Organ Facts
Intestine
How the Intestine Works
The intestine is the lower part of the digestive tract. It extends from the stomach to the anus. The upper part, the small intestine, is narrow and intricate. It provides further digestion of food and absorbs nutrients from the digested food. The lower part, the large intestine, is wider and reabsorbs water from the digested foods and sends it back into the blood stream.
U.S. Intestine Transplants Performed
The chart below shows the number of intestine transplants performed each year from January 1, 2005 - July 31, 2011
Friday, October 28, 2011
Hillary Clinton beats GOP Presidential frontrunners hands down!
"October 28, 2011
"Hillary Clinton Fares Better Than Obama In Matchups Against GOP Frontrunners: Poll" From the Huffington Post.
"First Posted: 10/27/11 05:27 PM ET Updated: 10/27/11 05:27 PM ET
"Secretary of State Hillary Clinton performs better than President Barack Obama in a speculative matchup against frontrunning GOP presidential contenders, a new poll from Time finds.
"The poll, released as part of a series for the magazine's latest cover story, which features Clinton, shows Obama's 2008 rival leading Romney by 17 points, Cain by 22 and Perry by 26 in a hypothetical competition. Obama leads Romney by 3 points and both Cain and Perry by 12 in the same poll.
"The results are just the latest buzz in an ongoing saga of speculation and denial about Clinton's aspirations for higher office. Some have suggested that she'd replace Joe Biden as Vice President ahead of Obama's 2012 reelections campaign, while others have posited, or perhaps just hoped, that she'd mount a primary challenge to Obama in 2012. Clinton's response has been unequivocal denial to both. In fact, she's said that she wouldn't serve in Obama's cabinet past 2012, and that her role as Secretary of State was likely her "last public position."
"Time explains their polling methodology:
"A national poll conducted for TIME on Oct. 9 and 10 found that if Clinton were the Democratic nominee for President in 2012, she would best Mitt Romney 55% to 38%, Rick Perry 58% to 32% and Herman Cain 56% to 34% among likely voters in a general election. The same poll found that President Obama would edge Romney by just 46% to 43%, Perry by 50% to 38% and Cain by 49% to 37% among likely voters.
"In a recent interview with Time, Clinton described her thoughts on President Obama and their relationship:
"Well, I think that the President is an American exceptionalist almost by definition. He exemplifies American exceptionalism. But I think he also governs with that belief as well. He has a deep respect for other people's opinions and their own values of their culture and their history, which I think makes sense, because if you're going to work with people, you need to know where they're coming from and not just assume you can assert your own position. And I think that what captured people about his election was that they knew nowhere else in the world could that have happened than the United States of America.
"For the entire interview, click through to Time."
Right now, the President would beat the GOP front-runners by three points, but Hillary Clinton would beat them by twenty points. So? What is the point? You don't get any credit for point spread in elections. Both Democrats would beat the GOP front runners if an election were held today. Point spread is unimportant. Anyway, I'm concentrating on observing the Congressional races, and not making much comment about the Presidential selection process. Kenneth Stepp.
"Hillary Clinton Fares Better Than Obama In Matchups Against GOP Frontrunners: Poll" From the Huffington Post.
"First Posted: 10/27/11 05:27 PM ET Updated: 10/27/11 05:27 PM ET
"Secretary of State Hillary Clinton performs better than President Barack Obama in a speculative matchup against frontrunning GOP presidential contenders, a new poll from Time finds.
"The poll, released as part of a series for the magazine's latest cover story, which features Clinton, shows Obama's 2008 rival leading Romney by 17 points, Cain by 22 and Perry by 26 in a hypothetical competition. Obama leads Romney by 3 points and both Cain and Perry by 12 in the same poll.
"The results are just the latest buzz in an ongoing saga of speculation and denial about Clinton's aspirations for higher office. Some have suggested that she'd replace Joe Biden as Vice President ahead of Obama's 2012 reelections campaign, while others have posited, or perhaps just hoped, that she'd mount a primary challenge to Obama in 2012. Clinton's response has been unequivocal denial to both. In fact, she's said that she wouldn't serve in Obama's cabinet past 2012, and that her role as Secretary of State was likely her "last public position."
"Time explains their polling methodology:
"A national poll conducted for TIME on Oct. 9 and 10 found that if Clinton were the Democratic nominee for President in 2012, she would best Mitt Romney 55% to 38%, Rick Perry 58% to 32% and Herman Cain 56% to 34% among likely voters in a general election. The same poll found that President Obama would edge Romney by just 46% to 43%, Perry by 50% to 38% and Cain by 49% to 37% among likely voters.
"In a recent interview with Time, Clinton described her thoughts on President Obama and their relationship:
"Well, I think that the President is an American exceptionalist almost by definition. He exemplifies American exceptionalism. But I think he also governs with that belief as well. He has a deep respect for other people's opinions and their own values of their culture and their history, which I think makes sense, because if you're going to work with people, you need to know where they're coming from and not just assume you can assert your own position. And I think that what captured people about his election was that they knew nowhere else in the world could that have happened than the United States of America.
"For the entire interview, click through to Time."
Right now, the President would beat the GOP front-runners by three points, but Hillary Clinton would beat them by twenty points. So? What is the point? You don't get any credit for point spread in elections. Both Democrats would beat the GOP front runners if an election were held today. Point spread is unimportant. Anyway, I'm concentrating on observing the Congressional races, and not making much comment about the Presidential selection process. Kenneth Stepp.
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Florida and Clemson named as top two Jock Schools.
"The Top 10 Jock Schools: Princeton Review List
First Posted: 10/26/11 09:22 AM ET Updated: 10/26/11 09:31 AM ET
"Think working out is fun? You might be happy at a jock school.
"Our pals at the Princeton Review recently named the biggest jock schools. University of Florida topped the list, with Clemson coming in a close second.
"Check out our slide show of the biggest jock schools, then tell us. Did you go to a jock school? Weigh in below!"
O.K., now you know. Kenneth Stepp went to America's number two Jock School. I confess, I'm a Jock. I even used to travel to Gainesville, Florida and watch their football team play LSU and some of the other Jock schools. I'd even run a few laps on their track and see the alligators sunning themselves by the campus pond. I even took my wife and my mother-in-law and father-in-law (all three from Clay County, Kentucky) to Lexington to see the Gators and the 'Cats clash in football. What a bunch of Jocks on both sides!
While an Industrial Management student at Clemson, I was on the soccer team. Actually, that was before they became nationally ranked and well-funded in soccer. When I was there, the Clemson soccer club was a collection of local South Carolina boys, Arabs from Syria, Egypt, and such places, a Frenchman, and at least one South American. The highlight of my soccer career was at the Clemson-Brevard College game when I kicked the ball toward the goal, and one of my team-mates hit the soccer ball with his head, knocking it in the goal and getting us a goal. I few minutes after that as we were running down the field to try our next shot at the goal, one of the Brevard College crowd yelled about me, "Watch that guy, he's dangerous." Dangerous or not, I enjoyed that game.
Anyway, I'm a blue and white fan now, but I feel a sense of pride whenever any school that I have been associated with is recognized as an outstanding Jock school. Kenneth Stepp.
First Posted: 10/26/11 09:22 AM ET Updated: 10/26/11 09:31 AM ET
"Think working out is fun? You might be happy at a jock school.
"Our pals at the Princeton Review recently named the biggest jock schools. University of Florida topped the list, with Clemson coming in a close second.
"Check out our slide show of the biggest jock schools, then tell us. Did you go to a jock school? Weigh in below!"
O.K., now you know. Kenneth Stepp went to America's number two Jock School. I confess, I'm a Jock. I even used to travel to Gainesville, Florida and watch their football team play LSU and some of the other Jock schools. I'd even run a few laps on their track and see the alligators sunning themselves by the campus pond. I even took my wife and my mother-in-law and father-in-law (all three from Clay County, Kentucky) to Lexington to see the Gators and the 'Cats clash in football. What a bunch of Jocks on both sides!
While an Industrial Management student at Clemson, I was on the soccer team. Actually, that was before they became nationally ranked and well-funded in soccer. When I was there, the Clemson soccer club was a collection of local South Carolina boys, Arabs from Syria, Egypt, and such places, a Frenchman, and at least one South American. The highlight of my soccer career was at the Clemson-Brevard College game when I kicked the ball toward the goal, and one of my team-mates hit the soccer ball with his head, knocking it in the goal and getting us a goal. I few minutes after that as we were running down the field to try our next shot at the goal, one of the Brevard College crowd yelled about me, "Watch that guy, he's dangerous." Dangerous or not, I enjoyed that game.
Anyway, I'm a blue and white fan now, but I feel a sense of pride whenever any school that I have been associated with is recognized as an outstanding Jock school. Kenneth Stepp.
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
"if a war breaks between Pakistan and America, we will side with Pakistan", Hamid Karzai, President of Afghanistan.
"This is a rush transcript from "On the Record," October 24, 2011. This copy may not be in its final form and may be updated.
"MARTHA MACCALLUM, FOX NEWS GUEST HOST: We are back. And "On the Record" tonight, Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai making some explosive remarks about the United States this weekend. Karzai said in an interview with a Pakistani reporter, quote, "God forbid if a war breaks between Pakistan and America, we will side with Pakistan. Afghanistan would stand with you. Afghanistan is your brother," he said. But now the Afghan president's office is saying that the media, quote, "misinterpreted" Karzai's remarks.
The United States is not a doormat. We should demand an apology from President Hamid Karzai, and announce that all American troops should be out of Afghanistan by the end of 2011. Since Hal Rogers supports keeping American Troops in Afghanistan, Hal Rogers should be voted out of office and replaced with a Democrat.
"MARTHA MACCALLUM, FOX NEWS GUEST HOST: We are back. And "On the Record" tonight, Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai making some explosive remarks about the United States this weekend. Karzai said in an interview with a Pakistani reporter, quote, "God forbid if a war breaks between Pakistan and America, we will side with Pakistan. Afghanistan would stand with you. Afghanistan is your brother," he said. But now the Afghan president's office is saying that the media, quote, "misinterpreted" Karzai's remarks.
The United States is not a doormat. We should demand an apology from President Hamid Karzai, and announce that all American troops should be out of Afghanistan by the end of 2011. Since Hal Rogers supports keeping American Troops in Afghanistan, Hal Rogers should be voted out of office and replaced with a Democrat.
Friday, October 21, 2011
Barak Obama and John C. Calhoun.
Obama signs 3 trade deals, biggest since NAFTA
JIM ABRAMS | October 21, 2011 06:23 PM EST |
06:23 PM EST10:52 AM EST09:59 AM EST and 06:23 PM EST10:52 AM EST09:59 AM EST versions
"WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama signed off Friday on the first three – and possibly last – free trade agreements of his administration, deals with South Korea, Colombia, and Panama that could be worth billions to American exporters and create tens of thousands of jobs.
"The three deals were years in the making, and the difficulty of bringing them to fruition make it unlikely there will be another bilateral trade agreement during Obama's current term.
"Obama signed them with none of the ceremonial fanfare that normally accompanies such triumphs. Republicans, while supportive of the deals, continue to find fault with Obama's trade policies. And nearly three-fourths of House Democrats voted against the trade measures.
"The agreements will bring to 20 those countries that have free trade relations with the United States.
"Trade won't go away as an issue, as the administration pushes ahead with a major Pacific rim trade pact, Congress and the White House scuffle over China, and Republicans take aim at Obama's policies during the presidential campaign.
"But, "I don't see this administration coming up with new free trade agreements," said National Foreign Trade Council president Bill Reinsch. "For the next six months we ought to go after trade liberalization in manageable pieces."
"Republicans accuse the administration of moving too slowly to find new free trade partners, resulting in U.S. exporters losing out to foreign rivals. The administration says it is promoting free trade, but wants to assure that the other side is playing by the rules, that basic worker and environmental rights are observed, and that deals promote U.S. job growth.
""From day one," U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk told The Associated Press, the guiding principle has been not just to complete the three trade agreements but "to develop a new paradigm for trade, and rebuild and restore America's confidence in our trading policy."
"He added that the administration was on track of reaching Obama's goal, set early last year, of doubling U.S. exports over a five-year period.
"Trade officials, in justifying their approach, point to the 83 Senate votes for the South Korean deal, which was renegotiated by Obama to expand access for U.S. vehicles in Korea. That was the highest total ever for a free trade vote.
"The accord with South Korea, America's seventh-largest trading partner, is estimated to support 70,000 jobs, and the signing capped a singular moment of triumph for a president who over the past year has seen his jobs agenda blocked on every front by unified Republican opposition. This time Republicans were his eager partners, urging him to move even faster to complete the long-delayed trade deals and move on to new ones.
"Obama also signed legislation extending a program, a Democratic favorite, to help workers hurt by foreign trade. Yet the quiet signing ceremony and a low-key reception in the Rose Garden for those who might benefit from the agreements reflected the unpopularity of free trade pacts among Obama's core labor supporters – and the uncertainty of his future trade policy.
"Supporters say the three deals are a winning proposition for American businessmen and farmers who now face high tariffs in those three countries, while those countries can ship goods to the United States with few or no duties. The deal with Korea could boost exports by $10 billion, erasing the current trade gap. Exports could go up another $1 billion a year to Colombia, one of the U.S.'s strongest allies in Latin America.
"The three deals were initially signed in the George W. Bush administration but were slowed down as the Obama White House renegotiated changes and haggled with Republicans over the worker aid program. Democratic opposition was strongest against the Colombia deal because of that country's record of violence against labor leaders.
"After the signing, Obama called President Juan Manuel Santos of Colombia and President Ricardo Martinelli of Panama to congratulate each of them. The White House in a statement said the president stressed the importance of meeting obligations of the agreements and of Colombia advancing labor rights.
"The U.S. Trade Representative Office is now shifting its attention to the Trans-Pacific Partnership, an economic alliance that would link the United States with Brunei, Malaysia, New Zealand, Vietnam and four countries that are already free trade partners – Australia, Chile, Peru and Singapore. Going beyond cutting tariffs, the alliance would tackle such areas as financial services, intellectual property rights, government procurement, investment and conservation.
"Kirk said negotiators had been "making really good progress" and they hoped to have the broad outline of an agreement when leaders meet in Honolulu next month for the annual Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum.
""TPP is the one game in town and there is going to be a lot of focus on that," said John Murphy, vice president for international affairs at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
"But in a world filled with acronyms, TPP would have a tough time getting congressional approval without TPA. Trade promotion authority, also known as fast track, gives the president the authority to negotiate trade deals that Congress can either accept or reject, but cannot amend. That authority expired in 2007 and Obama, tied to Democrats and labor groups who oppose further free trade agreements, has not pushed for its restoration.
"Last month Senate Republicans tried to revive TPA, but the measure was defeated on a largely party-line vote. Democrats argued that the TPA law has to first be rewritten to reflect changes in such areas as digital services and the environment.
"Kirk also emphasized the importance of getting other countries to abide by existing trade rules. "Enforcement has been paramount to the work we have done on market access," he said, adding that "if we could get China to a better place where they were really opening up their markets," it would be a major windfall to U.S. exporters.
"Mitt Romney, currently viewed as the strongest contender for the GOP presidential nomination, said in a trade policy speech this month that he would work to reestablish TPA and promote more free trade agreements. He also singled out China, saying that as president he would take punitive actions if China continues to unfairly subsidize its domestic products and manipulate its currency.
"The Obama administration was cool to legislation passed by the Senate last month that would make it easier to impose higher tariffs on China if it continues to keep its currency undervalued as a way to make its exports cheaper.
"Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch, a group that has strongly opposed past trade agreements, said Obama may have to get tougher on China if he is to defend Ohio and other states where workers hit by foreign trade don't agree with his promotion of free trade.
"She said Obama has already lost ground among Democrats, noting that a greater percentage of House Democrats, 71.4 percent, voted against Obama on the trade deals than on any other legislation since he took office.
"Among other prickly subjects in the coming year, Russia is close to being accepted into the World Trade Organization, but U.S. businesses wouldn't benefit from lower Russian tariffs unless Congress repeals the Cold War Jackson-Vanik law that barred normal trade relations with the Soviet Union because of its policies on Jewish emigration. And the U.S. still has to make sure that South Korea, Colombia and Panama are ready to carry out their trade agreement commitments, a process that could take months.
"But the Chamber's Murphy said they are for now putting aside their frustrations over trade. "This isn't the moment for that. This is a week for sunny optimism."
O.K. you are wondering about Barak Obama and John C. Calhoun. Well, here it is. Right now, Obama seems to be the leading advocate of free trade--bilateral free trade agreements as we do it now. In the early and middle 1800's John C. Calhoun, from what is now Clemson South Carolina (named after his son-in-law from Pennsylvania) was America's chief advocate of free trade--mainly to benefit the cotton farmers trading with Britain and Germany--places where they can't grow cotton. Back then, bilateral free trade had not been invented, the idea was to give unilateral free trade and drop trade barriers from others. It is more popular now to negotiate deals--bilateral deal where Panama drops its duties against American cars and we drop our duties against Panama bananas and whatever else they import. I'm not gonna comment on "Panama Red" nor "Colombia Gold" any further in this column--I don't smoke myself and I wouldn't recommend it. Anyway, our relations with Communist China should be limited by their human rights record. Any government that mistreats its own citizens cannot expect any more special deals from us. Generally, bilateralism is a good idea. South Korea, Panama, and Colombia are unlikely to try to push us around, and we don't like to be pushed around. Communist China has got to realize that we will not be bullied or pushed around. Apparently the Communist Chinese are the biggest single importer of U.S. Pecans--I guess they got good taste and aren't very good at growing pecans. All you gotta do is plant a pecan tree and wait fifty years. I planted several pecan trees but most of them died. Globalism seems good, but the average worker has a falling standard of living. Globalism should benefit everyone in the U.S. and not just the investors. The government should have a special program to retrain workers unemployed by Globalism. One for all and all for one. Kenneth Stepp.
JIM ABRAMS | October 21, 2011 06:23 PM EST |
06:23 PM EST10:52 AM EST09:59 AM EST and 06:23 PM EST10:52 AM EST09:59 AM EST versions
"WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama signed off Friday on the first three – and possibly last – free trade agreements of his administration, deals with South Korea, Colombia, and Panama that could be worth billions to American exporters and create tens of thousands of jobs.
"The three deals were years in the making, and the difficulty of bringing them to fruition make it unlikely there will be another bilateral trade agreement during Obama's current term.
"Obama signed them with none of the ceremonial fanfare that normally accompanies such triumphs. Republicans, while supportive of the deals, continue to find fault with Obama's trade policies. And nearly three-fourths of House Democrats voted against the trade measures.
"The agreements will bring to 20 those countries that have free trade relations with the United States.
"Trade won't go away as an issue, as the administration pushes ahead with a major Pacific rim trade pact, Congress and the White House scuffle over China, and Republicans take aim at Obama's policies during the presidential campaign.
"But, "I don't see this administration coming up with new free trade agreements," said National Foreign Trade Council president Bill Reinsch. "For the next six months we ought to go after trade liberalization in manageable pieces."
"Republicans accuse the administration of moving too slowly to find new free trade partners, resulting in U.S. exporters losing out to foreign rivals. The administration says it is promoting free trade, but wants to assure that the other side is playing by the rules, that basic worker and environmental rights are observed, and that deals promote U.S. job growth.
""From day one," U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk told The Associated Press, the guiding principle has been not just to complete the three trade agreements but "to develop a new paradigm for trade, and rebuild and restore America's confidence in our trading policy."
"He added that the administration was on track of reaching Obama's goal, set early last year, of doubling U.S. exports over a five-year period.
"Trade officials, in justifying their approach, point to the 83 Senate votes for the South Korean deal, which was renegotiated by Obama to expand access for U.S. vehicles in Korea. That was the highest total ever for a free trade vote.
"The accord with South Korea, America's seventh-largest trading partner, is estimated to support 70,000 jobs, and the signing capped a singular moment of triumph for a president who over the past year has seen his jobs agenda blocked on every front by unified Republican opposition. This time Republicans were his eager partners, urging him to move even faster to complete the long-delayed trade deals and move on to new ones.
"Obama also signed legislation extending a program, a Democratic favorite, to help workers hurt by foreign trade. Yet the quiet signing ceremony and a low-key reception in the Rose Garden for those who might benefit from the agreements reflected the unpopularity of free trade pacts among Obama's core labor supporters – and the uncertainty of his future trade policy.
"Supporters say the three deals are a winning proposition for American businessmen and farmers who now face high tariffs in those three countries, while those countries can ship goods to the United States with few or no duties. The deal with Korea could boost exports by $10 billion, erasing the current trade gap. Exports could go up another $1 billion a year to Colombia, one of the U.S.'s strongest allies in Latin America.
"The three deals were initially signed in the George W. Bush administration but were slowed down as the Obama White House renegotiated changes and haggled with Republicans over the worker aid program. Democratic opposition was strongest against the Colombia deal because of that country's record of violence against labor leaders.
"After the signing, Obama called President Juan Manuel Santos of Colombia and President Ricardo Martinelli of Panama to congratulate each of them. The White House in a statement said the president stressed the importance of meeting obligations of the agreements and of Colombia advancing labor rights.
"The U.S. Trade Representative Office is now shifting its attention to the Trans-Pacific Partnership, an economic alliance that would link the United States with Brunei, Malaysia, New Zealand, Vietnam and four countries that are already free trade partners – Australia, Chile, Peru and Singapore. Going beyond cutting tariffs, the alliance would tackle such areas as financial services, intellectual property rights, government procurement, investment and conservation.
"Kirk said negotiators had been "making really good progress" and they hoped to have the broad outline of an agreement when leaders meet in Honolulu next month for the annual Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum.
""TPP is the one game in town and there is going to be a lot of focus on that," said John Murphy, vice president for international affairs at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
"But in a world filled with acronyms, TPP would have a tough time getting congressional approval without TPA. Trade promotion authority, also known as fast track, gives the president the authority to negotiate trade deals that Congress can either accept or reject, but cannot amend. That authority expired in 2007 and Obama, tied to Democrats and labor groups who oppose further free trade agreements, has not pushed for its restoration.
"Last month Senate Republicans tried to revive TPA, but the measure was defeated on a largely party-line vote. Democrats argued that the TPA law has to first be rewritten to reflect changes in such areas as digital services and the environment.
"Kirk also emphasized the importance of getting other countries to abide by existing trade rules. "Enforcement has been paramount to the work we have done on market access," he said, adding that "if we could get China to a better place where they were really opening up their markets," it would be a major windfall to U.S. exporters.
"Mitt Romney, currently viewed as the strongest contender for the GOP presidential nomination, said in a trade policy speech this month that he would work to reestablish TPA and promote more free trade agreements. He also singled out China, saying that as president he would take punitive actions if China continues to unfairly subsidize its domestic products and manipulate its currency.
"The Obama administration was cool to legislation passed by the Senate last month that would make it easier to impose higher tariffs on China if it continues to keep its currency undervalued as a way to make its exports cheaper.
"Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch, a group that has strongly opposed past trade agreements, said Obama may have to get tougher on China if he is to defend Ohio and other states where workers hit by foreign trade don't agree with his promotion of free trade.
"She said Obama has already lost ground among Democrats, noting that a greater percentage of House Democrats, 71.4 percent, voted against Obama on the trade deals than on any other legislation since he took office.
"Among other prickly subjects in the coming year, Russia is close to being accepted into the World Trade Organization, but U.S. businesses wouldn't benefit from lower Russian tariffs unless Congress repeals the Cold War Jackson-Vanik law that barred normal trade relations with the Soviet Union because of its policies on Jewish emigration. And the U.S. still has to make sure that South Korea, Colombia and Panama are ready to carry out their trade agreement commitments, a process that could take months.
"But the Chamber's Murphy said they are for now putting aside their frustrations over trade. "This isn't the moment for that. This is a week for sunny optimism."
O.K. you are wondering about Barak Obama and John C. Calhoun. Well, here it is. Right now, Obama seems to be the leading advocate of free trade--bilateral free trade agreements as we do it now. In the early and middle 1800's John C. Calhoun, from what is now Clemson South Carolina (named after his son-in-law from Pennsylvania) was America's chief advocate of free trade--mainly to benefit the cotton farmers trading with Britain and Germany--places where they can't grow cotton. Back then, bilateral free trade had not been invented, the idea was to give unilateral free trade and drop trade barriers from others. It is more popular now to negotiate deals--bilateral deal where Panama drops its duties against American cars and we drop our duties against Panama bananas and whatever else they import. I'm not gonna comment on "Panama Red" nor "Colombia Gold" any further in this column--I don't smoke myself and I wouldn't recommend it. Anyway, our relations with Communist China should be limited by their human rights record. Any government that mistreats its own citizens cannot expect any more special deals from us. Generally, bilateralism is a good idea. South Korea, Panama, and Colombia are unlikely to try to push us around, and we don't like to be pushed around. Communist China has got to realize that we will not be bullied or pushed around. Apparently the Communist Chinese are the biggest single importer of U.S. Pecans--I guess they got good taste and aren't very good at growing pecans. All you gotta do is plant a pecan tree and wait fifty years. I planted several pecan trees but most of them died. Globalism seems good, but the average worker has a falling standard of living. Globalism should benefit everyone in the U.S. and not just the investors. The government should have a special program to retrain workers unemployed by Globalism. One for all and all for one. Kenneth Stepp.
Obama announces U.S. Troop Pullout from Iraq.
"Fri Oct 21, 2011 at 01:00 PM PDT.
"Mitt Romney bitterly disappointed by end of Iraq warby Jed Lewison .
"Mitt Romney wants America to keep fighting Bush's long war (Larry Downing/Reuters)
"Jacka$$:
"Mitt Romney issued a scathing rebuke Friday of President Obama's decision to withdraw all U.S. troops from Iraq by year's end, joining a chorus of Republicans critical of the president's decision.
Romney sharply criticized the announcement this afternoon by Obama that all troops would leave Iraq by the end of 2011, fulfilling one of Obama's main promises from the 2008 campaign, that he would end the war in Iraq.
“President Obama’s astonishing failure to secure an orderly transition in Iraq has unnecessarily put at risk the victories that were won through the blood and sacrifice of thousands of American men and women," Romney said in a statement. "The unavoidable question is whether this decision is the result of a naked political calculation or simply sheer ineptitude in negotiations with the Iraqi government."
"As Steve Benen points out, it's rich to hear Mitt Romney accuse President Obama of playing politics. It's not just that Romney is just about the least principled guy you could possibly imagine running for President, it's that four years ago, he explicitly endorsed the idea of crafting a timeline for withdrawal in coordination with the Iraqi government.
"And now that President Obama has done exactly that—fulfilling one of the very first commitments he made as a presidential candidate—Mitt Romney suddenly changes his position and says that military commanders should be given carte blanche without regard for what Iraq itself wants. And he says this without even knowing what the military commanders think!
"But the most important fact to keep in mind is that before the first shot was fired, Barack Obama stuck his neck out and said that going to war with Iraq was the wrong thing to do. He called it a dumb idea. He didn't pussyfoot around and play games and flip-flop and change positions like Mitt Romney. He took a position—and it was the right position."
I don't often say this but, "Hail to the Chief!" The President promised to End a War. I'm glad to see him keeping that political promise. I had planned to vote for Obama in the next election. I should enjoy voting for him now. I might even vote for Obama in the primaries, too. Stay tuned.
"Mitt Romney bitterly disappointed by end of Iraq warby Jed Lewison .
"Mitt Romney wants America to keep fighting Bush's long war (Larry Downing/Reuters)
"Jacka$$:
"Mitt Romney issued a scathing rebuke Friday of President Obama's decision to withdraw all U.S. troops from Iraq by year's end, joining a chorus of Republicans critical of the president's decision.
Romney sharply criticized the announcement this afternoon by Obama that all troops would leave Iraq by the end of 2011, fulfilling one of Obama's main promises from the 2008 campaign, that he would end the war in Iraq.
“President Obama’s astonishing failure to secure an orderly transition in Iraq has unnecessarily put at risk the victories that were won through the blood and sacrifice of thousands of American men and women," Romney said in a statement. "The unavoidable question is whether this decision is the result of a naked political calculation or simply sheer ineptitude in negotiations with the Iraqi government."
"As Steve Benen points out, it's rich to hear Mitt Romney accuse President Obama of playing politics. It's not just that Romney is just about the least principled guy you could possibly imagine running for President, it's that four years ago, he explicitly endorsed the idea of crafting a timeline for withdrawal in coordination with the Iraqi government.
"And now that President Obama has done exactly that—fulfilling one of the very first commitments he made as a presidential candidate—Mitt Romney suddenly changes his position and says that military commanders should be given carte blanche without regard for what Iraq itself wants. And he says this without even knowing what the military commanders think!
"But the most important fact to keep in mind is that before the first shot was fired, Barack Obama stuck his neck out and said that going to war with Iraq was the wrong thing to do. He called it a dumb idea. He didn't pussyfoot around and play games and flip-flop and change positions like Mitt Romney. He took a position—and it was the right position."
I don't often say this but, "Hail to the Chief!" The President promised to End a War. I'm glad to see him keeping that political promise. I had planned to vote for Obama in the next election. I should enjoy voting for him now. I might even vote for Obama in the primaries, too. Stay tuned.
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
Herman Cain--the best of candidates and the worst of candidates.
Since Herman Cain is the current frontrunner in the Republican race for the Presidency, I'll focus on him today. Herman Cain is the best of candidates and the worst of candidates for the Republican nomination for U.S. President.
The anti-war Democrat portion of me cheers that he is the best such candidate. That is because of the logic he used in a similar situation. As CEO of Godfather's Pizza, he would not let his company's pizza delivery people deliver pizza into high-crime neighborhoods. When asked why, he explained--paraphrased, "Those are dangerous neighborhoods. Our Guys could get killed there, so I'm not letting our Guys go there." Well, Iraq and Afghanistan are rough neighborhoods, and a lot of our Guys (and Dolls) that we sent there have gotten killed there. Would President Cain quit sending American soldiers, sailors, and Marines there. We hope so.
Recently I gave Herman Cain a blast on his 9-9-9 tax, which includes a nine per cent federal sales tax, in addition to your regualar State sales tax. It is a regressive tax. It would hit the poor and the working poor worst. I'm again' it.
Kenneth Stepp.
The anti-war Democrat portion of me cheers that he is the best such candidate. That is because of the logic he used in a similar situation. As CEO of Godfather's Pizza, he would not let his company's pizza delivery people deliver pizza into high-crime neighborhoods. When asked why, he explained--paraphrased, "Those are dangerous neighborhoods. Our Guys could get killed there, so I'm not letting our Guys go there." Well, Iraq and Afghanistan are rough neighborhoods, and a lot of our Guys (and Dolls) that we sent there have gotten killed there. Would President Cain quit sending American soldiers, sailors, and Marines there. We hope so.
Recently I gave Herman Cain a blast on his 9-9-9 tax, which includes a nine per cent federal sales tax, in addition to your regualar State sales tax. It is a regressive tax. It would hit the poor and the working poor worst. I'm again' it.
Kenneth Stepp.
Monday, October 17, 2011
On Forrest Gump, Hal Rogers, and Herman Cain.
"Do the math!," Herman Cain incredulously replies when challenged by skeptical critics to explain how his mantra-like "9-9-9" tax overhaul plan doesn't lower taxes for the rich while increasing taxes on the poor and middle class.
"But that's just the problem. Cain's math is so fuzzy it would make George W. Bush proud. As Cain explains it, he'd do away with the current tax code and replace it with a 9% personal tax, a 9% corporate tax and a 9% national sales tax. Through this overhaul, he says, most people will pay less taxes than they currently do. But his calculations simply make no sense to many experts including economists, the Wall Street Journal and even Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform.
For example, there are 30-million Americans whose incomes are low enough that they don't pay any income or payroll taxes. So for them 9% is 100% more than they currently pay. Add a 9% national sales tax on top of the average 8% state sales tax they pay now and that's another 100%+ increase. So an individual earning and taking home $26,000 who pays about $2100 in state sales tax will, under 9-9-9, end up paying about $2400 in new income tax and a total of approximately $4800 in total sales taxes. That's a total tax bite of more than $7000 vs $2400. How can Cain with any degree of credibility claim that his plan won't increase taxes for the poor and middle classes?
Now take the rich, who currently pay the maximum 36% personal tax rate and 15% in capital gains taxes. In eliminating the cap gains tax and lowering the personal rate to 9% you don't need an economics degree from Wharton to recognize the enormous windfall 9-9-9 lavishes on the wealthy.
So one of two things is happening here: either Cain is stupid or he thinks we are. Let me assure you, Herman Cain is not a stupid man. 9-9-9 is nothing more than a plan in search of logic.
Follow Andy Ostroy on Twitter: www.twitter.com/AndyOstroy "
I ran a previous column on "follow the math" of the 9-9-9 tax plan. If you'd rather pay a total tax bite each year of $7,000 rather than your current $2,400, then you should vote for Herman Cain for President and Hal Rogers for U.S. Congress. Like Forrest Gump said in the movie, "Stupid is as Stupid does!" Hal Rogers and Herman Cain are not stupid. They know which side their bread is buttered on. They know that the rich people of America run the Republican Party, and that the rich provide the advertising money, and that the poor vote the way the advertisements tell them to. If this continues, the working poor will have their tax bite each year raised from $7,000 instead of their current $2,400. Most intelligent people would rather pay $2,400 total tax each year rather than $7,000. Which would you rather pay? The Democratic Party is the Party of the middle class people and the working poor people and the disabled poor people. Which are you? Next time, replace Hal Rogers with a Democrat and help kill the 9-9-9 tax plan.
"But that's just the problem. Cain's math is so fuzzy it would make George W. Bush proud. As Cain explains it, he'd do away with the current tax code and replace it with a 9% personal tax, a 9% corporate tax and a 9% national sales tax. Through this overhaul, he says, most people will pay less taxes than they currently do. But his calculations simply make no sense to many experts including economists, the Wall Street Journal and even Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform.
For example, there are 30-million Americans whose incomes are low enough that they don't pay any income or payroll taxes. So for them 9% is 100% more than they currently pay. Add a 9% national sales tax on top of the average 8% state sales tax they pay now and that's another 100%+ increase. So an individual earning and taking home $26,000 who pays about $2100 in state sales tax will, under 9-9-9, end up paying about $2400 in new income tax and a total of approximately $4800 in total sales taxes. That's a total tax bite of more than $7000 vs $2400. How can Cain with any degree of credibility claim that his plan won't increase taxes for the poor and middle classes?
Now take the rich, who currently pay the maximum 36% personal tax rate and 15% in capital gains taxes. In eliminating the cap gains tax and lowering the personal rate to 9% you don't need an economics degree from Wharton to recognize the enormous windfall 9-9-9 lavishes on the wealthy.
So one of two things is happening here: either Cain is stupid or he thinks we are. Let me assure you, Herman Cain is not a stupid man. 9-9-9 is nothing more than a plan in search of logic.
Follow Andy Ostroy on Twitter: www.twitter.com/AndyOstroy "
I ran a previous column on "follow the math" of the 9-9-9 tax plan. If you'd rather pay a total tax bite each year of $7,000 rather than your current $2,400, then you should vote for Herman Cain for President and Hal Rogers for U.S. Congress. Like Forrest Gump said in the movie, "Stupid is as Stupid does!" Hal Rogers and Herman Cain are not stupid. They know which side their bread is buttered on. They know that the rich people of America run the Republican Party, and that the rich provide the advertising money, and that the poor vote the way the advertisements tell them to. If this continues, the working poor will have their tax bite each year raised from $7,000 instead of their current $2,400. Most intelligent people would rather pay $2,400 total tax each year rather than $7,000. Which would you rather pay? The Democratic Party is the Party of the middle class people and the working poor people and the disabled poor people. Which are you? Next time, replace Hal Rogers with a Democrat and help kill the 9-9-9 tax plan.
Saturday, October 15, 2011
Protest outside Hal Rogers' Office.
"Kentuckians for the Commonwealth protest outside Hal Rogers' office
"Protestors held a peaceful demonstration outside the office of U.S. Representative Hal Rogers in Somerset.
"Protesers held a peaceful demonstration outside the office of U.S. Representative Hal Rogers in Somerset.
"Members of Kentuckians for the Commonwealth are demanding Rogers use his powerful role in congress to help the district by pushing policies to improve the quality of life.
"The group also wants him to create a jobs proposal and put people back to work."WYMT NEWS.
Yeah, Hal. You are our Congressman. Let's put people back to work. Kenneth Stepp.
"Protestors held a peaceful demonstration outside the office of U.S. Representative Hal Rogers in Somerset.
"Protesers held a peaceful demonstration outside the office of U.S. Representative Hal Rogers in Somerset.
"Members of Kentuckians for the Commonwealth are demanding Rogers use his powerful role in congress to help the district by pushing policies to improve the quality of life.
"The group also wants him to create a jobs proposal and put people back to work."WYMT NEWS.
Yeah, Hal. You are our Congressman. Let's put people back to work. Kenneth Stepp.
Hal Rogers and the 9-9-9 Tax.
In the Republican Presidential Race, current front-runner Herman Cain has proposed and advocated what he terms "the 9-9-9 Tax".
One feature of the 9-9-9 Tax is a nine per cent federal sales tax throughout the United States. The way this would work is simple. If you wanted to buy a new camera for a hundred dollars ($100.00) in Kentucky, you would pay $100.00, plus your State sales tax of $6.00, plus your Federal sales tax of $9.00, all for a total payment by you for that hundred dollar camera of $115.00. For another example, if you wanted to buy a new compact car or a used gas-guzzler from a car dealer for ten thousand dollars, you would pay $10,000.00, plus your Kentucky State sales tax of $600.00, plus your Federal sales tax of $900.00; all for a total payment by you for that $10,000.00 car of $11,500.00. A sales tax hits the poor hardest, because the poor spend a hundred per cent of their income on consumer goods, while the rich salt their surplus away on investments, and spend a lesser per centage on consumer goods; the sales tax is a regressive tax. Kenneth Stepp is a Democrat that believes in progessive taxation and opposes a regressive tax like the 9-9-9 tax. Hal Rogers is a Republican who votes with the Republican leadership 85% to 95% of the time, and I expect he will vote for the 9% Republican-sponsored Federal sales tax if it gets to the House floor. It's time to replase Hal Rogers with a Democrat who will vote to scuttle the 9-9-9 Tax. Kenneth Stepp.
One feature of the 9-9-9 Tax is a nine per cent federal sales tax throughout the United States. The way this would work is simple. If you wanted to buy a new camera for a hundred dollars ($100.00) in Kentucky, you would pay $100.00, plus your State sales tax of $6.00, plus your Federal sales tax of $9.00, all for a total payment by you for that hundred dollar camera of $115.00. For another example, if you wanted to buy a new compact car or a used gas-guzzler from a car dealer for ten thousand dollars, you would pay $10,000.00, plus your Kentucky State sales tax of $600.00, plus your Federal sales tax of $900.00; all for a total payment by you for that $10,000.00 car of $11,500.00. A sales tax hits the poor hardest, because the poor spend a hundred per cent of their income on consumer goods, while the rich salt their surplus away on investments, and spend a lesser per centage on consumer goods; the sales tax is a regressive tax. Kenneth Stepp is a Democrat that believes in progessive taxation and opposes a regressive tax like the 9-9-9 tax. Hal Rogers is a Republican who votes with the Republican leadership 85% to 95% of the time, and I expect he will vote for the 9% Republican-sponsored Federal sales tax if it gets to the House floor. It's time to replase Hal Rogers with a Democrat who will vote to scuttle the 9-9-9 Tax. Kenneth Stepp.
Thursday, October 13, 2011
Kentuckians for the Commonwealth to Demonstrate at Hal Rogers' Office!
"Posted by jeffbiggers at 7:18 am
"October 13, 2011
"Occupy Big Coal: Kentuckians to Protest Most Corrupt Member of Congress on Friday
"Posted by jeffbiggers on @ 7:18 amArticle printed from speakeasy: /2011/10/13/occupy-big-coal-kentuckians-to-protest-most-corrupt-member-of-congress-on-friday/
"Wall Street and Big Coal corporations have no better friend than Rep. Hal Rogers (R-KY), the “prince of pork” and powerful chairman of the House Appropriations Committee.
"Hailed as the most “corrupt member of Congress” by the non-profit Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, Rogers’ 5th District in eastern and south-central Kentucky also ranks at the bottom of the nation in virtually every quality of life indicator.
"After thirty years of his abysmal record, Rogers’ constituents have had enough. This Friday, at 3pm, Oct. 14, Kentuckians for the Commonwealth will hold a peaceful demonstration at Rogers’ Somerset office to ask a simple question: Doesn’t Kentucky deserve better?
"There might not be a better 99% vs. 1% scenario of political and corporate wanton abandon in the nation.
"Bankrolled by the dirty coal and energy lobby, Rogers also oversees the Congressional district with the most reckless and devastating mountaintop removal operations in Appalachia.
"According to the Kentuckians for the Commonwealth press release:
"Over the last several months, he’s pushed policies that would make college less affordable, cut access to child nutrition programs, reduce opportunities for energy efficiency jobs, and block safeguards for our water and air. He has no job creation proposal. His positions put many families further at risk, allow additional degradation of our land and water, and do nothing to improve the quality of life for Kentuckians.
"Since Rogers first came in office in 1981, an estimated 300 mountains and nearly 600,000 acres of hardwood forests, and hundreds of miles of headwater streams, have been irreversibly destroyed by mountaintop removal strip mining. In the process, more than 60 percent of the coal miner jobs have been stripped by the heavily mechanized operations, leaving the local economies in ruin and without any hope of economic diversification. According to recent studies, less than four percent of any mountaintop removal reclamation operation has resulted in verifiable post-mining economic productivity excluding forestry and pasture.
"Whether or not Rogers will greet his fellow Kentuckians is another question. The Congressman reportedly avoids meetings with his constituents, including nationally known KFTC activist and Harlan County-native Teri Blanton, who says she plans to ask: “Mr. Rogers, considering you have been in office for more than 30 years and your congressional district falls at 435th on the list of the unhealthiest, unhappiest and some of the poorest counties in the nation, aren’t you just a bit embarrassed by this?”
"For more information, check out the KFTC site.
"Jeff Biggers is the American Book Award-winning author of Reckoning at Eagle Creek: The Secret Legacy of Coal in the Heartland (Nation/Basic Books), among other books. Visit his website: www.jeffbiggers.com"
Kenneth Stepp has always answered the questionnaires sent out by the Kentuckians for the Commonwealth. I'm always glad to answer the questions of people of the Fifth Kentucky Congressional District. I hope the Kentuckians for the Commonwealth are pleased with the reception they get from Hal Rogers, this Friday, at 3pm, Oct. 14, Kentuckians for the Commonwealth will hold a peaceful demonstration at Rogers’ Somerset office to ask a simple question: Doesn’t Kentucky deserve better? Yes Kentucky deserves better. Better is just a ballot box away. Why do Kentuckians always try to place the millionaires and bankers in charge of their government offices. Replace Hal Rogers with a Democrat in 2012.
"October 13, 2011
"Occupy Big Coal: Kentuckians to Protest Most Corrupt Member of Congress on Friday
"Posted by jeffbiggers on @ 7:18 amArticle printed from speakeasy: /2011/10/13/occupy-big-coal-kentuckians-to-protest-most-corrupt-member-of-congress-on-friday/
"Wall Street and Big Coal corporations have no better friend than Rep. Hal Rogers (R-KY), the “prince of pork” and powerful chairman of the House Appropriations Committee.
"Hailed as the most “corrupt member of Congress” by the non-profit Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, Rogers’ 5th District in eastern and south-central Kentucky also ranks at the bottom of the nation in virtually every quality of life indicator.
"After thirty years of his abysmal record, Rogers’ constituents have had enough. This Friday, at 3pm, Oct. 14, Kentuckians for the Commonwealth will hold a peaceful demonstration at Rogers’ Somerset office to ask a simple question: Doesn’t Kentucky deserve better?
"There might not be a better 99% vs. 1% scenario of political and corporate wanton abandon in the nation.
"Bankrolled by the dirty coal and energy lobby, Rogers also oversees the Congressional district with the most reckless and devastating mountaintop removal operations in Appalachia.
"According to the Kentuckians for the Commonwealth press release:
"Over the last several months, he’s pushed policies that would make college less affordable, cut access to child nutrition programs, reduce opportunities for energy efficiency jobs, and block safeguards for our water and air. He has no job creation proposal. His positions put many families further at risk, allow additional degradation of our land and water, and do nothing to improve the quality of life for Kentuckians.
"Since Rogers first came in office in 1981, an estimated 300 mountains and nearly 600,000 acres of hardwood forests, and hundreds of miles of headwater streams, have been irreversibly destroyed by mountaintop removal strip mining. In the process, more than 60 percent of the coal miner jobs have been stripped by the heavily mechanized operations, leaving the local economies in ruin and without any hope of economic diversification. According to recent studies, less than four percent of any mountaintop removal reclamation operation has resulted in verifiable post-mining economic productivity excluding forestry and pasture.
"Whether or not Rogers will greet his fellow Kentuckians is another question. The Congressman reportedly avoids meetings with his constituents, including nationally known KFTC activist and Harlan County-native Teri Blanton, who says she plans to ask: “Mr. Rogers, considering you have been in office for more than 30 years and your congressional district falls at 435th on the list of the unhealthiest, unhappiest and some of the poorest counties in the nation, aren’t you just a bit embarrassed by this?”
"For more information, check out the KFTC site.
"Jeff Biggers is the American Book Award-winning author of Reckoning at Eagle Creek: The Secret Legacy of Coal in the Heartland (Nation/Basic Books), among other books. Visit his website: www.jeffbiggers.com"
Kenneth Stepp has always answered the questionnaires sent out by the Kentuckians for the Commonwealth. I'm always glad to answer the questions of people of the Fifth Kentucky Congressional District. I hope the Kentuckians for the Commonwealth are pleased with the reception they get from Hal Rogers, this Friday, at 3pm, Oct. 14, Kentuckians for the Commonwealth will hold a peaceful demonstration at Rogers’ Somerset office to ask a simple question: Doesn’t Kentucky deserve better? Yes Kentucky deserves better. Better is just a ballot box away. Why do Kentuckians always try to place the millionaires and bankers in charge of their government offices. Replace Hal Rogers with a Democrat in 2012.
Friday, October 07, 2011
More on U.S. drone killings of American Citizens without trial.
"Of Predator Drones and Due Process...
"October 5th, 2011 by MOTHAX
"Was the attack that killed Anwar al-Awlaki and Samir Khan justified under US and International Law?
"Just to give a basic framework of the discussion, the Palm Beach Post lays it out rather nicely:
"The killing of the U.S.-born Al-Qaeda cleric Anwar al-Awlaki on Friday along with another U.S. citizen and two other Al-Qaeda operatives in Yemen is likely to fuel the international controversy over the legality and wisdom of the Obama administration's dramatically increased use of drone attacks.
For several years, U.S. allies have made no public comment, even as U.S. drone strikes have killed twice as many suspected Al-Qaeda and Taliban members than were ever imprisoned in Guantanamo Bay. But that acquiescence may change, as human rights groups and the media debate the legality and collateral damage of drone attacks. The U.S. drone program has been highly effective in killing senior Al-Qaeda leaders, but the administration needs to better explain and defend its use of drones to avoid losing international support and potentially exposing administration officials to legal liability
The U.S. position, under the Bush and Obama administrations, has been that drone strikes against Al-Qaeda and Taliban leaders are permitted by the September 2001 Authorization to Use Military Force Act, which empowered the president to use "all necessary and appropriate force" against nations, organizations or persons who planned, committed or aided the Sept. 11 attacks. The United States also believes that drone strikes are permitted under international law and the United Nations Charter as actions in self-defense, with or without the consent of the country where the strike takes place.
It’s perhaps easiest to start with the people who think that it was not justified, which seems to range across the political spectrum, but noticeably more present at the far peripheries. From the far left, it is customary for me to start with Glenn Greenwald of Salon…
What’s most striking about this is not that the U.S. Government has seized and exercised exactly the power the Fifth Amendment was designed to bar (“No person shall be deprived of life without due process of law”), and did so in a way that almost certainly violates core First Amendment protections (questions that will now never be decided in a court of law). What’s most amazing is that its citizens will not merely refrain from objecting, but will stand and cheer the U.S. Government’s new power to assassinate their fellow citizens, far from any battlefield, literally without a shred of due process from the U.S. Government. Many will celebrate the strong, decisive, Tough President’s ability to eradicate the life of Anwar al-Awlaki — including many who just so righteously condemned those Republican audience members as so terribly barbaric and crass for cheering Governor Perry’s execution of scores of serial murderers and rapists: criminals who were at least given a trial and appeals and the other trappings of due process before being killed.
Meanwhile from the right we have Presidential candidates Ron Paul and Herman Cain representing the libertarian and conservative wings. First, Ron Paul:
"No, I don't think that's a good way to deal with our problems,” Paul said in a videotape of the questioning by reporters. Awlaki “was never tried or charged for any crimes. No one knows if he killed anybody. We know he might have been associated with the ‘underwear bomber.’ But if the American people accept this blindly and casually that we now have an accepted practice of the president assassinating people who he thinks are bad guys. I think it's sad.”…
“I think, what would people have said about Timothy McVeigh? We didn't assassinate him, who certainly had done it,” Paul said. McVeigh “was put through the courts then executed. … To start assassinating American citizens without charges, we should think very seriously about this.”
Paul argued that the killing of Awlaki was different from the attack on Bin Laden because Bin Laden was involved in the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon in Washington.
Frankly, the Ron Paul logic on this one escapes me entirely. How is it different? Bin Ladin was never put on trial either, so was it just that 9/11 changes it? And who exactly makes the decision as to whether one event is strong enough to overcome the need for a trial, and another is not. I’d like to give the Dr., the benefit of the doubt and assumed he was misquoted, and/or there was something else he said to bolster this line of thinking, but I have been looking for two days and found nothing.
Meanwhile, Hermann Cain is being no less difficult to pin down on this one. On May 5 of this year, Cain said
"He should be charged. And since he's an American citizen, he should be tried in our courts," Cain said of al-Awlaki. When asked if he considered it legal for President Obama to order al-Awlaki killed, Cain said, "In his case, no, because he's an American citizen."
This week, somewhat inexplicably, he stated:
“I never said that [President Obama] should not have ordered [the killing]. I don’t recall saying that. I think you’ve got some misinformation," Cain said. "Keep in mind that there are a lot of people out there trying to make me sound as if I am indecisive."
“I don’t know all of the compelling evidence that the intelligence agencies and the military had. I’m convinced—I’m convinced that they have enough intelligence information that said he’s a threat to the United States of America,” Cain said. “You don’t try to prosecute or capture him simply because he’s a United States citizen.”
Unfortunately, we don’t have a particularly clear-cut explanation of the legal thinking of the White House, as the memo that was drafted is secret….
The Justice Department wrote a secret memorandum authorizing the lethal targeting of Anwar al-Aulaqi, the American-born radical cleric who was killed by a U.S. drone strike Friday, according to administration officials.
The document was produced following a review of the legal issues raised by striking a U.S. citizen and involved senior lawyers from across the administration. There was no dissent about the legality of killing Aulaqi, the officials said.
“What constitutes due process in this case is a due process in war,” said one of the officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss closely held deliberations within the administration.
The closest that we have to a legal reasoning is a speech by John O. Brennan, Assistant to the President for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism before the Program on Law and Security at the Harvard Law School:
In the face of this ongoing and evolving threat, the Obama Administration has worked to establish a counterterrorism framework that has been effective in enhancing the security of our nation. This framework is guided by several core principles.
First, our highest priority is – and always will be – the safety and security of the American people. As President Obama has said, we have no greater responsibility as a government.
Second, we will use every lawful tool and authority at our disposal. No single agency or department has sole responsibility for this fight because no single department or agency possesses all the capabilities needed for this fight.
Third, we are pragmatic, not rigid or ideological – making decisions not based on preconceived notions about which action seems “stronger,” but based on what will actually enhance the security of this country and the safety of the American people. We address each threat and each circumstance in a way that best serves our national security interests, which includes building partnerships with countries around the world.
Fourth—and the principle that guides all our actions, foreign and domestic—we will uphold the core values that define us as Americans, and that includes adhering to the rule of law. And when I say “all our actions,” that includes covert actions, which we undertake under the authorities provided to us by Congress. President Obama has directed that all our actions—even when conducted out of public view—remain consistent with our laws and values.
Now, I don’t really see much of a legal argument per se in there, but everyone else is pointing to this speech as the justification. So, in the meantime, I guess we just have to guess as to what it is, and try to find a way to differentiate the Greenwald/Paul/Cain reasoning from that of the White House.
Either way, what do you guys think? Was the strike legally justifiable or not?
UPDATE: This article in Military.com today gives me a little more to go on....
"A secret panel of mid-level national security officials has been established that can put American citizens on a “kill or capture” list that is ultimately sent to the White House for final approval.
The panel’s recommendations first go through a group of National Security Council “principals” – meaning Cabinet secretaries and intelligence chiefs – for approval before reaching the president’s desk, according to a report today by Reuter’s.
There is no public record of the panel’s workings and no law actually establishing it or spelling out its functions."
"I don't know if that makes me more or less apprehensive about this. Is Congress cool with the President making this quasi-Judicial body without any legislative input?
If anyone is reading an inherent bias on my part in the preceding, I'd love to know what that bias is, because I honestly have no clue how I feel about this whole thing. I feel uncomfortable with secret bodies not authorized by legislation authorizing things like killings. On the other hand, Awlaki needed to be ventilated and good riddance to bad rubbish. But, we should always think worst case scenario with these sorts of things. Can you envision a scenario where a US Citizen is killed abroad with a drone attack, and he didn't have what was coming to him? Probably we all can. So, what safeguard is there? That's where I get somewhat lost."
"Update X2: The family of Samir Khan issued this press release today:
We, the family of Samir Khan, in our time of grief and mourning, request that the media let us have our peace and privacy during this difficult time.
"It has been stated in the media that Samir was not the target of the attack; however no U.S. official has contacted us with any news about the recovery of our son’s remains, nor offered us any condolences.
"As a result, we feel appalled by the indifference shown to us by our government.
"Being a law-abiding citizen of the United States, our late son Samir Khan never broke any law and was never implicated of any crime. The Fifth Amendment states that no citizen shall be 'deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law' yet our government assassinated two of its citizens."
"Was this style of execution the only solution? Why couldn’t there have been a capture and trial?
"Where is the justice? As we mourn our son, we must ask these questions.
"Sincerely,
"The Khan Family."
"I find that mildly ridiculous, because one of the last things Samir wrote was an article in the Al Qaeda Magazine entitled "I am proud be a traitor to America." So, he was a law-abiding self-professed traitor? Something doesn't add up there wouldn't you say?"
"My Friends at My Pet Jawa are also decidedly unpleased, and included this picture of Sami's article... [picture deleted]."
My editorial is this. Is our government anti-Semitic? What is a Semite anyway? What does a Semite look like? Wikipedia states: "The term Semite means a member of any of various ancient and modern Semitic-speaking peoples originating in southwestern Asia, including; Akkadians (Assyrians and Babylonians), Eblaites, Ugarites, Canaanites, Phoenicians, Hebrews (Israelites, Judeans and Samaritans), Arameans, Chaldeans, Amorites, Moabites, Edomites, Hyksos, Arabs, Nabateans, Maganites, Shebans, Sutu, Maltese, Mandeans and Ethiopian Semites."
Obviously, the American citizens killed were Semites. It used to be we didn't kill American citizens without some kind of warrant. Now it is O.K. to kill American citizens who look like Semites--without a warrant. That reminds me of an old saying from the 1940's "They came to take the Jews, but that did not concern me because I was not a Jew. They came to take the [it was a larger group, but I can't remember which it was], but I was not one of them, so it didn't concern me because I was not one of them either. They came to take me, but there was no one left to help me." Anyway, it looks like foreigners and American citizens who look like Semites are the only people the government has a right to kill without any kind of death warrant or other procedure. Does that mean we are O.K.?
Even when James Bond--the fictional character--had a license to kill, he did not use it on his fellow Englishmen. As I remember the Bond novels, he only killed foreigners who did not look like Englishmen, and only when they got in the way of his spy mission--I don't remember James Bond being sent out to assassinate anyone.
We are slouching down a slippery slope when we use drone attacks to kill American citizens. Our adherence to Constitutional law is rooted in American distrust of government. Has 9/11 changes us so that we now give a blank check to government to carry out activities that were unthinkable fifty years ago?
The Constitution, may it be preserved! May the Bill of Rights, the right to life, the right to a jury trial, and the right to confront accusers be preserved. May the rule of law be preserved. Osama bin Laden wanted to destroy the American Justice System. Let's stand up for the American Justice System and the American Courts System to assure that Osama bin Laden does not succeed in destroying the Rule of Law. Kenneth Stepp.
"October 5th, 2011 by MOTHAX
"Was the attack that killed Anwar al-Awlaki and Samir Khan justified under US and International Law?
"Just to give a basic framework of the discussion, the Palm Beach Post lays it out rather nicely:
"The killing of the U.S.-born Al-Qaeda cleric Anwar al-Awlaki on Friday along with another U.S. citizen and two other Al-Qaeda operatives in Yemen is likely to fuel the international controversy over the legality and wisdom of the Obama administration's dramatically increased use of drone attacks.
For several years, U.S. allies have made no public comment, even as U.S. drone strikes have killed twice as many suspected Al-Qaeda and Taliban members than were ever imprisoned in Guantanamo Bay. But that acquiescence may change, as human rights groups and the media debate the legality and collateral damage of drone attacks. The U.S. drone program has been highly effective in killing senior Al-Qaeda leaders, but the administration needs to better explain and defend its use of drones to avoid losing international support and potentially exposing administration officials to legal liability
The U.S. position, under the Bush and Obama administrations, has been that drone strikes against Al-Qaeda and Taliban leaders are permitted by the September 2001 Authorization to Use Military Force Act, which empowered the president to use "all necessary and appropriate force" against nations, organizations or persons who planned, committed or aided the Sept. 11 attacks. The United States also believes that drone strikes are permitted under international law and the United Nations Charter as actions in self-defense, with or without the consent of the country where the strike takes place.
It’s perhaps easiest to start with the people who think that it was not justified, which seems to range across the political spectrum, but noticeably more present at the far peripheries. From the far left, it is customary for me to start with Glenn Greenwald of Salon…
What’s most striking about this is not that the U.S. Government has seized and exercised exactly the power the Fifth Amendment was designed to bar (“No person shall be deprived of life without due process of law”), and did so in a way that almost certainly violates core First Amendment protections (questions that will now never be decided in a court of law). What’s most amazing is that its citizens will not merely refrain from objecting, but will stand and cheer the U.S. Government’s new power to assassinate their fellow citizens, far from any battlefield, literally without a shred of due process from the U.S. Government. Many will celebrate the strong, decisive, Tough President’s ability to eradicate the life of Anwar al-Awlaki — including many who just so righteously condemned those Republican audience members as so terribly barbaric and crass for cheering Governor Perry’s execution of scores of serial murderers and rapists: criminals who were at least given a trial and appeals and the other trappings of due process before being killed.
Meanwhile from the right we have Presidential candidates Ron Paul and Herman Cain representing the libertarian and conservative wings. First, Ron Paul:
"No, I don't think that's a good way to deal with our problems,” Paul said in a videotape of the questioning by reporters. Awlaki “was never tried or charged for any crimes. No one knows if he killed anybody. We know he might have been associated with the ‘underwear bomber.’ But if the American people accept this blindly and casually that we now have an accepted practice of the president assassinating people who he thinks are bad guys. I think it's sad.”…
“I think, what would people have said about Timothy McVeigh? We didn't assassinate him, who certainly had done it,” Paul said. McVeigh “was put through the courts then executed. … To start assassinating American citizens without charges, we should think very seriously about this.”
Paul argued that the killing of Awlaki was different from the attack on Bin Laden because Bin Laden was involved in the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon in Washington.
Frankly, the Ron Paul logic on this one escapes me entirely. How is it different? Bin Ladin was never put on trial either, so was it just that 9/11 changes it? And who exactly makes the decision as to whether one event is strong enough to overcome the need for a trial, and another is not. I’d like to give the Dr., the benefit of the doubt and assumed he was misquoted, and/or there was something else he said to bolster this line of thinking, but I have been looking for two days and found nothing.
Meanwhile, Hermann Cain is being no less difficult to pin down on this one. On May 5 of this year, Cain said
"He should be charged. And since he's an American citizen, he should be tried in our courts," Cain said of al-Awlaki. When asked if he considered it legal for President Obama to order al-Awlaki killed, Cain said, "In his case, no, because he's an American citizen."
This week, somewhat inexplicably, he stated:
“I never said that [President Obama] should not have ordered [the killing]. I don’t recall saying that. I think you’ve got some misinformation," Cain said. "Keep in mind that there are a lot of people out there trying to make me sound as if I am indecisive."
“I don’t know all of the compelling evidence that the intelligence agencies and the military had. I’m convinced—I’m convinced that they have enough intelligence information that said he’s a threat to the United States of America,” Cain said. “You don’t try to prosecute or capture him simply because he’s a United States citizen.”
Unfortunately, we don’t have a particularly clear-cut explanation of the legal thinking of the White House, as the memo that was drafted is secret….
The Justice Department wrote a secret memorandum authorizing the lethal targeting of Anwar al-Aulaqi, the American-born radical cleric who was killed by a U.S. drone strike Friday, according to administration officials.
The document was produced following a review of the legal issues raised by striking a U.S. citizen and involved senior lawyers from across the administration. There was no dissent about the legality of killing Aulaqi, the officials said.
“What constitutes due process in this case is a due process in war,” said one of the officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss closely held deliberations within the administration.
The closest that we have to a legal reasoning is a speech by John O. Brennan, Assistant to the President for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism before the Program on Law and Security at the Harvard Law School:
In the face of this ongoing and evolving threat, the Obama Administration has worked to establish a counterterrorism framework that has been effective in enhancing the security of our nation. This framework is guided by several core principles.
First, our highest priority is – and always will be – the safety and security of the American people. As President Obama has said, we have no greater responsibility as a government.
Second, we will use every lawful tool and authority at our disposal. No single agency or department has sole responsibility for this fight because no single department or agency possesses all the capabilities needed for this fight.
Third, we are pragmatic, not rigid or ideological – making decisions not based on preconceived notions about which action seems “stronger,” but based on what will actually enhance the security of this country and the safety of the American people. We address each threat and each circumstance in a way that best serves our national security interests, which includes building partnerships with countries around the world.
Fourth—and the principle that guides all our actions, foreign and domestic—we will uphold the core values that define us as Americans, and that includes adhering to the rule of law. And when I say “all our actions,” that includes covert actions, which we undertake under the authorities provided to us by Congress. President Obama has directed that all our actions—even when conducted out of public view—remain consistent with our laws and values.
Now, I don’t really see much of a legal argument per se in there, but everyone else is pointing to this speech as the justification. So, in the meantime, I guess we just have to guess as to what it is, and try to find a way to differentiate the Greenwald/Paul/Cain reasoning from that of the White House.
Either way, what do you guys think? Was the strike legally justifiable or not?
UPDATE: This article in Military.com today gives me a little more to go on....
"A secret panel of mid-level national security officials has been established that can put American citizens on a “kill or capture” list that is ultimately sent to the White House for final approval.
The panel’s recommendations first go through a group of National Security Council “principals” – meaning Cabinet secretaries and intelligence chiefs – for approval before reaching the president’s desk, according to a report today by Reuter’s.
There is no public record of the panel’s workings and no law actually establishing it or spelling out its functions."
"I don't know if that makes me more or less apprehensive about this. Is Congress cool with the President making this quasi-Judicial body without any legislative input?
If anyone is reading an inherent bias on my part in the preceding, I'd love to know what that bias is, because I honestly have no clue how I feel about this whole thing. I feel uncomfortable with secret bodies not authorized by legislation authorizing things like killings. On the other hand, Awlaki needed to be ventilated and good riddance to bad rubbish. But, we should always think worst case scenario with these sorts of things. Can you envision a scenario where a US Citizen is killed abroad with a drone attack, and he didn't have what was coming to him? Probably we all can. So, what safeguard is there? That's where I get somewhat lost."
"Update X2: The family of Samir Khan issued this press release today:
We, the family of Samir Khan, in our time of grief and mourning, request that the media let us have our peace and privacy during this difficult time.
"It has been stated in the media that Samir was not the target of the attack; however no U.S. official has contacted us with any news about the recovery of our son’s remains, nor offered us any condolences.
"As a result, we feel appalled by the indifference shown to us by our government.
"Being a law-abiding citizen of the United States, our late son Samir Khan never broke any law and was never implicated of any crime. The Fifth Amendment states that no citizen shall be 'deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law' yet our government assassinated two of its citizens."
"Was this style of execution the only solution? Why couldn’t there have been a capture and trial?
"Where is the justice? As we mourn our son, we must ask these questions.
"Sincerely,
"The Khan Family."
"I find that mildly ridiculous, because one of the last things Samir wrote was an article in the Al Qaeda Magazine entitled "I am proud be a traitor to America." So, he was a law-abiding self-professed traitor? Something doesn't add up there wouldn't you say?"
"My Friends at My Pet Jawa are also decidedly unpleased, and included this picture of Sami's article... [picture deleted]."
My editorial is this. Is our government anti-Semitic? What is a Semite anyway? What does a Semite look like? Wikipedia states: "The term Semite means a member of any of various ancient and modern Semitic-speaking peoples originating in southwestern Asia, including; Akkadians (Assyrians and Babylonians), Eblaites, Ugarites, Canaanites, Phoenicians, Hebrews (Israelites, Judeans and Samaritans), Arameans, Chaldeans, Amorites, Moabites, Edomites, Hyksos, Arabs, Nabateans, Maganites, Shebans, Sutu, Maltese, Mandeans and Ethiopian Semites."
Obviously, the American citizens killed were Semites. It used to be we didn't kill American citizens without some kind of warrant. Now it is O.K. to kill American citizens who look like Semites--without a warrant. That reminds me of an old saying from the 1940's "They came to take the Jews, but that did not concern me because I was not a Jew. They came to take the [it was a larger group, but I can't remember which it was], but I was not one of them, so it didn't concern me because I was not one of them either. They came to take me, but there was no one left to help me." Anyway, it looks like foreigners and American citizens who look like Semites are the only people the government has a right to kill without any kind of death warrant or other procedure. Does that mean we are O.K.?
Even when James Bond--the fictional character--had a license to kill, he did not use it on his fellow Englishmen. As I remember the Bond novels, he only killed foreigners who did not look like Englishmen, and only when they got in the way of his spy mission--I don't remember James Bond being sent out to assassinate anyone.
We are slouching down a slippery slope when we use drone attacks to kill American citizens. Our adherence to Constitutional law is rooted in American distrust of government. Has 9/11 changes us so that we now give a blank check to government to carry out activities that were unthinkable fifty years ago?
The Constitution, may it be preserved! May the Bill of Rights, the right to life, the right to a jury trial, and the right to confront accusers be preserved. May the rule of law be preserved. Osama bin Laden wanted to destroy the American Justice System. Let's stand up for the American Justice System and the American Courts System to assure that Osama bin Laden does not succeed in destroying the Rule of Law. Kenneth Stepp.
Tuesday, October 04, 2011
From Gettysburg to Anwar al-Awlaki
From Gettysburg to Anwar al-Awlaki
The column entitled "From Gettysburg to Anwar al-Awlaki" by John Yoo appeared in yesterday's Wall Street Journal, and needs rebutting.
The column succinctly states the opposition to the terminator-execution-drone-style killing of American citizen Anwar al-Awlaki, when it tries to have it both ways.
Concerning the "left", it states:
"Yet, from the howls on the left, you would never know that President Barack Obama had won another victory in the war on terror. Even as details of the operation leaked out, critics claimed that our government had 'assassinated' an American citizen without due process."
Right-wing opposition to such killing was lambasted as follows:
"Showing that antiwar fervor is a bipertisan disease, Rep. Ron Paul (R., Texas) immediately went on the offensive. 'Al-Awlaki was born here; he is an American citizen. He was never tried or charged for any crimes,' declared the Republican presidential candidate. 'If the American people accept this blindly and casually that we now have an accepted practice of the president assassinating people who he thinks are bad guys, I think it's sad.'"
Abraham Lincoln--who freed the slaves--is not an example to encourage people wanting to send terminator robots out to kill American citizens who are alleged to be terrorists. When faced with West Point graduates leading gray-clad troops against the United States, Abraham Lincoln sent blue-clad troops led by West Point graduates to fight them on battlefields. The only notable assassination of the Civil War era was the assassination of Lincoln, himself. The South may have lost that war, but our own time has seen for sixteen of the past twenty years, the United States led by the former Southern Governors Clinton (Arkansas) and G.W. Bush (Texas). Of course, the first President Bush also qualifies as a Southerner, although he was raised in Connecticut before moving to Texas.
No, we should not abandon civil liberties and the United States Constitution to win the war on terror. Abandoning civil liberties and the United States Constitution to win the war on terror would be a hollow victory, indeed. Kenneth Stepp.
The column entitled "From Gettysburg to Anwar al-Awlaki" by John Yoo appeared in yesterday's Wall Street Journal, and needs rebutting.
The column succinctly states the opposition to the terminator-execution-drone-style killing of American citizen Anwar al-Awlaki, when it tries to have it both ways.
Concerning the "left", it states:
"Yet, from the howls on the left, you would never know that President Barack Obama had won another victory in the war on terror. Even as details of the operation leaked out, critics claimed that our government had 'assassinated' an American citizen without due process."
Right-wing opposition to such killing was lambasted as follows:
"Showing that antiwar fervor is a bipertisan disease, Rep. Ron Paul (R., Texas) immediately went on the offensive. 'Al-Awlaki was born here; he is an American citizen. He was never tried or charged for any crimes,' declared the Republican presidential candidate. 'If the American people accept this blindly and casually that we now have an accepted practice of the president assassinating people who he thinks are bad guys, I think it's sad.'"
Abraham Lincoln--who freed the slaves--is not an example to encourage people wanting to send terminator robots out to kill American citizens who are alleged to be terrorists. When faced with West Point graduates leading gray-clad troops against the United States, Abraham Lincoln sent blue-clad troops led by West Point graduates to fight them on battlefields. The only notable assassination of the Civil War era was the assassination of Lincoln, himself. The South may have lost that war, but our own time has seen for sixteen of the past twenty years, the United States led by the former Southern Governors Clinton (Arkansas) and G.W. Bush (Texas). Of course, the first President Bush also qualifies as a Southerner, although he was raised in Connecticut before moving to Texas.
No, we should not abandon civil liberties and the United States Constitution to win the war on terror. Abandoning civil liberties and the United States Constitution to win the war on terror would be a hollow victory, indeed. Kenneth Stepp.
Saturday, October 01, 2011
Report from the Conference on the Constitutional Convention
Report from the Conference on the Constitutional Convention
Well what do you do if they have such a convention and they vote to abolish the present U.S. Constitution in favor of a fascist document that would have been championed by Benito Mussolini? If the sufficient number of States ratify it, the present U.S.A. is terminated without a shot being fired. Think about it.
Well what do you do if they have such a convention and they vote to abolish the present U.S. Constitution in favor of a fascist document that would have been championed by Benito Mussolini? If the sufficient number of States ratify it, the present U.S.A. is terminated without a shot being fired. Think about it.
The wars continue.
When I first got involved in politics, it seemed the Republican Party was the Peace party and the Democratic Party was the War party. The Democrats had lead us into World War One and World War Two, and the Korean War, and the Viet Nam War. Republican President Eisenhower had led us out of the Korean Conflict. We were right in the middle of the Viet Nam War. Of the three main candidates running for President in the general election in 1968, Richard Nixon seemed to be the one most likely to lead the U.S. out of the Viet Nam War--if elected. Well, I did vote for Nixon both times, and the Nixon-Ford Administration did lead America out of the Viet Nam conflict.
What a difference forty years makes. Now, you've got Republican Presidents twice leading us into Middle East Wars. We seem to be trapped in never-ending wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Why are we fighting in Iraq? No one seems to know.
Now that Osama bin Laden is dead, why are we still fighting in Afghanistan? No one seems to know that either.
Generally, war is a rich man's fight and a poor man's war. Too many of our poor people sent over to the Middle East are coming home in boxes. I know a lot of the pro-war people blame the victim, saying, "They knew it was dangerous when they volunteered." Well, that's just hogwash. It is always dangerous to defend your country, but we should choose our enemies more carefully, so that we are actually fighting a people that are a threat to us.
I say let's bring the troops home now.
Kenneth Stepp.
What a difference forty years makes. Now, you've got Republican Presidents twice leading us into Middle East Wars. We seem to be trapped in never-ending wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Why are we fighting in Iraq? No one seems to know.
Now that Osama bin Laden is dead, why are we still fighting in Afghanistan? No one seems to know that either.
Generally, war is a rich man's fight and a poor man's war. Too many of our poor people sent over to the Middle East are coming home in boxes. I know a lot of the pro-war people blame the victim, saying, "They knew it was dangerous when they volunteered." Well, that's just hogwash. It is always dangerous to defend your country, but we should choose our enemies more carefully, so that we are actually fighting a people that are a threat to us.
I say let's bring the troops home now.
Kenneth Stepp.
Democratic Supper
As you know, this is an election year for statewide office in Kentucky this year.
Two of my family members and I attended the Democratic supper at the Community Center in Manchester last night. After a spaghetti supper, we got to hear statewide candidate Bob Farmer who is running for Richie Farmer's old job as Commissioner of Agriculture. Bob related how he also does comedy--in a routine similar to that of Jerry Clower. You remember Jerry Clower--he used to be a fertilizer salesman before he went into comedy. Some people find the Jerry Clower brand of comedy to be offensive, but I always enjoyed hearing Jerry Clower talking about the people he would meet in Mississippi. Hawwh! That's pretty good stuff. I guess politics and comedy don't mix.
At least not with some folks.
Anyway, the Democratic Party in Clay County is alive and well, and is nobody's doormat. Hopefully the Democratic Party in Clay County will come out swinging in the upcoming elections.
Two of my family members and I attended the Democratic supper at the Community Center in Manchester last night. After a spaghetti supper, we got to hear statewide candidate Bob Farmer who is running for Richie Farmer's old job as Commissioner of Agriculture. Bob related how he also does comedy--in a routine similar to that of Jerry Clower. You remember Jerry Clower--he used to be a fertilizer salesman before he went into comedy. Some people find the Jerry Clower brand of comedy to be offensive, but I always enjoyed hearing Jerry Clower talking about the people he would meet in Mississippi. Hawwh! That's pretty good stuff. I guess politics and comedy don't mix.
At least not with some folks.
Anyway, the Democratic Party in Clay County is alive and well, and is nobody's doormat. Hopefully the Democratic Party in Clay County will come out swinging in the upcoming elections.
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