“FREEDOM IS NOT FREE” is inscribed on the Korean War Memorial in Washington, D.C. The Korean War ended JULY 27, 1953, with the armistice signed at Panmunjom. It began three years earlier as a U.N. “police” action. The outnumbered U.S. and South Korean troops fought courageously against the Communist Chinese and North Korean troops, who were killing thousands with arms and MIG fighters supplied by the Soviet Union.
Read more ›Archive for July 27th, 2012
Chick-fil-A Victimization: Discrimination Under the Guise of Diversity & Tolerance
The world has gone insane! There is no doubt left that this world has gone over the edge into madness. Right in our face is the situation with Chick-fil-A and the unreasonable response. The latter being quite maddening to many who actually still have some common sense and a touch of sanity. Apparently, the diverse community is only into diversity when it is their way, or simply goes against traditional.
Read more ›In Liberal Land, Some Opinions Are More Equal Than Others
Liberals like to scream that they have the right to their opinion (as ill-informed, unscientific, self-destructive, and bereft of facts and logic as it may be), and they do. They also like to wag their self-righteous finger in the face of society and lecture on “tolerance,” but they make it clear that only one opinion will be tolerated: the liberal one.
Read more ›ObamaCare CAN Be Blocked…If We’ll Only Try
A July 18 report by the Cato Institute’s Michael Cannon has revealed a critical flaw in the Obamacare law that could ultimately prove to be its undoing. Namely, if states refuse to set up an insurance exchange under the law, the federal government lacks authorization to dispense some $800 billion in subsidies through a federally operated exchange. But that does not mean the House of Representatives, under the leadership of Speaker John Boehner, has to stand by idly while the Obama Administration rewrites the law at will.
Read more ›If We Want Smaller Government, Drastic Action May Be Required
Beginning in the New Deal, the Commerce Clause was used to justify expansion of federal power into areas reserved for the States and/or the private sector. The federal government may oversee and regulate private industry, but nowhere in the original Constitution does the federal government have any role competing directly in the private sector. Now that the Roberts Court ruling on ObamaCare has re-opened the limitations of the Commerce Clause, perhaps it is time to re-examine many of these past decisions to possibly rollback federal programs to the States or to abandon the private sector completely?
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