Author Archive

“We don’t have an election, we have an auction”�

September 27th, 2004 by xformed

“We don’t have an election, we have an auction� Bumper sticker in the parking lot at Borders. You know, they have that right, but I think they haven’t figured out how right they are. I suspect, and it may be wrong for me to assume this, as I have not spoken to the owner of the vehicle, that they think it’s about how the Presidency may be bought by special interests. If they truly believed this in this, then it would seem it would apply to this president, and his predecessor, and the one before them. At what point did they begin being bought, and was it the first dollar we count from, or is there some “threshold”� we should use as a guideline? How far back in our 228 year history does this sham of elections go? Is it limited to one person, one party? Is it universal? If universal, why not some bumper sticker reminiscent of a jeer from the stands at a baseball game: Throw the bums out!�? Ah, ha! You see, the view seems to revolve around a victimized state of mind, a “my vote doesn’t count”� desperation mental frame. Two points are important to discuss here, one directly related, but the important one, with the real insight from the truth behind the bumper sticker will be discussed secondly. Firstly, yes, every vote counts. In fact, it is in getting out and standing in line, suffering thru the “process”� to poke holes in a paper, or to check blocks, or touch a screen, is worth the effort. The Nov, 2000 election is still a matter of heated debate, and it showed how a little over 300 votes in a single state, have caused a lot of dissention. If the special interest groups, with lots of money were truly in control of the election, oops, I meant “auction,”� wouldn’t the margin have been wider? Now, if almost 400 people, with a leaning towards Al Gore had gone to work early, or just got out and voted, would there still be the bumper sticker on that vehicle? Generally, the sentiment on the bumper sticker indicates that the driver didn’t like the outcome of the election, so therefore it was easier to blame it on some grand conspiracy of the moneyed elite. There may be gounds for that influence, but I don’t believe that will be as big an issue while we still refrain from an electronic method of voting. Once we have gone to electronic votes, all bets are off. If you look at how we have progressed from simple viruses on our PCs to very complex ones, and ones that do no more damage, than to get into your machine to gather information and then send it out. Who’s to stop a similar evolution in the electronic voting machines, particularly if they are based on currently well used operating systems, with a widely available list of flaws, and also openly published capabilities and interfaces. Second major point. Yes, we do have an auction. The auction is not who buys the politicians, but which politician buys our votes. We look to our representatives, at all levels, not to operate for the good of the system, but for the good of the entity that they represent, at the expense of the larger, or just simply, the other entities. If these elected officials go off to their appointed positions, and haul back truckloads of cash and benefits for our community, then we are happy to re-elect them, as they proudly trumpet how much they have “done for us,”� and not how they have had to make some hard decisions, which at times resulted in our betterment, but sometimes, took what we perceived as “ours”� and made sure it was used more wisely, and provided us long term benefits, but denied us the pleasure at the moment. There you go, inappropriate analysis from the mere sighting of a bumper sticker on the way got get a cup of coffee.

Category: Political | Comments Off on “We don’t have an election, we have an auction”�

These are a few of my favorite blogs

September 26th, 2004 by xformed

I’ve been avidly reading blogs for about 5 months now and decided today was the day to join the fray. I happily join the other pajamamujahadien in the cyber world.

As a way of introducing the reading I have been doing, which from which you can conclude my leanings to some degree, here are some of the many that I make a special effort to read daily, if not more depending on how fast the news is breaking. I will shamelessly promote the blogs with my thoughts on them as well:

Little Green Footballs
I was reading this well before RatherGate. Charles was the one who overlayed a MS Word document on the Texas ANG memos and got the entire ball rolling on the forgery issue. Even before that, his blog has a lot of links to news that is published overseas, or downplayed stateside. Great discussions from many thinking readers makes it even better thatn the basic posts alone!

The Anti-Idiotarian Rottweiller
Misha has a lot of insightful commentary, with “edgy” adjectives. Again, as with LGF, the discussions are lively and well populated.

Black Five
Matt is ex-military, with many connections to the real men, women and family members doing the hard work for the sake of freedom. His perspective is well founded when he adds to the material he links. Great place to find great reading and links to the real warriors, so you can see it through their eyes, not the filtering of the MSM.

International Monkey Assasination Organization
Frank isn’t really an assassin, but he doesn’t like monkeys. The man has a view of life of his very own and manages stick figure cartoons to get his point across. It’s a hoot!

That’s a few to start with. Surf on over and spend a few minutes reading.

Category: Blogging | Comments Off on These are a few of my favorite blogs

I’m FALLLLING!

September 26th, 2004 by xformed

This post is will be “the one that started it” for me. I’ve been reading blogs for about 6 months now and have decided to join the ranks of the pajamahadeen. More on the logic behind that to come with time, but it has at it’s core the desire to let the main stream media (herinafter referered to as “MSM”) and their blind supporters know there are plenty of thinking, knowledgeable people out here, who did not choose to wear a press pass for their chosen career. Not all of these people had to go through a higher education institution to get their smarts, either.

“They” employ “experts” all the time, and, while I’m thinking of it, they actually pay them for their commentary. Look at all the talking heads they had who used to wear a uniform for the Gulf War and the War on Terror? In the land of the cyber-expert, it seems plenty of people did some tremendously detailed research. all free of charge for the MSM, and their idea of “thanks” was to tell the world that people who sit at home and type in their pajamas can’t be taken seriously.

If I had the free money, I’d sure pay plenty for some not-photshopped pictures of the major luminaries of the press corps typing at home on their laptops…in their PJs!

Comments?

I feel like I’m running out the back of a Super Casa at 15,000 ft. I’m now falling into the cyber-atmosphere, but I packed a ‘chute, it will be OK….

Category: Blogging | Comments Off on I’m FALLLLING!

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