kimana517: (politics : nut job)

Qualifications for Public Office

Sarah Palin
: A self made woman, with no name recognition rose to the governorship of a state. She had no famous father and did not ride the coat tails of a powerful husband. She was elected mayor and later ran for governor. She ran in the primary against an incumbent sitting governor and beat him. She then ran against a Democratic challenger and beat him. As governor she enjoyed the highest approval rating of any governor in the nation. She was chosen by major presidential candidate as running mate.

Liberal Consensus: Palin is not qualified to run for high government office.

Caroline Kennedy: Enjoys name recognition as daughter of former president and member of powerful, elite political family. Has never held office. Has never ran for office. Was never elected to any position. No government experience of any kind. Does not intend to run for open Senate seat, intends to be appointed by governor.

Liberal Consensus: Kennedy is qualified to hold high government office.

________________________

How on earth can anyone not see the media bias?!

kimana517: (politics : don't blame me - I voted for)
"'Worst Economic Crisis Since The Great Depression'

How many times are they going to tell us this? Over and over and over. It is like a mantra from the “Office of the President-Elect”. Since the economy is a beast that is easily frightened, Obama isn’t helping by repeating this over and over. He is creating a self-fulfilling economic outlook.

Beyond that, I don’t even believe it is true. I am old enough to remember the 70s. I remember double-digit inflation, interest rates at almost 20%, unemployment at 10% and gasoline sales on odd and even days based on your license plate number. It was far more ugly than anything we are seeing today.

In fact, were it not for two things - the stock market and the MSM (mainstream media) - I wouldn’t even know there was a crisis. I see no evidence of it in my daily life. Nevertheless, Obama and the media keep hammering home that this is the “worst economic crisis since the Great Depression” which leads consumers to put off spending, business owners to put off hiring and investors to put off investing. The more Obama and media tell us that we are doomed, the more likely it becomes that we are.

I don’t know what the future will bring and neither does anybody else. This thing may yet get much worse and then again it might not. I suspect that Team Obama is keeping expectations low so, that if things do get worse, they can say, “See, I told you how bad it was before I even took office.” If, on the other hand, things improve, Obama can take credit for his Messianic ability to heal the world economy.

Either way it is crap and he is just fanning the flames of fear and economic panic."
kimana517: (tv : supernatural : up to no good)
Yay for a normal post!

+ Our Halloween night was fun, but felt nothing like Halloween. We had fun though.

+ Saturday morning we woke up early to go with Isaac's coworkers to the Florida Baptist Children's Home. We cooked a meal on the grill and then served it. Sadly, we didn't get to interact with the kids (some orphans, some temporarily there till a parent gets their act together) much. This was my first visit to an American orphanage. I felt bad for the kids there, of course, but it just reaffirmed my desire to adopt kids from other countries. To the orphans in El Salvador, the FBCH would be like heaven. The kids don't go hungry, and they have house parents so they get attention and affection, and they're taught the Truth, not the cult of Mary.

Saturday afternoon I slept for 4 hours on the couch! That was not expected, but much-needed. We watched Ghostbusters, which I hadn't seen since I was a teenager. That night Isaac went to play football with some friends, and I watched Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, which I hadn't seen since it was in theaters last year. It is amazing that that movie is 2 hours long and there is SO MUCH left out of it.

+ Sunday was pretty much engulfed by our Olympian Fun Fall Festival. After lunch we set up for it, which took so long we only had about an hour and a half between it and the actual festival. We had 13 kids come, though, and 6 of them don't attend church anywhere; their only exposure to God is through our club. We had a ton of candy left over again, so that was great. Hehe. I did face painting, and tried a few new things this year that went over big.

+ Monday's activities have slipped my mind, save for watching SNL's Presidential Bash that evening. Very entertaining.

+ Tuesday I voted in the morning and did not have to wait in line at all. Bwaha. I then went out to lunch at Olive Garden with Grams, Ange, and the kids. It'd been ages since I'd been there. I do love their Five Cheese Ziti al Forno, breadsticks, and raspberry lemonade. *licks lips* As mentioned the other day, we went to AAAC's house that night for a small election party, which was a total blast and an excuse to use the chocolate fountain again. =oD I was up way too late that night though, and I've paid for it since.

+ Yesterday I spent the day cocooned in the house. I felt like crap for staying up so late without being able to sleep in, and I was still royally ticked about the election results, so I did not want to see any news or newspapers. I was able to take a bit of a nap in the late afternoon, and I convinced Isaac to join me. We skipped the gym in favor of something more fun, and then finally went to see Fireproof. (We've been saying we were going to see it ever since it came out.) We were both pleasantly surprised by it. I had no idea it was funny, and I was expecting nearly all the actors to be bad, like in Facing the Giants. Instead, only a few of them were really wooden, and the rest, while not likely to win an Academy Award, were quite good. It was well-made too - as good as any indie film I've seen. And of course I bawled my eyes out. Hehe. I also had fun spotting people who were in Facing the Giants. We went to the movie at 7, and still hadn't had dinner, but thankfully it was free small popcorn day for people in their Movie Watcher club, so we snacked on that and then went to Steak 'n Shake. We hadn't been there in months, and they have 4 meals under $4 now - and they're good ones - so that was awesome. It was a great little impromptu date night. =o)

Oh yeah, and when we were on the highway heading down to the theater, we kept seeing all these cops go by very quickly, some with lights on, some without. We got around the bend and saw the cops (now all with lights on) blocking the entire highway. We were right behind them. We still don't know what was going on, but we saw them arrest 3 girls in their late teens/20s who looked stoned. We're guessing they were driving recklessly and, to have so many policemen there, probably refusing to pull over at first. Isaac was pretty freaked out, because the cops had their guns drawn and we were so close to them, but I figured any bullets would've had to go through 3 cop cars to get to us. Anyway, it made us late for the movie, but it was pretty exciting.

+ Someone in Greece bought one of my Supernatural shirts! That is so cool. What will be even cooler is if when we're there in June, I see her wearing it. Yeah, yeah, Greece is a decent-sized country, blah, blah, blah. It would still be cool.

+ Off to watch Survivor and then Supernatural. Happy almost-Friday!
kimana517: (politics : don't blame me - I voted for)
The intensity of my dislike for 50% of the American people has lessened a bit this morning. I think it's more denial kicking in.

I have a lot of really anti-Obama friends who are already praying for him. I'll get to that stage eventually (I believe that's the "acceptance" stage), but right now I'm just praying for ME that I will get over it quickly, and praying that people will not have to learn that, as Thomas Jefferson said, "A government big enough to give you everything you want is strong enough to take everything you have."

I actually think, though, that if he decides to buck his party a few times, he will have an easy presidency. The economy is cyclical and THE FOUNDATIONS OF OUR ECONOMY ARE STRONG - no matter how many times Obama mocks that, it's still true - and it will probably come back either next year or the one after. Which sucks, because people will give him credit for it, when it will be despite him. The only things that *really* worry me are health care, being attacked by one of the terrorist groups who were praying to Allah that Obama would be elected, and that he will appoint Supreme Court justices who will not strictly interpret the Constitution.

My one consolation in last night's mess was that Jacksonville went for McCain. America and Florida as a whole may have betrayed me, but at least Jacksonville stayed sane. Barely.

For the record, I did know that Obama was going to win. I tried to resign myself to that fact, but I guess I failed in that attempt. Ah, well.

I did have a good day yesterday despite the sense of foreboding that hovered everywhere. (It was even extremely gloomy weather-wise all day yesterday.) I had fun honking and thumbs-upping at the people standing on street corners with McCain signs, and just barely resisted sticking my tongue out and thumbs-downing those with Obama signs. Hehe. Voting was fun as usual, and I didn't have to wait in line at all. Last night we went to AAAC's to watch the election returns, and that was fun and involved mucho junk food, as well as a few rounds of Rock Band. So except for the results, I had a good election day.

I think I'll leave comments on for this one, but as I'm not feeling very tolerant right now, I'll be deleting any "YAY OBAMA!!" comments. As of right now, I don't have to give equal time to liberals, so I'm allowed to do that.
kimana517: (movies : princess bride : wesley / to th)
Seriously. I can't even put into words the absolute disgust I feel right now at the stupidity of the majority of Americans. I cannot believe they (absolutely not we, as I had nothing at all to do with this idiocy) elected a first-term, most-liberal, Marxist, baby-murdering senator to be the president of America, especially while we have a liberal majority in the other gov't branches.

I'm either in the grief stage of denial or the stage of anger. Maybe depression. Possibly all three, with an emphasis on anger.

Is God still good? Yes. But I wish we didn't have to go through tough times to re-learn that. I guess we will be re-learning it a lot in the coming years.

Comments are disabled because this is harsh and I know some of you voted for Obama and you're wonderful people and I love you, but I can't take your defending him/the country right now. I haven't been this disgusted in I don't know how long, and I don't want anyone trying to convince me to get over it.
kimana517: (movies : nemo / dude)
This is the first YouTube person I've ever subscribed to. I wish he had his own TV show!

kimana517: (movies : potc / savvy?)
I know you guys are probably sick of my political posts talking about Obama's Marxist/Socialist tendencies, but as you know, this is a huge issue for me. Socialism is SCARY. (To the socialist(s) on my friends list: I love you as people, but socialism does scare me. I can't help that, and I won't hide it. I don't expect you to hide your opinions either. I'm just sharing mine.)

What the founding fathers said about socialism:

“To take from one, because it is thought his own industry and that of his fathers has acquired too much, in order to spare to others, who, or whose fathers, have not exercised equal industry and skill, is to violate arbitrarily the first principle of association, the guarantee to everyone the free exercise of his industry and the fruits acquired by it.” — Thomas Jefferson, letter to Joseph Milligan, April 6, 1816

“A wise and frugal government… shall restrain men from injuring one another, shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned. This is the sum of good government.” — Thomas Jefferson, First Inaugural Address, March 4, 1801

“Congress has not unlimited powers to provide for the general welfare, but only those specifically enumerated.” — Thomas Jefferson

“The moment the idea is admitted into society that property is not as sacred as the laws of God, and that there is not a force of law and public justice to protect it, anarchy and tyranny commence. If ‘Thou shalt not covet’ and ‘Thou shalt not steal’ were not commandments of Heaven, they must be made inviolable precepts in every society before it can be civilized or made free.” — John Adams, A Defense of the Constitutions of Government of the United States of America, 1787

“With respect to the two words ‘general welfare,’ I have always regarded them as qualified by the detail of powers connected with them. To take them in a literal and unlimited sense would be a metamorphosis of the Constitution into a character which there is a host of proofs was not contemplated by its creators.” — James Madison in a letter to James Robertson

In 1794, when Congress appropriated $15,000 for relief of French refugees who fled from insurrection in San Domingo to Baltimore and Philadelphia, James Madison stood on the floor of the House to object saying:

“I cannot undertake to lay my finger on that article of the Constitution which granted a right to Congress of expending, on objects of benevolence, the money of their constituents.” — James Madison, 4 Annals of Congress 179, 1794

“[T]he government of the United States is a definite government, confined to specified objects. It is not like the state governments, whose powers are more general. Charity is no part of the legislative duty of the government.” — James Madison


Two more good quotes:

“The inherent virtue of Capitalism is the unequal sharing of blessings. The inherent virtue of Socialism is the equal sharing of misery.” - Winston S. Churchill

“The Constitution only gives people the right to pursue happiness. You have to catch it yourself.” - Ben Franklin


(Quotes compiled by http://sweetness-light.com/archive/the-founding-fathers-on-redistribution.)
kimana517: (christian : this is a child)
This is a letter from Huntley Brown - an award-winning Christian jazz pianist who also happens to be black - about why he will not be voting for Obama. The reasons in this email alone are enough not to vote for him, and Brown didn't even mention Obama's Marxist/Socialist ideas. This is an email forward that has been verified by Snopes.com.

http://www.snopes.com/politics/soapbox/huntleybrown.asp

Why I Can't Vote For Obama
By Huntley Brown

Read more... )

E.T.A.: I just saw this on [livejournal.com profile] pansyprincess's LJ, and it made me LOL. What happens when a Democrat celebrates Halloween?
kimana517: (me : goofy)


SNL actually started an episode by mocking Democrats! Amazing! They have had one or two skits mocking Dems this season, but never an opener. Oh man, this is so true to Biden too. "Gird your loins!" LOL!
kimana517: (isaac&me : marriage is fun)
+ Isaac and I have been emailing each other in haiku all morning. No particular reason.

+ Speaking of Isaac (or should I say Isaaic?), he is an extremely intelligent person. I've always known this, but I'm reminded of it a lot when he is explaining things to people. He will be such a good Bible teacher.

+ Bill O'Reilly was on The View today. Oh, that was entertaining. It is so obvious that Joy and Barbara can't stand the sight of him. I don't think Joy has ever fidgeted with her hair that much during one segment before. Yesterday Elizabeth wore an awesome McCain shirt, which got her booed by the audience. (Dude, someday I will be a part of that audience and I will give that girl a standing ovation and boo Joy.) Y'all know McCain was like my 5th favorite of the Republican candidates, but that shirt rocks. If the election wasn't 2 weeks away, I'd buy it.

+ I finished watching The Lake House again this morning. I was right - I cried a lot. Such a great movie though. And at least I didn't cry as much as I did when we went to see it in the theater. Not like that's an attainable goal.

+ It's been about a year since Sarah and Andrew moved to Washington. It seems absolutely insane that it's been that long (where has this year gone?), and even more insane that I've been Sarah-less that long. =o/

+ We need to go buy our pumpkins tonight for the carving party tomorrow. I'm so excited!

+ I had more to say, but Mom just called about going to lunch with her and Grams, so I need to get ready. Adios!
kimana517: (politics : nut job)


It’s not that I want to punish your success, I just want to make sure that everybody that is behind you, that they have a chance for success too. I think that when you spread the wealth around, it’s good for everybody.
Barack Obama

From each according to his ability, to each according to his need.
Karl Marx

Same thing, just different words.

_______________________________________________________________


Did you know?
The top 1% of wage earners pay 40% of all income taxes. The top 5% pay 60%. The top 50% pay 97%. That means that 50% of the taxpayers pay 3% of the taxes. The poorest people not only do not pay any taxes, they also receive a tax credit on April 15th.
You tell me who needs a tax cut.

_______________________________________________________________


Quote from someone in a LiveJournal community:
"People will fight socialism if it's pushed by mobs and led under a red banner -- but if it's sold as universal health care, they'll eat it up."

_______________________________________________________________


ABC Finds FDR Partly to Blame for 10-Year Great Depression

On Saturday’s Good Morning America, ABC ran an unusual report that placed some of the blame for the Great Depression’s length on government intervention by Franklin Delano Roosevelt as well as Herbert Hoover, and concluded by questioning whether the current plans could do harm. After an unidentified economist contended that "the government from Hoover to Roosevelt made it worse by intervening too much and too arbitrarily," correspondent Bill Blakemore concluded: "And now, is the Bush government intervening too much arbitrarily with its $700 billion bailout? That’s a million dollar question, so to speak, for those trying to guess when this crisis will end."

Blakemore’s attention to this often ignored take on government intervention came at the end of a report that looked back at the Great Depression. After giving Roosevelt credit for injecting America with a "can do" spirit, Blakemore noted that the Great Depression ended its 10-year run as a result of World War II. He then asked the question of why the Stock Market Crash of 1929 resulted in the Great Depression:

BLAKEMORE: So what made the crash of ‘29 lengthen into a depression?
WOMAN: Because the government from Hoover to Roosevelt made it worse by intervening too much and too arbitrarily.
BLAKEMORE: And now, is the Bush government intervening too much arbitrarily with its $700 billion bailout? That’s a million dollar question, so to speak, for those trying to guess when this crisis will end.

Anchors Bill Weir and Kate Snow then tried to provide context by cautioning viewers that the current economic situation is not near the scale of the Great Depression:

WEIR: If you do look back, 90 percent drop in the stock market, 25 percent unemployment, the Dust Bowl, huge drought.
SNOW: We’re nothing like that.
WEIR: We're nowhere near a Great Depression. Some context is good.

Below is a complete transcript of the story from the Saturday, October 11, Good Morning American on ABC:

BILL WEIR: Well, as we wind down this week, you know, we’ve heard the words "Great Depression" thrown around quite a bit.
KATE SNOW: Scary, yes, scary words. So we thought we’d take a look back. What led to the actual crash in 1929 and the terrible times that followed that? And what lessons can we maybe learn from it? ABC’s Bill Blakemore has that for us.
FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT: -that the only thing we have to fear is fear itself.
BILL BLAKEMORE: 1933: four years after the Crash of '29. The Depression was still going, but new President FDR calmed the country asking everyone to think about their own fear, their own psychologies, and get a grip. Irving Kahn, 102, remembers. He became a trader on Wall Street just before that crash came.
IRVING KAHN, FORMER WALL STREET TRADER: And I didn't like the business after one week. I’d get off the floor on the exchange. It was like being in a casino. Yelling, make a lot, lose a lot, not a real business.
BLAKEMORE: And then, as the story goes, FDR arrived, and Americans started pulling together, reflected in those 1930s Mickey Rooney/Judy Garland movies where the "can do" spirit takes over with a vengeance.

[MOVIE CLIP WITH MICKEY ROONEY]

BLAKEMORE: But it wasn't just enthusiasm that ended the Depression after 10 years – World War II did. The hard question, say scholars, is why did the crash of '29 become a depression in the first place?
UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: Markets do crash. We've had credit crises, many crises, many, many times without depressions.
BLAKEMORE: For example, the market crash of 1987.
WOMAN: ‘87 was more like one of those events. If you woke up a year later, you wouldn’t even remember it.
BLAKEMORE: So what made the crash of ‘29 lengthen into a depression?
WOMAN: Because the government from Hoover to Roosevelt made it worse by intervening too much and too arbitrarily.
BLAKEMORE: And now, is the Bush government intervening too much arbitrarily with its $700 billion bailout? That’s a million dollar question, so to speak, for those trying to guess when this crisis will end. For Good Morning America, Bill Blakemore, ABC News.
WEIR: If you do look back, 90 percent drop in the stock market, 25 percent unemployment, the Dust Bowl, huge drought.
SNOW: We’re nothing like that.
WEIR: We're nowhere near a Great Depression. Some context is good.
We'll be back.

This is why I *hate* the bailout, and why I hate Obama's (and every liberal's) plans to increase gov't spending.

_______________________________________________________________


And finally, some humor:
See more funny videos at Funny or Die

ROTFL!

Oct. 4th, 2008 10:09 am
kimana517: (tv : gilmore girls : lor&ror laughing)
This made Isaac and me both laugh SO HARD last night. Enjoy.



"Maverick."

"Spain."

LOL!!!
kimana517: (politics : nut job)
Apologies to my liberal friends. To the rest, you will probably find this funny.

Today at the gym I was watching TV, and listening, too, since my phone has an FM tuner. The Obama smear ad on McCain that I've seen about 3 million times in the past month came on. (I've heard McCain has some negative ads too, but they aren't running in Florida.) It starts by stating that John McCain opposed finding alternative energy, blah, blah, blah. Then it goes on about Obama's brilliant plan to... well, no one really knows, because, as always, he just says what he's going to do, and not how he's going to do it.

Anyway. The 30 seconds of smearing + Obama's plan ended - or, really, 28 or 29 seconds, because the next commercial cut off Obama's. Interestingly, because of that, I heard the first thing I agreed with:

"I'm Barack Obama, and I approved this mess."

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