Yesterday, January 5, 2011, those we elected on November 2nd took their oath of office and swore to uphold the Constitution of the United States, so help them God.
It was a great day in America. Yet, we cannot believe all will be well and the bad guys will go away quietly. Imagine this the good guys coming to town and the bad guys thinking up ways to get back at us for voting them out of office.
I’m reminded of the ’50’s movie, High Noon. High Noon was about a Marshall, Will Kane, played by Gary Cooper. Kane has decided to turn in his badge because he fell in love and married a pacifist Quaker. He is going to leave town and a new life with his pacifist wife. Before he can leave, he learns that a criminal that Kane had brought to justice has been pardoned on a legal technicality. He is arriving on the noon train vowing revenge on Kane and anyone who stands in his way.
Kane stays and fights the criminal and his thug buddies who show up to help him. The townspeople do not help him… he’s on his own to fight this battle. Even his wife challenges him to leave with her instead of fighting. He chooses to fight.
The difference between the movie and what happened at high noon in DC is this: The Townspeople are behind our new guys 100%. They are not in this alone and the rest of the bad guys will be run out of town if the new Congress stays firm and principled.
Crusty cowboys, boots and spurs are just what we need when liberty is under attack. We all have a little cowboy or cowgirl in us and we will need to saddle up for the great adventure that awaits us — protecting freedom for all Americans. Cowboys are always there for the downtrodden, the weak, and those who cannot defend themselves either out of fear or because they don’t know how.
I’m counting on our new Cowboy Congress to do all they can to protect us, fix the fiscal problems, repeal Obamacare, stamp out corruption and clean up the town so the good people of America can live in peace with freedom-loving cowboys watching our backs.
In the movie High Noon – The bad guys are taken down, Kane lives to ride another day and he and his wife walk off into the sunset. Good guys always win in the cowboy movies and we expect nothing less than a happy ending in DC and across America now that the good guys are in charge.
A note for the good guys: Put your spurs on and fight for the Politically Uncorrect. That’s your job and this is your song!
Comment
On top of all of this, state and local governments have literally thousands of regulatory agencies and commissions that regulate everything from allergies to zoos. As just one example, taken from the statelocalgov.net, the state of Alabama has regulatory agencies and commissions that regulate retirement systems, geological surveys, public health, education, conservation and natural resources, industrial relations, agriculture, seniors, tourism and travel, veterans affairs, environmental management, forensic science, business development, rehabilitation, banking, insurance, labor, transportation, youth services, children's affairs, film making, ports, disabilities, arts, real estate, oil and gas, forests, ethics, surface mining, alcoholic beverages, auctioneers, and "faith-based initiatives." And Alabama is a relatively conservative state with a modest-sized government compared to, say, New York, California, or Washington DC. Local governments are also active in regulating most of the things that are on the list for the state of Alabama.
Then there's the Fed. (I'll be breif) In addition to attempting to fix prices (interest rates) and causing perpetual boom-and-bust cycles with its monetary manipulation, the Fed performs dozens of regulatory functions. According to a Fed publication entitled "The Federal Reserve System: Purposes and Functions," the Fed regulates bank holding companies, state-chartered banks, foreign branches of member banks, edge and agreement corporations, state-licensed branches, agencies, and representative offices of foreign banks, nonbanking activities of foreign banks, national banks, savings banks, nonbank subsidiaries of bank holding companies, financial reporting procedures, accounting policies of banks, business "continuity" in case of economic emergencies, consumer protection laws, securities dealings of banks, information technology used by banks, foreign investment by banks, foreign lending by banks, branch banking, bank mergers and acquisitions, who may own a bank, capital "adequacy standards," extensions of credit for the purchase of securities, equal opportunity lending, mortgage disclosure information, reserve requirements, electronic funds transfers, interbank liabilities, Community Reinvestment Act subprime lending demands, all international banking operations, consumer leasing, privacy of consumer financial information, payments on demand deposits, "fair credit" reporting, transactions between member banks and their affiliates, truth in lending, and truth in savings.
Because of the inevitable failures of all government planning in a democracy, Hayek wrote that "the conviction [will grow] that if efficient planning is to be done, the direction must be 'taken out of politics' and placed in the hands of experts — permanent officials or independent autonomous bodies." Moreover, "the cry for an economic dictator is a characteristic stage in the movement toward [central] planning." This indeed describes many of the above-mentioned agencies and commissions, but is especially descriptive of all the central planning "czars" who now hold office in the federal government. These include the following, as of July 2010: Afghanistan czar, AIDS czar, auto-recovery czar, border czar, California-water czar, car czar, central-region czar (Middle East, Persian Gulf, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and South Asia), climate czar, domestic-violence czar, drug czar, economic czar (Paul Volcker), energy and environment czar, faith-based czar, government-performance czar, Great Lakes czar, green-jobs czar, Guantanamo-closure czar, health czar, information czar, intelligence czar, science czar, stimulus-accountability czar, pay czar, regulatory czar, Sudan czar, TARP czar, Technology czar, terrorism czar, urban-affairs czar, weapons czar, WMD-policy czar, war czar, oil czar, manufacturing czar, cybersecurity czar, safe-school czar, Iran czar, Mideast-peace czar.
To sum it up, it would be very difficult to argue against the proposition that the US economy today is even more heavily controlled, regulated, and regimented by the state than Germany was at the time Hayek wrote The Road to Serfdom. Americans have traveled many miles down the road to serfdom by deluding themselves that the god of democracy will somehow save them from statist slavery. But as Hayek warned 56 years ago, "There is no justification for the belief that, so long as power is conferred by democratic procedure, it cannot be arbitrary…"
The exercise of arbitrary or dictatorial power is, of course, the whole purpose and function of all those agencies, commissions, and czars.
Where do you want to start? The politicians will try to scare you off by threatening that to which your most dependent. Be strong.
If you're not already aware. This is what's going on in DC while dangerous criminals are allowed back out on the streets. It's horrifying that this is happening to our citizens and veterans for protesting the hijacking of our election process. This is still happening! They are STILL being tortured and treated like full on terrorists.
You may not be aware of the typical things they're forced to go through...…
ContinuePosted by Babs Jordan on August 14, 2022 at 8:44am
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