LISTEN to BLACK MAN THINKIN’


Is This Why Obama Could Lose?

Categories: ... 'bout Politics
Comments: Comments Off
Published on: August 31, 2012

This is not about which party had the better nominating convention. It’s not about budget deficits or the national debt. It’s not about Social Security or Medicare. It’s not about who built American businesses. It’s not about unemployment or “fair” taxation. It’s not about Obamacare.

It’s about an American president’s response to the death of Americans.

Rule No. 1 of war is “Young Men Die”; Rule No. 2 is “You Cannot Change Rule No. 1”. Therefore, Americans expect US casualties in Iraq and Afghanistan. However, they do not expect US allies to purposely attack US troops.

On Aug. 10, Afghan “friendlies” killed 6 Americans in one day in two separate attacks. In one, a police commander shot 3 Marines he invited to a meal, then reportedly joined the Taliban. In the second, a civilian opened fire at a NATO base. These were hardly isolated incidents. Attacks on, and deaths of, American troops have increased in frequency, with more occurring this year than in 2011.

However, the Commander-in-Chief’s response is more disturbing than the attacks. When US troops mistakenly burned copies of the Koran, President Obama sent a 3-page letter of apology to the Afghan president, who replied on Afghan television, “we call on the US government to bring the perpetrators of the act to justice and put them on trial and punish them.” Obama complied, though stopping short of criminal charges for an error that injured or killed no one. However, Obama demanded no apology when Afghani “allies” killed US troops.

Apparently, American blood is fair compensation for the loss of paper and ink.

On Aug. 20, Obama vowed to do more to protect American troops. He would talk with Afghan president Karzai, and he called on American troops to be more careful about who they trust. On Aug. 27, an Afghan “colleague” killed 2 more American soldiers .

In contrast, when Manuel Noriega’s Panamanian Defense forces opened fire on 4 unarmed US military officers in December 1989, killing Marine First Lieutenant Robert Paz, President George H. W. Bush invaded Panama, removed Noriega from his country and from power, and put him in prison. That action demonstrated a president who values the lifeblood of his military. Perhaps this president does not regard that same blood as highly.

After Trayvon Martin was killed in Florida, Obama said, “You know, if I had a son, he’d look like Trayvon.” His desire: “that everybody pulls together…to figure out exactly how this tragedy happened.” Undoubtedly, a better response than what he gave to US troop deaths in Afghanistan.

Unfortunately, whether Obama sought calm or political advantage is unclear. If Obama wanted calm, then why not reprimand Spike Lee for his tweets, condemned the New Black Panther Party for offering a seven-figure bounty on a man convicted of no crime, or discussed the tone of pro-Trayvon rallies with Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson?

Obama shied away from those stands, leaving perhaps an innocent man to twist in the wind after telling the nation that the boy George Zimmerman killed might have been Obama’s son.

Perhaps Obama’s seeming lack of concern for the lives of Americans half a world away is excusable, though military families will disagree. Obama’s awkward show of concern for the death of one young man stateside may be no big deal, though it resembled pandering or political posturing. But something closer to home, the president’s home, is impossible to either excuse or ignore.

In 2008, nearly half of Chicago’s more than 400 gun homicide victims were aged 10 to 25. During the 2008 – 2009 school year, as the one-time Chicago community organizer was ascending to and assuming the presidency, guns killed at least 36 Chicago public school children. In 2009, Chicago had more black children shot to death than soldiers dying in Iraq. The year 2010 saw Chicago with weekends in which 29 and 54 people were shot.

In 2008, 405 homicides were by gunshot wounds. In 2009, there were 379 gunshot homicides. 2010 saw 364 killed by guns. In 2011, it was 375. Finally, in 2012, there are 307 gun homicides through Aug. 29. Since 2008, 1,830 people, most of them black, have died from gunshot wounds in Chicago.

As an American, a black man, and a Chicagoan, this should deeply concern President Obama. So, what is his response to the carnage?

When police stopped a convicted felon outside then Senator and presidential candidate Obama’s home with a .40-caliber handgun and a bulletproof vest in 2008, Obama had no comment.

This is not to imply Obama is silent on all gun violence. When a gunman shot Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ) and killed 6 others in January 2011, the president took to the podium, calling it “an unspeakable act”; he also released a statement. When a deranged man opened fire in an Aurora, CO, theater, killing 12 and wounding 58 others, the president issued a statement saying how he and the First Lady were “shocked and saddened”. He spoke to the incident at a campaign event in Florida.

It is difficult to give the president high marks for compassion in these cases. It is more likely that, as president, duty compelled him to respond to the shooting of a House member. Since he was already before a campaign event crowd ignoring or downplaying the Colorado shooting to deliver a stump speech, would have been bad form.

However, those who live and suffer in the city Obama calls home still wait for their hometown-boy-who-made-good to empathize with them. So far, he has not.

Compassion for fallen Americans does not come naturally to this president. When he is silent as nearly 2,000 are gunned down on his hometown streets, when he apologizes to a foreign ally that murders US troops, something is wrong.

Many wonder if this president cares about Americans struggling in the current economy. Given his demonstrated concern for dead countrymen, that remains a fair question. Should enough people decide he does not care, then, no matter the nation’s challenges, and no matter his November opponent, America will likely choose to face the future with a different president.

Copyright 2012. blackmanthinkin.com

Ending Spock “As We Knew Him”

Categories: ... 'bout Politics
Comments: Comments Off
Published on: August 29, 2012

I’m not a “Trekkie”, but I am a fan, old enough to have seen each Star Trek movie’s original release. I consider Star Trek 2: The Wrath of Khan the best of those using the original TV cast. It was memorable because, in it, Mr. Spock died…sort of. You can see the details of his “demise” here:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SPBGZRRrEKM&feature=related[/youtube]

I write “sort of” because the backlash against killing the Star Trek franchise’s most popular character prompted another movie, ostensibly to resurrect Spock. But I digress. I use the clip to draw some parallels between Spock’s “death” and the current Medicare situation.

Upon hearing Admiral Kirk (yep, Jimmy got an upgrade) tell Scottie, “I need warp drive in 3 minutes or we’re all dead!”, Spock leaves the bridge, goes to the Engine Room, and brings the ship’s warp drive back on line, in time for the Enterprise and those aboard to escape harm. In the process, Spock sacrifices himself. In his final dialog with a distraught Admiral Kirk, it is said, “The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few…or the one.” That is where I begin.

Spock “as we knew him”, or before he absorbed enough radiation to light the Eastern Seaboard, is comparable to Medicare “as we know it”. The similarities? Well:

    A Firm Deadline: Spock understood time was of the essence; he had 3 minutes. With Medicare, we have until 2024 if we do nothing, only until 2016 with the effects of Obamacare, or perhaps even sooner. So say Medicare’s trustees.

    A Need for Quick Action: The Enterprise’s warp drive had to be fixed NOW. In 3 minutes more, no action would matter; there would be neither ship nor crew to save. Similarly, Medicare needs fixing, correction, reform (pick you favorite noun) NOW. In not more than 12 years, and possibly less than 4, if nothing changes, then there will be nothing that can be done.

    A Need for Bold Action: Had Spock remained “as we knew him”, all aboard the Enterprise would have died. In a nod to Caiaphas, Spock reasoned that it was more expedient that one man die for the ship than that the ship perish. Similarly, should Medicare remain “as we know it”, both Medicare and those who depend upon it will be lost.

All who follow, and who are willing to speak candidly about, Medicare’s financial situation know the status quo cannot continue; both Medicare and Social Security, with its $8.6 Trillion in unfunded liabilities through 2086, will bankrupt the federal government if no action is taken. So far, only one of the major US political parties is speaking openly about this. While both would cut Medicare spending by more than $700 Billion over the next decade, the GOP plan is not law and would be part of reforming the program; the Democrat approach is already law and does nothing to make Medicare more solvent. But back to Spock.

In order to save the Enterprise and those aboard her, Spock effectively reformed himself. Not surprisingly, those who were fond of Spock “as we knew him” resisted this reform, though they had no other plan that would save Spock or the ship. Before he made his sacrifice, however, Spock performed a mind meld with Dr. McCoy, uttering the word, “Remember”.

Remember

That marked the end of Spock “as we knew him”. As it turned out, Spock’s reform allowed everyone to survive, and paved the way for a new Spock to appear.

The point is simple, if somewhat contrived. Had Spock continued “as we knew him”, those aboard the Enterprise would have died; if Medicare continues “as we know it”, America’s seniors, who depend upon government-run or subsidized health care, may not survive.

One major US political party proposes to end Medicare “as we know it”, in favor of a reformed version that could actually last beyond 2016, and even beyond 2024. The other party seems content to simply let Medicare end, not just “as we know it,” but end period, not heeding the financial warnings from Medicare’s trustees. The other party even encourages the lie that money seniors “paid into” Medicare when they were younger will provide their benefits when they turn 65. The open secret is that no one “pays into” Medicare for their future benefits. Instead, everyone now “pays for” the services those now on Medicare receive.

With 10,000 Americans turning 65 daily and qualifying for Medicare, and with fewer than 200,000 jobs created per month, the math no longer works. Something needs to be done differently, NOW, or soon there will be nothing that can be done at all.

Medicare is indeed a case of the need of the many to find a way to fund benefits bumping against the need of the few to receive benefits. Medicare “as we know it” is broken to the point that, at most, 12 years remain before it dies. If Medicare were Mr. Spock, then it would already be on its way to the nation’s Engine Room, looking to get things back online. It would abandon its current make up in search of a new one that would first make those who now depend upon it safe; next, be affordable for those who must pay for it; and remain available for those too young to be in either of the former two groups. It would do that, even if it meant death, because “The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few…or the one.”

Spock sacrificed himself only to return for further service. Similarly, the sacrifice of the current Medicare would result in a new program with a longer life. However, for that to occur, the American people must decide they can let go of Medicare “as we know it.”

Copyright 2012. blackmanthinkin.com

Time for a Romney Rant on Taxes

This started back in February, when Republicans were still winnowing their field of potential presidential nominees:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=totRt7wks5I[/youtube]

And it continues to the present time, now fueled by the Obama campaign:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uMo5pykT4uw[/youtube]

I’m speaking of the obsession over seeing Mitt Romney’s tax returns. That discussion continues, to the exclusion of other matters in this campaign. To be fair, Romney’s naming a running mate shifted the discussion momentarily. Yet we still here the same three questions about the presumptive GOP presidential nominee’s tax returns:

    • Why won’t he release them?
    • What’s in them?
    • Why is his tax rate so low?

Of course, the president wants this focus on perceived Romney weaknesses – his wealth (therefore, he cannot understand the struggles of the middle class), and his ability to avoid high tax rates (therefore he’s 1%-er and doesn’t play fairly, by the same set of rules as everyone else).

I will not make Romney’s case regarding his tax returns. However, I will note that this discussion is reminiscent of the revelatory scene from the Wizard of Oz:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YWyCCJ6B2WE[/youtube]

So, I will do my Toto impression and pull back the curtain. To quote Shakespeare’s Macbeth, the issue of Romney’s tax returns, like the fake wizard, is a matter:

That struts and frets his hour upon the stage
And then is heard no more: it is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing.

Those who will oppose Romney because of his taxes are likely Obama voters from the outset. Yet the Romney tax discussion works to divert attention from things the Obama campaign would rather keep behind the curtain. Consider how some issues have played out since February, when calls for Romney’s Forms 1040 became loud:

US Jobless Rate Feb - Aug 2012

The unemployment rate, which the administration declared would not top 8% once the “stimulus” bill became law is back at 8.3%, where it was in February, now with an upward trajectory. I doubt that many unemployed have Romney’s tax returns as a top concern. How about this:

Black Unemployment 2012

This disturbs me deeply as a black man. A year ago in Detroit, Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA) called black unemployment “unconscionable”. It is back over 14%, as it was in February. It appears that the administration’s plan remains a mystery to the Congressional Black Caucus…and to everyone else. I wonder if there are enough black people who now feel it is “time to let go”? Then there is this:

US GDP 2012

As the volume went up on the call for Romney’s tax returns, the volume on GDP growth went down. The trend would suggest another recession, and even more pain for those without employment. And what about this:

Deficits 08-12

The president promised to halve the deficit in his first term. Instead, Obama’s deficits, each year, are more than double George W. Bush’s 2008 deficit, the last and largest of the Bush administration. This last one is key:

US Retail Gas Price Chart

US Retail Gas Price data by YCharts

A gallon of gasoline cost less than $1.80 when Obama took office. The above chart is a bit old; gasoline has already topped $4/gallon in many places across the country. The 120% rise in gasoline under this administration puts a stranglehold on economic recovery and growth and a huge hole in family budgets.

Despite these issues plaguing the nation since February and even before, somehow the nexus of at least some discussions is Mitt Romney’s tax returns. Though it does not appear to be Romney’s style, I think a rant is in order. Some may remember this classic by former NBA star Allen Iverson:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eGDBR2L5kzI[/youtube]

If candidate Romney could pull it off, it might go something like:

“If a Democrat (i.e., Harry Reid) says that I’ve not filed taxes, and y’all (doubt that Romney would say “y’all”) hear it, then that’s that – you guys believe it! I mean, I might have not gotten one tax return together, and that’s because we’ve requested an extension and we’re working to get it done. If they’re not done, then I can’t release them. But it’s not about that…it’s not about that…at all. It’s easy to sum it up and try to say it’s all about taxes…

“We in here (another non-Romneyism), I’m supposed to be the GOP nominee for president and we in here talkin’ bout taxes. We’re talkin’ about TAXES, man. Not the economy, not the economy…we’re talking about…taxes. Not high unemployment, not low job creation…we in here talkin’ about…TAXES.

“Not GDP growth, not talkin’ about the US falling back into a recession…we’re talkin’ about TAXES, man. We’re talkin about TAXES!

“Not the deficits, which are higher than ever in history, we’re not talkin’ about that…we’re in here talkin’…about…TAXES.

“We’re not talkin’ about the price of gasoline, and how it’s more than doubled since 2009….”

You get the picture. The country faces serious issues, and we’re in here talking about Mitt Romney’s taxes. This is majoring in the minors. I have no idea how seeing Romney’s tax return would worsen those problems, any more than I can see how Obama’s release of his tax returns has made them better the last four years.

When looking at those problems, it is easy to understand why the president would rather focus on his opponents’ tax returns. However, this is no different from the man behind the curtain in the Wizard of Oz, who had something he wished to hide. All that’s missing is for someone to confront Obama, as Dorothy confronted the fake wizard and say that they don’t believe him, and that he’s a very bad man. That may come in November, and it will likely be more than one person trying to get back to Auntie Em.

In the meantime, I would just like to hear the rant.

Copyright 2012. blackmanthinkin.com

A Case of Misplaced Sympathy?

Perhaps you’ve seen this video of Tony Farmer, a rising senior at Garfield Heights High School in Ohio and a top college basketball prospect, reacting to hearing a judge sentence him after he pleaded guilty to several crimes, including 3 felonies:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3295O40Vfbg[/youtube]

There it is! Another young black man going to prison instead of college! Another hateful white judge, ignoring the pleas of teachers, coaches, family members, and even the crime victim not to send Tony Farmer to prison! This is what’s wrong with America – killing opportunity for young black people even before they can realize their potential! This situation requires immediate action. People need to organize. Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson need to travel to Ohio and speak to this situation. Recall Judge Pamela Barker! . . .

Ok, forgive me. I put my “social justice” hat on for a moment; only way to complete that rant since that “social justice” stuff can make people say and write strange things. The hat’s off now; back to reality.

First, Farmer’s attack on his former girlfriend, Andrea Lane, was caught on surveillance video. Farmer faced charges of kidnapping (perhaps dragging Lane by her hair back into the lobby of the apartment building was a bad idea), felonious assault (might have been that kick to Lane’s head as she cowered in fear in a corner), and robbery (dude took Lane’s cellphone, a bank card, a laptop computer and her car keys).

Second, a grand jury who, no doubt, viewed the video of Mr. Farmer’s antics, indicted him. So, even though a decent district attorney can, as the saying goes, indict a ham sandwich, ordinary citizens also concluded Farmer’s case warranted criminal charges.

Third, Farmer rejected a plea bargain which contained less prison time than he ultimately received. Interestingly, Farmer’s attorney, Joe Dubyak, said he expected his client would receive probation after his guilty plea.

Now, I’m no lawyer, I don’t play one on TV, and I don’t live in Ohio, but a cursory review of state law makes Mr. Dubyak’s comment seem strange. According to the Ohio Revised Code:

    • Kidnapping is a first degree felony, Chapter 2905.01(C)(1),
    • Felonious assault is a second degree felony, Chapter 2903.11(D)(1), and
    • Robbery is a second degree felony, Chapter 2911.02(B).

The code speaks of mandatory sentencing for those convicted of, or pleading guilty to, the first two crimes. The code also prescribes definite prison terms of 3 to 11 years for first degree felonies, and 2 to 8 years for second degree felonies (Chapter 2929.14(A)(1) & (2)).

Mr. Dubyak’s client pleaded guilty 3 felonies, 1 first degree felony and 2 second degree felony, with two of those calling for mandatory incarceration. It is hard to fathom why he believed probation was a possibility. Judge Barker showed leniency to Farmer, imposing minimum sentences and allowing all sentences to run concurrently. This spared Farmer at least another 4 years and 9 months in prison, and as much as another 24 years and 9 months.

Of course, none of these facts are apparent when watching Farmer collapse as he sees his college hoops aspirations evaporate. There is one other thing that is not apparent, at least not immediately, in the dramatic courtroom video:

The woman Farmer dragged by the hair, the woman he beat and kicked in the lobby of her own apartment building, the woman whose property he stole after assaulting her, is also black.

With so much “concern” of late over attacks on women through the words of politicians, I can only wonder where is the concern over this real attack on a woman, involving fists and feet, all because that woman no longer wanted to have a romantic relationship with the man who would attack her? Is there truly a stronger reaction to what this young man lost than there is to what he did to another black person?

I hate to see young black men go to prison, but can anyone condone Tony Farmer’s crimes? Make no mistake: giving ANYONE who commits 3 felonies against a black woman anything other than prison time is unconscionable. To my thinking, giving anyone who commits 3 felonies against a black woman minimum sentencing, that effectively condenses three crimes into one, also devalues that black female victim, and minimizes the ordeal she suffered.

Again, I hate to see young black men go to prison. However, I cannot say, in good conscience, that what a young man can do with a basketball should entitle him to a pass when it comes to kidnapping, assaulting, and robbing another person. For a violent attacker of a black person to have his talents put aside, the same way he put aside the humanity and dignity of another human being, affirms the value of black people in American society. I always promote human dignity (which all people have) over human talent (which not all people have).

I have no clue why Tony Farmer did what he did, nor do I care, though I hurt for the immediate opportunities that he has sacrificed. My sympathies lie with the woman he attacked, who had a 6′ 7″, 220-pound man drag her by the hair, beat her, and kick her in the head. Anyone who would do that to another human being doesn’t belong on a college campus or on a college basketball team. Anyone who would do that to another human being looks good in an orange jumpsuit.

Copyright 2012. blackmanthinkin.com

Maybe He’s Just Not That Into Us. Maybe We’d Rather Not See It.

Categories: ... 'bout Politics
Comments: Comments Off
Published on: August 17, 2012

It’s not hard to understand why the first black man on the ballot for President of the United States captured 95% of the black vote. One might have thought, after the 2008 election, that Obama loved the black community as much as they loved him. But after nearly four years, and what has happened during that time, I’m not quite sure about that. Consequently, I admit to confusion regarding the continued strength of black support for Barack Obama. Let me explain:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aytV_MDxPms[/youtube]

Vice President Joe “the Human Gaffe Machine” Biden, spoke to the NAACP National Convention on behalf a black president’s administration. O…K…? When announcing that he would pass on the event, Obama cited “scheduling” issues”. Hmm…

Stop me if you’ve heard this before, “Hey baby, I’d love to come and spend time with you and your family, but I got these ‘scheduling issues’….” Wasn’t that about the time you saw the relationship going downhill?

That’s not the only indication that more black love flows into the White House than flows from it. A quote from the hyperlinked article points to an uncomfortable truth: “… President Obama’s schedule would appear to reflect the power and importance of the Latino vote in this year’s election. The White House’s focus on Latino issues has been demonstrated over the last year and a half.”

So, in 2008, 19 of every 20 black votes cast went to Obama while he received only 2 out of every 3 latino votes. But when re-election time comes around in 2012, Obama spends more time courting…. who, again? Further, he sends his white proxy to talk to the old girlfriend, so to speak.

Do not misunderstand – Biden handled himself well before the NAACP crowd. Still, it’s a safe bet that the conferees wanted to hear from the black beneficiary of the NAACP’s century-long effort for racial equity in America – not the white guy in the second spot on the ticket.

Then I recalled what happened when Obama did speak to black folks:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1mnv37Aqbi8[/youtube]

Joe Biden sounded more compassionate toward black people than did Obama. Biden spoke with empathy and concern. Obama, however, talked about himself and lectured black folks to get with him and to stop complaining. Then he slapped the lectern and absorbed all the… applause? Really? Obama ignores blacks for an extended period, then finally drops by to tell them to stop complaining? And they applaud him? Wow.

Sounds like the woman who’s been ignored for so long that she’s happy to hear anything from her man, no matter what it is, so long as he shows up and says it to her. I was almost ready to conclude VP Biden liked black people more than the black president. Then he showed, again, why he’s Joe Biden:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tGaWQsq9YbI[/youtube]

He was with us in July, then we became “y’all back in chains” in August. Perhaps he believes only black folks would suffer if a Romney presidency goes bad. Perhaps he’d stand by and let Romney chain black people… or even help.

Of course, a larger question is why does a black president keep sending a white man to talk to black people? What black person voted for Joe Biden? Which blacks flocked to campaign events to see Biden?

I don’t believe blacks have endured higher unemployment than any other American demographic, apart from teenagers, over the last 3 years so that they could be comforted and then thrown under the bus by Joe Biden, while the “latin lover” holds the president’s attention. He attends more latino political events, puts more latino people in his administration, and even risks violating the Constitution making announcements intended to secure the affections of latinos.

Meanwhile, Obama makes announcements that leave black people nearly apoplectic. Seems that black pastors are still reacting to that one…and not well.

Nevertheless, the widely held view is that Obama will yet capture at least 90% of black votes.

Given the state of black unemployment, the disregard for traditional black social values, and the constant pandering to another ethnic group, it is hard for me to understand why black people would support Obama so strongly. It would seem that he’s just not that into us.

Apparently, I’m not the only black person who can’t figure out what’s going on with Obama:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HUJIWmsQdi8[/youtube]

You may want to watch that one again. Quite a few of the unemployed black people in Detroit, listening to Maxine Waters, seem more than a bit impatient. Maybe they’re not as “in love” as they once were. Perhaps they no longer believe the president is working hard for black America, or for its votes.

Of course, Obama did say he’s not the president of black America.

He also acknowledges that his administration has not done enough to help American business in general and black businesses in particular.

Then, perhaps it is time for 95% of the black vote to find another lover, one who will do more for us than other groups, and doesn’t scold us when economic pain creates impatience. Maybe he just not that into us. Maybe it’s time for a change.

Copyright 2012. blackmanthinkin.com

Romney Made A Good VP Pick…..And?

Categories: ... 'bout Politics
Comments: Comments Off
Published on: August 11, 2012

Romney and VP Pick Paul Ryan

He did not choose the inexperienced rockstar from Florida, Marco Rubio. He did not go for the “ruffle-no-one’s-feathers” pick from Ohio, Rob Portman. He did not select the NJ firebrand, Chris Cristie. Nor did he select the former Bush Administration official, Condoleeza Rice. To be fair, most of them are on record as saying they did not want the job.

What he did do was select someone who unabashedly addresses the most pressing domestic problem in the United States, one that even surpasses the lack of jobs in importance – federal overspending and the deficits and debt it creates. Unfortunately, few seem to have yet understood the link between a government that spends like a drunken sailor and an economy that cannot produce enough jobs. Paul Ryan seems to understand both the problem at hand, and the link to the problem of unemployment.

With this selection, the focus of the presidential campaign, at least on the Republican side, becomes the role of the federal government and how much it spends in carrying out that role. Most believe the federal government spends too much money, and most people also believe that it is doing too much.

It therefore appears that Ryan’s selection takes dead aim at a clear Obama weakness: the national view that his policies call for too much spending. If the GOP turns a laser focus on that topic, it could easily burn a hole through all the personal attacks and fix the nation, as a whole, on the discussion of “how much is too much,” and how do we get it all under control.

I see the Obama campaign as desperate, doing all it can to avoid discussion of the president’s record on federal finances and the economy. The Romney campaign reminds me of the “Gang Who Couldn’t Shoot Straight”, fumbling one opportunity after another to counter false narratives from the White House and then hammer the president on what the country already sees as his obvious failings.

However, this could be a game-changer. Mr. Ryan may seem a one-trick pony to some as the House Budget Committee Chairman but, in this election cycle, it’s a pretty good trick. He understands the numbers better than either Romney or Obama, and would easily expose Joe “The Human Gaffe Machine” Biden as, well, a Human Gaffe Machine, when it comes to matters financial. Check this out:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JYsOet9ynS0[/youtube]

Now, Joe Biden is not as quick on his feet as Chris Matthews and, if Ryan can respectfully carve up Matthew like a Thanksgiving Turkey, Biden will not fare much better.

It is a good VP pick, because it gives voice to one of the government’s leading experts on government spending and how to control it. Not to mention, it is likely that Ryan will have a better response to the Obama campaign’s personal attacks, given that he has been slighted by the president before. He has shown a fair amount more backbone in response to an Obama attack than has Romney.

If this choice helps to focus on an important issue facing the country, and it should, then it is an excellent selection, no matter the outcome of the election in November. However, if the GOP fails to maintain focus on issues and continue to respond poorly to things like phantom tax evasion charges and thinly-veiled murder accusations, then this pick is a wasted opportunity.

Copyright 2012. blackmanthinkin.com

A Campaign Against Logic – The Opposition to Voter ID Laws

Categories: ... 'bout Politics
Comments: Comments Off
Published on: August 10, 2012

American progressives and liberals seem to have the same philosophy regarding elections that some attribute to SEC football coaches regarding conference games: if ya ain’t cheatin’, then ya ain’t tryin’.

Consider the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, or ACORN, a group linked with president Obama. Their rap sheet is long ; by 2009, the organization already had at least a decade-long record of voter fraud arrests and convictions in 17 states: Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Indiana, Michigan, Missouri, Minnesota, North Carolina, New Mexico, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, Virginia, Washington state, and Wisconsin.

It doesn’t stop there with ACORN. In 2010, Maria Miles and Kevin Clancy were 2 ACORN workers among 5 people charged with felony voter fraud in Wisconsin. Clancy got 10 months in prison, concurrent with an armed robbery sentence he was serving (you can’t make this stuff up!). Miles got a 1-year jail term, deferred in lieu of 90 days in jail and two years probation. The organization itself pleaded guilty to felony voter fraud in Nevada in 2011 . Suffice to say that ACORN raised voter registration fraud to an art form.

But there is more. Comedian and Democrat Al Franken won the 2008 Minnesota US Senate race by 312 votes, after eight months of legal wrangling and recounts. One thousand ninety-nine convicted felons, who cannot legally vote in Minnesota, and who tend to vote Democrat when allowed near a polling place, did cast ballots.

It would be nice to say there is voter fraud on both sides, Democrat and Republican. However, it is difficult, at best, to find much on the Republican side; an accusation against an Arizona county supervisor candidate and a conviction of an Indiana Secretary of State is out there. Still the Democrats, even without the voter fraud machine known as ACORN, are the more consistent, aggressive, and determined perpetrators of voter fraud. News reports and court records over the past few years seem to confirm the fact. Yet, despite the arrests and convictions, and at least one US Senate race where Democrat voter fraud affected the outcome, the Democrat Party maintains that voter fraud is not a problem.

What seems to get lost in the noise of debate is the fact that voter fraud is much more effective at disenfranchising voters than any Voter ID law could ever hope to be. Voter ID laws put a surmountable barrier, at worst, before would-be voters – the same barrier anyone opening a checking account must overcome – to obtain a photo ID to verify their identity. Those who believe they are disenfranchised can either comply with the law and get an ID or sue to demonstrate that the law treats them unfairly. Both of these can be accomplished long before Election Day.

But what remedy is available to the victims of voter fraud? The 1,099 felons who voted illegally in the 2008 US Senate race in Minnesota effectively disenfranchised 1,099 legal voters. Given the final margin of victory (312 votes), it is likely that the junior Senator from Minnesota was not the voters’ choice; the will of the people did not prevail. Would another vote, or a recall election, correct the situation? Of course not! Every vote that is cast by the man who should not represent the people will still register in the Senate until he would be replaced. And each vote from that Senator is a new injury to the people who cast legal ballots.

Further, what good would a recall do, unless the fraudulent voters are first purged from the rolls and prevented from casting another ballot?

Eric Holder would have all believe Voter ID laws are the equivalent of poll taxes:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xIonL3e_0AQ[/youtube]

When speaking to the NAACP, Holder relayed the Democrat talking point that Texas would accept a concealed weapon carry permit as an acceptable photo ID for voter identification but would not accept a student photo ID for the same purpose. This was meant to show the unreasonable nature of voter ID laws. However, the gun permit involves coming out clean after a National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) check; they KNOW you are who you say you are. Let’s just say the requirements for getting a student photo ID are significantly less stringent.

But that is the current tactic of the political left: present an unequal act as the moral equivalent to a reasonable act so that they might call what most would consider reasonable as either absurd or unfair.

Kind of like the college football coach who would have you believe that, when another school’s senior player takes a recruit to a movie, it’s the moral equivalent of his Booster Club buying the kid a car. Then, that same coach would tell you that since, both schools did something “questionable”, that both acts should be viewed in the same light.

Of course, it is not only a false argument, but one that defies logic, just like the Democrat argument that a student photo ID is no different from a concealed weapon permit.

As I wrote earlier: if ya ain’t cheatin’, then ya ain’t tryin’.

Copyright 2012. blackmanthinkin.com

Why Don’t They Tell Us This About Taxes – And Why Won’t We Hear It?

Comments: Comments Off
Published on: August 4, 2012

Recall this portion of the April 2008 Democratic presidential debate regarding taxes:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8CYn2NWuLhQ&feature=relmfu[/youtube]

Credit Charlie Gibson for attempting to make a point: History consistently shows tax revenues are higher when the tax rate is lower. Obama twice sidestepped Gibson’s question, first talking about “fairness” (huh?), effectively saying that lower rates are unfair, no matter how much more money they raise. The second time he questioned the historical link between low tax rates and higher tax revenues by saying “… uh, eh, eh-eh, That MIGHT happen, uh, or it might not…” Hillary Clinton simply answered a different question than the one posed.

However, Charlie Gibson’s question misses the real point. So also does the fact that each of the four times federal income tax rates were lowered (following World War I, in the 1960’s, in the 1980’s, and the 2000’s), income tax revenues increased. So also does the current debate about extending the current income tax rates or returning to the higher rates of the 1990’s. Finally, the excited rumors of pending tax reform also miss the real point.

The real point is these 30 words: “The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration.”

That is the entire text of the 16th Amendment to the US Constitution. Congress’ received this power less than a century ago, in 1913, part of an early 20th century wave of progressive government reform which also included: the direct election by voters, rather than selection by state legislatures, of US Senators; the prohibition of alcohol; and women’s suffrage – these were the 17th, 18th, and 19th amendments. But let’s not lose focus as did Mr. Gibson when trying to question Hillary and Barack.

Without the 16th Amendment, there is no 2008 debate question regarding national capital gains taxes. Without that amendment, there would be no discussion of the Clinton era versus Bush era income tax rates. Without the 16th Amendment, no private citizen would deal with the IRS regarding income taxation; they would address such matters with the state taxing authority.

The 16th Amendment’s ratification robbed US citizens of a significant constitutional protection. Prior to it, the American people’s incomes were safe from Congress. Congress could levy whatever taxes they saw fit, however it was for the states to determine how to raise what was apportioned to them. Sales taxes, excise taxes, fees, income taxes – whatever worked best financially, economically, or politically for that state. The federal government could not harass individual citizens about federal income taxes – there was no such thing. Consequently, there was a barrier between citizens and the federal government regarding the private property known as their incomes.

Why did that protection matter? Well, there was less federal stress for Americans. Also, citizens had more input into what taxes were paid. Additionally, well… look at this graph of public debt from 1900 and projected through 2016. The debt hardly registered before the 16th Amendment was ratified in 1913. Though the numbers then were small by today’s standard, between 1913 and 1916, the debt grew nearly 30%. Some may blame World War I, but the US did not enter that war until 1917.

Fast forward through the 1920’s (when the federal government ran a budget surplus each year, after lowering income tax rates) and look at the period 1940 through 1946. The more than four-fold debt increase is understandable – World War II was on. However, the US had no armed conflict during the 1930’s; what is to explain the more than 70% increase in debt during that decade?

Try this: once the 16th Amendment was ratified, Congress and the Senate went from protecting citizens from the excesses of federal spending to advocating the federal position. There was no limit on Congress’ power to tax incomes, and the taxation process by-passed the inputs of the states. The feds were free to tax as they pleased, and the constitutional check and balance between the states and the federal government regarding income taxation was all but removed.

Worse yet, federal finances became a discussion that occurred entirely inside Washington, D.C. Since Congress no longer relied upon state governments to provide the major part of their income, they no longer paid attention to state government input regarding federal spending. The result, though indirect, can be directly seen in the growth of public debt since the ratification of the 16th Amendment.

I’ll end with a couple of questions. If Congress still had to apportion taxes to the states, then do you think we would have spent the last three years without a federal budget; would the states have readily accepted an apportionment of taxes without knowing the total bill? If Congress had to depend upon the currently cash-strapped states to pony up its money, does anyone doubt there would be a bit more resistance to the idea of the federal government borrowing 40 cents of every dollar it spent?

The 16th Amendment disrupted what the Founders designed as a state and federal government dialog regarding the national finances. That dialog was to be dominated by the states, being the major sources of federal income. Less than a century after the change was made, and with the states largely out of the national financial discussion, the US government owes more money than the US economy produces in a year. At no time before the 16th Amendment did the US debt ever become this much out of hand. I have a difficult time believing this to be a coincidence.

Regarding what should be done regarding this, I favor the word of the prophet, “Thus saith the Lord, Stand ye in the ways, and see, and ask for the old paths, where is the good way, and walk therein, and ye shall find rest for your souls. But they said, We will not walk therein” (Jeremiah 6:16).

The way to walk is to repeal the 16th Amendment. I only hope the national sentiment is not reflected in the last sentence of that verse.

Copyright 2012. blackmanthinkin.com

Has the Oval Office been Church-ified?

Categories: ... 'bout Politics
Comments: Comments Off
Published on: July 29, 2012

Obama in the

America has never been here before.

True, there have been outstanding black orators throughout the nation’s history. True also that they were heard outside the black community. After all, many non-blacks can quote portions of Martin Luther King’s “I Have A Dream” speech.

[dailymotion]http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x833ml_martin-luther-king-i-have-a-dream-s_news[/dailymotion]

Perhaps a smaller number have adopted Malcolm X’s “By Any Means Necessary” into their normal dialog.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hhg6LxyTnY8[/youtube]

America’s black folks like preacher types, whether or not they like church. Clerical robe or no, we want to see and hear a confident black man deliver a strong message about our concerns with passion and conviction. Often, the message itself can stink on ice, as long as the emotion with which it is delivered is right; that’s the way we roll. We like leaders who can get us worked up, use their passion to communicate important themes beyond the surface level. As Obama is the first black president under the US Constitution, (provided you overlook questions regarding Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson, Abraham Lincoln, Warren Harding, and, Dwight Eisenhower), America has not had that type of a “preachy” leader in the White House.

Now, and you may call this a “black thing,” it does seem that sometimes how a leader speaks is more important than what he says. We like that traditional, build-to-a-climax, message which leaves at least half the room up and shouting, even those who have no idea what the man was talking about. That style over substance thing can be a problem.

Which brings me back to…Obama.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1mnv37Aqbi8[/youtube]

Granted it is only an excerpt, and it may not have been his best effort. However, you see the same result that you would in a black church service when “the Spirit is high” – wild applause, shouting, people out of their seats…y’all know what I’m talking about.

Is there a problem with this? Well, generally no; a leader who cannot motivate emotionally will never be effective. But what did he say? That HE was fighting, and HE needed the folks to get with HIM, and that the folks needed to stop complaining and get on board?

That is not how King motivated while he was the “moral leader of our nation.” The message was consistently about the issue of black citizenship rights, not about what what King was doing or how people needed to get on board with him. His speeches demonstrated WHY every and anyone should be on board.

Malcolm also, while less conciliatory to the white national majority than King, did not make his messages about him and how he needed support. He knew how to choose and describe an issue that demanded support. People followed Malcolm and King, not because they asked for help, but because they spoke and took on issues where they could be of help.

You know, in a “good” church, the preacher, puts his heart and soul into a message that will help the people’s standing with God. In a not-so-good church, the preacher’s heart and soul goes into a message about…the preacher. However, in both places, you will find those who say, “That man is PREACHIN’!” And blacks will keep a sorry preacher around for awhile – the money can be funny, the church building can be falling apart – as long as he gets them to shoutin’ come Sunday morning.

With deficits at historic levels, with not a single budget being in place during his term, with the national debt now equaling the size of the economy, with black unemployment having risen to levels not seen in more than 7 decades with no end in sight, and with government initiatives that force individual liberty to take a backseat to the collective “good,” the US is not as good a church as it once was or can be. Additionally, it is not addressing the issues where people need help.

Still, as evidenced by the video clip, there are many blacks, and especially Obama himself, who yet believe that man is preachin’.

I’m just not sure he’s saying what the people need to here.

Copyright 2012. blackmanthinkin.com

Do Y’all Know What Ice-T Got Just About Right?

Comments: 1 Comment
Published on: July 25, 2012

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=txuTBE6QQzQ[/youtube]

Ice T, soundin’ a bit like a Foundin’ Father.

Tracy Marrow, also known as Ice T, went on TV in the UK after the “Batman Rises” shooting in Colorado to defend the 2nd amendment. Check out the video above.

What got my attention were these words: “The right to bear arms is because that’s the last form of defense against tyranny. Not to hunt. It’s to protect yourself from the police.” The brotha sounds downright Jeffersonian. In fact, Thomas Jefferson said, “The strongest reason for the people to retain the right to keep and bear arms is, as a last resort, to protect themselves against tyranny in government.”

Our current gun laws serve the purpose of making it more difficult for the law-abiding citizen who wants a gun to keep and bear one. Of course, the idea is to make people safer by having guns in the hands of very few people…outside the government. Does anyone believe that works?

When the SCOTUS, in 2008, declared Washington, D.C.’s handgun ban unconstitutional and sent Chicago’s gun ban back to a lower court, the local governments went into overdrive to keep their cities safe from guns and gun violence. Predictions were for blood to run in the streets as everyone turned already violent cities into a re-incarnation of the Wild West.

But a funny thing happened while the politicians were wringing their hands, telling us to fear…we wound up with less to fear.

It seems that where you have more gun-toting, law-abiding citizens, you also have more law-abiding, period. Perhaps because good people can only be made into victims when outgunned, either by the government, or by other people who aren’t so good.

So why do politicians fight so hard to limit gun ownership? To stop incidents like the one in Aurora, Colorado? As if the guy could not have used his government assistance to buy illegal weapons and ammo, instead of the legal ones he used in the massacre? Yeah, right.

Try this: maybe politicians fear being pushed around by a citizenry that not only does vote, but also is armed to protect itself from governmental excesses. Maybe Ice T got it just about right.

Finally Jefferson also said, “When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.” I live in a nation where people are afraid of the IRS, the EPA, the ATF, the CIA, and the FBI – each of those government organizations are packin’ (yes, the IRS has armed agents.). I also live in a nation where many fear outlaws who break the law to exercise their 2nd amendment rights, while they themselves are discouraged from even having a gun. It’s clear to see who is under tyranny. It is also clear to me what we should do. What’s clear to you?

25 July 2012, 1:52 AM, Pacific Time

Copyright 2012. blackmanthinkin.com

«page 6 of 7»

The World of Black Man Thinkin’
ARTICLE ARCHIVES
WDFP Radio Show Archives

Welcome , today is Thursday, November 21, 2024