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Category: Current Events

Listen to the “Science”!

I hear a lot of people, especially during the pandemic, but before as well, saying “Listen to the Science” and accusing anyone who disagrees with them of being “Anti-Science.” There are several big problems with this.

“Science” doesn’t say anything. Science is a method of collecting data, testing and drawing conclusions about the data, so “Science” can’t say anything. You can’t “Listen to the Science.”

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The Socialist Headache

A couple of days ago, I heard that, after Amazon decided not to put its east coast headquarters in Long Island City, New York, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez rejoiced at the “victory” and remarked that the $3 billion New York would have “spent” could be used by the state to create their own jobs. Here’s part of what she said:

“If we were willing to give Amazon…$3 billion for this deal we could invest those $3 billion in our district ourselves if we wanted to.”

When I heard that my palm hit my forehead so hard I got a headache.

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What We’re Missing About the NFL Protests

There has been so much talk about the NFL protests that I don’t know that my opinion will make any difference, but I do feel that some important questions are being ignored and some vital facts are being glossed over.

I am greatly saddened by the division in our country. A lot of what’s going on doesn’t make any sense to me.

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Is This Presidential Election Really Different From Others?

shutterstock_343758632I haven’t written anything on my blog or on Facebook or Twitter for a very long time, which is unusual for me because ordinarily I would be very active on my blog and social media during the political campaign season. However, this time has been different.

I don’t just mean that this political season has broken all molds and sent all conventional wisdom to the circular file. I also was really distracted by a big move from mainland Georgia where I had lived for almost 35 years to the island of Hawaii (the “Big Island” is really named “Hawaii” like the state). This process took all my attention and a lot of my resources (time and money). But it’s all been worth it as my wife and I see our daughter, son-in-law and grandchildren several times a week instead of once a year.

Now, with the campaigns winding down and the conventions gearing up, I’ll put my two cents in. Heaven knows my opinion isn’t needed with talk radio, 24-hour TV news channels, blogs, news websites, Facebook, Twitter, ad nauseum. But here goes nothing:

I really understand my fellow conservatives’ anguish over the primary victories and subsequent nomination of Donald Trump as the Republican standard bearer, since his bona fides as a Republican are tenuous at best, and he has gored pretty much every ox held dear to the party.

But I think it’s important to point out that, if you’re like me, you’ve had to hold your nose to vote for the Republican nominee in every presidential election since 1984! I don’t remember a single time that I was able to vote enthusiastically for the Republican nominee, but I always did because the alternative was (or alternatives were) so much worse. I did really like George W. Bush personally, but he wasn’t conservative enough to suit me. I didn’t think we needed to create the Department of Homeland Security, for example. We had apparatuses in place already that could have administered the War on Terror. We already had too much bureaucracy, but government types seem to think they haven’t done anything about a problem unless they have created a new burden for taxpayers.

And that’s an area that I actually have some hope that Donald Trump might do a good job. As the quintessential outsider, his mandate, if elected, will be to change the culture of Washington. That’s no small task, I realize, but how many people get to the White House without getting stained with the Washington stench of self-preservation at all costs, of empire building and turf defending? Trump is largely self-made, warts and all, and he has already built his empire. He will go in owing no one and, with the sharp eye of a business man who has expressed alarm at the exploding national debt brought on by both parties, he may be the only one who can tame the beast. If he brings his “You’re Fired!” mantra to Washington, the results could be really positive as I see it.

I could talk about how bad the alternative candidate is, but many have done that. Even Democrats are worried that they appear to be stuck with the lackluster Hillary Clinton and all the scandals she and her husband have spawned. There is one aspect that I haven’t heard a lot though. I’m convinced that Clinton is running for President for one purpose: to get rich(er). I believe she expended most of her energy while Secretary of State in selling influence and enriching the “Clinton Foundation”. That’s why she didn’t want her emails to be public, even within the State Department. I believe she will milk the presidency in the same way.

But voting against a worse candidate is even more depressing than holding your nose to vote for your own party’s. I could also point out that a vote for the Libertarian nominee is a vote for Hillary Clinton, just as a vote for the Green Party candidate will enhance Trump’s chances.

So while a lot of Republican voters are upset about Donald Trump, I look at it and say, what’s the difference? Usually we have a milquetoast, establishment-selected candidate that engenders no enthusiasm but I vote for him anyway. This time we have a bull-in-the-china-shop that offends me with the regularity of the sunrise, but he has built an enthusiastic following. Will he disappoint? Of course, no one can be the end-all that some voters are looking for. Will he be a disaster as president? Possibly. Will he further the conservative agenda? I’d say the chances of that are about even with the likelihood of McCain, Dole, Romney, and Bush Sr. and Jr. advancing the principles I believe in.

On the other hand, if he accomplishes no more than decisively defeating the animals populating ISIS, secures the border (as much as that’s possible) and stops the bleeding of the national debt, he will have done what none (in the Obama Administration at least) thought possible. If along the way, he jump-starts the economy, puts several million Americans back to work and at the same time reduces the bloated bureacracy which is the Federal government, he will have worked miracles.

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Strangeness On Top of Strangeness

This is shaping up to be one of the strangest presidential election seasons I can remember. And I voted for the first time in 1976.

The obvious factor that makes for strangeness is the mob of Republican wannabes. While pretty much any of them would make a better president by my standards than Hillary Clinton, 17 is a really high number to have to whittle down. Donald Trump is sucking all the air out of the process, but he doesn’t have enough votes in the polls to clinch anything.

Also strange, but refreshing, is that establishment darling Jeb Bush is lagging in the polls in spite of raising the most money. That’s a sure sign that the natives are restless and won’t abide an “it’s-his-turn” candidate dished up by the GOP powers-that-be this time around.

Everyone else gets lost in the sameness of conservative principles they all agree on, with the exception of Rand Paul, whose libertarian bent causes him to often clash with the others. But that doesn’t really give him an advantage in the polls.

But strangeness in the Republican camp is totally outdone by the Democrats. The nominal front-runner and “it’s-a-woman’s-turn” candidate, Hillary Clinton, is having trouble maintaining a lead against an old white guy from Vermont, because she has more skeletons in the closet than Jeffrey Dahmer. She has serious problems with the FBI investigation into deeds that, if it was you or me, could mean jail time, or losing the security clearance necessary to BE president, at the very least.

So Bernie Sanders, self-confessed Socialist and eccentric curmudgeon, is garnering huge crowds and, in some polls, beats Clinton in New Hampshire, an early primary state. And then there’s two other forgettable white guys running for the Party of Diversity. Meanwhile the party of Old White Men has fielded two Hispanics, one African-American, one woman, one billionaire and two medical doctors, along with a variety of career politicians.

Like I said, strangeness.

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The Marvelous Millennials

FedEx Shooting
The 19-year-old who shot up the FedEx facility about 50 miles away from where I sit, exhibited the precise characteristics that make “Millennials” problematic in the workplace.

Watching the news video, you see that his friend said he shot 6 people and COMMITTED SUICIDE because he wasn’t given a day off he had requested.

HUH?

This is how you react when your boss can’t give you the day off? Reading a little about Millennials and the workplace will tell you that this man’s reaction is extreme but in character, because Millennials have always been told they are special. They’ve always gotten a trophy for showing up.

His friend also says he didn’t feel appreciated on the job. That’s because Millennials feel like they need to be rewarded beyond their paychecks for simply doing routine tasks that are part of their job descriptions. So just doing your job should be cause for huge rewards, and if you don’t get them, you have been disrespected.

Add that to the teen who last week murdered the girl who rejected his prom invitation and you have downright scary goings-on.

We always knew the culture of not keeping score and everybody-gets-a-trophy would come back to bite us and it is.

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