy where all exchanges of property are made with the mutual, voluntary consent of all parties to those transactions.  While government's role is limited in such a system, it is nevertheless crucial: to ensure that all transactions are made with the mutual, voluntary consent of all parties.  To put it most succinctly, government's role in a free market is to protect the property rights of each individual.

Is this what George W. Bush did or at least attempted to do?  Let us examine the Bush economic policies and see for ourselves.

Bush campaigned on and did follow through upon a promise to cut taxes.  He did this by reducing the income tax on the highest income earners and by sending each American family a "refund" of several hundred dollars.  One might be tempted to argue that this was a move in the direction of free markets, as the returned money represented reductions of a government that had grown far beyond its role of defending life, liberty, and property.  Thus, the tax money collected for these illegitimate functions was a violation of the property rights government was supposed to protect and the tax cuts were a partial remedy for those violations.  This is what any self-respecting Republican would have you believe.

There is only one problem: there were no reductions in government.  In fact, Bush greatly increased the size of the government with military and new entitlement spending.  As a result, he ran huge deficits and doubled the national debt.  Looked at objectively, there was a tenuous relationship at best between the money taxpayers had previously paid in taxes and the checks sent out by the government after all of that tax money was already spent.  Furthermore, millions of Americans who hadn't even paid taxes received "refund" checks anyway.  Seen for what it was, this "tax refund" was merely a ploy to buy votes with other people's money dressed up in Republican rhetoric, as well as a way to perpetuate debt-fueled consumerism for the benefit of President Bush's friends in corporate America.  Handing out money to people to whom it doesn't belong has nothing to do with free markets, whether that money is borrowed from other nations or printed out of thin air.  It represents complete distortion of the markets by government, along with a fundamental violation of the property rights of present and future generations.

Amidst this confusion we seem to have forgotten one major contributor to the aforementioned deficits: the Medicare drug plan.  The Medicare drug plan was the Bush administration's program from start to finish, and it was rammed through the legislature despite its dubious administrative plan and complete lack of funding.  While it was rightly criticized for both of these faults, no media outlet seems to have recognized its complete antagonism toward free markets.  In addition to violating property rights by forcing one group of individuals to pay for the healthcare services of others, Medicare and other government health care programs completely distort the health care market, creating artificial demand that inflates prices and suspends market forces.  Here we have another major component of President Bush's policy that is the complete antithesis of laissez faire capitalism.

The mass illusion about this president's policies doesn't stop there.  The American public also seems to think that major deregulation occurred under President Bush, but actually the exact opposite is true.  It was the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (repealing the Glass-Steagall Act) that lead to the massive expansion of derivates in the stock and real estate markets that helped fuel the housing bubble.  However, this legislation was actually passed when President Clinton was still in office.  In fact, Bush's only significant effect on the regulatory structure was to increase regulation, not decrease it. 

Due to the political fallout from the accounting scandals during the early years of Bush's presidency, especially the Enron scandal, Bush championed new, completely unnecessary, and profoundly destructive regulations under the Sarbanes-Oxley act.  Despite the fact that the accounting scandals were clear cases of fraud, which was already illegal and which could be prosecuted without a single new regulation, President Bush had a political need to show that he was "doing something" about corporate crime.

So, again in complete opposition to "free markets," Bush signed Sarbanes-Oxley into law, saying as he did so that the bill represented "the most far-reaching reforms of American business practices since the time of Franklin Delano Roosevelt."[1]  Invoking FDR should have been enough on its own to erase any perception of Bush as a champion of free markets, but the hated "laissez faire" moniker seems to be a tough one to shake.  As we now know, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act has been terribly destructive to American markets and has contributed to a migration of new investment away from America and to more business-friendly countries.  Chalk up another victory for Bush against free markets.

Finally, there is Bush's role in the housing bubble, the straw that broke the proverbial camel's back regarding America's borrow and spend economy of the past several decades.  Here it should be noted that the lion's share of the blame for this debacle should go to the Federal Reserve System, which kept interest rates artificially low and expanded money and credit to counter what would have been two recessions in the late 1990's and early 2000's.  Remember, the private Federal Reserve System does not answer to any branch of the federal government.  One could certainly argue that both Clinton and Bush merely happened to be in office while the Federal Reserve blew up two massive bubbles during their presidencies (the NASDAQ bubble and the housing bubble).

However, it was not just low interest rates or the expansion of money and credit that caused the housing bubble to inflate.  There was also the role of government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which guaranteed mortgages that would not have been written in a free market.  Starting with Clinton and continuing with Bush, the executive branch played cheerleader to the "ownership" society whereby every American was entitled to own their own home, whether they could afford the mortgage that went with it or not.

The mortgage debacle is often cited as an example of the "unregulated free market" producing negative results.  Since both the "predatory lenders" and the "irresponsible borrowers" were acting voluntarily, the millions of subsequent defaults are characterized as the result of too little regulation on the market, allowing these freely-acting participants to eschew prudence for short-term profits.  However, this analysis omits one very important fact: there were not two parties to most of these mortgage transactions, but three.

The forgotten third party was, of course, the taxpayer.  It was the taxpayers' money that was put up as collateral for the loans guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and the taxpayer was not acting freely.  The taxpayer was forced by government to back these loans without his consent and against his best interests.  Had the government not committed this crime against property rights to serve its goal of an "ownership society," none of the defaulting loans would have been made.  

In a truly free market, the desire for profit is balanced by the presence of risk.  When one is lending one's own money, the possibility that the borrower will default forces the lender to adhere to high lending standards to avoid making a bad loan.  This is not done out of some civic duty or professional integrity (not that many lenders don't possess both of these qualities), but out of recognized necessity for economic survival.  The balance between desire for profit and risk is a naturally occurring market force when all participants are acting voluntarily in their rational self interest.  However, by allowing lenders and borrowers to use other people's money as collateral, this natural market force was suspended.  To go on to call the resulting disaster the result of "unregulated free markets" is nonsense in the first degree.

Ironically, Clinton and Bush each pursued the exact same policy regarding the housing market for very different reasons.  Clinton pressured Fannie Mae to take more and more risk in order to play to his base: low-income Americans who would not qualify for a mortgage in a truly free market.  Bush went right on encouraging the process in order to appease his base: Wall Street investment houses that were making a killing securitizing mortgages.  Regardless of the motivation, what is important to realize is that this policy is completely antithetical to the concept of free markets or laissez faire capitalism.

Of course, once the crisis began, most people recognize that nothing President Bush did could be characterized as "laissez faire."  Bush himself admitted that he was abandoning free market principles because "the market is not functioning properly," a bizarre statement from one who supposedly believes in free markets in the first place.  His massive intervention into the economy and egregious redistribution of wealth are characterized by the media as a departure from his previous "laissez faire approach."  Yet, anyone can see that this "laissez faire approach" was complete fiction.  So why do all but a few contrarians keep saying it anyway?

There is an answer to that question.  Characterizing Bush's policies as "laissez faire" does serve a very useful purpose for politicians.  It provides them with justification to loot more property and seize more power.  The all-out war on free enterprise presently being waged by President Obama and his cohorts in Congress would not be possible if most Americans did not believe the official story that Bush's presidency was an era of "laissez faire capitalism" or "unregulated free markets" and that these policies caused the economic crisis.  Only the continued willingness by the majority of Americans to swallow this economic gibberish allows the destruction of our liberty to march forward. 

To my fellow Americans, I say this:  No politician (save perhaps one) is going to come forward and tell you the truth.  Most of them don't know the truth, and those that do have figured out that this official nonsense serves their own ambitions, just as saying that the world was flat once served the ambitions of medieval rulers.  It is up to you to rub your eyes and look at the world as it really is.  Two plus two does not equal five and you know that.  Similarly, people voluntarily exchanging their own goods and services with one another can never cause anyone harm and deep down you must know that, too.  It is time to reject the idiotic history that is being written about our present difficulties and demand that the evil incursions into our liberty cease immediately.   You have enormous power when you know what to demand.  It all starts with recognizing the obvious despite the well-funded efforts of those who wish to deceive you.  As the good book saith, the truth shall set you free.[2]

Check out Tom Mullen's new book, A Return to Common Sense: Reawakening Liberty in the Inhabitants of America.  Right Here!

Home

 

 


[1] Bumiller, Elisabeth (2002-07-31). "Bush Signs Bill Aimed at Fraud in Corporations". The New York Times

[2] John 8:32





Categories: Finance, Domestic Policy, Republican Party, Democratic Party, History, Current Events, Philosophy, Socialism, Economy, Monetary Policy, Congress
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Comments (1)




Posted by Deb Wells
Posted 10/10/09
Last updated 10/29/09
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Since Ron Paul's Audit the Fed bill was introduced, you've reached millions of Americans through phone calls, mailings, radio and television interviews, letters to the editors, emails, social networking sites, door-to-door canvassing, booths at fairs, gun shows and music festivals, and a host of other local events and activities in communities around the country.

Then we turned up the heat.  You put the pedal to the metal, shifted gears and took aim at the Senate.

You made your voices heard loud and clear by calling your Senators and attending Town Hall events, and collected petition signatures for the cause at every possible event.  Then on September 15, you hand-delivered thousands upon thousands of petitions to Senators across the country, making S.604 Mass Action Day a resounding success!

There are currently 30 co-sponsors in the Senate!!

To make it interesting, Campaign for Liberty held a competition.

The following individuals gathered the most signatures on petitions in their states.  They not only win our respect, gratitude, and admiration, they've won a copy of Ron Paul's new book End the Fed and a pocket Constitution, both bearing Congressman Ron Paul's autograph!

A big shout out to Debi Longarello in Florida, Rob Bulas in Ohio and Brent Roos in Illinois for collecting 1,000 or more petitions! 

Please join me in congratulating all of the following Patriots:

STATE PATRIOT's NAME
# PETITIONS

AL

Marcelo Munoz  466
AR  Alex White  125
AZ  Annette Freeman
 768
CA  Tin Lieu  800
FL  Debi Longarello  1,700
IL  Brent Roos  1,000
IN  Melissa Lineberry
 300
KY  Alan Brown, Sr.
 150
LA  Pam Rankin
 350
MA  Tony Camean
 350
MI  Eric Cadeau
 1000
MN  Jonathan Kovaciny
 290
NC  Sharon Ward
 261

NY

OH

 Bob Gawel

 Rob Bulas

542

1,400

VA  Donna Holt
 548
VT  Audrey Pietrucha
 63

And now, for the state that collected the most signatures as a percentage of population:

WASHINGTON STATE

Members gathered a whopping 7,180 unique signatures!

Congratulations to Washington State who wins a $1,500 gift certificate to the Campaign for Liberty store!

Here's how the winner was calculated:  Unique signatures gathered divided by total 2008 est. population.  The winner is based on percent of total population, which is why Washington State edged out Florida for first place. (Although in some cases, twice as many petitions were actually delivered, unique signatures were used in the actual calculation.)

The state of Minnesota came in second with 3,000 unique signatures!

The state of Michigan came in third with 5,622 signatures!

A special shout out to Florida who gathered the most unique signatures with 10,160!

All of these states deserve a big round of applause for getting over 250 unique signatures on Mass Action Day:

STATE # SIGNATURES
AL 602
AR 650
AZ 1,274
CA 6,600
FL 10,160
IL 3,900
IN 1,000
KY 1,777
LA 1,475
MA 750
MI 5,622
MN 3,000

NC

NY

600

3,856

OH 3,600
VA 2,520
VT 263
WA 7,180

THANKS TO ALL OF YOU FOR MAKING S.604 MASS ACTION DAY A BIG SUCCESS!!


Keep up the great work!  Let's get a majority in the Senate to co-sponsor!





Categories: Ron Paul, Campaign For Liberty, Finance, Grassroots News, Federal Legislation, Current Events, Revolution, Economy, Monetary Policy, Congress
Tags: audit the fed, End the Fed, Federal Reserve, Mass Action, s604

Comments (13)




Posted by Debi Longarello
Posted 10/06/09
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 During these economic and historically challenging times, personal outlooks may wane from time to time.

It is especially during times as these that being more observant of family, friends and neighbors is essential.

Some folks may need to express their feelings.  Some may need encouragement.  Some may need a little diversion.  Some may need a comforting word.  And some may need to simply laugh.

Just a little reminder that a little something can mean a lot to someone.

 



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This animated short is what our kids should be watching on Sat. mornings - I may want to quibble with a minor point or two, but it's amazing that its message was mainstream thinking just 50-60 years ago. 

~Peter Gemma

Sarasota

 'Make Mine Freedom ~ 1948'





Categories: Campaign For Liberty, Grassroots News, History, Just For Fun, Philosophy, Revolution, Miscellany
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Posted by ChristinaGomez
Posted 09/21/09
Last updated 09/19/09
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Hey Liberty Guys and Liberty Gals,

 

The Mass Acction Audit the Fed day was a great success. Orange County offices for Senator Nelson, and Senator Lemieux heard from at least 15 CFL members in our group that were there. When we got to Senator Lemieux's office, we ran into a couple of CFL'ers from St. Cloud/Osceola CFL. (Shout out to David Shamblin!)

Both offices were impressed, (you could tell) with our turnout, and I feel heard us. We had a group enter all saying the same thing, and pushing our point politely, yet firmly.

Scott Explaining things to Celeste at Sen. Nelson's office. Look at that stack of petitions!!!

(Check out that stack of petitions! Over 2,200 total. Great Job CFL!)

I want to thank everyone who made it out. It was fun. It's also kind of the job of us, to turn this tide so that Senators think first, "What do my constituents want" vs. what kind of deals they can cut to get legislation passed. If they hear from us enough, on enough issues, guess what? They're going to have to listen.  WE HAVE A VOICE.

Cheers to all.

Christina Gomez

Orange County

District 24





Categories: Campaign For Liberty, Finance, Action Item, Federal Legislation, Current Events, Revolution, Economy, Monetary Policy
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Posted by Tom Leser
Posted 09/21/09
Last updated 09/27/09
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I had just finished reading this book and decided I would write my review on it.

This book is nearly 100 years in the making as the Federal Reserve was unfortunately created in 1913. That's been 96 years too long and this is perfect timing for the release of this book as we're on the brink of the next Great Depression. As Dr. Paul illustrates in this book, this next coming Depression will really make the 30's seem "Great" but there is a way out, and we can avoid the collapse. The answer lies in the free market.

I had read Ron Paul's The Revolution: A Manifesto when it was first released in 2008 and while I would ultimately recommend that book first to a newcomer to the Revolution (meaning someone who still thinks our system may be flawed, but still "good" overall), this book greatly expands upon the Money Chapter from the Revolution: A Manifesto.

The structure of the book is essentially laid out in 3 parts comprising a total of 15 chapters.

The first part of the book is introductory in nature. Dr. Paul is presenting the topic at hand, and defining the problem clearly as it exists, by answer the questions of "WHY?" (you should care) and "WHAT?" (is the Fed).

The next section of the book, as I categorize them, gives us more of an insight into the experiences of Ron Paul and his discovery of the issue of money and the Federal Reserve. Ron Paul has never been the type of person to ever place any emphasis on himself, so rarely ever talks about himself as most politicians do (self-promoting), and it was interesting to hear tidbits of his history as a child. With most of us it's the small things we've questioned as a child, that has had a lasting effect on who we became.

It was also interesting to hear about his experiences with Reagan, who supported sound money but faltered by the simple fact of him surrounding himself with the wrong people. The Gold Commission also played a small part, for the good, in leading us to where we are at now in the battle for sound money. Also some very interesting tidbits on his history with Paul Volcker that I'd rather not spoil.

I thought that the chapters on Ron Paul's interactions with Greenspan and Bernake would not be further insightful for me being that I have seen just about all of his interrogations with Bernake from CSPAN, and also some of the previous ones from Greenspan as well. However there was more insight into the minds of these men from Ron, especially with Greenspan whom he knows a little better than Bernake.

The last of the 3 sections of this book, as I categorize them, is the greater portion of the book and this is where Dr. Paul really makes the "Case Against the Fed" (to borrow a book title from the late great Murray Rothbard). All the cases FOR a fiat currency, and FOR a central bank, and blown to shreds by the good doctor in the final 7 chapters.

Now what? Well he answers that too. There really is only one answer for a Fed replacement, and it extremely simple and laden in common sense. The answer is not the gold standard, however, gold (and silver) are a big part of the answer. The books he suggests in the reading list, some of which I've already read, further expands on the solution. The main purpose of this book was to bring to light the most corrupt and fraudulent institution the American people have seen since we were under the Royal Crown. Ron succeeds in bringing this matter to light, and clearly we should End The Fed.


Review posted on Amazon.com by Tom Leser

 





Categories: Ron Paul, Education, Monetary Policy
Tags: End the Fed, Brevard

Comments (8)




Posted by PeterGemma
Posted 08/27/09
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FLORIDA LAWMAKERS INTRODUCE LIBERTY LEGISLATION

Since the introduction of House Memorial 19 (HM19), which “Urges Congress to honor provisions of U. S. Constitution & U. S. Supreme Court case law which limit scope & exercise of federal power”, this piece of legislation now has 47 co-sponsors plus its prime sponsor, Representative Ritch of Brevard County.

Unfortunately, this doesn’t mean that the Federal government staff and various minions now occupying Florida are packing up. No, they have not started to request moving vans destined for Washington, D.C.

This is a ‘Memorial’ as opposed to a ‘resolution’. Resolutions are for things like ‘key lime pie is the state pie of Florida.’ Resolutions also stay within the state level of documents. Memorials on the other hand are passed on to the national level. For instance this one (if passed) will be handed over to all of the United States Congressmen and Senators from Florida, who will in turn request that the Executive branch start obeying the 10th Amendment and stop overreaching into state affairs. It also means that we have an official filing in the Florida State House Legislature docket.

Activists should start calling all of their State House Representatives and ask them to sign on as co-sponsors of House Memorial 19 (HM19) if they have not already done so. If there are enough co-sponsors this timely and important piece of legislation will most likely win passage on the first day of the Legislature meets in March 2010.

Why did Representative Workman and main co-sponsor Representative Scott Plakon of Seminole County got this resolution together so early? It has to do with the way the legislature does its work. Documents with lower numbers like HM 19 are not as likely to get lost in the shuffle, as would HM 7019, for example (the numbers of items do actually get this high as the session nears). This early start allows citizens time to start the lobbying effort required to pass it. Additionally, the representatives created this ‘memorial’ early to coincide with the national 4th of July (Independence Day) holiday. No better present could be given to Florida citizens! However, the work has just begun.

Opposition to this bill will most likely come from both Democrats and Republicans alike that are misinformed about the nature of HM19. These educationally-challenged legislators should know that the Federal government is in breach of their constitutionally mandated limits. This is the first step that will remind the D.C. bureaucrats that we the people are watching them. We want to put a stop to this infringement of our rights.

The Florida House has also proposed two additional pieces of legislation to further strengthen the sovereignty of our State and the independence of her citizens.

These are House HB 21, The Firearms Freedom Act, which seeks to provide “that specified firearms, firearm accessories, and ammunition for personal use manufactured in state are not subject to federal law or regulation” in the State of Florida and House HJR 37, The Health Care Freedom Act. This act is a proposed state constitutional amendment that would prevent Florida citizens from being affected by federal health "reform." It provides that any "law or rule shall not compel, directly or indirectly, any person, employer, or health care provider to participate in any health care system," and specifies people and employers can’t be fined for not buying insurance. The bill does not ban federal programs such as Medicare and Medicaid in our state; it simply focuses on restricting the federal government from forcing Floridians to participate in an insurance policy, whether public or private. If approved by the state legislature, Florida residents may vote on the amendment in 2010.

Our Legislature is planning ahead to restore our liberty and they need our help. Citizens are urged to find out whom their Florida State House Representative and Florida State Senator is. This is easy to do by visiting myfloridahouse.gov and http://www.flsenate.gov on the Internet. Contact them and make sure to get a firm commitment to support HM19, HB21 and HJR37.

You can make a difference for the liberty and freedom of the citizens of Florida.

~Peter Gemma, Sarasota

 





Categories: Campaign For Liberty, Law, Grassroots News, Action Item, US Constitution, Executive Power, Current Events, Revolution, State Legislation
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Posted by MarkCrossEA
Posted 08/19/09
Last updated 08/19/09
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Greetings to Florida's defenders of liberty!

The drive to audit the Federal Reserve continues to gain momentum thanks to hundreds of thousands of patriots like you that have made their voices heard on this issue.  Now we need your help again to make sure that our efforts end in victory.  We will get an audit bill passed if we get your support!

Here's the situation:

Right now there are 282 co-sponsors to H.R.1207 in the House of Representatives.  That's just under 2/3rds of the House, a truly remarkable accomplishment.  How did we get there?  By calling our congressmen, signing petitions, sending letters, and by letting our representatives know in every possible way that this issue is important to us and important to America. 

But there is still work to be done in the Senate.  The Audit the Fed companion bill, S.604 has 23 co-sponsors.  That's a great start and the bill is certainly gaining momentum, with 20 co-sponsors since the 4th of July.  But to overcome resistance from the Senate leadership, we're going to need even greater support. 

We didn't come this far to watch an audit bill stall out in the Senate!

That's why the Campaign for Liberty is organizing a nationwide effort, "30 Days of Action," to bring as many senators as possible on board with S.604.  Last spring a similar effort for H.R.1207 resulted in over 50 new co-sponsors as the support in the House doubled in just a few weeks. 

Since that time our organization has grown and the American people have become increasingly aware of the damage being done to our country by the Federal Reserve.  Over 75% of Americans want to see an audit of the Fed, and Americans actually think less of the Federal Reserve than the hated IRS.  We've made monetary policy a key issue in the public conscience.  Our efforts can and will be more successful during these coming 30 Days of Action.

Here is what we need from every lover of liberty in the state of Florida:

1. We need you to sign and collect petitions for S.604.
  Your local coordinators will be contacting you on where you can sign or help to collect petitions.  But you don't have to wait for instructions!  Visit the Campaign for Liberty website or the brand new AuditTheFed.com to download and print petitions and get any signatures you can.  This is the perfect time to get out and meet your neighbors and spread the message of liberty.

2. We need you to talk to your Senators at public appearances.  Politicians are hiding from protesters unhappy with big government, which means we don't know where or when Senators Nelson will make an appearance.  Who knows who & when Governor Crist will appoint?  Keep your eyes open, and if there is going to be an event make sure that you talk to your Senators about S.604. 


3. We need you to sign-up to call your Senator's office.  The last week of the 30 Days of Action will include a nationwide phone campaign to keep our senator's phones ringing off the hook.  Go to the AuditTheFed.com website and sign up for a time to call.  Then remember to call both Senators.  Our goal is to have someone call every 5 minutes.  That's just 500 callers for the entire week, a goal we should accomplish easily.  If you forget to sign-up or you can't find a convenient time available, don't let that stop you.  Make the call!

4. We need everyone to show-up for the big petition drop-off event on September 15th at 4PM in Orlando & Tampa.  The Campaign for Liberty's 30 Days of Action will culminate with nationwide visits to local Senate offices.  Our goal is to have over 100 people show up for the Orlando & Tampa rallies at the Senators' offices to drop-off thousands of petitions. 

Make plans to be there!  If you can't make it to this location, contact your local coordinator with the Campaign for Liberty.  Smaller events will be planned at office locations across the state.


We know what we have to do to succeed.  We also know that victory could mean a revolution in the United States' monetary policy, once the workings of the Fed are finally revealed. 

To make things interesting, Campaign for Liberty is upping the stakes.  The person who gathers the most signatures in each state will win a pocket Constitution and a copy of Dr. Paul's new book End the Fed, both autographed by Dr. Paul himself.

And whichever state collects the most signatures (as a percentage of population) will win a $1,500 gift certificate to the Campaign for Liberty store.

If that's not enough motivation (really?), the Campaign for Liberty is offering prizes for truly outstanding efforts.  The person who collects the most signatures in the state (as certified by a State, Regional, or County Coordinator) will win a Campaign for Liberty silver coin and a pocket Constitution autographed by the great Ron Paul.  And if Florida collects the most signatures (as a percentage of the population), we'll win a $1,500 gift certificate to the Campaign for Liberty store.

But the only prize we really need is an audit of the Fed.  And it is going to happen, if we all act now!

Any Questions?  Contact our Florida Audit the Fed Coordinators, Christina Gomez and Chris Alterio or our State Coordinator, Mark Cross.

For Liberty,

Christina Gomez

Chris Alterio

FL Audit the Fed Coordinators

 

Mark Cross

Florida Campaign for Liberty

State Coordinator

Mark.Cross@CampaignForLiberty.com

 





Categories: Ron Paul, Campaign For Liberty, Civil Liberties, Action Item, US Constitution, Federal Legislation, Current Events, State Legislation, Economy, Monetary Policy, Congress
Tags: audit the fed

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JOIN DR. PAUL - FLORIDA LIBERTY SUMMIT - ORLANDO, FL - AUGUST 7-9

Please join Congressman Ron Paul at the Florida Liberty Summit on August 7-9.  Congressman Paul will be speaking Friday evening, August 7 at the Rosen Centre Hotel in Orlando, FL, next to the Orange County Convention Center.  This will be an evening you won't want to miss.

Now what can be better than a Friday night Liberty Celebration with Dr. Paul?  How about a Friday night Liberty Celebration that is free and open to the public?  Yes, that's right!  Friday evening will be free and open to the public.  Bring your family, friends, and fellow liberty-minded activists.  And maybe even a non-believer or two.  This will be a great fun-filled evening. 

Our Friday night speakers will include:

  • Congressman Ron Paul, Honorary Chairman of Campaign for Liberty.
  • Tom Woods, best-selling author, historian, and Senior Fellow at the Ludwig Von Mises Institute.
  • John Tate, President Campaign for Liberty.

On Saturday and Sunday Florida Campaign for Liberty members will gather at the Rosen Centre Hotel in Orlando, FL, to network, learn, and build their local organizations as our grassroots Revolution to reclaim our Republic and restore our Constitution continues. We will learn about history and current events from a freedom perspective you won't hear from the mainstream media, and prepare to take back our country with top-notch training from seasoned experts.

The Florida Liberty Summit Conference will:

  • Strengthen your understanding of history and foundational principles necessary to maintain liberty
  • Teach you how to persuasively communicate our movement's mission and message
  • Train you in how to recruit, equip, and mobilize an army of informed citizens and build the organizational structure necessary to win
  • Help you master the political process on the local, state, and national level

Go to Florida Liberty Summit for agenda, schedule, hotel, sponsorship, and registration information. 

Florida Campaign for Liberty will also host two optional special events.  Prior to the Liberty Celebration on Friday evening is a private sponsor's reception with Dr. Paul and Tom Woods.  Saturday night will bring a Liberty Banquet with Tom Woods as the keynote speaker. 

Remember the Friday night Liberty Celebration with Dr. Ron Paul is free and open to the public


Training and Special Event costs are as follows:

Non-Member Conference Rate $139
Dues-Paying Member Conference Rate $99
Student Conference Rate $59
Friday Night Private Sponsor Reception with Dr. Ron Paul & Tom Woods $175 (Min)
Saturday Night Liberty Banquet with Tom Woods $60

 

Register by August 1 and receive:

  • Entry into drawing - Four lucky people will win tickets to the Friday night Reception and get a photo opportunity with Ron Paul! 

Don't miss out on this training in political philosophy, campaign tactics, and strategies from some of the best veterans in the field. Purchase your tickets today for the Florida Liberty Summit on August 7-9 and get the tools you need to reclaim our Republic and restore our Constitution!

For Registration and Reservation information go to www.FloridaLibertySummit.com

I'll see you in Orlando!

 





Categories: Ron Paul, Campaign For Liberty, Foreign Policy, Education, Finance, Media, Globalism, Civil Liberties, Law, Domestic Policy, Presidential Race, 3rd Parties, Health Freedom, Election News, Republican Party, Democratic Party, Grassroots News, Action Item, Commodities, US Constitution, Ethics, Executive Power, Federal Legislation, History, Just For Fun, Current Events, Philosophy, Revolution, Miscellany, Social Issues, Socialism, State Legislation, Video, Voting, War/Military, World Affairs, Economy, Monetary Policy, Trade, Congress
Tags: Florida Liberty Summit, conference, ron paul

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All,

Don't wait.  Sign up now for this once in a lifetime experience.  Go to:  www.floridalibertysummit.comfor all the information you will need.  I'll be there along with many other Region 5 members.  Remember, there will be a chance for you to see Congressman Ron Paul and Mises  scholar Tom Woods speak (for free).  There is also a mixer with Dr. paul and Tom Woods which is ticketed.  I have ben to one of these mixers and it will be something you will never forget.  The banquet with Tom Woods will be another chance for you to speak with one of the highest regarded economists and historians you will ever meet (and he's a humble and kind gentleman). If, for some reason, you can't attend either the mixer or the banquet, please attend the training.  This part of the conference is so important to our future. The training is exceptional and will help us with our mission so please take advantage of it. 

Region 5 has been a proud leader in Florida's Campaign for Liberty movement.  We are currently holding the #2 spot as the Region with the most members and we are #1 with the highest percentage increase in members for the last thirty days.

I am fully expecting Region 5 to proudly show its colors at the Liberty Summit.

So don't wait, sign up now!  Remember, we are Region 5!!!

Sign up at:  www.floridalibertysummit.com

John J. Baeza, Region 5 Coordinator, Florida's Campaign for Liberty 352-247-6791





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Georgia was the first state with both Senators as co-sponsors on S.604 Federal Reserve Sunshine Act of 2009, and as of today, both of Oklahoma's Senators and Texas' Senators are now co-sponsors!  CONGRATULATIONS!

There are currently 17 co-sponsors on this important piece of legislation

There are 23 Senators on the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, where the bill has been referred.  Five committee members (22%) have co-sponsored this legislation:

Mike Crapo (ID), David Vitter (LA), Jim DeMint (SC), Robert F. Bennett (UT), and Kay Bailey Hutchison (TX), all Republicans.

There are 20 Senators on the Democratic Policy Committee.  Two have co-sponsored so far:

Blanche Lincoln (AR) and Russell Feingold (WI).

...AND THIS IS JUST THE BEGINNING!

In other Audit the Fed news...

HR1207 "100 Club"

There are currently 275 co-sponsors on HR1207 Federal Reserve Transparency Act of 2009, and sixteen states have gained 100% co-sponsorship of their Representatives:

Alaska, Arkansas, Arizona, Delaware, Hawaii, Idaho, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Dakota, Nebraska, Nevada, South Dakota, Vermont and Wyoming!  Congratulations!!

Fifty-four percent of the House Financial Services Committee members have co-sponsored the legislation.  All House Republicans and 38% of House Democrats have co-sponsored HR1207, representing a 63% overall House co-sponsorship.

YOUR HARD WORK IS PAYING OFF

These successes prove that taking back your own backyard is the way to win.  Get involved, become a Local Coordinator, take Boot Camp training, and WIN! 

A BIG SHOUT OUT TO THE STATE OF FLORIDA, who has officially pulled ahead in number of Local Coordinators!  Go Florida!!

Local Coordinator "100 Club"

FLORIDA 155
WASHINGTON 154
TEXAS 141
CALIFORNIA 140
NEW YORK 102
MICHIGAN 101

Thanks to Scott Olver for keeping us honest. :)





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Tony Holt writes in the Tampa Tribune Hernando Today section about the role Campaign For Liberty District 5 played in convincing US Representative Ginny Brown-Waite to co-sponsor HR 1207, the Federal Reserve Transparency Act of 2009.

Read Holt's article, Grassroots group wants the Fed to be Audited, to see quotes from C4L Florida dist. 5 coordinator, John Baeza, on the Fed. Watch the video recorded by C4L members on the mass-action day that Holt referenced in his article:





Categories: Campaign For Liberty, Grassroots News, Current Events
Tags: hr1207, Ginny Brown Waite, florida

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Posted by JamesMoore
Posted 07/11/09
Last updated 07/10/09
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Watch this video for instructions on how to invite your friends to join C4L:



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At the 2009 Independence Day Tea Party in Inverness, John Baeza delivered a speech on the steps of the Old Historical Courthouse.

As John spoke about the necessity to audit the Federal Reserve; extended a metaphorical olive branch to like minded organizations to form a common alliance; and passionately conveyed America will regain independence as our Founding Fathers declared - many hundreds of people cheered and applauded. 

The Campaign for Liberty team collected 901 Audit the Federal Reserve S.604 Petition signatures in less than four hours! 

A heartfelt thanks to Rick, Alita, Josephine, Mike, Robert, (Christine we missed you); our Terrific Trio: Barbara, Joann and Dottie and all the donated patriotic trinkets and American flags to share with fellow patriots!  Personal thanks to my husband Steve, son Joe and his fiancée Karina for your support and help. 

A VERY SPECIAL THANK YOU to our District 5 Regional Coordinator, John Baeza.  It is because of your sincere dedication and inspiration; our desire to stand up for our American liberties with a peaceful, collective and take-action voice is possible. 

God, Family, Country. 

Debi Longarello

Hernando County Coordinator

 





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Posted by bobbyw24
Posted 06/29/09
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Yesterday on Meet the Press they reviewed the declining prospects for the Republican Party. And the yawning conclusion was that no one can really challenge Barack Obama in 2012 and no one can revive the G.O.P. They assessed the prospects of all the possible candidates but there was one glaring omission. Guess who?

Mitt Romney and Lindsey Graham were the Republican guest commentators. Romney has already made it clear that only an Obama owned recession will allow him back in. And if Obama can't get a temporary bump in the stock market, after trebling the money supply, well, we might as all start selling apples right now. And one by one, on the Russertless Meet the Press, they ticked off all of the reasons why Sarah Palin and Mike Huckabee won't be returning after all.

Of course, the weekly news dominated and they bemoaned the loss of yet another possible G.O.P. standard bearer for 2012. Mark Sanford, the governor of South Carolina, is now out. His dalliance in Argentina means he is damaged goods. Can't you just see the governor sitting at a side walk café in Buenos Aires, with this nagging worry in the back of his head, "What if they are looking for me right now? What if I am on CNN? Naaa." Indeed, the Sanford episode brings back all the painful narrative surrounding the infidelities of Newt Gingrich and Rudolph Giuliani. Is there no one left to lead the G.O.P.?

Meet the Press cannot be blamed for omitting the one man who is still on everyone's lips, as in "you know, I think he may have been right, after all." The one man who predicted the economic collapse, who suggested that the Federal Reserve needed an audit itself, who warned that electing a Democrat or Republican was pretty much the same thing; there would still be a war where we don't need one. The lobbyists would still rule. The government would still intrude.

On May 18, 2009 Time magazine ran a cover story on the Republican Party, entitled "Endangered Species." They had a Michael Grunwald article on "How the Republicans Lost Their Way." And an article by Joe Scarborough on "How They Can Come Back." Not once did the magazine even mention the name of the man who raised $32 million with a single call. The man who was first to recognize and announce that Republicans had lost their way, their heart, their soul.

What made the Mark Sanford loss so regrettable to many in the press was the fact that he was emerging as a bit of a populist figure. He had been able to articulate some of the views and the ideas of the one man whom Meet the Press and Time Magazine and the rest of the establishment so studiously ignore. And Sanford had been able to pick up the mantle without all the odious, dangerous extra baggage that makes the people at the television networks recoil in horror. Like actually auditing the Federal Reserve.

The fact is that Mark Sanford was never really a true clone to that man, who like Lord Voldemort, cannot be named. The man who would shake Wall Street and Capitol Hill to their foundations. I am speaking, of course, of Congressman Ron Paul of Texas

No, he is not dead, much as Meet the Press and Time would have you believe. Tim Russert is dead. Michael Jackson is dead. Farrah Fawcett is dead. And now even, Billy May is dead.

Ron Paul lives.

And as long as Ron Paul lives, the heart of the Republican Party beats strong and an alternative to the new Socialist Republic of America still exists.

http://dougwead.wordpress.com/2009/06/29/ron-paul-shall-rise-again/





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ROSEN CENTRE HOTEL
ROSEN CENTRE HOTEL

Florida Campaign for Liberty members will gather at the Rosen Centre Hotel in Orlando, FL, next to the Orange County Convention Center to network, learn, and build their local organizations as our grassroots Revolution to reclaim our Republic and restore our Constitution continues. Spend time with fellow liberty-minded activists, learn about history and current events from a freedom perspective you won't hear from the mainstream media, and prepare to take back our country with top-notch training from seasoned experts.

The Florida Liberty Summit Conference will:

  • Strengthen your understanding of history and foundational principles necessary to maintain liberty
  • Teach you how to persuasively communicate our movement's mission and message
  • Train you in how to recruit, equip, and mobilize an army of informed citizens and build the organizational structure necessary to win
  • Help you master the political process on the local, state, and national level

Our speakers will include:

  • John Tate, President Campaign for Liberty.
  • Tom Woods, best-selling author, historian, and Senior Fellow at the Ludwig Von Mises Institute.
  • Congressman Ron Paul, Honorary Chairman of Campaign for Liberty.

First 25 registrations receive:

  • Pocket Constitution autographed by the Champion of the Constitution, Congressman Ron Paul.

Sign up by July 31 and receive:

  • Entry into drawing - Four lucky people will win tickets to the Friday night Reception and get a photo opportunity with Ron Paul!

3-day pass to conference $139
Dues-Paying Member Conference Rate $99
Student Conference Rate $59
Friday Night Sponsor Reception with Ron Paul & Tom Woods $175 min. (info)
Saturday Night Banquet with Tom Woods $60

Don't miss out on this training in political philosophy, campaign tactics, and strategies from some of the best veterans in the field. Purchase your tickets today for the Florida Liberty Summit on August 7-9 and get the tools you need to reclaim our Republic and restore our Constitution!

For Registration and Reservation information go to www.FloridaLibertySummit.com





Categories: Ron Paul, Campaign For Liberty, Foreign Policy, Education, Finance, Media, Globalism, Civil Liberties, Law, Domestic Policy, Presidential Race, 3rd Parties, Election News, Republican Party, Democratic Party, Grassroots News, Action Item, Commodities, US Constitution, Ethics, Executive Power, Federal Legislation, History, Just For Fun, Current Events, Philosophy, Revolution, Miscellany, Social Issues, Socialism, State Legislation, Video, Voting, War/Military, World Affairs, Economy, Monetary Policy, Trade, Congress
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Posted by RyanAdams
Posted 06/07/09
Last updated 06/08/09
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Well, what can I say? When we ran out of Campaign for Liberty brochures by 4:00 pm on Saturday we knew our mission was accomplished. We passed out around 150 C4L glossy brochures to freedom loving, gun toting Americans.

The crowd was very, very responsive to our message of individual liberty and Constitutional government. We also unloaded 75 Gunowners of America brochures, which is the no compromise gun lobby in Washington.

Since we ran out of C4L brochures, we won't be going to the event on Sunday. Special thanks to Ernest for paying for and helping to man the table. We look forward to the next gunshow, August 15th & 16th.

If anyone can step up and help out with the next gun show, even for a few hours, this would be greatly appreciated. See pictures from the event below.

Long Live Liberty,

Ryan Adams

Jax Gun Show 6/6/09

 

Jax Gun Show 6/6/09 2

Jax Gun Show 6/6/09 3

Jax Gun Show 6/6/09 4

Jax Gun Show 6/6/09 4

Jax Gun Show 6/6/09 5





Categories: Campaign For Liberty, Grassroots News, Action Item
Tags: Campaign for liberty, 2nd Amendment, Gun show, florida, Jacksonville

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Posted by Deb Wells
Posted 06/02/09
Last updated 06/03/09
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Our last report a couple of months ago titled IOWA in FIRST PLACE - Montana, Vermont, Idaho Jockey for Second told the story of who to watch as teams organize to take back their states.

The goal is 10,000 Local Coordinators nationwide, with each state having set their goals based on total population.  Local Coordinators are the key to winning back our beloved Country, one neighborhood at a time.

Recent stats show a surprising turn of events!

IDAHO shot out in front from fourth place just a couple short months ago into the number one spot with 72.55% of goal.

IOWA (who has been in front throughout) remains neck and neck, holding its own at second place with 72% and 72 Local Coordinators.

WASHINGTON STATE moved up on the inside from fifth place into a coveted third place with 69.16% of goal and a whopping 148 Local Coordinators (more than any other state).

MONTANA and VERMONT continue to run like the wind, holding fourth and fifth place respectively, with 60.87% and 58.82%.

MINNESOTA and NORTH DAKOTA, ever-vigilant, jockey for sixth place with over 40% of goal, and UTAH is not far behind with over 38% of goal.

In addition to Washington, three additional states now have over 100 Local Coordinators each:  Texas (135), Florida (126), and California (119).

New York, Pennsylvania and Michigan each have over 90 Local Coordinators and are headed toward the "100 mark".

Congratulations to all.

Who will win the race?  It's anyone's guess!

Stay tuned...





Categories: Campaign For Liberty, Grassroots News, Action Item, Current Events, Revolution
Tags: coordinator, local, neighborhood, Organize, local coordinator

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This is a great article I found in today's Lew Rockwell email, it is a little long but is worth reading.

 

The Socialist Bailout of Wall Street

by Jacob G. Hornberger

 

The massive federal bailout of U.S. financial firms reflects everything that's wrong with the economic system of welfare and interventionism under which the United States has operated since at least the 1930s. There are critically important lessons in the bailout that the American people ignore at their peril. While most politicians and mainstream pundits are viewing the bailout as a necessary "reform," it is imperative that we place this "reform" in a much wider and deeper context. In doing so, we need to return to first principles.

Our nation was founded on the most unusual set of economic principles in history. It is impossible to overstate the radical, even extreme, nature of America's economic system from the founding of the republic to the early 20th century.

Imagine: No income tax, no capital-gains tax, and no estate tax. For the first time in history, people were free to accumulate unlimited amounts of wealth, and there was nothing the federal government could do to prevent it. People were going from rags to riches in one or two generations.

Imagine: No economic regulations. People were free to pursue occupations and trades and enter into mutually beneficial economic transactions without any government supervision, control, or regulation. What was meant by the terms "free enterprise" and "free market" was that economic activity - enterprise and markets - was free of government supervision, control, or regulation.

Imagine: No welfare. No Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, or education grants. Charity was voluntary. If people wanted to help others, they were free to do so. But people also understood that freedom entailed the right to say, "No." Thus, government did not wield the power to take money from people in order to give it to other people.

Imagine: No immigration controls. People from all over the world were free to come to the United States. With the exception of a cursory health inspection for such things as tuberculosis, no one was denied admission, no matter how poor, illiterate, or uneducated.

Imagine: No systems of public (i.e., government) schooling. No compulsory-attendance laws and no school taxes. Education was left to the free choices of families and individuals.

Imagine: No Federal Reserve System. Banks were privately owned and there was no government central monitoring authority.

Imagine: No paper money. People believed in sound money, which is why they used the Constitution to establish a gold standard. People transacted their business with gold and silver coins.

I'm not suggesting that there weren't exceptions to these principles from time to time in the 1800s and early 1900s. Perfection is impossible to attain, but, by and large, these were the overall principles of the paradigm known as "economic liberty" to which our American ancestors subscribed and under which they lived.

Let's examine the economic system under which Americans live today.

First, extremely burdensome progressive income taxes, capital-gains taxes, and estate taxes.

Second, an enormous regulatory scheme in which government bureaucrats have the power to supervise, monitor, and control people's financial and economic activities.

Third, a massive welfare system, including Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, farm subsidies, education grants, federal deposit insurance, and much, much more.

Fourth, an enormous and complex plan for immigration. The plan entails restrictions on the ability of people to freely enter the United States, with an enforcement mechanism that grows ever more severe.

Fifth, a nationwide system of government education systems, which involve government planning, direction, and control of what is taught to the children of America. While the public-school systems are run by state and local governments, what is taught is strongly influenced by federal officials as a result of federal aid to education.

Sixth, a monetary system in which the federal government has the authority to print unlimited amounts of paper money. The government also closely regulates, supervises, and monitors banks across the United States.

Seventh, paper money. The gold standard is nonexistent and people now transact their business with nonredeemable paper money, whose value has steadily diminished over the decades.

The life of the lie and unreality

Do you notice any differences between the economic system under which our American ancestors lived and the economic system under which today's Americans live?

Why is that important? Two reasons.

First, throughout the financial crisis mainstream commentators, both liberal and conservative, have been claiming that the crisis reflects a failure of "free enterprise" and, therefore, that government intervention is needed to fix the crisis.

Second, this crisis provides the opportunity for libertarians to raise people's vision to a much higher level than some "reform" plan, a level that brings to an end the economic system under which we've all been born and raised and that restores and builds upon the economic system to which our American ancestors subscribed.

Throughout the bailout controversy, there have been those who have railed against unfettered capitalism, free markets, deregulation, free enterprise, self-interest, and greed. The crisis, they argue, is proof positive that America's much-vaunted free-enterprise system has failed and, therefore, that it's necessary for government to step in and save the system.

This mindset is what might be called the "life of the lie" or the "life of unreality." After all, when we compare the principles that guided the paradigm of economic liberty on which our nation was founded with the principles of today, we find completely opposite principles. If the economic paradigm under which we are living is capitalism and free enterprise, then what was the economic paradigm under which our American ancestors lived?

The key to this life of the lie and life of unreality lies with a monumental event in the life of the republic - the Great Depression, which began with an enormous stock-market crash in 1929 and lasted for more than 10 years. Although the event took place long before most of us were born, it is impossible to overstate the impact that it continues to have on most Americans.

The role of government schools

An important digression is in order at this point. There is a reason that so many mainstream pundits believe (perhaps honestly) that the current financial crisis reflects a failure of free enterprise. The reason is rooted in the Great Depression or, to be more precise, what these pundits have learned about the Great Depression. Here is where the government program known as public schooling plays a critically important role in people's understanding of what is happening today.

While most people believe that the primary purpose of public schooling is to ensure that everyone receives an education, nothing could be further from the truth. The reason that governments everywhere force the children of the nation into these government facilities is to mold their minds. Long ago, government officials learned that if they could control what children learn every day from the age of 6 through 18, over a course of 12 years they could indoctrinate them into accepting officially approved interpretations of historical events.

No better example of this phenomenon could be found than that relating to the Great Depression. If one conducted a poll of Americans asking whether the Great Depression reflected a failure of America's free-enterprise system, my hunch is that the overwhelming majority of them would answer, "Yes." They would also respond that President Roosevelt's response to the crisis - the New Deal - saved America's free-enterprise system.

Now, ask yourself: How is it that so many Americans have arrived at the same conclusion about the Great Depression? It's not a coincidence. It is what American students are taught in public schools and, for that matter, in government-approved private schools. In fact, it is also what most American college and university students are taught in state-supported universities and colleges.

There is just one big problem with what Americans have been taught about the Great Depression and the New Deal. It's all a lie. It's that simple. All those years of state indoctrination produced mindsets that are filled with lies and deceptions.

The truth is that the Great Depression reflected not the failure of America's free-enterprise system but rather the failure of the system that replaced America's free-enterprise system. And contrary to popular belief, Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal programs didn't save free enterprise; they instead fully and completely rejected and abandoned the free-enterprise system that America had embraced since our nation's founding and replaced it with a system in which the federal government's primary purpose became to confiscate and redistribute wealth and control and regulate economic activity.

Economic liberty versus socialism

There have been economists who have pointed out this uncomfortable truth. They include Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, and Milton Friedman. Mises and Hayek were members of the so-called Austrian school of economics, a school of economic thought that advances free-market principles. Friedman was an economist in what became known as the Chicago School. Hayek and Friedman were winners of the Nobel Prize.

All three of these economists, along with countless of their students and successors, have long maintained that what failed in the Great Depression was not free enterprise but rather government intervention. They have also long pointed out that Roosevelt's New Deal programs, based on socialist and fascist principles, actually prolonged the Great Depression. Finally, they have long pointed out that the economic system under which Americans of today were born and raised isn't free enterprise but rather welfare-state socialism and regulatory interventionism.

Obviously, what Mises, Hayek, and the Austrians, as well as Friedman and the Chicago School, were saying for decades hasn't sat well with liberals, conservatives, or mainstream pundits. Thus, it shouldn't surprise anyone that their ideas, philosophy, and policy prescriptions were not likely to be discussed in any history or economics textbook or lectures in government schools or even government-approved private schools.

What is of paramount importance, from the standpoint of those who subscribe to the status quo, is that the indoctrination of America's young people continue as usual, no matter how false or fallacious. The last thing that federal officials wanted in the 1930s was for people to figure out that the federal government was responsible for the Great Depression. It's also the last thing they want people to discover today.

While Roosevelt's New Deal constituted a wholesale rejection of free-enterprise principles, the rejection of economic liberty had actually begun years before. The intellectual battle began in the late 1800s, with economic libertarians on the one side and advocates of government control over enterprise on the other. Slowly but surely, the supporters of socialism and interventionism began making headway with their ideas.

For example, there was the Sherman Antitrust Act in 1890, a federal law that criminalized voluntary mergers or combinations between businesses. It was the first of many economic crimes that would later be enacted by federal officials. There was also a growing push at the state level for economic regulation, for example, occupational licensure, minimum-wage laws, and inspections of businesses. The movement toward increased government involvement in American economic life was manifested by the Progressive movement, the socialist and interventionist philosophy and ideas of which would later be embraced by both Republicans and Democrats.

Two of the most significant changes in American life took place in 1913. In that year, the Sixteenth Amendment was adopted, which reflected the national urge to permit the federal government to impose taxes on income, something that earlier Americans had abhorred. The Congress also established the Federal Reserve System, a central bank that had the monopoly power to expand and contract money and credit, another program that early Americans had rejected.

As Mises, Hayek, and Friedman pointed out, throughout the 1920s the Federal Reserve was artificially expanding credit. Have you heard the phrase "the Roaring Twenties"? One of the reasons the decade was roaring was that the Fed, through the expansion of credit, was making the economy "roar."

As prices started to rise, however, in response to the Fed's inflationary policy, the Fed moved in the opposite direction - contraction of the money supply. The Fed over-contracted, however, sucking massive amounts of money out of the system, which produced a massive recession.

Rather than simply letting things sort themselves out, Roosevelt convinced people that what was actually needed was a major transformation of America's economic system - a "new deal" in which the primary mission of the federal government would be to tax and redistribute wealth and regulate economic activity.

Here are the roots of Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, FDIC, and the rest of the welfare state. Here are the roots of the SEC, the departments of Labor, Agriculture, and Commerce, a multitude of regulatory agencies, and a never-ending stream of tax, banking, labor, economic, and commercial regulations. Here are the roots of America's 20th-century and 21st-century experiment with socialism and interventionism.

Roosevelt's political brilliance was not just in bringing about a revolutionary change in America's economic system. His political acumen was also reflected in how he sold his revolution - as a free-enterprise reform designed to save America's free-enterprise system.

What could be more brilliant than that? After all, the last thing most Americans wanted was to be called socialists or interventionists. They wanted to be considered as pro-free enterprise as their predecessors. So Roosevelt made them feel good about what he was doing - adopting a paternalistic welfare, regulatory state, but continuing to call it "free enterprise."

It was important, for both Roosevelt and the American people, that the lie be maintained. It was important that people continued believing that everything was the same as before. So what if early Americans rejected income taxes, welfare, economic regulations, a central bank, drug laws, paper money, and public schooling? So what if their successors embraced all those things? What mattered was that the lie and the myth be maintained, at all costs.

Now do you see why so many modern-day commentators, both liberal and conservative, are maintaining that the current financial crisis constitutes a failure of America's free-enterprise system? Ever since they were children, they have lived in a system whose economic principles are totally contrary to those of our ancestors, but their minds have been molded into believing that opposites are the same.

Where do libertarians fit in all this? We are the advocates of the principles of economic liberty to which our ancestors subscribed. Is it any surprise that we make government officials and mainstream pundits so uncomfortable? Is it any surprise that they do everything they can to ignore or shun what libertarians are saying? Is it any surprise that they erect mountains of electoral barriers to candidates with libertarian perspectives?

We expose their life of the lie. We cause them to confront reality. We remind them of what they have done. We put their abandonment of principle on display. We show them how they've been indoctrinated. That's not a pleasant experience for someone whose life is dedicated to socialism and interventionism but whose mind has been molded into thinking that he's an advocate of the free market.

During the recent presidential race, Republican John McCain accused Democrat Barack Obama of being a socialist, owing to Obama's belief in using the federal government to "spread the wealth." Obama, for his part, expressed surprise at being accused of being a socialist. Apparently, he's always believed that he's a strong supporter of America's "free-enterprise" system.

The irony is that McCain called Obama a socialist during the very time that McCain was supporting the federal bailout of U.S. financial firms, banks, and insurance companies. What better example of socialistic redistribution of wealth than that? Equally ironic was the fact that the bailout plan entailed the federal government's taking partial ownership of banks and insurance companies.

While pure socialism entails complete government ownership of the means of production, there are important markers of socialist activity. They include: (1) the government takes money from one group of people and gives it to another group; (2) the government centrally plans economic activity; and (3) the government owns and operates business enterprises.

Don't those three tenets describe perfectly some of the primary functions of the U.S. government ever since the New Deal in the 1930s? Isn't the welfare state a good example of government's taking money from some in order to give it to others?

An example of central planning is the Federal Reserve System, which plans the monetary affairs of the United States.

Examples of public ownership of business enterprises include Amtrak and the Tennessee Valley Authority.

Socialism is not the only economic philosophy that has guided the United States for the last 80 years. There is also an economic philosophy known as interventionism. Under interventionism the government intervenes in private economic activity with rules, regulations, subsidies, or tax benefits. That's what the SEC is all about, along with the Federal Reserve, the departments of Agriculture, Labor, and Commerce, and multitudes of regulatory agencies. Interventionism leaves the means of production in private hands but controls, manipulates, and regulates economic activity.

It would be difficult to find a better example of both socialist central planning and interventionism than the U.S. housing market, that sector of the economy that ignited the financial firestorm that has engulfed the world.

Here is what federal central planners and interventionists did. Primarily through the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), they came up with a plan that would ensure home ownership for almost every American. Home ownership is the American dream, or so they said. The problem with a free market, the planners thought, is that banks and financial institutions are ordinarily resistant to lending money to high-risk customers. The inability of many poor and middle-class people to borrow money to purchase a home is a flaw in the free market, the planners felt, so they came up with a plan that would solve the problem.

In 1977, Congress enacted the Community Reinvestment Act, which prohibited banks from discriminating against poorer-risk customers, including those who lived in poorer parts of town. However, the banks didn't actually have to assume the risk of the loans. That's where Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac came into the picture. They are quasi-government agencies that would purchase the mortgage loans from the banks, thereby relieving the banks of the risk of default.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac would then package the mortgages into collateral for debt instruments issued by them. The reason that investors all over the world purchased those debt instruments as investments is that the U.S. government was serving as an implicit guarantor of mortgage-backed securities. The idea was that if borrowers defaulted in payments on their loans, investors wouldn't lose their money because the federal government would cover the losses.

Ultimately, the entire house of cards came crashing down, as socialist central plans are apt to do. Large numbers of people began defaulting on their home-mortgage payments and investors were facing massive losses on their investments. As expected, the federal government entered the picture and began covering the enormous losses that institutions were suffering as a result of the home-loan scheme.

Free enterprise or interventionism?

Does any of that sound like "free enterprise"? Free enterprise means enterprise that is free of government intervention and manipulation. Here you have massive government intervention in the form of mandatory rules requiring the funding of high-risk loans, government purchase of those loans, government selling of those loans, and government guarantee of those loans, all pursuant to a socialist central plan to help people buy homes.

Yet throughout the crisis there have been those, including McCain and Obama, who have steadfastly maintained that the problem was "free enterprise" itself and, therefore, that the only solution was the heavy hand of government to "save free enterprise."

Obviously, history was repeating itself. Isn't that exactly what Franklin Roosevelt and the New Dealers said? Didn't they claim that the Great Depression reflected the failure of free enterprise when in fact it reflected the failure of monetary central planning and interventionism, as Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, Milton Friedman, and other economists have shown?

Why were both McCain and Obama and so many others claiming that "free enterprise" was the culprit in the current economic crisis?

One possibility is that they truly believe that the United States has a free-enterprise system. If a person honestly believes that, then it's entirely logical for him to conclude that "free enterprise" has produced the current financial crisis.

And why would anyone honestly believe that America is a "free-enterprise" country, when it's obvious that Americans rejected and abandoned the principles of economic liberty during the 1930s in favor of socialism and interventionism? Because many of these people have absolutely no idea that that is what happened. From the first grade on up, government-approved schoolteachers have ingrained into students' minds that America has always had the same type of economic system - a "free-enterprise system," which failed and produced the Great Depression, and which was saved by the New Deal's welfare state and centrally planned and regulated economy.

But there's another possible explanation for why some people - extremely intelligent people who should know better - are blaming the financial crisis on "free enterprise." They know that the crisis goes to the very heart of the socialist-interventionist paradigm under which America has operated since the 1930s. Equally important, they know that libertarians know the truth and are speaking the truth about this entire charade. The last thing they want is for ordinary Americans to begin questioning the myths and lies with which America has been living for almost a century. That could bring down the entire socialist and interventionist paradigm under which America has been operating and bring about the restoration of economic liberty to our land.

Conservatives and libertarians

In blaming the financial crisis on "free enterprise," socialists and interventionists often level their criticisms at both conservatives and libertarians. In doing so, they oftentimes pretend that libertarianism is nothing more than a subset of conservatism. Since conservatives and libertarians both favor free markets and detest socialism and regulation, the argument goes, what has failed is the free-market policies of conservatives and libertarians.

The criticism is valid insofar as conservatives are concerned but not libertarians. Long ago, most conservatives abandoned opposition to the welfare state and the regulated economy and have devoted their efforts to gaining control over it and running it. Most libertarians, on the other hand, have maintained a steadfast opposition to all socialist and interventionist programs and continue to call for their repeal.

For example, do conservatives call for the eradication, rather than the reform, of such things as the income tax; the Federal Reserve System; paper money; the SEC; the departments of Labor, Agriculture, Commerce, Education, and HUD; Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid; education grants; welfare; regulation; and trade restrictions?

No, they don't. The most they do is call for "reform" and getting rid of "waste, fraud, and abuse." But libertarians do oppose all these programs and call for their eradication, not their reform.

 

 

 

 

 

Thus, when socialists and interventionists claim that "free enterprise" has brought the financial crisis, they're obviously referring to how conservatives view "free enterprise" - that is, as a warmed-over, reformed welfare state and regulated economy. They are not referring to libertarianism, a philosophy in which there would be no welfare-state or regulatory laws, rules, regulations, departments, or agencies.

Would businesses fail in the unhampered market economy that libertarians seek? Would people's investments go down from time to time? Would banks go under? Some undoubtedly would. But at the same time, the risk of failure nurtures important values, such as responsibility and prudence.

Like it or not, life is insecure. The socialist illusion is that by surrendering economic liberty, the government can make life secure. It does not and cannot. As the Founding Fathers pointed out, those who trade liberty for security gain neither - and deserve neither.

In his book The Critique of Interventionism, Ludwig von Mises pointed out that government interventions into economic activity will inevitably lead to more interventions. The reason is that the initial intervention inevitably produces chaos and crises which cause people to call for new interventions to solve the problems of the previous interventions. At the end of the interventionist road is the totally controlled economy - omnipotent government.

In the current crisis, that's what the socialist bailout of financial firms, partial nationalization of banks and insurance companies, a moratorium on foreclosures, proposals for the government to purchase mortgages, and increases in deposit insurance are all about. They are all socialist and interventionist measures that purport to solve the chaos and crises arising from previous interventions. They lead in but one direction: bankruptcy, inflation, chaos, crises, omnipotent government, tyranny, and the loss of liberty.

June 2, 2009

Jacob Hornberger [send him mail] is founder and president of The Future of Freedom Foundation





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 I made a trade off, I gave Ron Paul's: The Revolution to a liberal friend to read on the condition that I would read a book of his choosing.  So I read the classic The Jungle, by Upton Sinclair.  If you don't know the book it's a story about an American Immigrant from Lithuania (Jurgis Rudkis) who comes to Chicago in the early 1900's to live the American Dream.  He works in the stockyards and the story tells a sad tale of a man who is used up by this evil slaughterhouse that is Packingtown.  Mr. Sinclair shows us food and health atrocities, insane work environments, child-labor, managerial rape, black listing, and the list goes on and on.

For most of the book it's pretty fair, unlike a Michael Moore smockumentary you actually see the corruption of Labor Unions, the police force, and democratic politicians.  Our main character goes through trails that I couldn't even imagine.  He loses his job because he punches his wife's boss who had raped her, goes to jail, then his wife dies, then his son dies, then he becomes a hobo, then he becomes a criminal, then he becomes an alcoholic, and then......

Then I get to the last two chapters of the book....It becomes blatant propaganda for socialism.  Jurgis hears of socialism and stops drinking, starts working again for "a comrade" and has the hope that humanity will eventually evolve, if not in his life time at least inevitably we will evolve into a socialist planet.  Sinclair even starts on religion how (and this is from Sinclair now) Jesus was the first socialist and being a socialist is strictly being a Christian, or at the least following the moral teachings of Jesus.  (Which is funny because I thought Jesus came to save souls)  The book even brakes down how a country with no private property would work and look, except it's painted as this man made utopia.  The book even glances very briefly at Eugenics, which believe it or not was very popular before Nazi German kind of ruined the fun of "Scientific breeding of men and women" aka mandatory sterilization or extermination of people owning weaker genes....thank you Margaret Sanger.

 

The moral of the story was Capitalism is evil.  Now obviously I don't agree with the conclusions of the book, it did however make me sad.  Not only for Jurgis but sad when I thought of the fact that we have a lot of re-educating to do folks.  We need to show the difference between the wrongs illustrated in this book and capitalism.  And we need to inform that the liberals will never get their social freedoms without the economic freedoms.

 

"Economic control is not merely control of a sector of human life which can be separated from the rest; it is the control of the means for all our ends." - Friedrich Hayek

"The idea that political freedom can be preserved in the absence of economic freedom, and vice versa, is an illusion. Political freedom is the corollary of economic freedom. It is no accident that the age of capitalism became also the age of government by the people." - Ludwig Von Mises





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This is an article from the Niagara Falls Reporter (5-26-09), it was brought to my attention from an email from www.lewrockwell.com .

It's a little long, but time well spent!!

 

WHY I'M LEAVING NEW YORK

Guest View by Tom Golisano

I love New York. But how much should it cost to call New York home? Decades of out-of-control budgets, spending increases and relentless borrowing have made New York simply too expensive.

Politicians like to talk about incentives -- incentives for businesses to relocate, incentives to buy local and incentives to make smart decisions. After reviewing the 2009 budget, I have identified the most compelling incentive of all: a major tax break immediately available to all New Yorkers. To be eligible, you need only do one thing: move out of New York state.

 
 
 

Last week I spent 90 minutes doing a couple simple things: registering to vote, changing my driver's license, filling out a domicile certificate and signing a homestead certificate -- in Florida. Combined with spending 184 days a year outside New York, these simple procedures will save me over $5 million in New York taxes annually.

That savings doesn't include that Florida has a 6 percent sales tax, compared to New York's 8 percent or more. Florida has lower utility taxes and lower gasoline taxes. The Florida homestead certificate guarantees my property taxes will not grow more than 3 percent.

By moving to Florida, I can spend that money on worthy causes, like better hospitals and improving education, and on worthy projects like the Clinton Global Initiative. Or maybe I will continue to invest that money in fighting the status quo in Albany. One thing is certain: That money will not continue to fund Albany's bloated bureaucracy, corrupt politicians or regular handouts to the special interests.

How did we get here in the first place? It all starts with spending, spending and more spending.

BUDGET SPENDING

New York's budget was $72.7 billion in 1999. Ten years later, it has ballooned to $131.8 billion. That growth is astounding, but it continues to get worse. Each year, New York's budget has had 6 percent compounded growth, double the average rate of inflation (2.8 percent). Florida's budget, on the other hand, went down 8 percent this year. HEALTH CARE SPENDING New York spends $2,283 per person on Medicaid. That's the highest per capita spending in the nation and twice the national average. In the last decade, the Medicaid budget has grown by 50 percent ($30 billion in 1999 and $45 billion in 2009). In almost every sector (hospitals, nursing homes, medicine, clinics, and home and community care), spending per recipient regularly exceeds the national average.

Faced with escalating costs and diminishing returns, Albany and their allies, the health care unions (SEIU has over 300,000 politically active members), had only one answer: Increase taxes.

EDUCATION SPENDING

New York spends the most per pupil in America on education, spending 63 percent above the national average. Costs went up about 60 percent in the last decade ($12.7 billion in 1999 and $20.7 billion in 2009). Like health care, education is something worth spending on and worth investing in, but we're spending more and getting less. New York City schools graduated 54 percent of high school students in 2007, Buffalo 47 percent and Rochester 45 percent.

Why? Perhaps it's because the New York state teachers union, with its $114 million budget, is always trying to convince Albany to spend more. Maybe it's because it's mandatory that all teachers pay union dues. Whatever the cause, when faced with potential cuts, the union and their allies have one response: Increase taxes.

LOCAL GOVERNMENT SPENDING

It's not just the state. It's the range and breadth of New York layers of governments and special taxing districts. In New York, the average state and local tax burden is $5,260 for every man, woman and child. That's by far the highest in the country. Like Albany, when faced with a difficult problem, these municipalities have one answer: Increase taxes.

Upstate New York has been particularly hard hit. Add unreasonable real estate taxes to the uncontrolled state spending, and you have whole communities decimated. The assessment process is unfair, unworkable and unreasonable, and the result is that 15 of the 20 highest taxed counties in America are right here in Upstate New York. While homeowners in other areas build equity, we just pay more taxes.

NO ONE'S HOME

This problem did not begin with the current recession. New York faced a $6 billion shortfall before the economic downturn. However, in the face of economic turmoil Gov. Paterson, Speaker Silver and Majority Leader Smith looked to the unions and special interests, who answered with one voice: Raise taxes.

Among other taxes and fees, they raised the marginal tax rate on the most successful (and most mobile) New Yorkers to 8.97 percent, the second highest rate in the nation.

It was irresponsible and it may just prove to be counterproductive, since the top 1 percent of earners account for about 50 percent of state revenue. We're the ones who can -- and will -- leave.

It's not an easy decision, but I'm being forced away from my family and friends, a pain shared by too many parents and grandparents in this state.

I'm leaving. And by domiciling in Florida, I will personally save $13,800 every single day. That's a pretty strong incentive.

Like I said, I love New York, but I'm not going to pay New York more for the waste, corruption and inefficiency that is New York state government.

Tom Golisano is the Chairman of the Board of Paychex, Inc. and the founder of the B. Thomas Golisano Foundation. He created Responsible New York so the voices of ordinary New Yorkers can be heard over the special interests, to hold elected officials accountable and to advocate for government reform.

Niagara Falls Reporter

www.niagarafallsreporter.com

May 26 2009





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Fitch Advises Florida Insurance Market Remains 'Fragile'

 

Fitch Ratings agency is advising that the Florida property insurance market is "fragile" and remains a "peak risk zone."

 
The Florida assessment is included in a Fitch report for investors right before the 2009 hurricane season starts and right after lawmakers passed legislation allowing some property insurance rate hikes.

 
The entire East Coast is the "world's peak reinsurance aggregate zone," says Fitch, and Florida represents a "significant portion of that risk."

 
The ratings company identifies several particular concerns in the Florida market, including that the primary property market is "increasingly dominated by small, unrated" domestic carriers along with the state-backed insurer, Citizens Property Insurance Corp., and that primary insurance rates remain under wraps by regulators even while reinsurance rates are rising.

 
The analysis notes that the state, through the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund (FHCF), subsidizes reinsurance to insurers in the state, but adds that "there is uncertainty as to whether the FHCF can meet all of its obligations in a severe storm season."

 
The rating agency's advisory is in keeping with warning from the state's independent insurance agents and a consumer advocate last week that the state's insurance rates and regulatory approach need to be reformed.

 
"The Florida hurricane insurance market has been strained since the significant losses incurred in 2004 and 2005 hurricane seasons. The financial crisis of 2008 did not improve this situation. Florida is a complex market with several moving parts," Fitch writes.

 
The "moving parts" include the state-sponsored FHCF, which appears to be $14 billion short of being able to fulfill its obligation to reimburse insurers up to $27.8 billion after a major storm, and Citizens, which was designed to be an insurer of last resort but has become the largest primary insurer in the state with 14 percent personal lines and 29 percent commercial lines market share, according to Fitch.

 

Fitch also cites the pending withdrawal of the state's second largest home insurer, State Farm Florida, which has 16 percent of the market or some 1.2 million policies, as contributing to Florida's insurance outlook. Lawmakers have passed legislation, HB 1171, that would let large carriers raise rates, a measure some believe could keep State Farm from leaving, but there is uncertainty whether Gov. Charlie Crist will sign it.

 
The Florida Legislature has also passed legislation that will allow Citizens to raise its currently frozen premiums by up to 10 percent annually, beginning in 2010. The legislation, HB 1495, also promises to phase out the $12 billion upper layer of the coverage oeffered by the FHCF over a six-year period. Gov. Crist has indicated he will sign this legislation.





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Politics & Poker: Paul’s Group Plans to Be Involved in 2010 Elections

May 26, 2009 
By Josh Kurtz
Roll Call Staff 


He’s out there somewhere. Somewhere, Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) is out there, talking up freedom and the Constitution, tut-tutting the state of the economy, taking aim at the Federal Reserve, inciting his fervent supporters to ... something.

Something.

But will that something ever amount to anything?

During the 2008 presidential campaign, no Republican had more enthusiastic supporters than Paul, the quirky libertarian who had been the Libertarian Party nominee for president back in 1988. When it became evident that Paul wouldn’t be the GOP nominee — and of course, that was evident to every Washington, D.C., wise guy from the very beginning — his supporters more or less scattered.

Not into the wind, exactly, but in a thousand different directions, as befits a man whose own views are hard to pinpoint on any kind of ideological scale. Some worked for Sen. John McCain (Ariz.), the eventual Republican nominee. Others launched quixotic bids of their own for public office. A few probably even worked for Democrat Barack Obama. And many no doubt chose to sit on the sidelines, throwing rhetorical spitballs wherever they could.

Spitballs may be effective in short spurts. But they don’t win any long-term wars. Although Paul has lists with hundreds of thousands of supporters and runs a surprisingly diverse political operation, he has never tried to unleash the network in any kind of cohesive way.

Now, with the 2010 midterms under way, it’s time to ask whether he will be a factor and aid the Republicans’ cause. After all, Paul in theory commands an army that’s substantially bigger than any kind of troops that Mitt Romney or Newt Gingrich or Michael Steele or Dick Cheney can rustle up.

Jesse Benton, who runs Liberty PAC, Paul’s political action committee, says yes, the Congressman has every intention of playing a big role in the 2010 campaign.

“I don’t know that we’ll be working in tandem with Republican committees, but we will be quite active,” Benton said.

Paul is expected to set up a campaign he’ll call “Ten in ’10.” While he may personally endorse any number of candidates during the course of the cycle — and in a few races, he already has — he’ll invite candidates for all offices to seek special attention and assistance from his PAC.

They’ll be asked an array of questions in an endorsement process that

Benton describes as “pretty organic.” The one essential for any Liberty PAC endorsement: a commitment to support H.R. 1207, the Federal Reserve Transparency Act, Paul’s bill calling for a Government Accountability Office audit of the Fed in 2010. The bill had more than 175 co-sponsors as of late last week — ideologically and alphabetically, from Rep. Neil Abercrombie (D-Hawaii) to Rep. Don Young (R-Alaska).

But what then? Paul has a list of 500,000 “microdonors.” The PAC will urge Paul supporters to help the 10 designated candidates. And then? Well, it’s anybody’s guess.

“It’s more than just money that Ron can do to help a candidate,” Benton said.

Through the years, Paul has had an uneasy relationship with Republican leaders, although a GOP insider this week said he’s had conversations with a few state party chairmen. And Benton said two things are different this cycle. For starters, Paul will not work to defeat Republican incumbents.

“We think there are more ways to be productive than opposing Republican incumbents,” Benton said.

Another difference is that Paul has “a friendly relationship” with National Republican Congressional Committee Chairman Pete Sessions, according to Benton, and will confer with his fellow Texan on how he can aid GOP candidates this cycle. Ken Spain, an NRCC spokesman, said Sessions is looking forward to the help.

“Chairman Sessions enjoys a positive working and personal relationship with Congressman Paul,” Spain said. “Harnessing the power of the Ron Paul Revolution to defeat Democrats in Congress is something Chairman Sessions is very interested in.”

But it’s fair to ask: Will the “Ten for ’10” be candidates of substance with real chances of winning? Or are the past few days illustrative?

Last week, two candidates touted their support from Paul. One was ex-Bogota Mayor Steve Lonegan (R), a candidate for governor of New Jersey who is decidedly NOT the favorite of party leaders. The other was Adam Kokesh, an anti-war Iraq War veteran who plans to challenge freshman Rep. Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.) but hasn’t decided whether to run as a Democrat, a Republican, a Libertarian or an Independent.

In addition to his official Congressional operation, Paul has four different entities that help promote him and his causes. There’s his PAC (with $184,000 on hand as of March 31) and his House campaign committee (with more than $2.2 million). That war chest will come in handy if he gets a tough Republican primary challenge, though so far only high school social studies teacher Jeff Cherry (R) is planning to run against him.

There’s also Paul’s 501(c)(4), the Campaign for Liberty, which, according to its president, John Tate, will not endorse candidates in 2010. And then there’s his education foundation, the Free Foundation.

Another intriguing aspect of the Ron Paul story this election cycle is the possibility that his son, Rand Paul (R) — who, like his dad, is a physician — will run for Senate in Kentucky. The younger Paul has created an exploratory committee but says he won’t run if Sen. Jim Bunning (R) seeks a third term.

Benton says father and son “talk all the time,” but he notes that Rand Paul has a political operation all his own called the Kentucky Taxpayers Alliance that’s separate and distinct from anything the Congressman does. As of Friday, Rand Paul’s online fundraising appeals had yielded $23,000 for the exploratory effort.

And is it too early to be talking about 2012? Some of Congressman Paul’s supporters don’t think so. The Web is full of speculation — and there are sites dedicated to Paul that are not operated by Paul’s team — about how he can best position himself to run for president again.

Other supporters are suggesting alternatives who can carry Paul’s mantle into 2012, such as South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford (R), who is almost certain to sculpt a White House bid out of his opposition to the Obama stimulus plan, or former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson (R), who is more famous for his athletic feats, like climbing Mt. Everest, and for calling for the decriminalization of drug use, than anything he did during his eight years in office.

Ron Paul will be 77 years old in 2012. Is he thinking of running for president again?

“It’s not something that’s extremely likely,” Benton said. “It is something he’s keeping an open door to. It’s very premature. We don’t know what the country’s going to look like in 18 months.”

And we also don’t know what kind of factor Paul and his supporters will become in the politics of 2010.
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The grassroots infrastructure will already be firmly established through remnants of the meetup groups, email lists and relationships developed at rallies and along the campaign trail. Fewer organizational trails will need to be blazed this time around which will conserve energy to be put toward knocking on doors, making phone calls and stuffing envelopes. Starting with a nation wide fund raising infrastructure and mobilized grassroots supporters will put him out ahead of the pack on day one.

Ron Paul supporters have also gained a new sophistication since the end of the Presidential campaign by becoming involved in Campaign for Liberty.

The Campaign for Liberty has given people a chance to learn all the nuances of the legislative system through the lens of pushing bills that would audit the Federal Reserve or legalize hemp. Having supporters with a greater sophistication can only help to effectively spread his message around the nation when the time comes.


http://www.politicallore.com/politics/presidential-candidates/ron-paul/what-would-a-r
on-paul-2012-campaign-look-like/894





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Monday is Memorial Day, and I will remember, not only those who gave their lives for our country, but also an 8-year-old boy, delivered by Dr. Ron Paul, who gave his life on Memorial Day 30 years ago, my son Kevin.

Last year, on Memorial Day, I sat by Kevin's grave and read from "The Revolution-a Manifesto" written by the man who brought him into the world, Dr. Paul.  It helped me a lot, and I will do the same this year, and I will also read some of Kevin's favorite Bible verses.   Like most of you, I don't visit gravesites very often, but on Memorial Day, let's remember those who gave their lives, not only  for our country, but also by just being here and giving of themselves.  We really do have so much to be thankful for.

Marilyn Townsend





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Posted by JayGreene
Posted 05/21/09
Last updated 05/24/09
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"Tax and Tax, Spend and Spend, Elect and Elect, because the people are too damn dumb to know the difference"

Stated by  Harry Hopkins October 14, 1938, President Franklin D. Roosevelt's chief diplomatic advisor & right hand man,

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Hopkins

 

For those in C4L that ride the political fence!

There's the Exit Sign!....by John Tate May 21st, 2009

(To Take a Poll if you know any infiltrating C4L members click the following link:)

http://www.campaignforliberty.com/blog.php?view=18776

 

Scroll down below to view our President John Tates entire letter:

  • "Many Republican leaders, however, continue to believe that principle must be sacrificed on the altar of attaining political power, despite the devastating defeats a "win-at-all-costs" philosophy brought their Party last November. And, as youwill see below, it is the liberty message that has all the momentum." Of course winning is important. But when that becomes your ultimate focus at the expense of everything else, you throw away the integrity our Founders believed crucial in order to be involved in government.
  • To those in all political parties who wish to maximize freedom and prosperity, we invite you to join us in our efforts. To all those who would sell out our Constitution and their beliefs in pursuit of power, we turn Senator Graham's words back on him and you by saying, "There's the exit sign."

--John Tate

 

  • Senator Lindsey Graham adamantly defended supporting those who choose political expediency over substance. "We're not going to build [the Republican Party] around libertarian ideas," he told his audience. "[Ron Paul] is not the leader of this Party," he emphasized.

--Lindsey Graham

 

  • "I [w]ould rather have 30 Republicans who believe in the principles of limited government and free markets and free people than 60 Republicans who have no beliefs at all."

--Jim Demint

 

  • "I believe the very heart and soul of conservatism is libertarianism." the time has come to repudiate those in our midst who would blur the Republican image by saying we should be all things to all people in order to triumph... I've been urging Republicans to raise a banner and put the things we stand for on that banner and don't compromise, but don't try to enlarge the party by being all things to everyone when you can't keep all the promises."

--Ronald Reagan

 

  • Liberty is the hallmark of the American experiment. That is the distinguishing characteristic of our Republic, and frankly what's made it great... I've been accused of being a libertarian, and I would say I wear it as a badge of honor because I do love, believe in, and want to support liberty."

--Mark Sanford

 

May 21, 2009

 

Dear Friend of Liberty,

Across our nation, Campaign for Liberty's 150,000+ members are taking action, educating their fellow countrymen, and making a considerable impact on the political landscape. Together, we unapologetically champion the principles that made our nation great: sound money, a constitutionally limited government and foreign policy, and respect for individual liberties.

These ideas transcend traditional boundaries and draw Americans (and like-minded people across the globe) from all backgrounds to the liberty message.

Many Republican leaders, however, continue to believe that principle must be sacrificed on the altar of attaining political power, despite the devastating defeats a "win-at-all-costs" philosophy brought their Party last November.  And, as you will see below, it is the liberty message that has all the momentum.

This past weekend at a South Carolina Republican convention, Senator Lindsey Graham adamantly defended supporting those who choose political expediency over substance. "We're not going to build [the Republican Party] around libertarian ideas," he told his audience. "[Ron Paul] is not the leader of this Party," he emphasized.

Click on the image below to see these widely-circulated remarks.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oy48BKd-1TI

Senator Graham claimed his view as being that of a Ronald Reagan Republican, but Reagan's own words in a 1975 Reason interview remove any endorsement of the Senator's statement.

"If you analyze it," said Reagan, "I believe the very heart and soul of conservatism is libertarianism."

What about principle vs. politics? (Emphasis in the following mine)

Reagan said: "I have been doing my best to try to revitalize the Republican Party groups that I've spoken to, on the basis that the time has come to repudiate those in our midst who would blur the Republican image by saying we should be all things to all people in order to triumph... I've been urging Republicans to raise a banner and put the things we stand for on that banner and don't compromise, but don't try to enlarge the party by being all things to everyone when you can't keep all the promises. Put up a banner and then count on the fact that if you've got the proper things on that banner the people will rally round."

South Carolina's junior Senator, Jim DeMint, spoke after Graham and echoed Reagan, commenting about the Senate that he, "[w]ould rather have 30 Republicans who believe in the principles of limited government and free markets and free people than 60 Republicans who have no beliefs at all."

South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford also defended the freedom movement, remarking, "Liberty is the hallmark of the American experiment. That is the distinguishing characteristic of our Republic, and frankly what's made it great... I've been accused of being a libertarian, and I would say I wear it as a badge of honor because I do love, believe in, and want to support liberty."

Click on the image below to watch Governor Sanford's remarks:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ikqJ_KB66WQ

In his speech, Senator Graham noted that those who don't think winning matters should head for the Party's exits.

Of course winning is important. But when that becomes your ultimate focus at the expense of everything else, you throw away the integrity our Founders believed crucial in order to be involved in government.

The time has come to make it clear that we will no longer tolerate the rampant trashing of our Constitution by our representatives or their constant shifting on the issues. No matter what political party you belong to, you should have the courage to stand firm on your beliefs.

As our efforts with HR 1207 are demonstrating, you don't have to cast aside principle to achieve success. A clear, consistent stand on a philosophy of freedom will find supporters, and from there real, lasting change can be effected.

To those in all political parties who wish to maximize freedom and prosperity, we invite you to join us in our efforts. To all those who would sell out our Constitution and their beliefs in pursuit of power, we turn Senator Graham's words back on him and you by saying, "There's the exit sign."

 

In Liberty,

John Tate

President

 





Categories: Campaign For Liberty, Education, Republican Party, Grassroots News, History, Revolution, Miscellany
Tags: John Tate, C4L, FDR

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Posted by thomj76
Posted 05/18/09
Last updated 05/18/09
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We, the Republican Executive Committee of Alachua County, in the great Florida State, commend our fellow several States, who have introduced Resolutions based squarely upon the Ninth and Tenth Amendments of the United States Constitution, which are particular to the thoughts, words, and actions of our American Founding Fathers' Bill of Rights; left as Providence to their Posterity.

Whether or not the States have affirmatively asserted, in resolution or action, their reserved sovereign rights, it remains that these unenumerated rights, retained by the People or the States respectively, are not meant to be denied or disparaged. Discussion of the Tenth Amendment in regard to Sovereign Rights must be necessarily and properly introduced with what precedes it, in the form of the Ninth Amendment of the United States Constitution,

‘The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.'

Honored States such as Arizona, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and Washington have introduced or passed Resolutions to assert their reserved respective rights guaranteed them by the Bill of Rights contained within the United States Constitution.

The United States of America was founded on the principle of sovereign people within sovereign states and a limited federal government. It is with a firm reliance upon these principles of ‘We, the People', that this resolution is brought forth.

We, the People, are struck with the magnitude of this endeavor. The events of history, the news of the day, the extreme, grave, and serious nature of these times compel us to now demand, for our Posterity's sake, a strong measure of action be taken to reaffirm the sovereignty of the state of Florida on behalf of all Floridians. These times require earnest, honorable, and valiant action on behalf of our Esteemed Legislature.


Using the resolution brought forth by the great State of Texas as a template from which to begin, the undersigned Republican Executive Committee of Alachua County, in the great Florida State, offer the following:

WHEREAS, The Tenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States reads as follows:

‘The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people'; and

WHEREAS, The Tenth Amendment defines the total scope of federal power as being that which has been expressly delegated by the people to the federal government, and that which is absolutely necessary to advancing those powers specifically enumerated in the Constitution of the United States and no more; and

WHEREAS, The Ninth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States reads
as follows:

'The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.'; and

WHEREAS, The Ninth Amendment was ratified to work alongside the Tenth
Amendment to preserve the Constitution's restrictions on federal power; and

WHEREAS, The scope of power defined by the Ninth and Tenth Amendment clarifies that the People within pre-existing States created the federal government, to be their agent for certain enumerated purposes only. The role of the several States in America, remains today, as agents of its Citizenry, bound by their own Constitution, to be in agreement with, and pursuant to the United States Constitution; and

WHEREAS, Today, in 2009, the federal government has exercised, and continues to exercise powers far beyond those delegated to it by the People; and

WHEREAS, Numerous federal laws and spending programs are directly in violation of the Ninth and Tenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States; and

WHEREAS, The Tenth Amendment assures that we, the people of the United States of America and each sovereign state in the Union of States, now have, and have always had, rights the federal government may not rightfully usurp; and

WHEREAS, Section 4, Article IV, of the Constitution says, "The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government,"; and

WHEREAS, The United States Supreme Court has clarified as good law in New York v. United States, 112 S. Ct. 2408 (1992), that Congress may not simply commandeer the legislative and regulatory processes of the states; and

WHEREAS, A number of proposals from previous administrations and some now pending within the present administration and Congress, may further violate the Constitution of the United States; now, therefore, be it

RESOLVED, That the Legislature of the State of Florida hereby claims sovereignty, for the People and the great State of Florida, under the Ninth and Tenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States over all powers not otherwise enumerated and granted to the federal government by the Constitution of the United States; and, be it further

RESOLVED, That this serve as notice and demand to the federal government, as our agent, to cease and desist, effective immediately, mandates that are beyond the scope of these constitutionally delegated powers; and, be it further

RESOLVED, That all compulsory federal legislation that directs states to comply under threat of civil or criminal penalties or sanctions or that requires states to pass legislation
or lose federal funding be prohibited or repealed; and, be it further

RESOLVED, That the vital nature of this matter compels the creation of a committee by the State of Florida and its Citizenry to review the historical nature of the existence of the several States and the federal government in regard to the Ninth and Tenth Amendments of the Constitution of the United States. All historical and future findings should be diligently documented and brought forth in the creation of a United States Constitutional White Paper to serve as a necessary and proper reference of empirical accuracy upon the subject; and, be it further

RESOLVED, That the Florida secretary of state forward official copies of this resolution to the president of the United States, to the speaker of the house of representatives and the president of the senate of the United States Congress, and to all the members of the Florida delegation to the congress with the request that this resolution be officially entered in the Congressional Record as a testament to the Congress of the United States of America upon the Nature of proper Constitutional Action.

 




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Categories: Campaign For Liberty, Foreign Policy, Education, Globalism, Civil Liberties, Law, Domestic Policy, Republican Party, Democratic Party, Action Item, US Constitution, Executive Power, Federal Legislation, Current Events, Social Issues, State Legislation, Congress
Tags: sovereignty, Constitution, amendment, Bill of Rights, america, republic, Guarantee, Is

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All,

After all of our hard work our Congresswoman has signed on as a co-sponsor to HR 1207.  She signed on today, 5/15/2009.  Congresswoman Brown-Waite will be officially listed as a co-sponsor to Congressman Paul's bill on Monday when Congress is back in session.

Those of you who have participated in our grassroots effort should be proud of yourselves.  We should all be encouraged by the fact that we can, and did, make a difference!

Special thanks to:

James Moore, Daniel Prentice, Deborah Longarello, Mike Gordon, Toni Wheeler, Christine Morris, Robert Morris, Cheryl Mikkelson, Tracy Sacks, Stephen Longarello, Catherine Maentaus, and Jenna Moore.  My sincere apologies if I missed anyone.

We have much more work to do, but this is a great incentive for us to forge ahead and make change.

Respectfully,

John J. Baeza, Region 5  Coordinator- 352-247-6791

 





Categories: Ron Paul, Grassroots News, Action Item, Federal Legislation, Economy, Monetary Policy
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There is a festive mood in my office thanks to the incredible victory last weekend of classical liberal businessman turned politician Ricardo Martinelli of Panama. I work for the Libertarian Movement Party of neighboring Costa Rica and our own presidential candidate, Otto Guevara, spent the weekend in Panama with his close friend Martinelli as the votes were cast.

Thanks to a deep dissatisfaction with a lousy leftist government and fund-raising of US$35 million, Martinelli was able to mount an overwhelming media campaign peppered with populist slogans and libertarian policies.

Martinelli, who is being described in the English-language press as a conservative, explains that his party is neither of the left nor the right. His beliefs are, in fact, almost identical to Guevera's. He founded the Democratic Change Party of Panama as a way to shift the dynamics of Panamanian politics away from corrupt left wing and right wing traditional parties and in the direction of liberty. In the last election, in 2004, Martinelli received 5% for president. This time, he earned over 60% as Democratic Change with its allies also took control of congress.

Here in Costa Rica, our own champion of freedom, Otto Guevara, founded Libertarian Movement for the same reason. In the last election, Otto pulled almost 10% and many analysts see him as a wildcard who could, with a good and well-funded campaign, challenge for the presidency of Costa Rica.

Latin America may already be getting sick of the leftist swing that many countries have taken.  Martinelli's win might indicate, as so many I talk to do, that this time, it will not be right-wing authoritarianism that replaces the left, but freedom and those that promise to defend it.

Photo: Panamanian President-Elect Ricardo Martinelli (left) and Costa Rican Congressman Otto Guevara (right)





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Please call each of these even if they are not in your district.  If they have signed on THANK THEM.  They are really glad to hear that we are watching and appreciate their actions by co-sponsoring.  On the ones that have not ASK THEM TO CO-SPONSOR.  I have went through the entire list during my lunch.  So please.... please.... call and let them know.  CO-SPONSOR HR-1207  We are now at 124 Co-Sponsors. KEEP THE PRESSURE ON!!!!

 

 

District 1 SIGNED ON

Rep. Miller, Jeff [R] (202) 225-4136

District 2

Rep. Boyd, Allen [D] (202) 225-5235

District 3

Rep. Brown, Corrine [D] (202) 225-0123

District 4 SIGNED ON

Rep. Crenshaw, Ander [R] 202-225-2501

District 5

Rep. Brown-Waite, Virginia [R] 202-225-1002

District 6 SIGNED ON

Rep. Stearns, Clifford [R] (202) 225-5744

District 7

Rep. Mica, John [R] (202) 225-4035

District 8 SIGNED ON

Rep. Grayson, Alan [D] (202) 225-2176

District 9 SIGNED ON

Rep. Bilirakis, Gus [R] 202-225-5755

District 10

Rep. Young, Bill [R] (202) 225-5961

District 11

Rep. Castor, Kathy [D] (202)225-3376

District 12 SIGNED ON

Rep. Putnam, Adam [R] 202-225-1252

District 13 SIGNED ON

Rep. Buchanan, Vern [R] (202) 225-5015

District 14

Rep. Mack, Connie [R] 202-225-2536

District 15 SIGNED ON

Rep. Posey, Bill [R] (202) 225-3671

District 16 SIGNED ON

Rep. Rooney, Thomas [R] (202) 225-5792

District 17

Rep. Meek, Kendrick [D] 202-225-4506

District 18 SIGNED ON

Rep. Ros-Lehtinen, Ileana [R] 202-225-3931

District 19

Rep. Wexler, Robert [D] (202) 225-3001

District 20

Rep. Wasserman Schultz, Debbie [D] 202-225-7931

District 21

Rep. Diaz-Balart, Lincoln [R] (202) 225-4211

District 22

Rep. Klein, Ron [D] 202-225-3026

District 23

Rep. Hastings, Alcee [D] 202-225-1313

District 24

Rep. Kosmas, Suzanne [D] 202-225-2706

District 25

Rep. Diaz-Balart, Mario [R] (202) 225-2778.





Categories: Ron Paul, Campaign For Liberty, Finance, Republican Party, Economy, Monetary Policy, Congress
Tags: hr1207, End the Fed, Federal Reserve, Bernake

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Posted by Matt Hawes
Posted 04/28/09
Last updated 04/27/09
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Don't forget to participate in the National Petition Push today and visit your representative's local office to drop off any petitions you may have gathered in support of auditing the Fed!!  Volunteers have been busy all day at our national headquarters getting over 47,000 of your petitions ready to take to Congress.

Thanks to all of you who have put in so much work on this project.  It's really incredible to see the bill's progress.  Could you have imagined two years ago that we would have almost 100 cosponsors in support of transparency at the Fed?

A few points to keep in mind:

- A lot of people have asked if there is a "magic" number of cosponsors.  There's no number that requires the committee to vote or guarantees a hearing (Dr. Paul has mentioned before that Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank has already promised to hold a hearing).  However, a representative can circulate a "discharge petition," which would release the bill from committee to the House floor if signed by 218 members - a majority of voting members in the House.

- Remember to be straight to the point when dropping off petitions.  Congressional aides get a lot of feedback from a wide variety of groups, and the ones they respect the most are the ones who keep the meetings quick and concise.

- Don't forget to take along your cameras!  We would love to see pictures/videos of our members in action all across the country.

If you are unable to participate, don't worry.  We will be holding more petition pushes in the future.  Although our current momentum is incredible, it's important to keep in mind that this fight is a long-term effort.  The Fed's supporters are going to do everything they can to stall this bill when it gets a hearing or makes it to the floor.  It's up to us to keep the pressure on over the coming months.

Those interested in participating across the country can contact their state/local coordinators for more information on district efforts.

Thanks again for your hard work.  Today's going to be a great day!  Be sure to blog and leave comments about your petition push experience!





Categories: Campaign For Liberty, Grassroots News, Action Item
Tags: audit the fed

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While on April 15th we had a number of "Tax Day Tea Parties" sprinkled throughout Brevard County, our BIG one was on Sunday April 19th, the anniversary of the shot heard round the world at the Lexington Common which began the American Revolution.

There were an estimated 2500 in attendance at this tea party, and the Brevard Campaign For Liberty was there to deliver the message to them. 

The event was successful in so many different ways.  For one, the fact that this tea party was not something "co-opted", or "Republican" in nature, as I've heard many others around this nation were organized in this fashion.  Rather, this tea party was organized by C4L member Matt Nye who is also chair of the RLC of East Central FL.

We also obviously needed volunteers, and money in order for it to be possible to even be present as table sponsor.  Local Coordinators Deborah Itin, Aleks Bologna, and Brieanne Daigle answered this call and were there most of the time working beyond their "shifts".  Lindsay Morris and PL Michael West also donated paper and toner by providing 1000 total prinouts from the materials/fliers page.

The table sponsor fees were $100, and it was also necessary for us to have C4L T-shirts, and also to have sufficient enough material such as the tri-folds.  While not everybody was able to be physically present at the table, many more helped chipin to make this possible to give us the materials we needed, and to cover the  tabling fees.

Almost immediately people started to come to our table and were very interested in the material, and the pocket Declaration/Constitutions that we had.  While expecting a lull throughout the course of events that never came.  Tri-folds were going out like hotcakes, the Constitutions were leaving like they were going out of style (no Washington, I wasn't talking to you), and when our H.R. 1207 Audit the Fed petition printouts arrived about halfway into the event our biggest problem was not enough pens!  People were wanting bumper stickers to place on our car as well and we nearly ran out of those (being the custom flag/Constitution design ones we printed ourselves back in November).

The biggest negative of this event was also a positive thing.  If I had somehow been able to procure a WiFi cellular card I can guarantee that at least 50 new individuals would have registered with Campaign For Liberty right on the spot!  While I try to live by lessons learned and not dwell on mistakes, this "problem" really just illustrates how successful we were, and how strong the liberty message is.  There was not one single individual who disliked us, debated us about any issue such as even a noninterventionist foreign policy, and everybody had GREAT things to say about Ron Paul when they saw his picture onthe back of the trifold. 

The event was a resounding success.

On an individual note.  As the County Coordinator, and a table sponsor, I was given the opportunity to deliver a 60-second speech in front of the crowd of thousands.  I have included this speech below.  While I tend to align with Ron Paul on any personal fanfare, recognition, or praise, I was completely taken aback at the cheers this speech was given.  While I was the only speaker to call for an "End to the Federal Reserve and return to sound money" this statement was cheered on just as loud as any others.  That made all of the organizing and coordinating efforts for this event well worth it. 

I do not know when another opportunity like this will come for us to capitalize on, but I hope more of you come on out and join us in support of the Campaign For Liberty, and the message.

Speech delivered to the thousands in attendance at the Brevard Tea Party:

For those of you not familiar with the Campaign For Liberty our mission is to promote and defend the Great American Principles of individual liberty, Constitutional government, sound money, free markets, and a noninterventionist foreign policy by means of educational and political activity. Today isn't about Republican or Democrat, nor about conservative vs. liberal, it's about WE THE PEOPLE and our unalienable rights of "life, liberty, and property" being trampled on at all levels of government!

We all know already that Barrack Obama will go down as one of the worst presidents in our history, but it's not all his fault. We have an inept Congress that abrogate their oath to the Constitution and FAIL provide a check and balance on the Executive Branch.

Though probably the worst of all, is the 4th Branch of government that the Constitution doesn't even authorize, and that's the Federal Reserve! If you or I printed money to cover our shortfalls we'd be in a federal prison, when the central bank does it they're heralded by the Keynesian Mainstream Media as "stimulating the economy". The Campaign For Liberty is leading the charge against the Fed's hyperinflationary policies through H.R. 1207 to Audit the Federal reserve, which is the first step in ENDING THE Federal Reserve in favor of SOUND MONEY!! Thank you Congressman Posey, who along with Ron Paul wrote H.R. 1207 which is gaining strong bipartisan support in Congress.

Join us at CampaignForLiberty.com and stop by our table! Thank you!

 





Categories: Campaign For Liberty, Grassroots News, Revolution
Tags: Brevard Tea Party, Melbourne, Brevard, tea party, FL Tea Parties

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In the capacity of serving the Alachua County Campaign for Liberty, I am compelled to post this revised version of a potential Florida State Sovereignty Resolution.  This version has not been voted upon by the Alachua County Republican Executive Committee, and may not be transmitted to the Florida Legislature until a much later time.  It is imperative that people in Florida and the other several states be made aware of the language as these Resolutions evolve over time.

 

Thank you for all the good that you have done and for all the good that you will do to help America reclaim its Constitutional Function.  Certainly, other names of States are easily interchangeable below, as we do have a Constitutional guarantee of a Republican form of government throughout the several States.

 

We, the People, in the great Florida State, commend our fellow Citizens of the several States, who have helped introduced Resolutions based squarely upon the Ninth and Tenth Amendments of the United States Constitution, which are particular to the nature of the thoughts, words, and actions of our American Founding Fathers' Bill of Rights; left as Providence to their Posterity.

Whether or not the American States have directly claimed in Resolution or Action, their reserved Sovereign Rights, the matter remains that these unenumerated rights were not meant to deny, or disparage, those retained by the States respectively, or to the People. Discussion of the Tenth Amendment in regard to Sovereign Rights must be necessarily and properly introduced with what precedes it, in the form of the Ninth Amendment of the United States Constitution,

‘The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.'

Honored States such as Arizona, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and Washington have introduced or passed Resolutions to assert their reserved respective rights guaranteed them by the Bill of Rights contained within the United States Constitution.

The United States of America was founded on the principle of sovereign people within sovereign states and a limited federal government. It is with a firm reliance upon these principles of ‘We, the People', that this resolution is brought forth.

We, the People, are struck with the magnitude of this endeavor. The events of history, the news of the day, the extreme, grave, and serious nature of these times compel us to now demand, for our Posterities' sake, a strong measure of action be taken to reaffirm the sovereignty of the state of Florida on behalf of all Floridians. These times require earnest, honorable, and valiant action on behalf of our Esteemed Legislature.

Using the resolution brought forth by the great State of Texas as a template from which to begin, the following resolution is offered:

WHEREAS, The Tenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States reads as follows:

‘The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people';

and

WHEREAS, The Tenth Amendment defines the total scope of federal power as being that specifically granted by the Constitution of the United States and no more; and

WHEREAS, The scope of power defined by the Ninth and Tenth Amendment clarifies that the People within pre-existing States created the federal government, to be their agent for certain enumerated purposes only. The role of the several States in America, remains today, as agents of its Citizenry, bound by its own Constitution, to be in agreement with, and pursuant to the United States Constitution; and

WHEREAS, Today, in 2009, the federal government has exercised, and continues to exercise powers beyond those delegated to it by the People; and

WHEREAS, A number of federal laws are directly in violation of the Ninth and Tenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States; and

WHEREAS, The Tenth Amendment assures that we, the people of the United States of America and each sovereign state in the Union of States, now have, and have always had, rights the federal government may not rightfully usurp; and

WHEREAS, Section 4, Article IV, of the Constitution says, "The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government," and the Ninth Amendment states that "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not
be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people"; and

WHEREAS, The United States Supreme Court has clarified as good law in New York v. United States, 112 S. Ct. 2408 (1992), that Congress may not simply commandeer the legislative and regulatory processes of the states; and

WHEREAS, A number of proposals from previous administrations and some now pending within the present administration and Congress, may further violate the Constitution of the United States; now, therefore, be it

RESOLVED, That the Legislature of the State of Florida hereby claim sovereignty, for the People and the great State of Florida, under the Ninth and Tenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States over all powers not otherwise enumerated and granted to the federal government by the Constitution of the United States; and, be it further

RESOLVED, That this serve as notice and demand to the federal government, as our agent, to cease and desist, effective immediately, mandates that are beyond the scope of these constitutionally delegated powers; and, be it further


RESOLVED, That all compulsory federal legislation that directs states to comply under threat of civil or criminal penalties or sanctions or that requires states to pass legislation
or lose federal funding be prohibited or repealed; and, be it further

RESOLVED, That the vital nature of this matter compels the creation of a committee by the State of Florida and its Citizenry to review the historical nature of the existence of the several States and the federal government in regard to the Ninth and Tenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States. All historical and future findings should be diligently documented and brought forth in the creation of a United States Constitutional White Paper to serve as a necessary and proper reference of empirical accuracy upon the subject; and, be it further

RESOLVED, that the State of Florida, acting as agents of its Citizenry and in good faith with its Constitutional duties and obligations, will collect all federal taxes within Florida State and place these revenues into an escrow account(s) to be remitted in a timely fashion to the American federal government. The transmission of these funds is contingent upon the federal government of the United States acting constitutionally in good faith as the agent of the several States and the American People. The handling of these accounts is within the constitutional duties of the Comptroller of the State of Florida, and therefore, as an established constitutional office requires no further creation of superfluous bureaucracy to oversee and manage aforementioned accounting mechanisms; and, be it further

RESOLVED, That the Florida secretary of state forward official copies of this resolution to the president of the United States, to the speaker of the house of representatives and the president of the senate of the United States Congress, and to all the members of the Florida delegation to the congress with the request that this resolution be officially entered in the Congressional Record as a testament to the Congress of the United States of America upon the Nature of proper Constitutional Action within America.


NOTES:

Black's Law Centennial Edition (1891-1991) defines several key words in relation to this Florida State Sovereignty Resolution.


American. Of or pertaining to the United States.

Pertain. To belong or relate to, whether by nature, appointment, or custom.

Nature. A kind, sort, type, order; general character.

United States. This term has several meanings. It may be merely the name of a sovereign occupying the position analogous to that of other sovereigns in the family of nations, it may designate territory over which sovereignty of United States extends, or it may be collective name of the states which are united by and under the Constitution.

A reasonable analysis will conclude that Florida, among the several states, is united by and under the American Constitution, which thereby its nature has certain inalienable guarantees. The Republican form of government within the states being one of those guarantees is always immovable away from the Florida Constitution pursuant to the Constitution of the United States, in the eyes of the Judiciary under its Constitutional Role and Nature.

There exists certain Constitutional protocol that must be followed to redress grievances that Floridians have with the federal government. The Legislatures of the several States are hereby called upon to examine the critical gravity of the present age, in the given light of serious Constitutional and Economic deficiencies that have developed over the course of American History. It is imperative that civil protocol be adhered to in the progression of this resolution and its resulting action. It is with great sincerity that we must move forward in a Constitutional manner.

Interest accrued in the aforementioned escrow account(s) under the accounting of the Florida State Comptroller will be used to fund the Constitutional Committee in the researching, creation and caretaking of the United States Constitutional White Paper, its correspondence with the several States, its fulfilling of its duty charged to it by the State of Florida. Only reasonable compensation shall be given to this committee in its endeavors. It shall serve as an example of what proper American Civic Duty means. Monies collected above and beyond the necessary and proper expenses shall be used in accordance to the Florida Constitution at the discretion of the duly elected Florida Legislature.

 





Categories: Campaign For Liberty, Civil Liberties, Law, Domestic Policy, Republican Party, Democratic Party, Grassroots News, US Constitution, Ethics, Executive Power, Federal Legislation, History, Current Events, Philosophy, Social Issues, State Legislation, Monetary Policy, Congress
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Posted by pblumel
Posted 04/15/09
Last updated 04/13/09
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Saturday, April 4, 2009

I thought that this year's booby prize for hubris was securely held by South Dakota's attempt to cripple term limits just months after a statewide voter referendum reaffirmed them. But that was before news arrived from Florida.

A bill has been floated in the Florida State Senate by Sen. Dave Aronberg (D-Greenacres) that would extend a popular property tax discount to a broader group of disabled veterans. Who could vote against that, right? Well, that's what Sen. Mike Bennett (R-Bradenton) thinks too, so he's used his power as chair of the Senate Community Affairs to tack on an unrelated amendment to extend term limits from eight to 12 years!

Never mind that Florida voters labored to put the 8-year term limit on the ballot and then approved it at the polls by 77 percent in 1992. Or that the legislature's last attempt to gut the law in 2005 was timidly retracted in the face of active citizen outrage. Or that for most of Florida's term limits period, the state has been considered among the best managed in America.

Sen. Bennett claims that he is not doing this just for himself, and there is surely truth to this. After all, Sen. Bennett has distinguished himself as a special interest robot, submitting legislation at the behest of nearly every lobby under the Florida sun. So far this session, he has submitted over 70 bills, more than any other legislator.

Sen. Aronberg is not an innocent victim either, in case your wondering. He is on record supporting the amendment, which makes you wonder if this bill's only real purpose is to serve as cover for these guys' political machinations.

Fortunately, the bill would have to go through the House first, and House Majority Leader Adam Hasner (R-Delray Beach) is skeptical. "I think this is disrespectful to those men and women who have served our country and are disable veterans," he said, predicting its demise in the House. But, if it passed the House, it would still have to be approved by a 60 percent majority of the voters on the 2010 ballot.

Fat chance! But in spite of the fact that the outcome of such an election is nearly certain, experience from other states indicate that millions would be spent by special interests to topple term limits and a good deal of personal contributions of time, money and effort of voters would be required to defend the law.

Isn't this kind of arrogance part of the reason we support term limits in the first place?





Categories: Domestic Policy, Miscellany
Tags: term limits, florida

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Posted by Adam de Angeli
Posted 04/12/09
Last updated 04/13/09
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Throughout the month and especially April 15th, demonstrations against taxes will take place across the country. The stated purpose of these efforts is to lobby the government to reduce or eliminate taxes. The true purpose for many of these events will be to benefit the organizations putting on the events and the politicians attending them.

There are many possible scenarios. Perhaps your local Campaign For Liberty group is leading the charge and you are organizing the event yourselves. In Michigan, a group called Americans For Prosperity, an economic freedom lobby, is organizing the event and bringing (sigh) Joe the Plumber. In your state, another organization may be putting on the event, or a campus organization, or maybe a politician is planning an appearance. I'll try to cover a wide range of situations here.

A true story

It was at the very end of August 2007 that a local "peace" organization planned a rally at the University of Michigan. The students were still returning from summer vacation and getting back into school mode. Moveon.org was co-sponsoring the demonstration. By all indications it was to be a tame event where people express sadness, join an email list, and go home and do nothing.

Yet something else happened: 2 dozen people donned 2x3 Ron Paul sandwich boards with messages targeting anti-war college students. They displayed "Ron Paul 2008" in big letters, and beneath that were four bullet points: -Bring the troops Home -Restore civil liberties -Balance the Budget -Stop the World Bank and IMF Several of them carried clipboards and the rest handed out literature.

The peace group had brought speakers, but their sound system wasn't the greatest and they had a table instead of having people mingle with the crowd. Because of the sandwich boards, the Ron Paul supporters were far more visible to the audience (and importantly, to passersby) that it almost appeared as if they hosted the event.

The outcome: The Ron Paul supporters got sheets of contact information. The event set the tone for the upcoming school year. The University of Michigan ran one of the most active campus chapters in the country; airplanes flew Ron Paul 2008 banners over football games and students displayed Ron Paul signs that made it onto ESPN. They got a great deal of campus press, and when Dr. Paul came to U-M the next month, three thousand attended. (Side note: PLEEEEEASE message me if you have a hi-res photo of that event).

The lesson here is that you can get a lot accomplished at an event, even one your group isn't organizing. But you need to plan and prepare, and your whole group must understand the plan going into the event.

Step 1: State the goal and the target

Many people gauge the success of an event strictly by turnout. This is wrong--a small event may be an enormous success (an exciting legislative victory that never makes it onto the news) and a huge event may be almost meaningless (most anti-war demonstrations are).

Set a tangible goal. "This Wednesday in Lansing we're going to recruit 20 Local Coordinators and find someone to be the 5th Regional Coordinator." Great. A fascinating thing happens: from this defined goal, the obvious goal (turnout) becomes obviously not the goal. Given this goal, it is clear that our most important target is not the public, it is the attendees of the event. After all, these are people who care just like we do. They're liable to volunteer, to contribute, and to grow our organization more than the people who stay home. If you have no idea how many people to expect at your event, you may revise your goal when you get to the event, but it's easier to change a number than decide the goal at the event itself.

What about the goal of stopping the next tax increase? That might happen in the future, but it's not going to happen as a direct result of the event. If two thousand people come to the Lansing protest, that still probably won't convince the legislator who sponsored the bill to withdraw it. Changing the law is therefore not the immediate goal of the demonstration. The goal is to expand our network for long-term change.

What about the goal of turnout? Even if the event is led by your local Campaign For Liberty, turnout is secondary to expanding our network. The value of turnout is by how much it expands our network.

It is also important to define your political target. Don't just blame "the government." Decide in advance whether you want to make the target the US Congress or your state legislature. The more focus, the better. You don't necessarily need to have the same target as every other group organizing the event, but within your group, have one target.

Step 2: Choose the message

It's always a pleasure to read the various hand-made signs at a protest. But the pleasure is misleading; it's actually better to have only a few designs with the fewest "unique" signs. There are several reasons:

  • The newspaper, seeking an attention-getting photograph that will sell a paper, will print the goofiest sign they shoot
  • The slogan most repeated is the slogan most remembered and most likely to appear in TV and Youtube coverage
  • An appearance of consistency looks better (both to participants and media spectators) than an appearance of chaos

As in the story above, big signs bearing the Campaign For Liberty name are great, both for conveying the popularity of our organization and for getting people signed up.

Use only one or two slogans for "message" signs. Those slogans should be as short as possible, they should not be mean-spirited (though they can be negative), and should contain no obscure acronyms. "Audit the Federal Reserve." "Inflation IS a tax." Avoid naming politicians, which inflames opposition. Pick a relevant topic, that is, the issue your organization is working on. In Michigan we're lobbying on civil liberties and a sovereignty resolution, neither of which relate (directly) with taxes. So we're pushing for HR 1207, currently co-sponsored by only one of Michigan's fifteen Congressmen.

Step 3: Prepare the literature

Depending on the theme of your event, you may wish to print out materials on our website, or have your group create something specific for the event (if you do so, please make clear that your flier was not created by the Campaign for Liberty). Slim jims are excellent.

You will also need clipboard with signup sheets. Get them printed in advance and bring plenty of them--when you find yourself drawing sloppy gridlines across a white page, you're likely to lose a sheet in the shuffle. Remind them to print clearly. If you are organizing the event or have a booth, and someone in your group has an "air card" (a USB device with an antenna that gives your laptop an Internet connection via cellular networks), have them bring their laptop for registering members on the spot. Have clipboards to get their phone numbers and email addresses so you can contact them later; and have a username field for registered members to sign in. (It's good to have a list on hand of people who have volunteered). Your group should designate one trustworthy person to keep the sign-in sheets after the event and organize a follow-up phone bank. Have plenty of clipboards with signup sheets on hand.

A great way to make a batch of signs is to use discarded cardboard or old campaign signs, paper, and wheatpaste. You can make enough wheatpaste for a dozen sandwich boards with a dollar's worth of flour and water--google a recipe--and they hold up in the rain if they're dry before you go out. Wheatpaste both sides of the cardboard to prevent warping. If you're writing your sign with a marker, take a lot of time to line everything up and trace an outline. If you run out of room on the board your sign will look terrible. Personally, I prefer to get a poster printed at a local print shop--you might get a good deal if the printer supports your cause, and it saves a lot of time if you're making more than a few signs.

Step 4: Train the Team

Now that you've made your plans and assembled the supplies, you need to make sure your team executes the plan with no problem.

Everyone should have a standard line if asked something by the media, so that there's a possibility of our message appearing in the media. It could be something as simple and honest as "We are here to express that we are going to hold Congress and the Federal Reserve accountable for undermining our economy."

Have a designated person, your best speaker, do all the rest of the talking, and others to film important interactions. Click here to view a video that illustrates the value of a team where everyone plays their position correctly. (Action starts at about 2:20)

Have a simple message and keep it relevant. Don't mention Barack Obama--the economic crisis pre-dated his Presidency and if it appears that we're blaming Obama for causing the recession, we'll look ignorant. Keep the blame squarely where it belongs-on Congress and the Fed.

Make it clear that you are not here to confront the group putting on the event. Don't go to a FairTax event with signs that have "FairTax" crossed out and "No Tax" written underneath; you'll be too busy handling enemies to make friends. Your members should be reminded that they are to treat all other demonstrators as fellow activists with only slightly different priorities. You're there to get to know them, not to confront them and not to patronize them.

The event may have counter-demonstrators. Typically a small fraction of demonstrators will take the bait and get in a shouting match. It's unusual at tax demonstrations, but common in large anti-globalism protests, for police and federal law enforcement to pay people to infiltrate demonstrator groups and provoke violence.

Be clear that nobody in the group is to provoke the police or instigate violence for any reason. The police are powerless to disperse a crowd if there's no disorder, and if a provocateur decides to create disorder, let the police arrest him. If the crowd gets enraged the police might riot, but if the crowd seems to be on the side of the law and not the violent protester, the police will protect you and not attack you. It is no coincidence that there was not a single instance of violence at any Ron Paul 2008 campaign event.

Pick a place to meet a few hours before the event for everyone to get hyped up, and pick a restaurant to celebrate at afterward. It's much easier to choose a place in advance.

At the event

The events themselves are really exciting. Expect to be on high alert throughout the event. Time will pass slowly. Talk to as many people as you can, but remember to listen. I cannot tell you how many times at a demonstration an activist has come up to me and, presuming himself an expert, start spouting off all kinds of facts and opinions, telling me what our priorities should be, who I need to listen to, what I need to know about tax policy... often I will interrupt with "yes I've read it" or "yes I know" and yet they just keep right on going. Listen to your listener, find out what they are upset about and relate to them.

Added 4/13, more things to keep in mind at the event

Arrive early.  It is much easier to grasp the dynamics of a crowd when you see it develop from the start.  If you show up and hundreds of people are already there, you're going to spend the first 15 minutes just getting a sense of it.

Keep yourself busy. Don't talk to the same person for more than 5 minutes unless there's a compelling reason to; check in with everybody you know as often as possible; the more you move around, the better.  This way you'll easily keep on top of the situation and meet the most people.

Helping people is the easiest and best way to meet them. Everyone at a demonstration needs help with something--a banner, a camera, finding a person, knowing what's going on, whatever--be helpful and introduce yourself. Once you've helped a person they're obliged to introduce themselves and talk to you. HELP AS MANY PEOPLE AS YOU CAN.

At all times:

-Keep engaged

-Remember to listen

-Keep the peace





Categories: Campaign For Liberty, Grassroots News, Action Item, Current Events, Revolution
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Posted by heath.whiteaker
Posted 04/07/09
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Today I woke up to find an email from a customer.  As you know I own a web design business.  This customer has used us for about 4 or 5 projects.  I woke up to this email 

---------

A New World Order has been announced at the G20.
 
What's the big deal about world government, right?!
 
What could go wrong if you centralize power into the hands of the elite few?!
 
What is the driving force behind globalism? The people of the WORLD?
 
The PEOPLE of Europe didn't want the EU. Proud Italians and French didn't want to become part of a single government/economic system. They will in time become part of some homogenous nameless, voiceless, populous with no rights.
 
If GLOBALISM is not the will of the people; by definition it is TYRANNY!
 
Fun tyrants from the last century: Moa, Hitler, Stalin, Pol Pot
 
 
Tampa Tea Party 4/15/09 12-2 4-7PM
 
Our Federal Government has been hijacked.
 
youTube "Freedom to Fascism" TODAY!
 
 
What will it take until we all care about this?
Do you need troops in the streets? Curfews? Martial Law?
 
Will you just go along?
 
Stand up for the Constitution, your family and our future.
 
The Old World financial, political and royal elite has re-established its dominance over the New World.
 
Get your head out of the sand. Wake up and fight back.
--------------------------
Now upon writing this guy back and telling him I am happy he finally came around, he responded with another video.  The video was our friend Adam Kokesh at the Freedom March in DC.    Never in 100 years did I think a customer would be sending out a mass email to all of his contacts about what is going on and the movement.  We are winning people over everyday. I still find it amazing how large our movement is and the progress we are making.  I believe that if we have individuals attend the Tea Parties and hand out materials we can grow our movement even larger.  
God Speed Patriots.
 





Categories: Ron Paul, US Constitution, Current Events, Revolution, Socialism, Video, War/Military
Tags: Adam Kokesh, Heath Whiteaker, revolution, Waking Up

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I did my first bit of campaigning for the C4L today and critics are clear, it was a smashing success. I went in half expecting similar results to prior campaigning events, but instead found most people were happy to hear more about who we are and what we do. Specific positives include a number of interesting conversations about personal beliefs, the misrepresented change occurring in this country, the meaning of liberty, and real solutions to the current economic crisis. Another encouraging development was the positive response we got when people saw the back of the brochure (which was a picture of Ron Paul) and mentioned they thought the good Doc should have been our president. Also, quite a few people said a very sincere thank you for the work we are doing. And the comment that made my day came from an older gentleman, probably in his mid 70's, who read through our literature then came back by to tell me I was "the man."

I also found that quite a few people had already heard of C4L, and at least 3 people said that would consider joining our group after they checked out the website. Between the C4L, Tea Party events, the Glenn Beck group and various other organizations, most people are now aware that the "good guys" are out there and working hard to restore this country and the real freedom she once helped defend.

I hadn't really thought of it before, but the name Campaign for Liberty really is refreshing to most people. I found that simply saying the name to people as they passed was all the encouragement they needed to get more information. Can anyone honestly say they don't want the freedom to do as they choose ( so long as it doesn't infringe on another person's individual freedom of course)? It's great to be able to respond to the question, "What are you selling?" with the word freedom. It's so nonthreatening that regardless of political affiliation, personal idealogy, or any of the many other issues that tend to erect stone walls, people are willing to hear what you have to say.

RP frequently mentions how powerful the message of freedom truly is. And though I've been a supporter of the Doc and his ideas for about 1 & 1/2 years, the lukewarm response during the normal campaign season left me disheartened. However, with the focus now on the message of liberty, rather than his campaign for office, my confidence grows daily. Between the number of people that are now asking me questions (family, friends, and coworkers that previously showed no interest) and the response I received today, I truly believe our numbers our going to expand dramatically in coming months.

America has as many colors, shapes and arrangements as a Picasso painting. Each of these attributes makes us unique, but the single most binding of these is our belief that each individual human is entitled to certain natural unalienable rights. The constitution makes that belief our law, but our understanding of the origin of these rights makes us free. Since it isn't the government that grants freedom, but rather the very nature of human beings that entitles us to personal choice, government cannot eliminate that freedom. Governments can and do attempt to distort belief through propaganda and misinformation, while suppressing freedom with passage of bad legislation. Eventually, however, the distortion will be uncovered and we will overcome any suppression to which we are subjected.

I hope to see everyone on Tuesday and look forward to being part of the many more successes that are ahead.

 





Categories: Ron Paul, Campaign For Liberty, Civil Liberties, US Constitution, Philosophy, Revolution
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Posted by thomj76
Posted 04/01/09
Last updated 04/21/09
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We, the Republican Executive Committee of Alachua County, in the great Florida State, commend our fellow several States, who have introduced Resolutions based squarely upon the Ninth and Tenth Amendments of the United States Constitution, which are particular to the thoughts, words, and actions of our Founding Father's Bill of Rights; left as Providence to their Posterity. Whether or not the States have directly claimed in Resolution or Action, their reserved Sovereign Rights, the matter remains that these unenumerated rights were not meant to deny, or disparage, those retained by the States respectively, or to the People. Discussion of the Tenth Amendment in regard to Sovereign Rights must be necessarily and properly introduced with what precedes it, in the form of the Ninth Amendment of the United States Constitution,

‘The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.'

Honored States such as Arizona, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and Washington have introduced or passed Resolutions to assert their reserved respective rights guaranteed them by the Bill of Rights contained within the United States Constitution.

The United States of America was founded on the principle of sovereign people within sovereign states and a limited federal government. It is with a firm reliance upon these principles of ‘We, the People', that this resolution is brought forth.

We, the People, are struck with the magnitude of this endeavor. The events of history, the news of the day, the extreme, grave, and serious nature of these times compel us to now demand, for our Posterity's sake, a strong measure of action be taken to reaffirm the sovereignty of the state of Florida on behalf of all Floridians. These times require earnest, honorable, and valiant action on behalf of our Esteemed Legislature.

Using the resolution brought forth by the great State of Texas as a template from which to begin, the undersigned Republican Executive Committee of Alachua County, in the great Florida State, offer the following:

WHEREAS, The Tenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States reads as follows:

‘The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people';

and

WHEREAS, The Tenth Amendment defines the total scope of federal power as being that specifically granted by the Constitution of the United States and no more; and

WHEREAS, The scope of power defined by the Ninth and Tenth Amendment clarifies that the People within pre-existing States created the federal government, to be their agent for certain enumerated purposes only. The role of the several States in America, remains today, as agents of its Citizenry, bound by its own Constitution, to be in agreement with, and pursuant to the United States Constitution; and

WHEREAS, Today, in 2009, the federal government has exercised, and continues to exercise powers beyond those delegated to it by the People; and

WHEREAS, A number of federal laws are directly in violation of the Ninth and Tenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States; and

WHEREAS, The Tenth Amendment assures that we, the people of the United States of America and each sovereign state in the Union of States, now have, and have always had, rights the federal government may not rightfully usurp; and

WHEREAS, Section 4, Article IV, of the Constitution says, "The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government," and the Ninth Amendment states that "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not
be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people"; and

WHEREAS, The United States Supreme Court has clarified as good law in New York v. United States, 112 S. Ct. 2408 (1992), that Congress may not simply commandeer the legislative and regulatory processes of the states; and

WHEREAS, A number of proposals from previous administrations and some now pending within the present administration and Congress, may further violate the Constitution of the United States; now, therefore, be it

RESOLVED, That the Legislature of the State of Florida hereby claim sovereignty, for the People and the great State of Florida, under the Ninth and Tenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States over all powers not otherwise enumerated and granted to the federal government by the Constitution of the United States; and, be it further

RESOLVED, That this serve as notice and demand to the federal government, as our agent, to cease and desist, effective immediately, mandates that are beyond the scope of these constitutionally delegated powers; and, be it further

RESOLVED, That all compulsory federal legislation that directs states to comply under threat of civil or criminal penalties or sanctions or that requires states to pass legislation
or lose federal funding be prohibited or repealed; and, be it further

RESOLVED, That the vital nature of this matter compels the creation of a committee by the State of Florida and its Citizenry to review the historical nature of the existence of the several States and the federal government in regard to the Ninth and Tenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States. All historical and future findings should be diligently documented and brought forth in the creation of a United States Constitutional White Paper to serve as a necessary and proper reference of empirical accuracy upon the subject; and, be it further

RESOLVED, That the Florida secretary of state forward official copies of this resolution to the president of the United States, to the speaker of the house of representatives and the president of the senate of the United States Congress, and to all the members of the Florida delegation to the congress with the request that this resolution be officially entered in the Congressional Record as a testament to the Congress of the United States of America upon the Nature of proper Constitutional Action.

 





Categories: Campaign For Liberty, Civil Liberties, Law, Domestic Policy, Republican Party, Grassroots News, Action Item, US Constitution, Ethics, Executive Power, History, Current Events, Philosophy, Social Issues, State Legislation, Trade, Congress
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Posted by heath.whiteaker
Posted 03/30/09
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SB-956 will give Jim Greer a stronghold position to handpick REC chairmans.  My State Senator JD Alexander has introduced this bill.  It is first scheduled for the Ethics and Elections committee tomorrow morning.  Below I have given the names of everyone involved on that committee.  I only gave Tallahassee numbers because they are currently in session.  PLEASE CALL.    The lines we are concerned with in the bill are 

Do you want the RPOF & the county REC's to control who can run for a political party position? This is what this bill will do! Fight for our liberty by calling your legislative delegation (FL Senators & Representatives) to strike the language from lines 377-393 from this bill (SB956)! 

The bill was scheduled and published today and the first reading will be this Tuesday, so PLEASE call first thing Monday morning!!!  

If you would like to read the legislation,

(b) When a political party provides for the election of its

378 executive committee members as described in paragraph (a), In

379 such event, electors seeking to qualify for political party

380 positions such office shall do so with the chair of the

381 applicable county executive committee within the qualifying

382 period prescribed by s. 99.061(2). In addition to the

383 requirements imposed by law, electors seeking to qualify for

384 political party positions must satisfy any requirements adopted

385 by the political party. No later than 5 p.m. on the first Monday

386 following the qualifying period, the chair of each executive

387 committee shall transmit the names of all qualified persons to

388 the appropriate supervisor of elections and to the chair of the

389 state executive committee on a form adopted by the division. If

390 no county exective committee is organized in the elector's

391 county of residence, electors shall qualify as provided in this

392 paragraph with the chair of the poltical party's state

393 executive committee.

For the exact format and strikes, visit this website: http://flsenate.gov/session/index.cfm?BI_Mode=ViewBillInfo&Mode=Bil
ls&ElementID=JumpToBox&SubMenu=1&Year=2009&billnum=956
 c

----------------------------------------------------------------

Chair JD Alexander: (850) 487-5044

Vice Chair Charlie Justice (850) 487-5828

Carey Baker: (850) 487-5014

Alex Diaz de la Portilla: (850) 487-5109

Mike Fasano: (850) 487-5062

Andy Gardiner: (850) 487-5047

Arthenia Joyner: (850)-487-5059

Nan Rich: (850)-487-5103

Garrett Richter: (850) 487-5124

These are all the people who sit on the ethics and elections committee.  PLEASE CALL.





Categories: Election News, Ethics
Tags: RPOF, Jim Greer, SB956,

Comments (7)




Posted by Deb Wells
Posted 03/30/09
Last updated 03/30/09
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As you may have heard, our first-ever Regional Conference in St. Louis, Missouri was a resounding success!

And our volunteers were the key to that success.  They spent weeks planning, holding conference calls, spreading the word, helping supporters with lodging and travel options, then working at registration tables, creating badges, selling additional event tickets, answering questions, providing materials, standing at the doors, and even being security at the Freedom Celebration!

Over 1,000 attended the Freedom Celebration Friday night (standing room only) and over 400 attended training on Saturday.  The Sponsor Reception was a hit, and Exhibitors packed the halls.  The line to the Book Signing event and the Freedom Celebration wound down two long hallways and around a few corners, prompting hotel staff and attendees at other hotel events to ask what was happening and some of them joined in, too!

The next time you see one of these Campaign for Liberty volunteers, you may want to shake their hand and thank them for everything they do for Liberty.

A BIG THANK YOU goes to:

Laura Hausladen, Steve Hausladen, Corey Stinson, Tristan Walker, Eric Vought, Jesse Irwin, Aaron Tuttle, Bryon Huber, Josh Carter, Bill Thomas, Adam Kirschner, Kelly Owens, Mark Ogier, Denny Derda, Al Freeman, Tyson Lauby, Adam Kokesh, Jeff Covington, Bob Buscher, Robyn Hamlin and many others who selflessly pitched in throughout the conference to make it a big success!

We look forward to continuing the Revolution with you.

Check out photos from the events in St. Louis here!!





Categories: Campaign For Liberty, Education, Grassroots News, Current Events, Revolution, Miscellany
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"Florida Gov't Cancels Tea Party Fearing 'Too Many Attendees"

Want to protest your government by going to a Tea Party event? DENIED!

Posted by Warner Todd Huston (Profile)

Remember this report from our nation's history?

CNN (Continental News Network) Boston, 1773: The city of Boston canceled a proposed protest over tea taxes today, citing the fear that too many people dressed as Indians would be gathered near the wharves. Organizers expressed sadness over the cancellation, but meekly returned to their homes fearful of upsetting the officers of the Crown. Taxmen breathed a sigh of relief as the tar and feathers were put away not to be used this day.

You don't remember that pre-revolutionary history? I should say you shouldn't, because it didn't happen. But flash forward a few hundred years and you'll find it is happening today in Cape Coral, Florida where city officials canceled a tax day tea party gathering because they "feel too many people could show-up."

That's right, folks, the God-given, long-held American right to assemble and protest the actions of our government has been canceled due to too much popularity of the protest.

 

And what does it come down to? Money. You see, the city officials want an insurance policy taken out so that organizers can cover any loss that might occur as a result of the rally. And those insurance policies cost hundreds of dollars.

The tea party organizers of Cape Coral, though, aren't the only ones to find this restriction of their free speech and rights to assemble. Tea party organizers all across the country have begun to find out just how difficult, if not impossible, it is to be "allowed" to exercise their God-given right to speak their minds against government excess and criminality. City governments all across the country are charging fees for "permits," forcing organizers to pay out huge sums for "insurance policies," and binding tea party organizers in all sorts of government red tape.

In many instances, organizers are being told that they aren't "allowed" to hold rallies on government property. Imagine that? We, the taxpayers of the city/state/federal government aren't "allowed" to gather on property that our own taxes paid for.

And then there are the "permits" required to reserve the day, arrange the police protection, and clean up afterward. Often those "permits" can only be applied for at certain times a year, precluding any spontaneous assembly. Also, these "permits" can be denied with no reason stated quashing at birth any plan to exercise the right of assembly.

Here one might wonder how it is that we so often see those lefties appearing on our TV sets engaging in their many organized protests? Don't the flotsam and jetsam of the far left seem to have large protests all the time? One might be drawn to imagine that the government is involved in some sort of grand conspiracy to allow those with anti-American sentiment, the moonbats of the left, to march with impunity. But, hold the tinfoil hats, won't you? Because the wackjobs of anti-war ilk and the shrill, circus acts of the Code Pinkos are expected to cut through the same red tape the tea party organizers have been confronted with. The lefties are just better at it.

You see, contrary to popular conception, the far left has some deep-pocketed backers (your George Soros types, unions and even government funds) and a raft of organizations that do "protests" as a full time job. Their protest marches and rallies are far from spontaneously organized. These groups are thoroughly knowledgeable about the red tape and governmental hoops through which they must jump to carry off a successful protest assembly. After all, the hatemongers of the left are intimately intertwined with city governments all across the country. They understand what needs to be done because, by and large, city officials used to belong to, or belong still to the sorts of groups that plan lefty protests. Your new president is one of them. Being part of government, these leftie protest marchers help write the rules, being intimately associated with government they are quite well informed about what is required and how to get around or satisfy those rules.

But the obstacles are coming as a shock to the average citizens that love this country. For their whole lives peace-loving, work-a-day Americans have taken for granted that there exists the freedom to assemble completely unaware that those rights have been eliminated by stealth regulation by governments all across the land.

And now the folks in Cape Coral, Florida have learned their lesson.

Americans do not have the rights they always thought they did. There is no right to protest government. There is no right to assemble. The people have no rights at all to voice their displeasure. Shut up people. Go home. Nothing to see here. Go quietly back to your IPods and DVDs. Big daddy government will take care of you. The Obemmessiah will decide what's best for you. Don't worry your little heads. Oh, and thank you for your payments on April 15th.

Put away the tar and feathers, won't you? There's a nice fella.





Categories: Grassroots News, Action Item, US Constitution, Current Events, Revolution, Economy
Tags: tea party

Comments (15)





Platform-Banner

March 24, 2009


Dear Friend of Liberty, 

If you are a Florida registered Republican, you will want to join this initiative to guide your own party towards the cause of liberty.

DID YOU KNOW? Florida Republicans have NO PLATFORM!

No soapbox for we the members to tell our elected officials what we believe, and what we expect of them.

Help set free the grassroots members of the RPOF to speak their mind. If you would like to help, then feel free to check out the links below.

http://platformyes.com/index.html >>> Home

http://platformyes.com/Supporters.html >>> list of supporters

http://platformyes.com/Supportmail.html >>> sign on page

Please sign on and ENDORSE this initiative. Let it not be said of us by our children, "That they sat and did nothing!"

Then forward this on to your county REC and friends and spread the word. 10,000 would really send a message, and this is just the beginning.

Help Florida help themselves,

 

Randy Henning

Mossy Head, FL

850-585-2637

Walton County Republican Party Precinct Committeeman

Campaign For Liberty District 1 Co-Coordinator

 [Campaign For Liberty does not endorse any political party or candidates and the message above is for your information only.]

 

P.S.

In closing, I thought you might want to know Ron Paul's thoughts concerning a state platform. Since Ron is from Texas, this is his praise for...

A Texas Platform for the GOP Excerpts from Ron Paul Newsletter, August 30, 2004

... First and foremost, the Texas GOP is serious about reducing the size and scope of government. The party platform calls for strict congressional adherence to the 10th amendment, and the abolition of all federal agencies not authorized under a strict interpretation of the Constitution.... ...The language of the platform is refreshingly frank, with quotes like ... "We respect our Founders' intent to restrict the power of the federal government over the states and the people."...

...The Texas party platform is similarly bold when it comes to terrorism, civil liberties, and privacy.  Rather than promoting the current mantra that security is our ultimate goal, the platform reminds us that liberty is our most important value.  The platform calls for repealing portions of the Patriot Act, calls for less information gathering by government, opposes property seizures without due process, and opposes the creation of a national ID cardbanner_column The platform asserts that "A perpetual state of national emergency allows unrestricted growth of government," and "We believe the current greatest threat to our individual liberties is overreaching government controls established under the guise of preventing terrorism."  You won't hear this kind of language at the national Republican convention.

The Texas GOP platform also calls for a congressional audit of the Federal Reserve Bank, and demands full public access to the written minutes from Fed board meetings.  ... the Texas GOP recognizes the importance of sound money.

When it comes to 2nd amendment rights, the Texas GOP platform is uncompromising. It calls for outright abolition of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms....

Education?  The Texas GOP platform calls for the abolition of the Department of Education.  Taxes?  Texas Republicans urge the repeal of the 16th amendment and the abolition of the IRS, an agency the platform says is "Unacceptable to taxpayers."  On dozens of other issues, from abortion to activist judges to religious freedom, the Texas Republican party promotes true conservative values and strict adherence to the Constitution.  Real conservatives should demand the same from the national Republican Party ....

Hope to meet y'all at our first senate and state conventions next year. RH





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I've started some correspondence with Congresswoman Ginny Brown-Waite regarding HR 1207 The first request I sent via the web email quoted below:

 

  

Dear Congresswoman Brown-Waite,

Please co-sponsor and support H.R.1207, The Federal Reserve Transparency Act of 2009, to audit the Federal Reserve.

As you may well know, the Federal Reserve Board (which was created by an act of Congress and is appointed by the President) is not accountable to the citizens' representatives in Congress. While all citizens of this country are required to give an accounting of every penny we earn, the Federal Reserve (a quasi-governmental, central banking monopoly) creates, invests, spends, and collects probably trillions of dollars and has never been held to the same standard. During this time of extreme economic crisis, we deserve transparency. Secrecy can only be used to harm, not help, the citizens.

Currently H.R. 1207 has 11 co-sponsors including members from both parties. Your co-sponsorship of this important legislation would prove that you recognize what is really important to our economy and that you favor transparency in government and true equity. Those that oppose or do not support H.R. 1207 favor secrecy and a lack of accountability to the people who pay the bills. We pay the tab; we have a right to know where our money is going.

Thank you in advance for your attention on this important legislation. I have every expectation that you will do right by your constituents and support this measure.

Sincerely,

 

I followed-up with an in-person meeting with the Congresswoman's staff and left a note regarding HR 1207. This is the reply that I received the next day:

Dear James:

Thank you for bringing your concerns to my attention.  I appreciate the time you took to contact my office on this important issue and welcome the opportunity to respond.

As you know, the recent bailouts of the financial industry, the auto industry, and the twin efforts to stimulate the economy have cost trillions of dollars.  As I am sure you also know, the federal government was operating at a substantial loss before these expenditures.  Those trillions must come from somewhere.  If spending is not curtailed, or revenues are not increased, there are really only two ways the government can finance its deficit:  First, the Department of Treasury can issue debt to investors around the world.  Second, the Federal Reserve can "print money" and put it into circulation. 

Congress places a cap on how much debt the Treasury can issue, but it does not place a cap on how much money the Federal Reserve can "print".  This is the main source of concern for critics of the Fed and increasingly investors as well.  From August of 2008 to December of 2008, the Federal Reserve doubled the "monetary base", or the amount of money under its direct control.  The Federal Reserve was designed to be as independent of politics as possible. The reason is simple: good politics doesn't necessarily equal good economic policy.  The Obama "stimulus" plan, for instance, is a prime example of that. 

Yet despite this need for independence, it is important that Congress keep a close eye on the big picture, both in terms of economic security, and the relative power that this small groups of people has.  Some critics argue that opening the Fed's books for public inspection would accomplish these goals.  There is a concern, however, that revealing which banks are borrowing from the Fed on a short-term basis, or how much they are borrowing, would create uncertainty about those banks' health, and could create or spread a panic.  There is legitimacy to those concerns, and Congress should approach the subject in a sober and deliberate way. 

Throughout my tenure in public service, I have always kept an open door and an open dialogue with my constituents.  As Congress addresses the many challenges facing our nation, I hope you will continue to share your thoughts and views with me.  Accordingly, I encourage you to visit my Web site at http://brown-waite.house.gov to email me and find useful information about our 5th Congressional District.

It is my honor and privilege to serve the people of Florida's 5th Congressional District and my offices and staff are here to provide you with any assistance you may need.

Sincerely,

Ginny Brown-Waite
Member of Congress

Seems rather non-committal, but she recognizes at least some problems with the FED. I replied with the following:

 

Dear Congresswoman Brown-Waite,

Thank you for your prompt reply to my request that you co-sponsor and support HR 1207, The Federal Reserve Transparency Act of 2009, to audit the Federal Reserve.

I'm encouraged that you recognize, to some degree, that there are problems with the bailouts and the unchecked Federal Reserve. I agree with you that politics and the economy don't mix well and I consider that an excellent starting point to begin eliminating the unconstitutional intrusions of government in the economy. I commend you for the splendid job you did when you subtly made the point that government intrusion hurts the economy when you addressed Timothy Geithner thus:

"...I have mixed emotions about you're being here. It seems that every time that a statement is issued by you, the stock market plummets. I'm sure that it's not something that you feel good about..."

I am not sure, however, that you are committed to making progress toward unshackling the economy from the heavy hand of government. It seems from your response that you want to keep it "our little secret" and tip-toe away from discovering the bankrupt institutions that are risking trillions of dollars coerced by stealth (inflation) from honest wage earners and investors not bailed out. The Sarbanes-Oxley law was supposed to prevent just such defrauding of investors. That law inflicted great harm on thousands of sound, honest companies by prying into every detail of every public company because of the misdeeds of a few. Why doesn't Sarbanes-Oxley apply to these behemoth institutions that risk far more than Enron and Worldcomm combined? If it's right for huge banking institutions and the Federally-chartered central bank to operate in secret, surely it is right for all businesses and especially individuals (none of which were conjured into existence by act of Congress) to enjoy the same privilege.

The Federal Reserve was created by act of Congress, a purely political act. How can it now be reasoned that we should keep politics out of a politically created entity? It seems that only one political view is being kept out, that is, the view that believes that government should be open and honest with those who pay the bills. The side that wants to loot the savings and earnings of honest Americans gets to claim that uncovering their secrets would cause insolvent banks (banks that should be liquidated immediately to stop the mis-allocation of capital) to collapse. Those insolvent banks just happen to be cozy with those claiming secrecy is essential for "the good of the country." But how would any observer know that the deal was not corrupt, unless there was transparency, which, of course, is ruled out.

I encourage you to step up to your oath to the Constitution to take the side of honest money and honest government and co-sponsor HR 1207. Or, you could introduce legislation to repeal Sarbanes-Oxley and to grant the same level of privacy to every American person and company that the Federal Reserve is privileged to enjoy. Think of how a return to a coherent free market economy without government meddling would stimulate the economy!

Sincerely,

The greeting that Ginny gave Tim Geithner was a home run, nay, a GRAND SLAM! However, I'm not certain that she knows it. Stay tuned. We'll see if she can be brought on board. Feel free to use any and all the above in your own correspondence with the Gentlelady from Florida.

 





Categories: Federal Legislation, Economy, Monetary Policy
Tags: HR 1207, Federal Reserve, Transparency, Ginny Brown Waite

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Posted by RoseHewitt
Posted 03/14/09
Last updated 03/14/09
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If your looking for ideas to recruit members to C4L, I just wanted to share some information:

#1   In case you missed Kathy Latshaw's post "A Day at the Gun Show" take a look here -  http://www.campaignforliberty.com/blog.php?view=12269

Bookmark the link below. It give places and dates for all upcoming gun shows in the U.S. See if there is one by you and mark it on your calendar. Not everyone can afford to rent a table, but passing out a flier as people go by would be pretty easy.   http://www.gunshows-usa.com/index.html

 #2  This is just a link to GB Meetups.  If you look, maybe of these people seem like they are interested in information and not sure where to find it.  Maybe, you could make them aware that your nearby and invite them to your next meeting.  Link to find Meetup -  http://glennbeck.meetup.com/

#3  April 15th, Tea Party This is a link to people organizing a Tea Party and gives an email for contacting. If your not planning something yourself, maybe you would want to join them with your C4L stuff.

 http://taxdayteaparty.com/





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Shortly after class, an economics student approaches his  economics professor and says, "I don't understand this stimulus  bill.  Can you explain it to me?"
The professor replied, "I don't have any time to explain it at  my office, but if you come over to my house on Saturday and help me with  my weekend project, I'll be glad to explain it to you." The student  agreed.     At the agreed-upon time, the student showed up at the  professor's house. The professor stated that the weekend project involved his backyard pool. They both went out back to the pool, and the professor handed  the student a bucket.  Demonstrating with his own bucket, the  professor said, "First, go over to the deep end, and fill your bucket with as much water as you can." The student did as he was  instructed.
The professor then continued, "Follow me over to the shallow  end, and then dump all the water from your bucket into it."  The student  was naturally confused, but did as he was told. The professor then explained they were going to do this many  more times, and began walking back to the deep end of the  pool. The confused student asked, "Excuse me, but why are we doing  this?" The professor  stated that he was trying to  make the shallow end much deeper.
    The student didn't think the economics professor was serious,  but figured that he would find out the real story soon  enough. However, after the 6th trip between the shallow end and the  deep end, the student began to become worried that his economics professor  had gone mad.  The student finally replied, "All we're doing is  wasting valuable time and effort on unproductive pursuits.  Even  worse, when this process is all over, everything will be at the same level  it was before, so all you'll really have accomplished is the destruction of what could have been a truly productive action!"
The professor put down his bucket and replied with a smile,  "Congratulations.  You now understand the stimulus  bill."





Categories: Education, Finance, Domestic Policy, Presidential Race, Executive Power, Just For Fun, Philosophy, Social Issues, Socialism, Economy, Monetary Policy
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Posted by JayGreene
Posted 03/05/09
Last updated 03/06/09
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Cut and paste the below letter into "Word" or your word processor program, then simply fill in the blanks and mail or fax or have it hand delivered. To access your Representatives information just click the link below and type in your ZIP: 

http://www.congress.org/congressorg/directory/congdir.tt

or have it hand delivered visit:

www.FreedomSpirit.com, I have a link in the middle of the page to do so.

 


Dear             &nb
sp;           
              &
nbsp;          ,

Please co-sponsor and/or support H.R.1207, an effort to audit the Federal Reserve.

Recently, it has come to light that there is little to no accountability to the people on the part of the Federal Reserve. While the citizens of this country are required by law to give an accounting of every penny they come in contact with, the Federal Reserve has never been held to the same standard. During this time of extreme economic crisis, the people deserve an accounting of where our money is going.

Currently there are 11 co-sponsors for this legislation, and it is enjoying bi-partisan support. Your efforts in supporting this important legislation would go a long way in proving to your constituents that you not only hold the Federal Reserve to the same standard as you do your constituents, but it would also show that you believe in transparency. Anything less than support for this resolution suggests that you are in favor of secrecy and a lack of accountability to the people who pay the bills. We pay the tab; we have a right to know where our money is going.

Unlike recent bills that you voted on that had hundreds of pages and just a few hours to read, this bill can be read in under 5 minutes. I encourage you to take the time to READ IT, and then move to SUPPORT IT.

Thank you in advance for your attention on this important legislation. I have every expectation that you will do right by your constituents and support this measure.

Sincerely,





Categories: Campaign For Liberty, Foreign Policy, Domestic Policy, Grassroots News, Current Events, Economy, Monetary Policy
Tags: HR

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Bob Schulz of We The People Congress Speaking in Florida

Please get the word out and attend these important meetings
in Florida, March 3-8 in major cities across the state.

See this PDF for details:

http://hunteridge.com/WeThePeopleFlorida2009.pdf

I will be at the Tampa meeting on Saturday, March 7.

He is also speaking all over the country in his national tour,
see the full schedule and share it with friends around the
the USA:

http://WeThePeopleCongress.org

Thanks!

Mark Hendricks

 

 





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You normally wouldn't expect a 10-term Congressman to be a big term limits supporter but, as this year's primary campaign made clear, Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX) isn't a typical Congressman.

I ran into the Congressman on the campaign trail in Fort Lauderdale last year where we chatted briefly about the prospects for Congressional term limits. Yes, he's still on board, he assured me. He also inquired about Paul Jacob, the former executive director of U.S. Term Limits.

Rep. Paul most recently reiterated his support for term limits publically in his Dec. 23, 2007, appearance on Meet the Press, where interviewer Tim Russert grilled the Congressman for the alleged contradiction between his tenure and his support for limits on tenure.

"I support term limits," Rep. Paul told Russert. But Rep. Paul pointed out that he does not and has never supported the idea of self-limiting, but only a term limit requirement on the entire Congress.

"Matter of fact, some of the best people that I worked with, who were the most principled, came in on voluntary term limits," said Paul. "So some of the good people left." To get the institutional benefits of term limits, it has to be applied to the whole body.

So is this just political double-speak? Not in Rep. Paul's case. In his first stint in Congress (1976-1984), well before the term limits explosion of the early 1990s, he was the first representative in modern history to submit a term limits bill for Congress. He voted for all the term limits bills during the Contract with America era and continues to publically support the idea.

He says term limits are a first step, but insists that we must go further.

"To restrict and reduce the power of incumbency, we should address the sweeping powers that the federal government possesses," he wrote in a pro-term limits press release some years back. He also called for the abolition of the lucrative Congressional pension plan which he does not participate in.

To sign the petition calling for Congressional term limits, see: www.termlimits.org.

This blog post is adapted from my personal blog, No Uncertain Terms.



Tags: term limits, ron paul

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Posted by LaustKlawz
Posted 02/12/09
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Well, I finally did it. I had been putting it off for along time now. I guess I just get nervous about such things. Meeting new people is always daunting. I will tell you what though. There were no dragons or robots waiting to destroy me.

As I walked into the meeting, I recognized the chairman. There were a few people ahead of me and I let them greet the chairman. I walked up to him not really knowing what to do. Instead of introducing himself when I said hello, he just asked me to help myself to a seat at the meeting. Kind of disappointing but, whatever.

I sat down sort of by myself and someone starting talking to me. His intro, kind of funny, was "You know blackwater is looking for people like you" , or something to that nature. I responded by asking him if it was for domestic use or if I would have to travel. I thought it was kind of funny.

Our sheriff was the guest speaker. Hes a cop.

So my county is like old republican. A retirement n on the beach in Florida. I must admit, I did feel like a bit of an outcast. However, that will not stop me from returning. So what if i do not walk their walk. Why should they have control over my future. I have an opinion and I want to represent my generation and stand up for my country.

So I will return to their executive meeting, and will be a part of their group. I hope I can be joined by others who share my thought and feelings. I know some at the meeting already do, and there was another person at the meeting tonight with me. She is a member of our campaign for liberty and it was her first meeting as well.

If we want to influence our future we need to work within the current power structure. Our ideas reverberate with Americans allover. Truth and logic have a way of striking a cord with people, and reasonable, good people all over the country will listen to what we have to say. They are just as concerned with the state of our union as we are, and they need to hear our voice.

~Forest

 



Tags: REC

Comments (2)





The interview was nearly over. on the Fox News Channel last Wednesday evening, Sean Hannity was coming to the end of a segment with Indiana Congressman Mike Pence, the chair of the House Republican Conference and a vociferous foe of President Obama's nearly $1 trillion stimulus bill. How, Pence had asked rhetorically, was $50 million for the National Endowment for the Arts going to put people back to work in Indiana? How would $20 million for "fish passage barriers" (a provision to pay for the removal of barriers in rivers and streams so that fish could migrate freely) help create jobs? Hannity could not have agreed more. "It is … the European Socialist Act of 2009," the host said, signing off. "We're counting on you to stop it. Thank you, congressman."

There it was, just before the commercial: the S word, a favorite among conservatives since John McCain began using it during the presidential campaign. (Remember Joe the Plumber? Sadly, so do we.) But it seems strangely beside the point. The U.S. government has already—under a conservative Republican administration—effectively nationalized the banking and mortgage industries. That seems a stronger sign of socialism than $50 million for art. Whether we want to admit it or not—and many, especially Congressman Pence and Hannity, do not—the America of 2009 is moving toward a modern European state.

We remain a center-right nation in many ways—particularly culturally, and our instinct, once the crisis passes, will be to try to revert to a more free-market style of capitalism—but it was, again, under a conservative GOP administration that we enacted the largest expansion of the welfare state in 30 years: prescription drugs for the elderly. People on the right and the left want government to invest in alternative energies in order to break our addiction to foreign oil. And it is unlikely that even the reddest of states will decline federal money for infrastructural improvements.

If we fail to acknowledge the reality of the growing role of government in the economy, insisting instead on fighting 21st-century wars with 20th-century terms and tactics, then we are doomed to a fractious and unedifying debate. The sooner we understand where we truly stand, the sooner we can think more clearly about how to use government in today's world.

As the Obama administration presses the largest fiscal bill in American history, caps the salaries of executives at institutions receiving federal aid at $500,000 and introduces a new plan to rescue the banking industry, the unemployment rate is at its highest in 16 years. The Dow has slumped to 1998 levels, and last year mortgage foreclosures rose 81 percent.

All of this is unfolding in an economy that can no longer be understood, even in passing, as the Great Society vs. the Gipper. Whether we like it or not—or even whether many people have thought much about it or not—the numbers clearly suggest that we are headed in a more European direction. A decade ago U.S. government spending was 34.3 percent of GDP, compared with 48.2 percent in the euro zone—a roughly 14-point gap, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. In 2010 U.S. spending is expected to be 39.9 percent of GDP, compared with 47.1 percent in the euro zone—a gap of less than 8 points. As entitlement spending rises over the next decade, we will become even more French.

This is not to say that berets will be all the rage this spring, or that Obama has promised a croissant in every toaster oven. But the simple fact of the matter is that the political conversation, which shifts from time to time, has shifted anew, and for the foreseeable future Americans will be more engaged with questions about how to manage a mixed economy than about whether we should have one.

The architect of this new era of big government? History has a sense of humor, for the man who laid the foundations for the world Obama now rules is George W. Bush, who moved to bail out the financial sector last autumn with $700 billion.

Bush brought the Age of Reagan to a close; now Obama has gone further, reversing Bill Clinton's end of big government. The story, as always, is complicated. Polls show that Americans don't trust government and still don't want big government. They do, however, want what government delivers, like health care and national defense and, now, protections from banking and housing failure. During the roughly three decades since Reagan made big government the enemy and "liberal" an epithet, government did not shrink. It grew. But the economy grew just as fast, so government as a percentage of GDP remained about the same. Much of that economic growth was real, but for the past five years or so, it has borne a suspicious resemblance to Bernie Madoff's stock fund. Americans have been living high on borrowed money (the savings rate dropped from 7.6 percent in 1992 to less than zero in 2005) while financiers built castles in the air.

Now comes the reckoning. The answer may indeed be more government. In the short run, since neither consumers nor business is likely to do it, the government will have to stimulate the economy. And in the long run, an aging population and global warming and higher energy costs will demand more government taxing and spending. The catch is that more government intrusion in the economy will almost surely limit growth (as it has in Europe, where a big welfare state has caused chronic high unemployment). Growth has always been America's birthright and saving grace.

The Obama administration is caught in a paradox. It must borrow and spend to fix a crisis created by too much borrowing and spending. Having pumped the economy up with a stimulus, the president will have to cut the growth of entitlement spending by holding down health care and retirement costs and still invest in ways that will produce long-term growth. Obama talks of the need for smart government. To get the balance between America and France right, the new president will need all the smarts he can summon.

 

http://www.newsweek.com/id/183663





Categories: Socialism, Economy
Tags: socialism, Obama, stimulus, boondoggle

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Posted by bobster
Posted 02/10/09
Last updated 02/10/09
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Below you will find my second letter overall to my county's newspaper. I am also submitting this to The Florida Times Union as well. Feel free to submit this to any website or publication.

 Update: The Times-Union called me and said the article was selected for further review. If it passes that, it will be published!

An American Position:

The Economy.

 

            I'd like to open my first letter with congratulation to the Nation's first African-American president. It is truly a sign of how far we have come as a nation. However, I wait for the day when neither praise nor criticism is given to an individual based solely on aesthetics. This letter will be the first in a series of letters written entitled "An American Position." In these letters, I will cover many broad issues ranging from the topic of this letter, the economy, onto many different current events. I am writing this on behalf of no political party or organization.

            First, it is important to recognize that Government is not our economic "knight in shining armor." Simply put, you cannot solve the problem with more of the problem. To resolve this crisis and prevent it from happening again, you must get to the root: overregulation by the federal government. The Community Reinvestment Act is the main proponent. The CRA gives grants to financial institutions that loaned money to individuals who had low income or bad credit. This act was passed to prevent 'redlining', a practice where loans were denied based on the relative wealth of a neighborhood. However, the practice of redlining originated with the Federal Housing Authority in the 1930s. We have a history of passing regulation for problems of previous government regulation. This has created a spiral downward commonly known as the "Burst of the Housing Bubble."

Supplemental to this problem was the government pumping money into the housing system thus keeping prices artificially high. This is high-school economics: Supply and Demand. In most of the country, there was an excess of houses. As supply increased, the amount of people currently seeking a home decreased. This caused housing prices to fall. Since people had been using their houses as a vehicle for retirement, this lowered the amount of money they had to retire on.  If we still practiced laissez-faire business in this country, the free market would have solved this problem on its own: Prices would've gone down. As prices go down, less people would be involved in building new houses and would instead be switched over to repairing or reclaiming existing ones. As demand for housing increases again, so too would production of new houses.

 

On top of all of this, our government is now trying to rush a new stimulus through Congress. This package places us on a slippery slope to socialism. Redistributing wealth is comparable to a doctor telling a cancer patient that cigarette abstinence will cure them. The government is purchasing a stake in private companies which is nationalization. If our current government cannot run this country without a massive deficit, why should we trust them to run a company? The common answer would be that "We need to save jobs." The goal of an economy is not jobs: it is production. Jobs are merely a byproduct of production. A job can be to simply "dig a hole one day and fill it the next" or whatever the equivalent may be at a desk. This type of job does nothing for our production and instead raises costs with no positive byproduct. Where is the government getting this money? Taxpayers like you and me: People who may be reeling from loss of a house and/or job.

            In closing, we would do well to remember how this country got economically strong. The great innovators in our economy are entrepreneurs; not government. From Franklin to Ford we have a strong tradition of great minds innovating the way we do business and in the end, improving our quality of living. Whenever the government over-regulates it becomes more unlikely that we'll have another great innovator in our time. If we adhere to the Constitution and the advice of the founding fathers, we can again return to a time where innovation is encouraged by the free market. Eventually, someone will invent a better product than what is currently available. This benefits the inventor, consumer, and workers. It is this spirit of Americanism that is commonly referred to as the "American Dream." You are free to rise and fall based on your own merits.

 

Tayler Woodruff





Categories: Domestic Policy, Action Item, US Constitution, Federal Legislation, History, Current Events, Socialism, Economy, Congress
Tags: Community Reinvestment Act, cra, congress, bad economy, bubble, housing, housing bubble, economy, stimulus package, stimulus

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No Surprise to me and others, this is the change he intended....Fascism. This is exactly what our Founding Fathers WARNED us about 200 years ago, NOW IS THE TIME TO WAKE UP AMERICA & TAKE ACTION, Contact your Congress NOW!

"The accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and judiciary, in the same hands, whether of one, a few, or many, and whether hereditary, self-appointed, or elective, may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny"

-- James Madison

http://voices.washingtonpost.com/sleuth/2009/02/get_ready_for_the_us_census_fi.html


http://www.foxnews.com/politics/first100days/2009/02/09/gop-sounds-alarm-obama-decisi
on-census-white-house/

Get Ready For the U.S. Census Fight, Chicago-style

Republicans are fit to be tied over the Obama administration's Tom DeLay-style strategy of removing the U.S. Census Bureau from the jurisdiction of the Commerce Department and transfering it to the White House.

Their biggest fear, of course, is that with the 2010 census looming, Democrats will attempt to redraw congressional districts to their party's ultimate benefit. (Not that Republicans have ever used politics as their guiding tool in carving out congressional districts to their liking, right Mr. Delay?)

"With all of its political implications, hijacking the Census from the Commerce Dept. and letting it be run out of Rahm's office is like putting PETA in charge of issuing hunting permits," a Senior Republican Senate Aide fumed to the Sleuth. (The aide said he needed to remain anonymous for fear of "being redistricted -- Chicago style.")

So is the White House trying to pull a Tom DeLay?

"All DeLay did was rearrange the deck chairs," said the irate GOP aide, adding, "this would allow Rahm to redesign the whole ship affecting everything from congressional districts to who and where eligible S-CHIP children, adults and 'poor' rich people live."

House Minority Leader John Boehner also blasted the White House move today. In a statement, he said, "The United States Census should remain independent of politics; it should not be directed by political operatives working out of the White House."

The New York Times -- a day before it was revealed that Obama would be removing the census from the Commerce Department's jurisdiction -- editorialized on Wednesday that Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.) might not be the best choice to lead the agency tapped with conducting next year's census, given that he has routinely tried to cut census funding:

"Mr. Gregg was never a friend of the census," the editorial said. "As chairman of the Senate committee that oversees the Commerce Department's budget, he frequently tried to cut the bureau's financing. In 1999, he opposed emergency funds for the 2000 census requested by President Bill Clinton and the Republican-controlled House."

Problem solved on that front. Voila, the very next day, a Congressional Quarterly report revealed President Obama would be moving the Census over to the White House.

Stay tuned... the census fight will get interesting, and ugly.

By Mary Ann Akers |  February 6, 2009; 6:30 PM ET




Poll: Does Obama taking control of the Census make your stomach sick like mine?

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Categories: Campaign For Liberty, Education, Globalism, Civil Liberties, Law, Domestic Policy, Republican Party, Democratic Party, Grassroots News, Action Item, US Constitution, Federal Legislation, Current Events, Revolution, Social Issues, Socialism, Economy, Monetary Policy, Congress
Tags: socialism

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Check out the below poll on Congress.org, this is nearly identicle to the 1st TARP Poll back in November, but that's right, "WE THE PEOPLE" don't know what to do with the money if it were given to us, so says John Kerry today on CSPAN... Yell...SORRY MR. KERRY, it is you who don't understand the fact that you are part of the Un-Constitutional Domestic Enemy to the same Constitution and the People that you swore to uphold and defend:

The stimulus package is criticized from all sides. The GOP says there aren't enough tax cuts. Democrats want more spending. Some question the effect of the stimulus, especially some of the proposed spending. Economists say something big needs to be done fast. Should Congress pass or defeat the Senate version of the stimulus bill? Select your view below and tell Congress what you think. (11,880 messages thus far)

ACTION POLL: (Cast Your Vote by Sending a Message)
11% Support the Proposed Senate Economic Stimulus Package
89% Oppose the Proposed Senate Economic Stimulus Package

Link to the site below:

http://www.congress.org/congressorg/headlines.tt

PAY TO HAVE YOUR LETTERS FOR LIBERTY HAND DELIVERED / CALL / WRITE / FAX / BE HEARD!

      http://www.congress.org/congressorg/extraimpact/extraimpact.tt

(IF YOU TYPE IN YOUR ZIP IN THE MIDDLE OF THE SCREEN or THE HOME TOWN ZIP OF THE REP YOU WISH TO CONTACT, YOU CAN EMAIL ALL OF YOUR STATE REPS AT THE SAME TIME AND I RECOMMEND PAYING A SMALL FEE OF $8.95 TO HAVE IT HAND DELIVERED, BETTER CHANCE OF IT BEING READ)

In Liberty!

FreedomSpirit.com




Poll: Do you agree with John Kerry, he and his Socialist friends know best?

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"There is no disagreement that we need action by our government, a recovery plan that will help to jumpstart the economy."

— PRESIDENT-ELECT BARACK OBAMA, JANUARY 9 , 2009

With all due respect Mr. President, that is not true.

Notwithstanding reports that all economists are now Keynesians and that we all support a big increase in the burden of government, we do not believe that more government spending is a way to improve economic performance. More government spending by Hoover and Roosevelt did not pull the United States economy out of the Great Depression in the 1930s. More government spending did not solve Japan's "lost decade" in the 1990s. As such, it is a triumph of hope over experience to believe that more government spending will help the U.S. today. To improve the economy, policy makers should focus on reforms that remove impediments to work, saving, investment and production. Lower tax rates and a reduction in the burden of government are the best ways of using fiscal policy to boost growth.

  • Burton Abrams, Univ. of Delaware
  • Douglas Adie, Ohio University
  • Ryan Amacher, Univ. of Texas at Arlington
  • J.J. Arias, Georgia College & State University
  • Howard Baetjer, Jr., Towson University
  • Stacie Beck, Univ. of Delaware
  • Don Bellante, Univ. of South Florida
  • James Bennett, George Mason University
  • Bruce Benson, Florida State University
  • Sanjai Bhagat, Univ. of Colorado at Boulder
  • Mark Bils, Univ. of Rochester
  • Alberto Bisin, New York University
  • Walter Block, Loyola University New Orleans
  • Cecil Bohanon, Ball State University
  • Michele Boldrin, Washington University in St. Louis
  • Donald Booth, Chapman University
  • Michael Bordo, Rutgers University
  • Samuel Bostaph, Univ. of Dallas
  • Scott Bradford, Brigham Young University
  • Genevieve Briand, Eastern Washington University
  • George Brower, Moravian College
  • James Buchanan, Nobel laureate
  • Richard Burdekin, Claremont McKenna College
  • Henry Butler, Northwestern University
  • William Butos, Trinity College
  • Peter Calcagno, College of Charleston
  • Bryan Caplan, George Mason University
  • Art Carden, Rhodes College
  • James Cardon, Brigham Young University
  • Dustin Chambers, Salisbury University
  • Emily Chamlee-Wright, Beloit College
  • V.V. Chari, Univ. of Minnesota
  • Barry Chiswick, Univ. of Illinois at Chicago
  • Lawrence Cima, John Carroll University
  • J.R. Clark, Univ. of Tennessee at Chattanooga
  • Gian Luca Clementi, New York University
  • R. Morris Coats, Nicholls State University
  • John Cochran, Metropolitan State College
  • John Cochrane, Univ. of Chicago
  • John Cogan, Hoover Institution, Stanford University
  • John Coleman, Duke University
  • Boyd Collier, Tarleton State University
  • Robert Collinge, Univ. of Texas at San Antonio
  • Lee Coppock, Univ. of Virginia
  • Mario Crucini, Vanderbilt University
  • Christopher Culp, Univ. of Chicago
  • Kirby Cundiff, Northeastern State University
  • Antony Davies, Duquesne University
  • John Dawson, Appalachian State University
  • Clarence Deitsch, Ball State University
  • Arthur Diamond, Jr., Univ. of Nebraska at Omaha
  • John Dobra, Univ. of Nevada, Reno
  • James Dorn, Towson University
  • Christopher Douglas, Univ. of Michigan, Flint
  • Floyd Duncan, Virginia Military Institute
  • Francis Egan, Trinity College
  • John Egger, Towson University
  • Kenneth Elzinga, Univ. of Virginia
  • Paul Evans, Ohio State University
  • Eugene Fama, Univ. of Chicago
  • W. Ken Farr, Georgia College & State University
  • Hartmut Fischer, Univ. of San Francisco
  • Fred Foldvary, Santa Clara University
  • Murray Frank, Univ. of Minnesota
  • Peter Frank, Wingate University
  • Timothy Fuerst, Bowling Green State University
  • B. Delworth Gardner, Brigham Young University
  • John Garen, Univ. of Kentucky
  • Rick Geddes, Cornell University
  • Aaron Gellman, Northwestern University
  • William Gerdes, Clarke College
  • Michael Gibbs, Univ. of Chicago
  • Stephan Gohmann, Univ. of Louisville
  • Rodolfo Gonzalez, San Jose State University
  • Richard Gordon, Penn State University
  • Peter Gordon, Univ. of Southern California
  • Ernie Goss, Creighton University
  • Paul Gregory, Univ. of Houston
  • Earl Grinols, Baylor University
  • Daniel Gropper, Auburn University
  • R.W. Hafer, Southern Illinois
  • University, Edwardsville
  • Arthur Hall, Univ. of Kansas
  • Steve Hanke, Johns Hopkins
  • Stephen Happel, Arizona State University
  • Frank Hefner, College of Charleston
  • Ronald Heiner, George Mason University
  • David Henderson, Hoover Institution, Stanford University
  • Robert Herren, North Dakota State University
  • Gailen Hite, Columbia University
  • Steven Horwitz, St. Lawrence University
  • John Howe, Univ. of Missouri, Columbia
  • Jeffrey Hummel, San Jose State University
  • Bruce Hutchinson, Univ. of Tennessee at Chattanooga
  • Brian Jacobsen, Wisconsin Lutheran College
  • Jason Johnston, Univ. of Pennsylvania
  • Boyan Jovanovic, New York University
  • Jonathan Karpoff, Univ. of Washington
  • Barry Keating, Univ. of Notre Dame
  • Naveen Khanna, Michigan State University
  • Nicholas Kiefer, Cornell University
  • Daniel Klein, George Mason University
  • Paul Koch, Univ. of Kansas
  • Narayana Kocherlakota, Univ. of Minnesota
  • Marek Kolar, Delta College
  • Roger Koppl, Fairleigh Dickinson University
  • Kishore Kulkarni, Metropolitan State College of Denver
  • Deepak Lal, UCLA
  • George Langelett, South Dakota State University
  • James Larriviere, Spring Hill College
  • Robert Lawson, Auburn University
  • John Levendis, Loyola University New Orleans
  • David Levine, Washington University in St. Louis
  • Peter Lewin, Univ. of Texas at Dallas
  • Dean Lillard, Cornell University
  • Zheng Liu, Emory University
  • Alan Lockard, Binghampton University
  • Edward Lopez, San Jose State University
  • John Lunn, Hope College
  • Glenn MacDonald, Washington
  • University in St. Louis
  • Michael Marlow, California
  • Polytechnic State University
  • Deryl Martin, Tennessee Tech University
  • Dale Matcheck, Northwood University
  • Deirdre McCloskey, Univ. of Illinois, Chicago
  • John McDermott, Univ. of South Carolina
  • Joseph McGarrity, Univ. of Central Arkansas
  • Roger Meiners, Univ. of Texas at Arlington
  • Allan Meltzer, Carnegie Mellon University
  • John Merrifield, Univ. of Texas at San Antonio
  • James Miller III, George Mason University
  • Jeffrey Miron, Harvard University
  • Thomas Moeller, Texas Christian University
  • John Moorhouse, Wake Forest University
  • Andrea Moro, Vanderbilt University
  • Andrew Morriss, Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • Michael Munger, Duke University
  • Kevin Murphy, Univ. of Southern California
  • Richard Muth, Emory University
  • Charles Nelson, Univ. of Washington
  • Seth Norton, Wheaton College
  • Lee Ohanian, Univ. of California, Los Angeles
  • Lydia Ortega, San Jose State University
  • Evan Osborne, Wright State University
  • Randall Parker, East Carolina University
  • Donald Parsons, George Washington University
  • Sam Peltzman, Univ. of Chicago
  • Mark Perry, Univ. of Michigan, Flint
  • Christopher Phelan, Univ. of Minnesota
  • Gordon Phillips, Univ. of Maryland
  • Michael Pippenger, Univ. of Alaska, Fairbanks
  • Tomasz Piskorski, Columbia University
  • Brennan Platt, Brigham Young University
  • Joseph Pomykala, Towson University
  • William Poole, Univ. of Delaware
  • Barry Poulson, Univ. of Colorado at Boulder
  • Benjamin Powell, Suffolk University
  • Edward Prescott, Nobel laureate
  • Gary Quinlivan, Saint Vincent College
  • Reza Ramazani, Saint Michael's College
  • Adriano Rampini, Duke University
  • Eric Rasmusen, Indiana University
  • Mario Rizzo, New York University
  • Richard Roll, Univ. of California, Los Angeles
  • Robert Rossana, Wayne State University
  • James Roumasset, Univ. of Hawaii at Manoa
  • John Rowe, Univ. of South Florida
  • Charles Rowley, George Mason University
  • Juan Rubio-Ramirez, Duke University
  • Roy Ruffin, Univ. of Houston
  • Kevin Salyer, Univ. of California, Davis
  • Pavel Savor, Univ. of Pennsylvania
  • Ronald Schmidt, Univ. of Rochester
  • Carlos Seiglie, Rutgers University
  • William Shughart II, Univ. of Mississippi
  • Charles Skipton, Univ. of Tampa
  • James Smith, Western Carolina University
  • Vernon Smith, Nobel laureate
  • Lawrence Southwick, Jr., Univ. at Buffalo
  • Dean Stansel, Florida Gulf Coast University
  • Houston Stokes, Univ. of Illinois at Chicago
  • Brian Strow, Western Kentucky University
  • Shirley Svorny, California State
  • University, Northridge
  • John Tatom, Indiana State University
  • Wade Thomas, State University of New York at Oneonta
  • Henry Thompson, Auburn University
  • Alex Tokarev, The King's College
  • Edward Tower, Duke University
  • Leo Troy, Rutgers University
  • David Tuerck, Suffolk University
  • Charlotte Twight, Boise State University
  • Kamal Upadhyaya, Univ. of New Haven
  • Charles Upton, Kent State University
  • T. Norman Van Cott, Ball State University
  • Richard Vedder, Ohio University
  • Richard Wagner, George Mason University
  • Douglas M. Walker, College of Charleston
  • Douglas O. Walker, Regent University
  • Christopher Westley, Jacksonville State University
  • Lawrence White, Univ. of Missouri at St. Louis
  • Walter Williams, George Mason University
  • Doug Wills, Univ. of Washington Tacoma
  • Dennis Wilson, Western Kentucky University
  • Gary Wolfram, Hillsdale College
  • Huizhong Zhou, Western Michigan University

Additional economists who have signed the statement

  • Lee Adkins, Oklahoma State University
  • William Albrecht, Univ. of Iowa
  • Donald Alexander, Western Michigan University
  • Geoffrey Andron, Austin Community College
  • Nathan Ashby, Univ. of Texas at El Paso
  • George Averitt, Purdue North Central University
  • Charles Baird, California State University, East Bay
  • Timothy Bastian, Creighton University
  • John Bethune, Barton College
  • Robert Bise, Orange Coast College
  • Karl Borden, University of Nebraska
  • Donald Boudreaux, George Mason University
  • Ivan Brick, Rutgers University
  • Phil Bryson, Brigham Young University
  • Richard Burkhauser, Cornell University
  • Jim Butkiewicz, Univ. of Delaware
  • Richard Cebula, Armstrong Atlantic State University
  • Don Chance, Louisiana State University
  • Robert Chatfield, Univ. of Nevada, Las Vegas
  • Lloyd Cohen, George Mason University
  • Peter Colwell, Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • Michael Connolly, Univ. of Miami
  • Jim Couch, Univ. of North Alabama
  • Eleanor Craig, Univ. of Delaware
  • Michael Daniels, Columbus State University
  • A. Edward Day, Univ. of Texas at Dallas
  • Stephen Dempsey, Univ. of Vermont
  • Allan DeSerpa, Arizona State University
  • William Dewald, Ohio State University
  • Jeff Dorfman, Univ. of Georgia
  • Lanny Ebenstein, Univ. of California, Santa Barbara
  • Michael Erickson, The College of Idaho
  • Jack Estill, San Jose State University
  • Dorla Evans, Univ. of Alabama in Huntsville
  • Frank Falero, California State University, Bakersfield
  • Daniel Feenberg, National Bureau of Economic Research
  • Eric Fisher, California Polytechnic State University
  • William Ford, Middle Tennessee State University
  • Ralph Frasca, Univ. of Dayton
  • Joseph Giacalone, St. John's University
  • Adam Gifford, California State Unviersity, Northridge
  • Otis Gilley, Louisiana Tech University
  • J. Edward Graham, University of North Carolina at Wilmington
  • Richard Grant, Lipscomb University
  • Gauri-Shankar Guha, Arkansas State University
  • Darren Gulla, Univ. of Kentucky
  • Dennis Halcoussis, California State University, Northridge
  • Richard Hart, Miami University
  • James Hartley, Mount Holyoke College
  • Thomas Hazlett, George Mason University
  • Scott Hein, Texas Tech University
  • John Hoehn, Michigan State University
  • Daniel Houser, George Mason University
  • Thomas Howard, University of Denver
  • Chris Hughen, Univ. of Denver
  • Marcus Ingram, Univ. of Tampa
  • Joseph Jadlow, Oklahoma State University
  • Sherry Jarrell, Wake Forest University
  • Robert Krol, California State University, Northridge
  • James Kurre, Penn State Erie
  • Tom Lehman, Indiana Wesleyan University
  • W. Cris Lewis, Utah State University
  • Stan Liebowitz, Univ. of Texas at Dallas
  • Anthony Losasso, Univ. of Illinois at Chicago
  • John Lott, Jr., Univ. of Maryland
  • Keith Malone, Univ. of North Alabama
  • Henry Manne, George Mason University
  • Richard Marcus, Univ. of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
  • Timothy Mathews, Kennesaw State University
  • John Matsusaka, Univ. of Southern California
  • Thomas Mayor, Univ. of Houston
  • W. Douglas McMillin, Louisiana State University
  • Mario Miranda, The Ohio State University
  • Ed Miseta, Penn State Erie
  • James Moncur, Univ. of Hawaii at Manoa
  • Charles Moss, Univ. of Florida
  • Tim Muris, George Mason University
  • John Murray, Univ. of Toledo
  • David Mustard, Univ. of Georgia
  • Steven Myers, Univ. of Akron
  • Dhananjay Nanda, University of Miami
  • Stephen Parente, Univ. of Minnesota
  • Douglas Patterson, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and University
  • Timothy Perri, Appalachian State University
  • Mark Pingle, Univ. of Nevada, Reno
  • Richard Rawlins, Missouri Southern State University
  • Thomas Rhee, California State University, Long Beach
  • Christine Ries, Georgia Institute of Technology
  • Nancy Roberts, Arizona State University
  • Larry Ross, Univ. of Alaska Anchorage
  • Timothy Roth, Univ. of Texas at El Paso
  • Atulya Sarin, Santa Clara University
  • Thomas Saving, Texas A&M University
  • Eric Schansberg, Indiana University Southeast
  • Alan Shapiro, Univ. of Southern California
  • Frank Spreng, McKendree University
  • Judith Staley Brenneke, John Carroll University
  • John E. Stapleford, Eastern University
  • Courtenay Stone, Ball State University
  • Avanidhar Subrahmanyam, UCLA
  • Scott Sumner, Bentley University
  • Clifford Thies, Shenandoah University
  • William Trumbull, West Virginia University
  • Gustavo Ventura, Univ. of Iowa
  • Marc Weidenmier, Claremont McKenna College
  • Robert Whaples, Wake Forest University
  • Gene Wunder, Washburn University
  • John Zdanowicz, Florida International University
  • Jerry Zimmerman, Univ. of Rochester
  • Joseph Zoric, Franciscan University of Steubenville


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"In a long question-and-answer session following my speech I was asked about Iraq and then Defense Secretary Rumsfeld.  In this place-where cadets live by a code that says they never lie, cheat, steal, or quibble-I was bound to speak the truth as I knew it.

The war in Iraq, I said, is not worth the life of even one American soldier.  As for Secretary Rumsfeld, I told them, I never thought I would live long enough to see someone chosen to preside over the Pentagon who made Vietnam-era Defense Secretary Robert McNamara look good by comparison.  The cadets sat in stunned silence; their professors were astonished.  Some of these cadets would be leading young soldiers in combat in a matter of a few months.  They deserved a straight answer.

The expensive lessons learned in Vietnam have been forgotten and a new generation of young American soldiers and Marines are paying the price today, following the orders of civilian political leaders as they are sworn to do.  The soldiers and those who lead them will never fail to do their duty.  They never have in our history.  This is their burden.  But there is another duty, another burden, that rests squarely on the shoulders of the American people.  They should, by their vote, always choose a commander in chief who is wise, well read in history, thoughtful, and slow-exceedingly slow-to draw the sword and send young men and women out to fight and die for their country.  We should not choose for so powerful an office someone who merely looks good on a television screen, speaks and thinks in sixty-second sound bites, and is adept at raising money for a campaign.

If we can't get that part right then there will never be an end to the insanity that is war and the unending suffering that follows in war's wake-and we must get it right if we are to survive and prosper as free Americans in this land a million Americans gave their lives to protect and defend."

 

Lt. Gen. Harold "Hal" G. Moore (USA RET.), (From a spring 2005 address he made at West Point to the Corps of Cadets)

Moore, Harold G., Galloway, Joseph L., "We Are Soldiers Still" Harper Books (2008).





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Posted by Tom Mullen
Posted 01/28/09
Last updated 04/15/09
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For high school or undergraduate college students, it is probably difficult to imagine what relevance some of the dusty old books they are forced to read have to their lives. It is hard to blame the average teenager for caring little about what lights up the face of his eccentric professor, regardless of the passion said professor may exhibit for Plato, Cicero, Aquinas, or Locke. Yet, despite the understandable lack of interest an 18 or 19-year-old may have in the worldview of philosophers of several hundred years past, this is probably the last real chance he or she will have to consider them. Once out of school and faced with the realities of life and making a living, there is little time or motivation for one to go back and explore the world of ideas. Ideas and philosophy are for dreamers. Perhaps this is how a society forgets what it is trying to do.

The enlightenment that inspired our founding fathers was a period of explosive creativity and learning. Newton, Bacon, Sidney, Locke, Rousseau, Smith - these giants were all children of the enlightenment that inspired Jefferson, Adams, Franklin, and the rest to create a society based upon reason which recognized that all men were created equal. However, very often we tend to think about both the enlightenment and our founders as if they all shared one, homogenous philosophy and one vision of man and his place in society. Those who have taken a closer look will tell quite a different story.

First, as to the enlightenment, there was not one new liberal philosophy, but three. While the new American society was based exclusively on one of them, it is not as if the other two were not known and even considered by the founders. It is of the utmost importance to realize that they were.

The first to talk about "the social contract" during the enlightenment was Thomas Hobbes. Hobbes believed that man in the state of nature (the absence of government or any higher authority) was in a state of perpetual war, or as he put it, "war of everyone against everyone." This was the result of Hobbes assertion that in that state, man had "a right to everything," following from his opinion that reason dictated only that man is restricted from doing anything to harm himself. Thus, for Hobbes man was ultimately a depraved creature who needed a strong government - an absolute ruler - to save him from himself. While for Hobbes the law of nature dictated that man should seek peace, man would never find it by employing reason, which would only ensure that he tried to preserve his own life against the "violent death" that threatened his every living moment. The purpose of government, then, was to protect man from his own depraved nature and that of his neighbors with a strong, paternal hand, sanctioned by God.

Jean-Jacques Rousseau's vision of man and the purpose of government was quite different from that of Hobbes. Rousseau asserted that the idea of a "state of nature" was a purely academic one, having likely never actually occurred in human history. However, he did use the idea of a state of nature as a philosophical tool to develop his ideas about man in society and the purpose of government. For Rousseau, man had to give up his natural rights when entering society, and while society granted him individual rights, they could be set aside by society when the needs of society outweighed them. In his own words,

"Each of us puts his person and all his power in common under the supreme direction of the general will, and, in our coporate capacity, we receive each member as an indivisible part of the whole."

Therefore, government's purpose for Rousseau was to accomplish the "general will" and achieve the common good, which included economic equality, as Rousseau recognized man's property rights to end at what he needed to survive. "Having his share, he ought to keep it, and can have no further right against the community."

John Locke represented yet a third philosophy of man and society. Locke's view of man in the state of nature was vastly different from that of Hobbes, as was his definition of reason. As he said,

"The state of nature has a law of nature to govern it, which obliges every one: and reason, which is that law, teaches all mankind, who will but consult it, that being all equal and independent, no one ought to harm another in his life, health, liberty, or possessions."

So, for Locke, reason did not merely dictate self-preservation, but the Non-Aggression Principle as well. While Locke recognized that man was not safe from harm from other people in the state of nature, he believed that the laws of nature preceded man and society, and thus individual rights were inalienable. Man did not give up those rights when entering society, but instead entered society solely for the purpose of defending them. He had a right to as much property as he could legitimately accumulate, whether that resulted in more property than possessed by his neighbor or not, as long as he did not harm others in their "life, health, liberty, or possessions." The purpose of government for Locke was to protect life, liberty, and property as the societal extension of the individual right of self defense, and this was also government's strict limit.

It is interesting to consider how these three philosophies played out during the 18th century. In America, our founders chose the philosophy of Locke, specifically excluding the other two in writing our Declaration of Independence. However, our founders were not of one united mind on their vision of the most effective form of government. In fact, there was a deep divide between Hamilton and Jefferson. Jefferson without exception believed in the philosophy of Locke, whom he on more than one occasion named (along with Newton and Bacon) "one of the three greatest men who ever lived."

On the other hand, Hamilton's view of man and society was much more Hobbesian. As Jefferson put it, "honest as a man, but, as a politician, believing in the necessity of either force or corruption to govern man." To Jefferson's assertion that Locke, Bacon, and Newton were the greatest men the world had ever produced, Hamilton replied, "the greatest man that ever lived was Julius Caesar." While Jefferson asserted that the power of the government was limited to defense against aggression, Hamilton advocated a "more vigorous government," with the ultimate instrument of control at its disposal - a central bank.

This was the great struggle of ideas in early America. Very generally, it was a struggle between Hobbes and Locke. While Hamilton was able to accomplish many of his goals while serving in Washington's cabinet, Jefferson ultimately prevailed by winning the presidency, paying off the national debt, and eliminating the central bank (an accomplishment that had to be repeated by Jackson a few decades later). It was his Lockean vision that dominated, albeit amidst constant challenge, during the great century of innovation and prosperity that followed.

Rousseau's philosophy did not find footing in early America, but did so in his native France. While America's revolution was based upon Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness, drawn from Locke's Life, Liberty, and Property[1], France's revolution was based upon Liberty, Fraternity, Equality. It is no accident that one revolution was wildly successful and the other devolved into a bloody reign of terror and eventual despotism. The French had the same results trying to achieve economic equality via the force of government that later collectivist societies would under communism.[2]

While America lived by Locke's principles, she enjoyed a meteoric ascent, leading the industrial revolution and creating much of what we now call the modern world. The explosion of prosperity for common people that occurred during America's first century has been unequaled in human history. Indeed, while many are quick to point out that mass production was invented in America, let us not forget mass consumption - the enjoyment by the common people of the bounty that living by Locke's principles of freedom and individual rights had provided.


By now, the relevance of discussion of these three philosophies should have jumped off the page. While there were three competing philosophies in the enlightenment, there have been only two political parties in America for the past century. It is no coincidence that today virtually all Americans feel that they must vote for "the lesser of two evils" when choosing representatives in their government. It is because they are choosing between the Hobbesian Republicans, with their strong, central government, sanctioned by God to save people from themselves, and the Rousseaian Democrats, still striving to use the force of government to achieve their perverse vision of economic equality, despite the tens of millions that have died as a result of that same vision. Gone are the individual rights, liberty, and Non-Aggression Principle of Locke, and with Locke has gone America's greatness.

Most ominously, the two parties that previously represented Hobbes and Rousseau are now merging together into a terrifying hybrid, finding common ground in their mutual belief in the absolute sovereignty of the state over the individual. While they may have appeared radically different in decades or centuries past, the followers of these two philosophies have always had this in common. In the end, that makes them for all practical purposes the same.


However, all is not lost. While Locke has completely disappeared from the American ethos, his philosophy can never really die. Very soon, the artificial society created by the false philosophical hybrid is going to collapse upon itself, a victim of its own systemic flaws. The supreme justice in the universe is that society cannot routinely violate natural rights and continue to survive indefinitely. Just as the market eventually wins in economics, natural law eventually wins in the organization of society as a whole. When the use of force can no longer sustain society, as it ultimately never can, voluntary exchange will take its place. As the illusion of legitimacy disappears from the present paternal state, the Non-Aggression Principle will emerge instead. Do not fear the coming collapse. Embrace it. When the moment comes, let us seize it and shout joyously, not for equality or security, but for liberty.

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[1] Property being implicit in "the Pursuit of Happiness"
[2] Tragically, the cause and effect relationship between the economic policies that accompany a government striving to achieve economic equality (at the point of the sword) and the subsequent famine, war, and destruction that result still eludes us. It was demonstrated in France in the 18th century, Russia in the early 20th and China later in the 20th, yet history seems to have taught us nothing. The voices crying for government-enforced equality, perhaps this time under the guise of "spreading the wealth," are louder than ever.

  

Check out Tom Mullen's new book, A Return to Common Sense: Reawakening Liberty in the Inhabitants of America.  Right Here!


 

 

 

 

 





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Posted by Alan Burton
Posted 01/27/09
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1963 Commencement<!-- #EndEditable --> <!-- #BeginEditable "Body" -->

President John F. Kennedy
June 10, 1963

President Kennedy. Click to download High-res photo

President Kennedy spoke at American University's Spring Commencement on June 10, 1963. In this speech Kennedy called on the Soviet Union to work with the United States to achieve a nuclear test ban treaty and help reduce the considerable international tensions and the specter of nuclear war at that time.

President Anderson, members of the faculty, Board of Trustees, distinguished guests, my old colleague, Senator Bob Byrd, who has earned his degree through many years of attending night law school, while I am earning mine in the next 30 minutes, ladies and gentlemen:

It is with great pride that I participate in this ceremony of the American University, sponsored by the Methodist Church, founded by Bishop John Fletcher Hurst, and first opened by President Woodrow Wilson in 1914. This is a young and growing university, but it has already fulfilled Bishop Hurst's enlightened hope for the study of history and public affairs in a city devoted to the making of history and to the conduct of the public's business. By sponsoring this institution of higher learning for all who wish to learn whatever their color or their creed, the Methodists of this area and the nation deserve the nation's thanks, and I commend all those who are today graduating.

Professor Woodrow Wilson once said that every man sent out from a university should be a man of his nation as well as a man of his time, and I am confident that the men and women who carry the honor of graduating from this institution will continue to give from their lives, from their talents, a high measure of public service and public support.

"There are few earthly things more beautiful than a University," wrote John Masefield, in his tribute to the English Universities - - and his words are equally true here. He did not refer to spires and towers, to campus greens and ivied walls. He admired the splendid beauty of the University, he said, because it was " a place where those who hate ignorance may strive to know, where those who perceive truth may strive to make others see."

I have, therefore, chose this time and this place to discuss a topic on which ignorance too often abounds and the truth is to rarely perceived - - yet it is the most important topic on earth : world peace.

What kind of peace do I mean? What kind of peace do we seek? Not a Pax Americana enforced on the world by American weapons of war. Not the peace of the grave or the security of the slave. I am talking about genuine peace - - the kind of peace that makes life on earth worth living -- the kind that enables man and nations to grow and to hope and to build a better life for their children - - not merely peace for Americans by peace for all men and women - - not merely peace in our time but peace for all time.

I speak of peace because of the new face of war. Total war makes no sense in an age when great powers can maintain large and relatively invulnerable nuclear forces and refuse to surrender without resort to those forces. It makes no sense in an age when a single nuclear weapon contains almost ten times the explosive force delivered by all of the allied air forces in the Second World War. It makes no sense in an age when the deadly poisons produced by a nuclear exchange would be carried by the wind and water and soil and seed to the far corners of the globe and to generations unborn.

Today the expenditure of billions of dollars every year on weapons acquired for the purpose of making sure we never need to use them is essential to keeping the peace. But surely the acquisition of such idle stockpiles - - which can only destroy and never create - - is not the only, much less the most efficient, means of assuring peace.

I speak of peace, therefore, as the necessary rational end of rational men. I realize that the pursuit of peace is not as dramatic as the pursuit of war - - and frequently the words of the pursuer fall on deaf ears. But we have no more urgent task.

Some say that it is useless to speak of world peace or world law or world disarmament - - and that it will be useless until the leaders of the Soviet Union adopt a more enlightened attitude. I hope they do. I believe we can help them do it. But I also believe that we must re-examine our own attitude - as individuals and as a Nation - - for our attitude is as essential as theirs. And every graduate of this school, every thoughtful citizen who despairs of war and wishes to bring peace, should begin by looking inward - - by examining his own attitude toward the possibilities of peace, toward the Soviet Union, toward the course of the Cold War and toward freedom and peace here at home.

First: Let us examine our attitude toward peace itself. Too many of us think it is impossible. Too many of us think it is unreal. But that is dangerous, defeatist belief. It leads to the conclusion that war is inevitable - - that mankind is doomed - - that we are gripped by forces we cannot control.

We need not accept that view. Our problems are manmade - - therefore, they can be solved by man. And man can be as big as he wants. No problem of human destiny is beyond human beings. Man's reason and spirit have often solved the seemingly unsolvable - - and we believe they can do it again.

I am not referring to the absolute, infinite concept of universal peace and good will of which some fantasies and fanatics dream. I do not deny the values of hopes and dreams but we merely invite discouragement and incredulity by making that our only and immediate goal.

Let us focus instead on a more practical, more attainable peace - - based not on a sudden revolution in human nature but on a gradual evolution in human institutions - -on a series of concrete actions and effective agreements which are in the interest of all concerned. There is no single, simple key to this peace - - no grand or magic formula to be adopted by one or two powers. Genuine peace must be the product of many nations, the sum of many acts. It must be dynamic, not static, changing to meet the challenge of each new generation. For peace is a process - - a way of solving problems.

With such a peace, there will still be quarrels and conflicting interests, as there are within families and nations. World peace, like community peace, does not require that each man love his neighbor - - it requires only that they live together in mutual tolerance, submitting their disputes to a just and peaceful settlement. And history teaches us that enmities between nations, as between individuals, do not last forever. However fixed our likes and dislikes may seem the tide of time and events will often bring surprising changes in the relations between nations and neighbors.

So let us persevere. Peace need not be impracticable - - and war need not be inevitable. By defining our goal more clearly - - by making it seem more manageable and less remote - - we can help all peoples to see it, to draw hope from it, and to move irresistibly toward it.

Second: Let us re-examine our attitude toward the Soviet Union. It is discouraging to think that their leaders may actually believe what their propagandists write. It is discouraging to read a recent authoritative Soviet text on Military Strategy and find, on page after page, wholly baseless and incredible claims - - such as the allegation that " American imperialist circles are preparing to unleash different types of wars…that there is a very real threat of a preventive war being unleashed by American imperialists against the Soviet Union…(and that) the political aims of the American imperialists are to enslave economically and politically the European and other capitalist countries…(and) to achieve world domination.

Truly, as it was written long ago: "The wicked flee when no man pursueth." Yet it is sad to read these Soviet statements - - to realize the extent of the gulf between us. But it is also a warning - - a warning to the American people not to fall into the same trap as the Soviets, not to see only a distorted and desperate view of the other side, not to see conflict as inevitable, accommodations as impossible and communication as nothing more than an exchange of threats.

No government or social system is so evil that its people must be considered as lacking in virtue. As Americans, we find communism profoundly repugnant as a negation of personal freedom and dignity. But we can still hail the Russian people for their many achievements - - in science and space, in economic and industrial growth, in culture and in acts of courage.

Among the many traits the peoples of our two countries have in common, none is stronger than our mutual abhorrence of war. Almost unique, among the major world powers, we have never been at war with each other. And no nation in the history of battle ever suffered more than the Soviet Union suffered in the course of the Second World War. At least 20 million lost their lives. Countless millions of homes and farms were burned or sacked. A third of the nation's territory, including nearly two thirds of its industrial base, was turned into a wasteland - - a loss equivalent to the devastation of this country east of Chicago.

Today, should total war ever break out again - - no matter how - - our two countries would become the primary targets. It is an ironical but accurate fact that the two strongest powers are the two in the most danger of devastation. All we have built, all we have worked for, would be destroyed in the first 24 hours. And even in the Cold War, which brings burdens and dangers to so many countries, including this Nation's closest allies - - our two countries bear the heaviest burdens. For we are both devoting massive sums of money to weapons that could be better devoted to combating ignorance, poverty and disease. We are both caught up in a vicious and dangerous cycle in which suspicion on one side breeds suspicion on the other, and new weapons beget counter-weapons.

In short, both the United States and its allies, and the Soviet Union and its allies, have a mutually deep interest in a just and genuine peace and in halting the arms race. Agreements to this end are in the interests of the Soviet Union as well as ours -- and even the most hostile nations can be relied upon to accept and keep those treaty obligations, and only those treaty obligations, which are in their own interest.

So, let us not be blind to our differences - - but let us also direct attention to our common interests and to means by which those differences can be resolved. And if we cannot end now our differences, at least we can help make the world safe for diversity. For, in the final analysis, our most basic common link is that we all inhabit this planet. We all breathe the same air. We all cherish our children's future. And we are all mortal.

Third: Let us re-examine our attitude toward the Cold War, remembering that we are not engaged in a debate, seeking to pile up debating points. We are not here distributing blame or pointing the finger of judgment. We must deal with the world as it is, and not as it might have been had history of the last eighteen years been different.

We must, therefore, preserve in the search for peace in the hope that constructive changes within the Communist bloc might bring within reach solutions which now seem beyond us. We must conduct our affairs in such a way that it becomes in the Communists' interest to agree on a genuine peace. Above all, while defending our vital interest, nuclear powers must avert those confrontations which bring an adversary to a choice of either a humiliating retreat or a nuclear war. To adopt that kind of course in the nuclear age would be evidence only of the bankruptcy of our policy - - or of a collective death-wish for the world.

To secure these ends, America's weapons are non-provocative, carefully controlled, designed to deter and capable of selective use. Our military forces are committed to peace and disciplines in self-restraint. Our diplomats are instructed to avoid unnecessary irritants and purely rhetorical hostility.

For we can seek a relaxation of tensions without relaxing our guard. And, for our part, we do not need to use threats to prove that we are resolute. We do not need to jam foreign broadcasts out of fear our faith will be eroded. We are unwilling to impose our system on any unwilling people - - but we are willing and able to engage in peaceful competition with any people on earth.

Meanwhile, we seek to strengthen the United Nations, to help solve its financial problems, to make it a more effective instrument of peace, to develop it into a genuine world security system - - a system capable of resolving disputes on the basis of law, of insuring the security of the large and the small, and of creating conditions under which arms can finally be abolished.

At the same time we seek to keep peace inside the non-communist world, where many nations, all of them our friends, are divided over issues which weaken western unity, which invite communist intervention or which threaten to erupt into war. Our efforts in West New Guinea, in the Congo, in the Middle East and in the Indian subcontinent, have been persistent and patient despite criticism from both sides. We have also tried to set an example for others - - by seeking to adjust small but significant differences with our own closest neighbors in Mexico and in Canada.

Speaking of other nations, I wish to make one point clear. We are bound to many nations by alliances. These alliances exist because our concern and theirs substantially overlap. Our commitment to defend Western Europe and West Berlin for example, stands undiminished because of the identity of our vital interests. The United States will make no deal with the Soviet Union at the expense of other nations and other peoples, not merely because they are our partners, but also because their interests and ours converge.

Our interests converge, however not only in defending the frontiers of freedom, but in pursuing the paths of peace. It is our hope - - and the purpose of Allied policies - - to convince the Soviet Union that she, too, should let each nation choose its own future, so long as that choice does not interfere with the choices of others. The communist drive to impose their political and economic system on others is the primary cause of world tension today. For there can be no doubt that if all nations could refrain from interfering in the self-determination of others, then peace would be much more assured.

This will require a new effort to achieve world law - - a new context for world discussions. It will require increased understanding between the Soviets and ourselves. And increased understanding will require increased contact and communications. One step in this direction is the proposed arrangement for a direct line between Moscow and Washington, to avoid on each side the dangerous delays, misunderstandings, and misreadings of the other's actions which might occur at a time of crisis.

We have also been talking in Geneva about other first-step measures of arms control, designed to limit the intensity of the arms race and to reduce the risks of accidental war. Our primary long-range interest in Geneva, however, is general and complete disarmament - - designed to take place by stages, permitting parallel political developments to build the new institutions of peace which would take the place of arms. The pursuit of disarmament has been an effort of this Government since the 1920's. It has been urgently sought by the past three Administrations. And however dim the prospects may be today, we intend to continue this effort - - to continue it in order that all countries, including our own, can better grasp what the problems and possibilities of disarmament are.

The one major area of these negotiations where the end is in sight- - yet where a fresh start is badly needed - - is in a treaty to outlaw nuclear tests. The conclusion of such a treaty - - so near and yet so far - - would check the spiraling arms race in one of its most dangerous areas. IT would place the nuclear powers in a position to deal more effectively with one of the greatest hazards which man faces in 1963, the further spread of nuclear arms. It would increase our security - - it would decrease the prospects of war. Surely this goal is sufficiently important to require our steady pursuit, yielding neither to the temptation to give up the whole effort nor the temptation to give up our insistence on vital and responsible safeguards.

I am taking this opportunity, therefore, to announce two important decisions in this regard.

First: Chairman Khrushchev, Prime Minister Macmillan and I have agreed that high-level discussions will shortly begin in Moscow looking toward early agreement on a comprehensive test ban treaty. Our hopes must be tempered with the caution of history - - but with our hopes go the hopes of all mankind.

Second: To make clear our good faith and solemn convictions on the matter, I now declare that the United States does not propose to conduct nuclear tests in the atmosphere so long as other states do not do so. We will not be the first to resume. Such a declaration is no substitute for a formal binding treaty - - but I hope it will help us achieve one. Nor would such a treaty be a substitute for disarmament - - but I hope it will help us achieve it.

Finally, my fellow Americans, let us examine our attitude toward peace and freedom here at home. The quality and spirit of our won society must justify and support our efforts abroad. We must show it in the dedication of our own lives - - as many of you who are graduation today will have a unique opportunity to do, by serving without pay in the Peace Corps abroad or in the proposed National Service Corps here at home.

But wherever we are, we must all, in our daily lives, live up to the age-old faith that peace and freedom walk together. In too many of our duties today, the peace is not secure because freedom is incomplete.

It is the responsibility of the Executive Branch at all levels of government - - local, state and national - - to provide and protect that freedom for all of our citizens by all means within their authority. It is the responsibility of the Legislative Branch at all levels, wherever that authority is not now adequate, to make it adequate. And it is the responsibility of all citizens in all sections of this country to respect the rights of all others and to respect the law of the land.

All this is not unrelated to world peace. "When a man's ways please the Lord," the Scriptures tell us, "he maketh even his enemies to be at peace with him." And is not peace, in the last analysis, basically a matter human rights - - the right to live out our lives without fear of devastation - - the right to breathe air as nature provided it - - the right of future generations to a healthy existence?

While we proceed to safeguard our national interests, let us also safeguard human interests. And the elimination of war and arms is clearly in the interest of both. No treaty, however much it may be to the advantage of all, however tightly it may be worded, can provide absolute security against the risks of deception and evasion. But it can - - if it is sufficiently effective in its enforcement and if it is sufficiently in the interests of its signers - - offer far more security and far fewer risks than an unabated, uncontrolled, unpredictable arms race.

The United States, as the world knows, will never start a war. We do not want a war. We do not now expect a war. This generation of Americans has already had enough - - more than enough - - of war and hate and oppression. We shall be prepared if others wish it. We shall be alert to try to stop it. But we



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Posted by dshambli
Posted 01/25/09
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The past couple of months have been very trying for the liberty movement. We've all read the stories of Ron Paul supporters being kicked out of REC meetings, taking the REC's to court, and overall being at odds with the traditional Republicans. Noticing the hit-and-miss outcomes of this  straightforward approach, I decided to take a more conservative route.

As a precinct leader in the C4L, I'm expected to attend monthly Party meetings (in my case, the Republican meetings). This Thursday, I attended my third meeting, thus qualifyng me to be appointed as a precinct committeeman. Fortunately, the Comittee was also voting on people to chair the various sub-committees. I threw myself in to head the Events sub-committee and the group enthusiatically voted to have me be the chairman of events. As such, I'll be on the executive board and will be able to help the Committee make decisions.

The events chairman itself is an important position, as I will be the one in charge of deciding which events would be most beneficial for us to attend, in addition to how we can present ourselves at the events. This is encouraging, as at the last meeting the group expressed a couple of points that I feel will welcome liberty-minded individuals. They mentioned the lack of technology, a recurring theme throughout the Party, but also that people generally don't have a strong background in civics. I feel that Ron Paul supporters generally excelled in both of these. At our events, I hope that we can come across as more technology-friendly, and also have some sort of party-neutral literature, such as the Constitution, to hand to people.

Therefore, I think it's important for us to keep trying. We may not like it, but we're going to have to learn to play the game. Like Heath Whiteacker said, "If you approach this with finesse you will have no problem being invited in, making friends, and start working to change the party from within."





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I have to start out by saying that I was wrong.  I was possibly one of the strongest critics about Mr. Cross' actions at the Chairman selection. I passed judgement without knowing all the facts.  I passed judgement.... and I shouldn't have.  Wow feels great to get that off my chest.

What Mark essentially did was open the door throughout the state for Ron Paul republicans in their respective REC's.  The RPOF admits that they got beat this past election.  They were beat by technology.  Technology that Obama had and they did not.  The shift now is to bring in technology savvy republicans that can assist with this.  I have been one of those republicans.  

When discussing items that the local REC clubs could do, some of the members had no idea what most of the items were.... SMS Messages, Meetup Groups, Facebook, Twitter, Myspace, and Youtube.  If your REC group is anything like mine. Most of the members are older.  In the neighborhood of 50-70 years old.  This shows you that the party isn't really going to think outside of the box.  

Yet another reason why we need more and more Ron Paul republican types to get involved.  Now I am in no way advocating approaching this situation wrong.  If you join, expect to work, mingle, entertain and educate.  Don't I repeat Don't start saying things like I am going to overthrow the REC or we are going to take you over.  If you approach this with finesse you will have no problem being invited in, making friends, and start working to change the party from within.  

When Mark threw his support behind Greer, he shortened the time for our movement to gain a foothold in the RPOF.  Greer understands that the RPOF will need technology savvy republicans in order to succeed.  I have only been to about 4 REC meetings.  Our past meeting on Thursday I was asked to chair the Technology Committee.  This should serve and show the eagerness of the RPOF and Local REC's to embrace the movement.  

Mark has been successful considering numerous REC groups have invited him to speak or have asked how they can get some Ron Paul guys to their groups.  I believe it was Tuesday the Hillsborough REC group met.  Even there at the states largest REC group (not to mention wealthiest) they were talking about what he did.  Most agree that this was exactly what the party needed.  

I say whether or not you agree with it.  You will soon benefit from it as well.  Let bygones be bygones lets get past this rhetoric and move on. 

Good luck and God Bless,

Heath Whiteaker.





Categories: Ron Paul, Republican Party, Revolution
Tags: Mark Cross, REC, RPOF

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So long as we have an inauguration drawing this sort of crowd and not a protest about our government blowing $700 billion of our dollars so that The Pigmen of Wall Street can continue to rob our nation blind, then saddle us with the bill when their bets go bad, we will see no solution.

I cannot take credit for the idea floated on the forum, but I do like it.

It is time for We The People to send a strong message to Washington DC - no more. No more loading our children and grandchildren with debt. No more bailing out speculators and bankers who made bets they knew were unsafe at the time. No more bailing out people who came to Congress to demand the removal of leverage limits, got what they asked for, then blew themselves up with the very leverage they demanded to be able to use.

No more.

Therefore, on February 1st, which is more than enough time for Barack Obama to be seated in his chair in the West Wing, I am recommending an act of peaceful, lawful and yet unmistakable protest.

That is, to mail President Obama one teabag. Nothing dangerous, nothing illegal - just one teabag.





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Don't look to Keynes

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Michael Costa | November 14, 2008

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Article from:  The Australian

MOST economists would agree with the proposition that there is no such thing as a free lunch. All activities incur costs in terms of resources that have to be paid for directly or in terms of other opportunities forgone. This proposition is a fundamental insight of modern economics.

But although most economists would acknowledge the theoretical validity of this proposition, not all believe it to be true in practice.

Traditional Keynesian macro-economics is the theoretical refuge of economists who continue to believe economic magic can occur by the government waving its fiscal wand.

This year's Nobel laureate in economics, Paul Krugman, is in this category. Many were surprised when he won this year's prize. Krugman has become the pin-up boy of the US liberal Left for his attacks on the Bush administration and his advocacy of greater government involvement in the economy. To be fair to Krugman, his early work on strategic trade theory in particular is as worthy of recognition as the work of some other recent prizewinners. Whether there should be a Nobel prize for an imprecise social science such as economics is another question.

In a recent column for The New York Times, Krugman resurrects several old Keynesian chestnuts to argue that consumers have capitulated to bad economic times by pulling in their belts and adjusting their consumption patterns to tighter economic circumstances.

He claims that individual virtue has become public vice and "attempts by consumers to do the right thing by saving more can leave everybody worse off".

This, of course, is the classic Keynesian paradox of thrift, which requires corrective action from monetary authorities. Interest rates need to be cut and the economy stimulated to avoid a recession.

Krugman goes on to argue that the US in particular also faces the other classic Keynesian problem, the liquidity trap. Monetary policy alone cannot solve the problems. Further reductions in interest rates are unlikely to have a positive effect on the economy. He writes that "the financial crisis has made (Federal Reserve) policy largely irrelevant for much of the private sector" and "efforts to bail out the financial system, even if they work, won't do more than slightly mitigate the problem".

The solution? You guessed it: "a major fiscal stimulus" that should take "the form of actual government spending rather than rebate cheques that consumers probably wouldn't spend". Now, Krugman is not the only prominent economist advocating a fiscal stimulus for the US economy. Martin Feldstein and Lawrence Summers also have argued for a fiscal stimulus.

Feldstein argues that the increase in government spending should include money not only for "infrastructure such as bridges and roads" but also for military equipment "depleted by the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan". Feldstein's advocacy of a Keynesian fiscal stimulus is significant as he once rejected the efficacy of such policies. Krugman's advocacy, on the other hand, is true to form. During the economic crisis of the late 1990s, he published a book called The Return of Depression Economics, in which he advocated much the same policies. Unfortunately for Krugman, almost as soon as the book was published the world economy recovered.

The notion that US economic problems are the result of the paradox of thrift is absurd. The US has been living well beyond its means for many years. Its savings rate is historically low and has even been negative in recent years. Personal and corporate debt levels are at record levels. The US has been living off the savings of other nations.

How Krugman can equate this situation with the circumstances of the '30s described by John Maynard Keynes in his General Theory is difficult to understand.

Even if you accept Keynes's analysis that lack of effective demand was responsible for the mass unemployment of the '30s, you would be hard pressed to credibly argue, coming off the recent speculative asset bubble, that lack of effective demand has caused the present problems.

As the recession bites, households' ability to consume at the levels of the recent past will certainly be curtailed. But remember, this household expenditure was based on excessive leverage and clearly unsustainable. A period of economic contraction and financial deleveraging is the natural, albeit unpleasant, antidote to the excesses of the period.

Certainly the Government should provide support to those caught up in the inevitable adjustment process. In many ways the automatic stabilisers built into the system already provide that support through the social security system.

But what is absolutely clear is that attempting to maintain aggregate demand at the levels seen during the asset bubble is a recipe for further financial dislocation.

The US budget is in structural deficit and not in a position to provide the level of aggregate demand required.

Feldstein estimates that the financial crisis has already reduced homeowner wealth by $US3trillion and the value of the stock market has declined by a further $US8trillion.

The other disturbing aspect of Krugman's position is that it runs counter to the sensible consensus that has developed on the effectiveness of a fiscal stimulus. Most economists advocate a stimulus only when monetary policy isn't working effectively, and even then it should be temporary and well targeted.

Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke warned Congress that any fiscal stimulus should be temporary and not increase the Government's structural deficit.

"The nation faces daunting long-run budget challenges associated with an ageing population, rising healthcare costs and other factors" and a fiscal stimulus "that increased the structural budget deficit would only make confronting these challenges more difficult", he said.

Equally, Krugman's view that a classic Keynesian liquidity trap is evident needs to be treated with caution. The Keynesian liquidity trap arises because of a decline in what is known as the marginal efficiency of capital. In short, profitable investment opportunities dry up. Monetary policy stops working; even at low or negative interest rates, people are not willing to invest.

Even if the theory had some validity as part of a self-contained model, it is questionable in today's globally integrated economy and, in any event, doesn't truly describe the causes of present problems.

There are plenty of investment opportunities in the global economy that would return more than the risk-adjusted cost of capital. People aren't hoarding scarce capital because of lack of profitable opportunities; rather, they are confused.

Government fiddling with market transmitters of information such as price signals and insolvency risks through selective bailout packages confuses everybody in the market and leads to financial paralysis despite investment opportunities.

The present financial crisis is caused by the failure of government institutions, principally central banks, that were reluctant to burst the asset price bubble and are unwilling to accept the inevitable readjustment.

Modern proponents of a liquidity trap thesis point to Japan's so-called "lost decade of growth" as evidence of the failure of monetary policy alone to resolve economic downturns. They conveniently forget that part of Japan's problem was that its central authorities were unwilling for many years to allow Japanese banks and other financial institutions to bear the cost of their mistakes.

It's arguable that a managed liquidation of technically bankrupt institutions may have resulted in a quicker adjustment process.

The government's role should have been the social safety net role of providing income and adjustment support to the people affected, not the institutions. Perhaps Krugman needs to put aside Keynes for a while and pick up Joseph Schumpeter.





Categories: Philosophy, Economy
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http://libertymaven.com/2009/01/17/ron-paul-2012-says-ann-coulter/4034/

She has said some very positive things about the good doctor in the past and I could see her meaning this.

“Ron Paul 2012″ says Ann Coulter

January 17th, 2009 2:17 am  |  by Marc Gallagher  |  Published in ActivismElectionLibertyMaven CommentaryMediaPoliticsRon Paul  |  1 Comment

Ann Coulter at the Time 100 red carpet.

Image via Wikipedia

Ann Coulter appeared on FOX’s semi-humorous comedy program “Red Eye” the other day and named Ron Paul as her choice for President in 2012. It may have been meant as sarcasm but it was difficult to tell. After all, at one point she said she’d support Hillary Clinton if McCain was the GOP nominee.

When told that Ron Paul will be “in his eighties” (which is not true) she said under her breath, “Someone like Ron Paul”.

Coulter has also been known to say things that really annoy some on the left, but I like when she gets Ron Paul’s name out there, even if it is in jest.

Listen to the audio of the exchange below.

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Categories: Ron Paul, Presidential Race, Republican Party
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Posted by
Posted 01/19/09
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I want to extend the invitation to all C4L members in the 2nd Congressional District to become dues paying members and then ask you to become Precinct Leaders.  If you're already a Precinct Leader consider stepping up and becoming a County Coordinator.

Precinct Leaders are very important in our organization, and they are important to the Florida Campaign For Liberty.  Once we have enough PL's, we will be fully recognized by that National C4L and we will be able to have votes for leadership roles in our organization. 

Precinct Leaders are one of the base units in our organization.  The C4L needs them so that we can reach the people in YOUR communities through YOU.  There are some members in our area that are dues paying members, but haven't signed up to be Precinct Leaders.  To them I say, you've already paid the dues, why not step up and help lead your precinct?  As a bonus for becoming a PL, you get a 20% discount at the C4L Shoppe.  Something I've used to bolster my wardrobe so I can sport the C4L logo wherever I go.

What are your thoughts on where District 2 should go?  I want and need to hear what you're desires are, what your complaints are, what you think. 

If we want the kind of change that the Campaign for Liberty is advocating, it's not going to happen by itself.  We have to put in some hard work and effort.  There may be defeats along the way, but that shouldn't deter us from trying.  I'd prefer not to look retrospectively and say "dang, I wish we had done something."  Doing something starts with a personal commitment to our organizations principles.  Our platform isn't radical, it's common sense.

If not us, who?  If not now, when?  We have to be our own advocates for Liberty.  No one is going to serve this up on a plate for us. 

I know the kind of America that I'd like to live in, and I think we share that vision.  Without a concerted effort by all of us, we will continue to have the "same old, same old".  I'd prefer to leave our children a better world than what we have now.  Wouldn't you?

I'll end this post with a lyric from Frank Zappa that I am often reminded of when things are not how I'd like them to be:

"Do you love it, do you hate it.  There it is the way you made it."

In Liberty,

Jason Hellenberg





Categories: Ron Paul, Campaign For Liberty, Education, Grassroots News
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Posted by SteveCurtis
Posted 01/18/09
Last updated 01/25/09
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'Atlas Shrugged': From Fiction to Fact in 52 Years

By STEPHEN MOORE

Some years ago when I worked at the libertarian Cato Institute, we used to label any new hire who had not yet read "Atlas Shrugged" a "virgin." Being conversant in Ayn Rand's classic novel about the economic carnage caused by big government run amok was practically a job requirement.

If only "Atlas" were required reading for every member of Congress and political appointee in the Obama administration. I'm confident that we'd get out of the current financial mess a lot faster. Many of us who know Rand's work have noticed that with each passing week, and with each successive bailout plan and economic-stimulus scheme out of Washington, our current politicians are committing the very acts of economic lunacy that "Atlas Shrugged" parodied in 1957, when this 1,000-page novel was first published and became an instant hit. Rand, who had come to America from Soviet Russia with striking insights into totalitarianism and the destructiveness of socialism, was already a celebrity.

The left, naturally, hated her. But as recently as 1991, a survey by the Library of Congress and the Book of the Month Club found that readers rated "Atlas" as the second-most influential book in their lives, behind only the Bible. For the uninitiated, the moral of the story is simply this: Politicians invariably respond to crises -- that in most cases they themselves created -- by spawning new government programs, laws and regulations. These, in turn, generate more havoc and poverty, which inspires the politicians to create more programs . . . and the downward spiral repeats itself until the productive sectors of the economy collapse under the collective weight of taxes and other burdens imposed in the name of fairness, equality and do-goodism. In the book, these relentless wealth redistributionists and their programs are disparaged as "the looters and their laws."

Every new act of government futility and stupidity carries with it a benevolent-sounding title. These include the "Anti-Greed Act" to redistribute income (sounds like Charlie Rangel's promises soak-the-rich tax bill) and the "Equalization of Opportunity Act" to prevent people from starting more than one business (to give other people a chance). My personal favorite, the "Anti Dog-Eat-Dog Act," aims to restrict cut-throat competition between firms and thus slow the wave of business bankruptcies. Why didn't Hank Paulson think of that?

These acts and edicts sound farcical, yes, but no more so than the actual events in Washington, circa 2008. We already have been served up the $700 billion "Emergency Economic Stabilization Act" and the "Auto Industry Financing and Restructuring Act." Now that Barack Obama is in town, he will soon sign into law with great urgency the "American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan." This latest Hail Mary pass will increase the federal budget (which has already expanded by $1.5 trillion in eight years under George Bush) by an additional $1 trillion -- in roughly his first 100 days in office.

The current economic strategy is right out of "Atlas Shrugged": The more incompetent you are in business, the more handouts the politicians will bestow on you. That's the justification for the $2 trillion of subsidies doled out already to keep afloat distressed insurance companies, banks, Wall Street investment houses, and auto companies -- while standing next in line for their share of the booty are real-estate developers, the steel industry, chemical companies, airlines, ethanol producers, construction firms and even catfish farmers. With each successive bailout to "calm the markets," another trillion of national wealth is subsequently lost.

Yet, as "Atlas" grimly foretold, we now treat the incompetent who wreck their companies as victims, while those resourceful business owners who manage to make a profit are portrayed as recipients of illegitimate "windfalls." When Rand was writing in the 1950s, one of the pillars of American industrial might was the railroads. In her novel the railroad owner, Dagny Taggart, an enterprising industrialist, has a FedEx-like vision for expansion and first-rate service by rail. But she is continuously badgered, cajoled, taxed, ruled and regulated -- always in the public interest -- into bankruptcy.

Sound far-fetched? On the day I sat down to write this ode to "Atlas," a Wall Street Journal headline blared: "Rail Shippers Ask Congress to Regulate Freight Prices." In one chapter of the book, an entrepreneur invents a new miracle metal -- stronger but lighter than steel. The government immediately appropriates the invention in "the public good." The politicians demand that the metal inventor come to Washington and sign over ownership of his invention or lose everything. The scene is eerily similar to an event late last year when six bank presidents were summoned by Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson to Washington, and then shuttled into a conference room and told, in effect, that they could not leave until they collectively signed a document handing over percentages of their future profits to the government.The Treasury folks insisted that this shakedown, too, was all in "the public interest."

Ultimately, "Atlas Shrugged" is a celebration of the entrepreneur, the risk taker and the cultivator of wealth through human intellect. Critics dismissed the novel as simple-minded, and even some of Rand's political admirers complained that she lacked compassion. Yet one pertinent warning resounds throughout the book: When profits and wealth and creativity are denigrated in society, they start to disappear -- leaving everyone the poorer.

One memorable moment in "Atlas" occurs near the very end, when the economy has been rendered comatose by all the great economic minds in Washington. Finally, and out of desperation, the politicians come to the heroic businessman John Galt (who has resisted their assault on capitalism) and beg him to help them get the economy back on track. The discussion sounds much like what would happen today: Galt: "You want me to be Economic Dictator?" Mr. Thompson: "Yes!" "And you'll obey any order I give?" "Implicitly!" "Then start by abolishing all income taxes." "Oh no!" screamed Mr. Thompson, leaping to his feet. "We couldn't do that . . . How would we pay government employees?" "Fire your government employees." "Oh, no!"

Abolishing the income tax. Now that really would be a genuine economic stimulus. But Mr. Obama and the Democrats in Washington want to do the opposite: to raise the income tax "for purposes of fairness" as Barack Obama puts it. David Kelley, the president of the Atlas Society, which is dedicated to promoting Rand's ideas, explains that "the older the book gets, the more timely its message." He tells me that there are plans to make "Atlas Shrugged" into a major motion picture -- it is the only classic novel of recent decades that was never made into a movie. "We don't need to make a movie out of the book," Mr. Kelley jokes. "We are living it right now."

Mr. Moore is senior economics writer for The Wall Street Journal editorial page.

Printed in The Wall Street Journal, page W11 Copyright 2008 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. Distribution and use of this material are governed by our Subscriber Agreement and by copyright law. For non-personal use or to order multiple copies, please contact Dow Jones Reprints at 1-800-843-0008 or visit www.djreprints.com




Poll: Have yor read Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand?

Yes, it is one of my favorite books
Yes, and it is somewhat thought provoking
Yes, but I disagree with most of it
No, it's too long
No, I'm waiting for the movie
No, I have heard too many bad things about Ayn Rand
No, I never heard of it

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Categories: Finance, Executive Power, Federal Legislation, Current Events, Congress
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Posted by
Posted 01/17/09
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We're just a few short days before the new administration takes over from the last.  I am reminded of a quote from the HBO Series John Adams said by President Washington to President Adams.  "You are fairly in, and I am fairly out".

Whether or not you like the fact that Obama has been elected, we should take a moment and be thankful that we, the people, overthrow our government every four to eight years through BALLOTS and not BULLETS.  Not many countries can boast this type of system for over two hundred years.  And for that I am thankful to be an American.  That our government, however mangled it seems to be, allows this to happen.

It's our time to make sure we get our butts in gear, because we only have twenty-ish months before we get to change the mid-term guard.  And we need to be ready to advocate the candidates that we feel best to represent us in Congress and Senate.

Please get involved with your LOCAL politics.  City and County Commissions, School Boards and the myriad of posts that affect you locally.  It's been said that change in politics starts at the local level.  Please take time out of your schedule, if you can, to attend or monitor the events that are happening in your local communities.  It is daunting and a time sink, but I believe that individual citizens can have more sway and power than our elected officials.  They work for us, and must have our leave, if they want to be re-elected for another term.

For Liberty!

Jason Hellenberg



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Posted by BrianRosales
Posted 01/15/09
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Currently running for City Council Member, Seat 6, Fort Walton Beach, FL.

More details coming soon such as links to Facebook page, local Supervisor of Elections, and perhaps official webpage for my campaign.





Categories: Campaign For Liberty, Revolution
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Posted by MarkCrossEA
Posted 12/10/08
Last updated 12/10/08
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It is rare for an individual who adheres strictly to the beliefs of individual liberty, Constitutional government, sound money, free markets, and a noninterventionist foreign policy to say they are proud to be a Republican.  However, I am proud to be a Republican.  The Republicanism that flows through my veins is that of our last two Constitutionalist Republican Presidents Calvin Coolidge and Warren Harding, that of Mr. Republican Robert Taft, and of course Ron Paul.  When I consider myself as being a Republican in no way do I ever associate myself with the big government neoconservative flavor.  When it comes to voting, I probably had more empty checkboxes than I did votes casts this past November, and I certainly never take party into consideration either as this is always secondary to principles and the issues.  


With that said, when it came to the Brevard County FL Republican Executive Committee officer elections I figured that I would probably be submitting the principled non-vote (or even maybe writing in "Ron Paul" and hope the race came down to 1 vote!).  Let's face it, while our candidates for chairman could be a lot worse, we had no Ron Paul Republicans running.  So that was settled, I'd be turning in a blank ballot, I thought.  

Two of the three candidates I knew well throughout the past 1.5 years involvement in the party as a Ron Paul Republican, and these two obviously started campaigning for my vote.  Having known that none of these two (nor the 3rd candidate) were Ron Paul Republicans I figured there had to be some way I could capitalize on this opportunity and spread the message.  We all know the lengths that candidates will go in order to get a vote when running for office, and in this particular election there's only about 120 potential voters so every voter is honed in on.

I remembered the great "Pamphleteer" Thomas Paine, and how his treatise on government at that time, Common Sense, had a monumental effect on sparking the desire of our Founding Fathers to regain their freedom, liberty, and Independence from the oppressors.  At this time there was also even quite a bit of apathy, and sympathy, to the Royal crown from ohters.  The preceding events leading up to the Boston Tea Party were simply taxes on stamps, and mercantilist trade policies that of course favored the East India Tea Company.  I say "simple" taxes because now there are many in America who cannot conceive of any of the multitude of confiscatory taxes imposed on us to be eliminated, or even drastically reduced.  Mercantilist trade policies are a way of life, and more recently, and most unfortunately, even aggressive unconstitutional wars have become accepted and desired by some.  

There are of course many who reject this tyranny, there are many more who also do, but may not fully know it yet.  We all already know this otherwise we wouldn't be here, but even Glenn Beck stated that Ron Paul was the closest we had to a Founding Father during the 2008 Presidential Primary.  The Revolution: A Manifesto, is our own modern day Common Sense.  

With the power that's inherent in the message of liberty, I had immediately realized that getting a potential county Republican Executive Committee chairman to read The Revolution: A Manifesto was more important than my vote for this position since one will win anyways.  My thoughts being that at the very least, if one reads this book they will have a better understanding of Ron Paul, Ron Paul Republicans, and what we're about.  Instead of viewing us as a threat (which of course we legitimately are to big government), perhaps we would truly be welcomed into these local establishments instead of being constantly conspired against, and getting constant threats of being booted out. 

After one particular Republican meeting I mentioned to one candidate the notion of reading the book in exchange for my vote, and I merely got a chuckle and no further response.   

Jason Steele is the other candidate who is running for chair, and ironically the local Ron Paul/C4L base strongly opposed his bid for the state house of representatives, as he was running against a Constitutionalist Ken Babington whom we were heavily supporting.  The bias against Jason, based on his policies, was already there and I figured it a long shot, even though he did stand up for a Ron Paul Republican during a swear-in when another committeewoman tried to block it.  Jason made direct contact with me on a number of occasions so I decided to give him a call and speak with him briefly to just see if he could be somebody that at least treats Ron Paul Republicans fairly.  After making this determination that he would at least treat us fairly I asked if he would meet me for lunch so we can discuss some of these things in greater detail.

I asked Jason some of his plans for the local party, and let him do most of the talking to explain what he wanted to do as chairman of the local party.  The point of this meeting was not to discuss policy but to gather how myself, and others who put liberty above party, would be treated.  What impressed me the most was his desire to allow the party to be a conduit that represented the committee members, not his beliefs.  This puts the onus back on us to be active, involved, and engaged in the process to that we may put more Paulians into office who can implement the message.  Being confident that fair treatment would be there, I proceeded to discuss the presidential primary, and Ron Paul, to see where he stood.  Having assumed he was a McCain supporter, I was a bit surprised to learn that he had supported Huckabee from the beginning.  Having knocked on thousands of doors during the primary, I recalled how Huckabee supporters were the easiest to change into being Ron Paul supporters.  
 
We got into Ron Paul specifically and I didn't hear any of the expected reactions that one might expect from someone who you'd believe to genuinely have disdain for the good doctor.  Jason mentioned that he liked Ron Paul for all of the reasons I would expect anybody to like the guy for: He was honorable, he had integrity, and he stood up for and was passionate about his beliefs.  I can, however, understand how when somebody finds their candidate, they may not go and heavily research somebody else.  This was the case for a lot of Huckabee supporters.

Jason then told me that he still was interested in some of Ron Paul's beliefs, and wanted to learn more.  At this point I knew he would read the book.  We discussed some other things a little bit more, and I concluded by telling him that I'd make a deal, and if he would read Ron Paul's book before the election, that I would vote for him.  

We spoke at length about the book after he read it and I have no reason to believe he did not read it based on our discussion.  Although he wasn't converted into being a 100% Ron Paul Republican, with a newfound understanding there were a lot of shared beliefs, and an overall agreement in philosophy, albeit with some questions on implementation.  

While I do not like to use the word "endorsement", as it has a sense of telling people what to do, I'd rather explain why I will be voting for this particular candidate.  And I will be voting for Jason Steele come this thursday.  Our modern day founding father Ron Paul, and the modern day treatise on freedom, The Revolution: A Manifesto, came through again.    Ron Paul Republicans have to take this as a sign to become active in the process because our voices will be heard.

If you have any questions or comments for Jason Steele I'm sure he would be more than happy to receive them at rfbjasonsteele@juno.com.

 





Categories: Ron Paul, Election News, Republican Party, Revolution, Voting
Tags: Revolution A Manifesto, local

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Posted by MarkCrossEA
Posted 10/10/08
Last updated 10/12/08
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Twenty Seven Floridians attended the Leadership Summit at the Rally for the Republic, where we learned about the organization and the goals of the Campaign for Liberty. Many more Floridians attended the Real Paulitics Training Seminar, which described how politics really works and what makes politicians respect you. And hundreds of Floridians attended the Rally for the Republic, where Dr. Ron Paul electrified the audience with one of the best speeches of his distinguished career.

Now the Campaign for Liberty has finally started! Those of us who attended the Rally for the Republic were sitting on pins and needles waiting for the Campaign to kick off. Now it's here!

As of today, there are over 500 Floridians who have registered with the Campaign for Liberty. I'd especially like to thank the Precinct Leaders for coming forward, and I encourage everyone reading this to either become a Precinct Leader or volunteer personally to assist one.

The job of the Precinct Leader is going to be especially important in the days and weeks ahead. The Campaign for Liberty is a grassroots organization, beginning from the smallest political unit: the precinct. As a Precinct Leader, you will have the tools you need to canvass your precincts and identify other supporters. You will also be in a position to communicate with voters in your precinct about the important issues of the day.

And while the website is adding features every day, there is still plenty for us to do right now. The Campaign for Liberty website will be interactive with other Precinct Leaders, County Coordinators, and District Coordinators. You will be able to post announcements, post your own blog, and create a calendar of events, plus a whole lot more. As the Campaign grows we will be appointing interim County and District Coordinators.

As a Precinct Leader, you will have a voice in the leadership at both levels and the opportunity to be elected. This is where your hard work in your precinct will pay off, as your fellow Precinct Leaders recognize your dedication. If you would like to nominate someone from your county to be a County or District Coordinator, just go to your dashboard and submit a nomination form. You can even nominate yourself if you want to step up to the plate. The only requirement is that you must be a Precinct Leader to be eligible for these positions.

In the days to come, we will be learning more about our precincts and introducing ourselves to our neighbors. So take a deep breath and let's get started! Feel free to ask me any questions as we go along, or you can ask other Precinct Leaders as well.

Thank you for being a part of history as we work to restore the American republic and once again show the world the true blessings of liberty.

In Liberty,
Mark Cross
Campaign for Liberty





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Posted by MarkCrossEA
Posted 10/03/08
Last updated 10/01/08
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I thought this was a great article published by Robert P Murphy at http://mises.org/story/3132


The Great Bank Robbery of 2008

Daily Article by | Posted on 9/30/2008


Henry Merritt "Hank" Paulson, Jr.

A.K.A. "The Treasurer"
The Paulson bailout failed in the House. If it isn't a death blow to the plan, it should be. This is not an economic plan: it is a heist. It will go down as The Great Bank Robbery of 2008. The economics behind it are nonsense, but we are naïve if we spend much time even considering the "arguments" for it. This is a money and power grab, pure and simple. Just as magazine covers today feature scantily clad women that would have been scandalous a generation ago, in the same manner Paulson's proposal — made in broad daylight and on national TV! — is almost naked in its audacity. Austrian economists tend to be libertarians in their political views, and they are often chided for not keeping these systems her