Friday, July 2, 2010

O'Malley Violating State Constitution

As of July 1st the state of Maryland is $389 Million in the red due to O'Malley and the democrats that tried to use gimmicks and chicanery instead of passing a realistic budget that did not rely on a hoped for federal bailout. The bailout isn't here, and now our state government is breaking the law. The Maryland state constitution (Article III, Subsection 5a) does not allow for a running deficit and requires a balanced budget.

Even though these liberal politicians have raised our taxes, their unending spending continues unabated and now we are in the red. Now we will hear how firefighters, police, and teachers will loose their jobs if we don't accept new tax increases, rather than curbing the rampant waste elsewhere in the budget.

Every delegate, state senator, that voted for this budget, as well as Owe'Malley need to be held accountable and voted out of office. They have violated their oath of office to uphold the constitution, and should not be allowed to serve citizens that have to balance household budgets.

Monday, May 31, 2010

Memorial Day, Who are we Celebrating?

Americans today will celebrate Memorial Day at parades, by raising the United States Flag in front of their homes, and in countless other ways. But, why even bother celebrating this Memorial Day holiday, what is the point? Who are we celebrating?


On the 4th of July we celebrate American Independence, the birth of our nation. It is the day The Declaration of Independence was signed, and it is our national WHY? Why our forefathers broke from the King of England and embarked upon the creation of a new nation. In it, we declared to the world that: We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

On September 17th some, though very few any more, celebrate our national HOW, The United States Constitution. After achieving a most unlikely victory over the most powerful nation on earth, how were these thirteen loosely tied colonies to form a lasting bond and not devolve into separated nation states? We the people created a system of Federal government in order to provide and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity.

In schools across the country children recite The Pledge of Allegiance, our national WHAT? I pledge allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America, and to the Republic for which it stands: one Nation under God, indivisible, With Liberty and Justice for all. Thirty-one simple, powerful words that encompass what we, as Americans, strive to achieve.

On Memorial Day, we celebrate the WHO, those that have made the ultimate sacrifice for our country, in order that we might be able to still enjoy the freedom and liberty enshrined in the Pledge of Allegiance, The Declaration of Independence, and The United States Constitution. Without those that have been willing to serve and protect our country from enemies, foreign and domestic; without the WHO, we would no longer be able to celebrate the WHAT, WHY, and HOW. That is why we celebrate Memorial Day.

On this Memorial Day, let us not forget to remember that those WHO serve our country do so, WHEN and WHERE they are required without complaint or hesitation. It is right and good that we honor and celebrate those that have, and those that are serving our country.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

George F. Will Address at the Cato Institute

I've listened to this over and over again. George Will is both topical and quite on target.


Liberals just don't KNOW!

The powers delegated by the proposed Constitution to the federal government, are few and defined.

James Madison - The Federalist No. 45


Governor Deval Patrick, Governor of Massachusetts, speaking during a forum at Suffolk Law School's Rappaport Center on Monday commented on Republican opposition to President Obama’s agenda saying, "on my worst day, when I’m most frustrated about folks who seem to rooting for failure," he doesn't face anything like the opposition faced by the president. "It seems like child’s play compared to what is going on in Washington, where it is almost at the level of sedition”


Opposition and saying "NO" are quite the inverse of sedition. They are enshrined in the Constitution and Bill of Rights.

The Preamble to The Bill of Rights: "THE Conventions of a number of the States, having at the time of their adopting the Constitution, expressed a desire, in order to prevent misconstruction or abuse of its powers, that further declaratory and ***RESTRICTIVE CLAUSES*** should be added:"

Amendment I: Congress shall make *** NO *** law
Amendment II: *** SHALL NOT *** be infringed
Amendment III: *** NO *** Soldier shall
Amendment IV: shall *** NOT *** be violated
Amendment V: *** NO *** person shall be held
Amendment VII: *** NO *** fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise re-examined
Amendment VIII: Excessive bail shall *** NOT *** be required
Amendment IX: The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall *** NOT *** be construed
Amendment X: The powers *** NOT *** delegated

Our Constitution and Bill of Rights were designed to limit the Federal Government, slow and restrict the political process through a system of checks and balances, create gridlock, and give those saying NO the upper hand. The left thinks that calling Republicans the party of NO is an insult, when in fact it is high praise. Liberals just don't KNOW!



P.S. Today in history, May 25, 1787, the Constitutional Convention opened in Philadelphia.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Why Everyone in the Civilized World Must Support ‘Everybody Draw Muhammad Day’

This is copied in full from http://bighollywood.breitbart.com/bthor/2010/05/19/why-everyone-in-the-civilized-world-must-support-everybody-draw-muhammad-day/

I just couldn't have said it any better. (I might have left out the Star Trek stuff.)

Why Everyone in the Civilized World Must Support ‘Everybody Draw Muhammad Day’
by Brad Thor

Many people have asked if I am supporting “Everybody Draw Muhammad Day” tomorrow, May 20th. I am and two of the most moving arguments of why you should too come from the Huffington Post and Reason Magazine.

In response to Islamic reaction over the movie Fitna, which juxtaposes images of Muslim violence with passages from the Qur’an (the same passages Islamic terrorists cite as justification for their violence), writer Sam Harris at the Huffington Post penned one of the best critiques of Islam (and our refusal to engage it) I have ever read: Losing Our Spines to Save Our Necks. In it, Harris rightly points out:

The controversy over Fitna, like all such controversies, renders one fact about our world especially salient: Muslims appear to be far more concerned about perceived slights to their religion than about the atrocities committed daily in its name. Our accommodation of this psychopathic skewing of priorities has, more and more, taken the form of craven and blinkered acquiescence.
There is an uncanny irony here that many have noticed. The position of the Muslim community in the face of all provocations seems to be: Islam is a religion of peace, and if you say that it isn’t, we will kill you. Of course, the truth is often more nuanced, but this is about as nuanced as it ever gets: Islam is a religion of peace, and if you say that it isn’t, we peaceful Muslims cannot be held responsible for what our less peaceful brothers and sisters do. When they burn your embassies or kidnap and slaughter your journalists, know that we will hold you primarily responsible and will spend the bulk of our energies criticizing you for “racism” and “Islamophobia.”
Our capitulations in the face of these threats have had what is often called “a chilling effect” on our exercise of free speech.

In Mark Goldblatt’s Reason Magazine article this week The Poet Versus the Prophet he expands on many of Harris’ arguments and states:

[O]ur tip-toeing around Islamic sensibilities is nothing more than plain, old-fashioned cowardice…. We lack the moral courage to walk the walk, to put our individual lives on the line in order to defend the principles of free thought and free expression—the very principles that allowed the Judeo-Christian West to leave the Islamic East in the dust, literally and figuratively, three centuries ago.
Goldblatt makes multiple excellent points throughout his piece and closes with:
Since 2001, many Americans have asked how they can contribute in a direct way to the war against totalitarian Islam. Now we have an answer. If it’s legal, and likely to offend the radicals, just do it. That seems straightforward enough. But how many of us will have the nerve to stand up to a million or so Muslim dirtbags, and to scores of millions, perhaps hundreds of millions, of their fellow travelers and psychic enablers, and say in unison, “You want to kill the Enlightenment, you’re going to have to come through me.
Islam is not above question, criticism, critique, or examination. In fact, Islam is fourteen centuries overdue for some serious questioning, criticism, critiquing, and examination. People the world over need to be reminded that the freedom of speech most certainly includes the freedom to offend. The right of non-Muslims to draw pictures of Muhammad is equaled by a right just as powerful, the right of Muslims to ignore pictures they find offensive.

Though I can’t believe I am going to quote Captain Jean Luc- Picard, there is no better way to express why tomorrow’s world-wide event is so important:

“We’ve made too many compromises already, too many retreats. They invade our space and we fall back. They assimilate entire worlds and we fall back. Not again. The line must be drawn here! This far, no farther!”
While Picard goes on to say that he will “make them [the Borg] pay,” that’s not our job. Our job is to stand and defend free speech. No more outrageous outrage and Muslim grievance theater over cartoons, operas, and videos.

We will no longer retreat. We will no longer fall back. We will no longer demand from every other community on the face of the planet that they meet us on the playing field of civilized, rational discourse, yet carve out a special, protected, no-holds-barred zone for Islam.

It’s over. This far and no farther. No more special treatment. It is time for Islam to come into the 21st century.
This is why I support “Everybody Draw Muhammad Day.”

Sunday, May 16, 2010

I Need A Spiritual Bailout -

This morning I went to a friend's house to meet up with him and go to a juvenile detention facility to mentor teens in need. My friend got sick last night and was unable to go. Since this was to be my first trip, we agreed it would be better to not go by myself.

As I was returning home I was pulled over for not wearing my seat belt. I also have expired tags on the car, as I am still unemployed since returning from Iraq and can't afford to pay DMV what is owed. I also found out that I have an unpaid ticket from 2007 that I was honestly unaware of, thinking that I had paid the speeding ticket, and therefore my licence is suspended.

The officers were very kind and courteous. I was very respectful to them, and they to me. I told them the truth, and they were kind enough not to haul me off to jail. They told me what to do in order to get this taken care of. The only issue is I still do not have the money to do the right thing.

At the end of my time in Iraq I became very depressed, almost suicidal. This didn't get better as soon as I arrived home, but has been an ongoing process. I've had my ups and downs.

Two weeks after I arrived home a 17 year old attempted to rape my 12 year old daughter while she was babysitting at a home in our neighborhood. We decided for the safety of our children we had to move, and move NOW. As it turns out, the boy was not punished by the legal system, only getting probation.

Just over a month after we moved, this same boy and another broke into our then empty house and did thousands in vandalism. The officers were not able to prove anything, as they couldn't get any usable fingerprints. This was payback for having reporting him to the authorities.

We were finally able to sell the house last month, but 14 years of equity are gone, and we emerged owing nothing, but having nothing to show either.

Meanwhile I've been going to counseling for the depression, continue with AA, and things in general were looking up. I had a promising job interview and was told that the company is going to hire me, as long as I can get and keep a top secret clearance. Now with our credit mangled from the house, and now this issue with my licence, that seems more and more unlikely.

I'm trying to remain positive, keep active and continue my sobriety. Today is one of THOSE days, and it is tough. I think I am a good man, but a flawed and imperfect man. I know that life isn't fair, and it never will be. I do sincerely want to do the next right thing, but feel overwhelmed at the moment. I'm not asking for pity, nor do I expect it, but I sure could use some encouragement.

My beautiful wife has been sympathetic, and more than patient as I try to overcome my problems. I worry that I have become a horrible example for our children. It's hard to say if in dealing with my depression that I have done all I can do to the best of my ability. So I might be in denial, or I might be doing the best I can with what I have at the moment. I'm usually the last person to KNOW something about myself.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

SCOTUS Nominee Kagan & Thurgood Marshall, Birds of a Feather

SCOTUS Nominee Elena Kagan doesn't have much of a paper trail, having never been a federal judge. This doesn't mean we have no insight on how she would interpret the US Constitution.

As a former clerk to Associate Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall it may be rightly inferred that Kagan agrees with, and has in fact never tried to distance herself from his views on judicial activism. Marshall said:

"You do what you think is right and let the law catch up." Stanford Law Review, summer 1992

This is the same Marshall that was known for being lazy, skipping deliberation to watch "Days of our Lives". He once told his friend Justice Brennan that there was a "lot to be learned about life" from soap operas. Apparently not so much about law was to be learned from the US Constitution.

Kagan has already shown her own willingness to invalidate the plain meaning of texts in her time at Harvard. As Dean of Harvard Law School in 2004 and 2005 she gave two professors (Larry Tribe and Charles Ogletree) a smack on the wrist when they were outed for plagiarism. Well no, not even that. Kagan said "Nevertheless, we regard the error in question as a significant lapse in proper academic practice." Any student would have been suspended at the very least, if not expelled, as per Harvard's written policies. Tribe and Ogletree were not suspended or fired, as leftist lawyers they are above such rules in Kagan's world.

Kagan will not interpret the Constitution as written nor even try to, but will in fact do all in her power to make it a nullity as she legislates from the bench in order to push an ideology that would never be accomplished by legal means through the legislature.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

My Favorite Books (Part 1) - A Conflict of Visions by Thomas Sowell

A Conflict of Visions: Ideological Origins of Political Struggle, Thomas Sowell



"Extraordinary on several counts...There is nothing tendentious or one-sided about his argument... He makes his case fairly, lucidly, and persuasively."  The New York Times Book Review

You see things; and you say "Why?" But I dream things that never were; and I say "Why not?"
The Serpent in "Back to Methuselah" by George Bernard Shaw.


Here we have the concise difference between two opposing visions. The constrained and unconstrained visions are the basis for all political conflicts in the West for the last 200 plus years.

Sowell is one of my favorite authors. He was written many books, and in others he does take sides in the argument, but in this his goal is to explain how we have come to the argument, and why it is that almost no matter the subject, the same people end up on opposite sides. When we talk about "justice" or "equality" or "power", we may be using the same words, but with very different internal meanings.

Why do those on the left and right seem to be arguing not against the other but past each other?

Sowell's thesis is that prior to paradigms, world-views, theories or any rationally articulated models there is an underlying vision, defined (quoting Joseph Schumpeter) as a “pre-analytic cognitive act”. Sowell further defines a vision, “It is what we sense or feel before we have constructed any systematic reasoning that could be called a theory, much less deduced any specific consequences as hypotheses to be tested against evidence." A vision, according to Sowell, is our sense of how the world works and of reality and causation.

Visions are a sense of the possibilities of human reason and power to act purposefully to achieve desired ends and are broadly defined by Sowell as Constrained and Unconstrained.

Appreciation of the role of visions in shaping worldviews can help make sense of opposing views for those who disagree and shows us that opposing views are not capriciously chosen or necessarily stemming from ulterior motives, but are internally self-consistent within the framework of the underlying vision.

Sowell discusses this book in a series of interviews here:
(Part 1).
(Part 2)
(Part 3)
(Part 4)
(Part 5)

Friday, May 7, 2010

Supplies Needed For Injured Veterans' Visit - Southern Maryland Vacations for Vets

Southern Maryland Vacations for Vets is hosting its first weekend event for disabled veterans from the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts and their families from May 14 to 16 at Greenwell State Park in Hollywood.

The foundation is looking for volunteers to assist the veterans with kayaking, horseback riding, cookouts and other events. Donations of ready-to-eat foods and other items can be turned in by next Thursday, May 13, in order to prepare the participants' rooms and gift packs prior to their arrival.

Southern Maryland Vacations for Vets, in partnership with the Greenwell Foundation, requires a massive amount of "people power." Volunteers are needed for every aspect of this program – whether you have one hour to give or a hundred.

The Weekends

Each weekend begins on Friday afternoon and ends on Sunday after lunch. Transportation is available from the medical centers to Greenwell State Park and back. During these weekends, service members and their families can participate in activities such as horseback riding, kayaking, hiking, picnicking, fishing, sailing, etc. While activities are offered, the weekend is loosely structured to allow families time to relax and be together in whatever way is most comfortable for them.

Because of Greenwell’s universally accessible facilities there are no limitations on participants with physical disabilities. Accessible equipment, such as golf carts, adaptive fishing poles and all terrain wheelchairs, is available so that everyone can experience the park as independently as possible.

Most of the veterans currently are undergoing treatment for their wounds at Walter Reed Army Medical Center and Bethesda Naval Regional Hospital. Call 301-737-8102.

info@greenwellfoundation.org

Sunday, May 2, 2010

America, why was I alone?


People were rightly outraged when the show South Park was censored because they tried to poke fun at Mohammed. Comedy Central bowed to Muslim extremists and chose to enforce dhimmitude on themselves, so now I'll refer to the network as Comedhimmi Censored.

Now Arizona has passed a law to protect it's citizens from illegal aliens. Predictably the illegal aliens mount a protest. I went to Washington DC on "May Day" to see the "immigration" protest in Lafayette Park just across the street from the White House. I didn't dare counter-protest because I've seen what happens when just one person dares to stand up for the rule of law. (The near riot in Phoenix just after the SB1070 bill was signed.) Not that I'm a wimp, I volunteered and went to work in Iraq to help protect our soldiers from roadside bombs.

In a nation of 300 million, not one voice was heard in our nation's capitol in favor of the rule of law. I didn't see a single person stand up for Arizona, Governor Jan Brewer, the sheriff that was shot just the day before by drug smugglers, the Constitution, or the citizens of this country. I was alone and justifiably worried for my well being. (I was asking people to sign a bogus petition that was against illegal immigration.)

I spoke to many of the protesters. Not one said they were worried about being arrested or harassed as an illegal alien. Nor were they concerned that ICE would round up any foreign nationals. How is it that a foreign national feels secure complaining about the laws of this nation in front of the White House, but a citizen that supports the rule of law must remain camouflaged?

Many complained when President Obama bowed to the King of Saudi Arabia. A chorus of, "America doesn't bow to anyone!" went up from lots of folks. Well, as it turns out we bow very well. We bow to the politically correct crowd of multiculturalists every time they complain about the USA. We don't stand up to these people that demand open borders and the ruin of our society. How can our citizens win a fight they refuse to show up for? Forfeit is not a winning plan.

America, why was I alone? Where were you when I needed you?

Saturday, May 1, 2010

MAY DAY March Washington DC


I went to the Washington DC May Day March in Lafayette Square across from the White House today. Since I'm not suicidal I didn't do a counter-protest. As it turns out I would have been the ONLY counter-protester there. DC can be risky enough, but counter-protesting upset leftists is not something to do all alone.


Wearing an old tie-die Grateful Dead bear shirt to better camouflage myself in addition to skipping my morning shower, I armed myself with a camera, blackberry and some petitions.

Apoyo el 1994 la Medalla Presidencial de la Libertad receptor César Chávez, creador de la famosa consigna, "Sí se puede", y su política de inmigración justa.

I support the 1994 Presidential Medal Of Freedom recipient Cesar Chavez, originator of the famous slogan, "Yes, We Can!", and his just immigration policy.


In between taking pictures of protesters and their signs, I also chatted with a few people. Once in a while I would slip to the margins and ask some person to sign my petition. (I saw nobody else petitioning.) Everyone was more than happy to sign, and I got maybe two dozen people to sign. Nobody seemed to know that Mr. Chavez was extremely anti-illegal immigration! (I had a good laugh to myself every time someone signed without even asking what his stance on the issue was!)

All the while people on stage were giving speeches, but as I don't speak much Spanish, I didn't understand most of it. Jan Brewer, the Arizona governor was vilified repeatedly. The usual lefty standards were seen and hurled, "racist", "bigot", "fascist" as well as "apartheid". Calls for reform, justice, and open borders were rampant.

There were a lot of SEIU (Service Employees International Union) purple t-shirted people about, and lots seemed to be leaders of the rally, as well as Casa De Maryland, an "immigrants rights" group.

Heaps of heated rhetoric, both on and off stage were in abundance, but the crowd was very peaceful. Everyone I spoke with was polite, calm, and passionate. As with most liberal protests, there were others wanting to be heard and seen as well. Socialist Party, PETA, National Lawyers Guild Legal Observers, and the ever radical United Chicken Concerns among others.

At one point another person was signing my petition and a purple t-shirted SEIU guy grabbed the papers and ran off with them. I figure I lost about two dozen names and emails but, didn't bother chasing or getting the cops. Somebody had finally realized there was a "traitor" in their midst. I moved quickly across the street, closer to the White House, and the Park Police.

The grand finale was a symbolic "Sit Down" in front of the White House. Protesters asked to be arrested, and the Park Police obliged. Grand theater indeed, and a complete farcical one at that. As with any really good demonstration, the media outnumbered those being arrested by about ten to one.

While the crowd was about 1/3 to 1/2 the size of the Tax Day Tea Party two weeks earlier, they left a lot more trash. For a Green leaning crowd, I guess picking up the trash is a job even, "undocumented immigrants" don't want to do.

DC illegal immigrant MAY DAY rally Saturday

Going to the Washington DC illegal immigrant rally Saturday. Plan to see how many I get get to sign a petition: "I support the 1994 Presidential Medal Of Freedom recipient Cesar Chavez, originator of the famous slogan, "Yes, We Can!", and his just immigration policy." Of course I won't mention that his policy was AGAINST ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION! I'll take pix of signs, and those that sign the petition.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Why I Went To Iraq

My wife and I had a young man move into our home for a time. We had known him since his early teenage years. The young man was Matt Wallace, and he continued to live with us for many months due to family problems. He reminded myself of a younger and much dumber me. He began working, paying his bills, all the things a young man should do. He got his act together. We encouraged him to join the military for the educational benefits and opportunities that had helped both Yvette and myself. Matt joined the Army, and while on patrol in Baghdad in July of 2006, he was hit by an IED (Improvised Explosive Device), or a roadside bomb. He was burned over 99% of his body, yet was able to move the body of his Sergeant, who was driving the Bradly Fighting Vehicle, return the burned out vehicle to Camp, walk in and give his SITREP, (Situation Report). He then passed out and never recovered consciousness. Matt is now interred at Arlington National Cemetery. I went to do counter IED work so that other families don't have to visit Arlington.

Friday, April 23, 2010

Steny Hoyer Says He Regrets Un-American Slur

Yesterday The House Majority Leader finally acknowledged his slur against those who protest the health care bill. He says he, "regrets" the slur of accusing those opposed to the bill as "un-American" but he did not apologize for it.

Merriam-Webster defines regret as, "to be sorry for". If a man breaks into my house and tries to cause harm to my family I may have to shoot him. I might regret the fact. I might feel sorry that I had to take that course of action. I would certainly not apologize or in any way make amends for protecting my family. Steny says he regrets the un-American comment, but in no way does he feel he ought to apologize for smearing people opposed to his socialist-statist agenda.

When I served my country in the military I was called a patriot. When I made the choice to go to Iraq to protect our soldiers from roadside bombs I was called a patriot. But according to Steny Hoyer, when I oppose his agenda for America I'm un-American.

I swore to uphold and defend the Constitution from all enemies foreign and domestic. My service in the military and since was against foreign enemies. Steny Hoyer is a domestic enemy of the Constitution, and my oath to uphold it means that I must oppose him and his kind!

Our current state of affairs was predicted in 1840, by Alexis de Toqueville.

This predicted and described the United States decent into socialism. We have failed to learn from our mistakes and others, teach our children, or know ourselves the value of liberty.

"Above this race of men stands an immense and tutelary power, which takes upon itself alone to secure their gratifications, and to watch over their fate. That power is absolute, minute, regular, provident, and mild. It would be like the authority of a parent, if, like that authority, its object was to prepare men for manhood; but it seeks on the contrary to keep them in perpetual childhood: it is well content that the people should rejoice, provided they think of nothing but rejoicing. For their happiness such a government willingly labors, but it chooses to be the sole agent and the only arbiter of that happiness: it provides for their security, foresees and supplies their necessities, facilitates their pleasures, manages their principal concerns, directs their industry, regulates the descent of property, and subdivides their inheritances - what remains, but to spare them all the care of thinking and all the trouble of living? Thus it every day renders the exercise of the free agency of man less useful and less frequent; it circumscribes the will within a narrower range, and gradually robs a man of all the uses of himself. The principle of equality has prepared men for these things: it has predisposed men to endure them, and oftentimes to look on them as benefits.

After having thus successively taken each member of the community in its powerful grasp, and fashioned them at will, the supreme power then extends its arm over the whole community. It covers the surface of society with a net-work of small complicated rules, minute and uniform, through which the most original minds and the most energetic characters cannot penetrate, to rise above the crowd. The will of man is not shattered, but softened, bent, and guided: men are seldom forced by it to act, but they are constantly restrained from acting: such a power does not destroy, but it prevents existence; it does not tyrannize, but it compresses, enervates, extinguishes, and stupefies a people, till each nation is reduced to be nothing better than a flock of timid and industrious animals, of which the government is the shepherd."

Democracy In America, Volume 2

by Alexis de Toqueville

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Prescription for Disaster

On September 11, 2001 our government failed us. Despite massive budgets, impressive human and technological resources available to the government, 19 men armed with box cutters were able to turn aircraft into missiles. The only qualified success that day was aboard flight 93. The passengers ignored the rules, formed an ad hoc militia, and kept the terrorists from crashing their plane into a fourth building in Washington, D.C. With Todd Beamer's rallying cry, “Let's Roll,” they saved hundreds, maybe thousands of innocent lives on the ground while sacrificing their own on a field in Pennsylvania. These citizens responded with amazing speed to a threat America wasn't even aware of the previous day. We justifiably take pride in their actions.

Now this same government that has failed to secure our borders despite the explicit constitutional sanction to do so, has taken over our health care system in spite of the will of the people and constitutional restraints expressly put forth in the 10th Amendment.

The government’s past meddling in our health care system is what got us into our present problems. Rather than admitting their socialist mistakes of the past, liberals insist that they need to massively overhaul the existing system. Instead of instituting tort reform and other logical approaches President Obama and Democrats in Congress supply us with a 2,300 plus page law that we and they are supposed to read after they pass it. We don't need 159 new agencies and 16,000 new IRS agents. We need a functioning health care system!

The health care systems in Canada and the UK are pathetic. There are more MRI machines in Philadelphia than in all of Canada. Yet our leaders insist that somehow we are wrong because we are the only country that doesn't have socialized universal coverage. Instead of celebrating our exceptionalism, they demand we follow the rest of the lemmings over the cliff. Instead of cutting red tape and outrageous law suits Congress insists on more bureaucracy.

Doctors, patients, and the entrepreneurs in a free market can better solve our health care issues than can the government bureaucrats. Government, “solutions” invariably lead to waste, fraud, and abuse since there is no profit/loss motivation to keep things as efficient as possible. Instead government bureaucrats are rewarded for failure by ever increasing budgets.

We need a Congress that will listen to us, obey the Constitution, and unleash the entrepreneurs that have helped make this the greatest nation on earth! We need more people like Todd Beamer, and fewer like Steny Hoyer. So, “Let's Roll” to the voting booth in November and take our country back!