September 28th, 2006

CITGO Boycott being felt down south

I pick them up from Stuck On Stupid, who picked it up from Investors Business Daily:

President Bush may have been loath to reply to last week’s U.N. speech by the sulfur-tongued Hugo Chavez, but the American public wasn’t. Its boycott of Venezuela’s Citgo gas has set off alarms in Caracas.  The big blow came Wednesday when 7-Eleven announced it would not renew a 20-year contract with Venezuelan-owned gas supplier Citgo. Instead, it would start selling its own brand, to be supplied by three U.S. oil firms. 7-Eleven admitted Chavez was a public relations disaster for the firm after his United Nations speech, denouncing President Bush as “the devil,” and affected its decision. 

“Regardless of politics, we sympathize with many Americans’ concern over derogatory comments about our country and its leadership recently made by Venezuela’s president,” said a 7-Eleven spokeswoman, who’d obviously been hearing from the public. “Chavez’s position and statements over the past year or so didn’t tempt us to stay with Citgo.”  That’s about 2,100 gas stations off the books for Citgo, cutting total outlets to 11,000. 

The rest are likely to remain targets of the infuriated American public’s wildcat boycott of Venezuelan crude. If so, it would be the first time in modern memory a spontaneous consumer boycott had such a commercial impact.  Watching from Caracas, Rafael Ramirez, Venezuela’s energy minister, said he was stunned at the “brusque” tone of 7-Eleven’s announcement, calling it “bitter to swallow.” 

The main point to know is that CITGO still has over 11,000 outlets here in the US – so we have our work to do. Please boycott these stations!

 

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September 28th, 2006

Firearms

I received this in an e-mail from a friend. Hat tip to the orriginal author.  

         
           If you consider that there has been an average of 160,000 troops in
the Iraq Theatre of operations during the last 22 months, and a total of
2,112 deaths,
          That gives a firearm death rate of 60 per 100,000 soldiers.
          The firearm death rate in Washington, D.C. Is 80.6 per 100,000 for
the same period.
          That means that you are about 25% more likely to be shot and killed
in the U.S. Capitol, which has some of the strictest gun control laws in the
nation, than you are in Iraq.
           Applying Democratic Logic:
            The U.S. should pull out of Washington, D.C.

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September 28th, 2006

Funny Clinton Videos

I found these two clips over at HotAir – I always hurt myself laughing so though I would share them with you.

 

[youtube]34-mz-wEHCs[/youtube]

 

 

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September 28th, 2006

On Torture

Being a Christian I live in a world of moral absolutes, a world where Truth (with a capital T) exists, and shades of grey are merely distortions. Most people cannot fathom such a world, and would call me inflexible, elitist, or naive.  If you are one of those people, please don’t read further – this will only confuse you.

So how dose one fit torture into a world of moral absolutes? If right is right and wrong is wrong – where dose torture stand? Is it right or wrong, for we just said shades of grey are distortions?

Well … yes. Taken that way it is not so easy.
 

War and torture come under, to me, a single category of violence. When is it right to do violence to another person? Is it always wrong and always right – or is it is situation dependent.

Wait, you may say, that is a shade of grey! No, I am sorry, it is not.

William Buckley said it best: If one man pushes an old lady in front of a buss, and another man pushes an old lady out of the way of a bus – we cannot condemn both for pushing around old ladies. Situations matter.

It is human nature to try and separate things down to the smallest whole part – a single concept which stands alone. We try this with torture and war, and we loose the circumstance which holds the entire moral element. While we would love to say that torture is always wrong, that is an over simplification.

Rick Moran, over at The Right Wing Nuthouse has a different and much better articulated view. Though I agree with Rick on most things, I can’t agree here. The following is an excerpt from his article from today:

Jack Bauer knows that a terrorist strike is imminent which justifies his brutal treatment of prisoners in most people’s minds. But in the real world, that kind of certainty is almost definitely lacking. And even though the capture of a “high value” terrorist operative would almost by definition be an intelligence bonanza regarding future attacks, the idea that any of them would be imminent and a direct threat to American citizens would almost certainly be unknown. Therefore, torture would be carried out in these cases not to necessarily uncover any plots but rather to see if there are any plots worth responding to in the first place.

The situation in this case is that person captured is indeed a high value terrorist operative. One who would be in “the know” for terrorist activities targeted at our country. In this case, boil him in oil – his activities and choice of careers have exempted him from moderation. To do less then our best to protect the lives of innocents from the terrorists is most certainly wrong.

This is not a case of taboo, nor a case of upholding the Geneva Convention – those are mortal constructs. This is a case of right and wrong on a grand scale. To not defend our faith, or families, and our country with every tool in our arsenal is wrong.

Yet I must interject a word of caution. We must not confuse torture, or War, with justice – as that is not its intent. It is not a tool of revenge, vindication, or reconciliation. It is a tool for rough men to use in defending our country. It is a distasteful necessity in today dark world.

“People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf.” – George Orwell.

Torture, like War, is unpleasant – we long for a world those things are put away forever, but we are not there yet. I think it is absolutely better that one terrorist suffer than the thousands who would be impacted by another 9/11.

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September 28th, 2006

Supreme Court New Term Fast Approaching

I picked up the following on Reuters:

The U.S. Supreme Court’s new term has cases on abortion, the environment and racial diversity in schools, some of the country’s most contentious social issues for a court primed to shift sharply to the right by President George W. Bush’s conservative appointees. The nation’s highest court, with Bush’s two appointees, could decide to limit or overturn recent precedents upholding abortion rights for women and programs to foster a racially diverse student body, legal experts said. 

“The term is going to be a bellwether on the shift in the court’s ideology. The court is revisiting a series of profound issues,” said Tom Goldstein, a Washington lawyer who closely follows the court. “With Justice (Sandra Day) O’Connor’s departure from the ideological center seat, there’s the prospect for a significant shift to the right,” he said of the term that begins on Monday. 

It will be the second full term for Chief Justice John Roberts, who succeeded the late William Rehnquist, and the first full term for Justice Samuel Alito, who replaced the more moderate O’Connor. Bush appointed both Roberts and Alito. 

All I can say is pray for wisdom for the court and the judges. The opportunity to rethink this nations stance on issues like Abortion is critical. The current view of the judicial system is out of line with that of most Americans. The vocal minority supported by small by noisy special interest groups have twisted our constitution so far left that average America is either sickened or oblivious. Roberts and Alito should be a breath of fresh air on these topics, lets support them in any way we can.

 

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September 28th, 2006

Syria - supplier to any who attack Israel

What do you do in a dark, dark world where there is no effective united body to stand up to the militants of the world?

This just in from Reuters:

Syria will keep supporting Hamas and Hizbollah despite U.S. threats to impose more sanctions on it, a government newspaper said on Thursday.
 

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice threatened this week to toughen sanctions Washington imposed on Syria in 2004, mainly because of its support for the two movements, which Washington regards as “terrorist organizations”.
 

“Syria is more determined to stand by the resistance until the land is liberated and Israel is defeated,” an editorial in the newspaper Baath said.

Rice said this week that the United States was going “to have to look at tougher measures if Syria continues to be on the path that it’s on.” She said Washington would like other nations to join it in imposing “other kinds of sanctions” on Syria.

Notice Condi is not calling on the ineffectual, bloated, anti-American UN to help; and rightly so. The UN has never passed an effective resolution against the Arab world in the 64 years it has been in place.

Syria has always been a blight on the world, and ranks right up there with Iran and North Korea as the largest threats to world stability. They are overcome with hatred for Israel and any who stand with her.

The international community sits back and does nothing, and allows Syria to continue to openly supply terrorist organization that blatantly attack civilian targets.  The US cannot continue to be the world conscience – its time for a new approach. If the UN cannot do its job, then it is time to scrap it and bond with countries of like mind; replacing the UN with a construct that can and dose act.

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September 28th, 2006

ACLU: A Legacy Of Hypocrisy

Crossposted from Stop The ACLU: In case you haven’t heard, a group of dissenters from the ACLU are rebelling and calling for a change in the current leadership of the main organization. The summary of things this new group is fed up with is hypocrisy and the ACLU is full of it. Purging the ACLU of its hypocrisy is bound to be a goliath task. Where do we even begin with the ACLU’s hypocrisy? How about its odd stance on the Second Amendment? They have decided that the term “the people” that is contained in the Second Amendment does not apply to “the people” as it does in all of the other rights contained in the Bill of Rights. They defend even the most radical in free speech for individuals, but somehow have adopted the opposite position on the Second Amendment. Surely it couldn’t be that the Second Amendment doesn’t fall within the boundaries of their liberal agenda! Could it? In August of 2005 the New York ACLU sued against random bag searches on the NY Subway. Ironically the NYCLU HQ has a sign warning visitors that all bags are subject to search. The ACLU have fought tooth and nail against the Bush administration’s NSA program, a program designed to track international phone calls being made to or from suspected terrorist organizations. They have hailed themselves defenders of the right to privacy and labelled the program an illegal “secret” program of “domestic spying”. All the while the ACLU has its own “secret” program of domestic spying of its own members and their personal financial information. This program has nothing to do with national security and everything to do with the real bottom line of fundraising. Former ACLU board member Michael Myers was shocked at this discovery.

The American Civil Liberties Union is using sophisticated technology to collect a wide variety of information about its members and donors in a fund-raising effort that has ignited a bitter debate over its leaders? commitment to privacy rights. Some board members say the extensive data collection makes a mockery of the organization?s frequent criticism of banks, corporations and government agencies for their practice of accumulating data on people for marketing and other purposes. The group?s new data collection practices were implemented without the board?s approval or knowledge and were in violation of the ACLU?s privacy policy at the time, according to Michael Meyers, vice president of the organization and a frequent internal critic. He said he had learned about the new research by accident Nov. 7 during a meeting of the committee that is organizing the group?s Biennial Conference in July. He objected to the practices, and the next day, the privacy policy on the group?s Web site was changed. ?They took out all the language that would show that they were violating their own policy,? Meyers said. ?In doing so, they sanctified their procedure while still keeping it secret.?

After spending 23 years on the ACLU board, the ?defenders of free speech? issued gag orders to him, not to speak about the issue. Now thats free speech for you. When it comes to free speech the ACLU claim to be its most steadfast defender. Now, I am not an absolutist on unlimited free speech. However, most people would think that an organization arguing for hate cults to protest with “God Hates Fags” signs at military funerals, neo nazis to march through Jewish neighborhoods, and that child porn distribution is protected by the First Amendment are about as absolutist as it gets. Not so! When it comes to pro-life protesters the ACLU could care less about their free speech rights. As a matter of fact they actively fight against pro-life protesters’ free speech and have even tried RICO lawsuits on them. It is scary to see just how far the ACLU will go for its unrestricted abortion agenda. Free speech definitely takes a backseat to their pro-abortion agenda. They have even listed it as their number one priority pushing the defense of the First Amendment, the alleged heart and soul of the ACLU?s mission, down to third on the list, after civil rights. But don’t just take my word for it, listen to the words of a former Execuitve Director:

The right to express unpopular opinions, advocate despised ideas and display graphic images is something the ACLU has steadfastly defended for all of its nearly 80-year history. But the ACLU, a group for which I proudly worked as executive director of the Florida and Utah affiliates for more than 10 years, has developed a blind spot when it comes to defending anti-abortion protesters. The organization that once defended the right of a neo-Nazi group to demonstrate in heavily Jewish Skokie, Ill., now cheers a Portland, Ore., jury that charged a group of anti-abortion activists with $107 million in damages for expressing their views. Gushed the ACLU’s press release: “We view the jury’s verdict as a clarion call to remove violence and the threat of violence from the political debate over abortion.” Were the anti-abortion activists on trial accused of violence? No. Did they threaten violence? Not as the ACLU or Supreme Court usually defines it, when in the context of a call for social change. The activists posted a Web site dripping with animated blood and titled “The Nuremberg Files,” after the German city where the Nazis were tried for their crimes. Comparing abortion to Nazi atrocities, the site collected dossiers on abortion doctors, whom they called “baby butchers.” … This is ugly, scary stuff. But it is no worse than neo-Nazi calls for the annihilation of the Jewish people, or a college student posting his rape fantasies about a fellow coed on the Web, both of which the ACLU has defended in the past.

Defending NAMBLA to print material advocating for sex between grown men and boys is the definition of defending “robust freedom of speech” in the ACLU’s book, but defending people’s right to protest against killing the unborn somehow fails to make the list. But the hypocrisy does not end there. When it comes to protecting religious expression the ACLU has proven itself to be number one in America’s religious censors. They have consistently shown themselves to be hostile towards Christianity in particular. When the Tangipahoa Parish School Board in Louisiana opened its board meetings with a prayer like they had for 30 years the ACLU sued. After the ACLU won that case and the School Board ignored the court ruling, Louisiana ACLU chief Joe Cook called for them to be jailed and compared them to terrorists. Mr. Cook is currently leading an attack on plan for a Katrina memorial paid for with private funds to be errected on private land simply because it is in the shape of a cross and might offend some sensitive passerby. When valedictorian of Foothill High, Brittany McComb, decided to share her faith voluntarily at her graduation cermony the ACLU said it was the right call to pull the plug. Currently when the ACLU wins a case from attacking religious expression it is awarded attorneys fees, often in the millions, at the expense of the American taxpayer. The U.S. House of Representatives recognized this abuse and passed the Public Expression Of Religion Act to put a stop to it. However, the threats and abuse will continue however if we can’t convince the Senate to pass this as well. But the hypocrisy goes even further. The ACLU’s disdain for free speech outside of its agenda extends beyond Christians and pro-lifers to its own dissenting members. Very recently the ACLU attempted to put forth a policy restricting the free speech of its own members. Natt Hentoff, another former ACLU board member, was incredulous.

?For the national board to consider promulgating a gag order on its members ? I can?t think of anything more contrary to the reason the A.C.L.U. exists.?

After a huge controversy, media coverage, and public concern of the NY Attorney General?s office the ACLU dropped the proposal. Instead they switched to more effective measures of replacing or voting out the members that were not in line with their agenda. When it comes to principles the ACLU has none other than lining their pocketbooks and furthering their own liberal agenda. As I said at the beggining of the article, cleansing the ACLU of hypocrisy will be a mammoth task. I don’t think its possible. I’m more hopeful that their own greed and corruption will eat them from the inside. I think we are beggining to see the cracks and hopefully enough light will shine through them to wake people up to the truth. This was a production of Stop The ACLU Blogburst. If you would like to join us, please email Jay at Jay@stoptheaclu.com or Gribbit at GribbitR@gmail.com. You will be added to our mailing list and blogroll. Over 200 blogs already on-board.

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