tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-32350053800919971502024-03-08T07:05:38.620-06:00Dust in the Permanent BasinDon't know what to think these days?
Let me help. Just open your mind and let me start pouring in wisdom and knowledge.wmhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07272090780586918978noreply@blogger.comBlogger10125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3235005380091997150.post-27036103629963293032008-01-24T12:32:00.000-06:002008-01-24T13:51:43.404-06:00Men, Women and the Dating MinefieldI've seen my lady friends (and lady relatives) make mistake after mistake, and when they're about to make those mistakes, it's too late to talk them out of it. Women are emotional creatures, as are men, and as they say, love is blind. So I have to stand helplessly by as they walk blind into the dating minefield.<br /><br />So I decided to list some warning flags as I see them. Now, understand that these are not all the warning flags you'll ever see - they're merely the most common ones, and the ones that are more or less easy to recognize when you have your eyes open for them. And they are not necessarily hard rules that if broken will result in tragedy. They are merely conditions that should be interpreted as raising the probability that you're headed into a problematic relationship.<br /><br /><br /><ul><li><span style="font-weight: bold;">Two or more of your friends have a bad feeling about it.</span> This is probably the most reliable warning flag you will ever get. Here is why. Nobody with any sense of self preservation is going to relish telling you that they don't like your new guy. They know it's dangerous to say anything at all; those of us who have made that mistake will avoid making it again. It's just too likely to damage a good friendship, and the odds are so great that <span style="font-style: italic;">it won't slow you down anyway</span>. So if two of your friends work up the nerve to gently suggest that you might want to be careful, that is a huge warning flag, with a siren to boot. You can safely assume that they see something you missed. Again, this does not mean you should break it off immediately - but it does mean you need to step back and think really hard, and really objectively. You should also consider your experience with your friends: have they displayed wisdom in the past? If so, consider all the more what they say.</li><li><span style="font-weight: bold;">You met him on the internet through a dating service or chat room.</span> Now, everyone knows about this one, and if you tell any of your friends "Hey, I met this guy on the internet..." you will immediately see a reaction that should throw cold water on your warm cockles. Sure, some people meet on the 'net and find true happiness. But most don't, and there is a reason that internet dating has such a bad reputation. Let's examine that. Obviously, you don't know anything about the other person except what he tells you. And it is well-known that predators lurk in the world wide web, telling you whatever they think you want to hear. There is no reason for them to tell you any negative information about themselves, and in fact they have a strong incentive to lie to you. But here's the big reason: unlike in real life, you don't get to hear outside opinions about a person because you don't know any mutual friends. There's nobody to give you a warning until you already invest yourself in him emotionally. So sure, you could meet Mr. Right on the 'net, but the sheer odds are against it. Use extreme caution.</li><li><span style="font-weight: bold;">He seems to be a wonderful match in the things that are important to you - especially religious faith.</span> Now, this could almost be a subset of the above flag on internet dating, but actually it's relevant to real life dating, too. Here's an example. Suppose you're a devout Christian. You're not going to keep that a secret, are you? You're going to make it clear from the start that that's a deal-breaker. Now, you meet a guy, and he not only agrees with your Christian views, he <span style="font-style: italic;">leads</span> with them. Now, this will seem like an odd thing to say, because of course we want to be compatible in our religious beliefs, but when somebody goes to an unusual amount of trouble to convince us of their sincere Christianity, <span style="font-style: italic;">watch out! </span>Hucksters and predators are notorious for using that way of gaining our trust. The bum looking for a handout to buy wine, the salesman trying to get you to invest in some ripoff scheme, the guy selling Bibles in the film <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paper_Moon_%28film%29"><span style="font-style: italic;">Paper Moon</span></a>, and of course the guy who wants to date or marry you because you have money, or at least a good income. They do this because it works. Faith is a strong emotional tag, and from the predator's standpoint, has the additional benefit of our desire to believe that God is taking care of us. But be careful not to let this flag weaken your faith in God. God will not let you down - people, however, will <span style="font-style: italic;">often</span> let you down. That is why we were told, in <span style="font-size:85%;">Matthew 10:16 -- "Behold, I send you forth as sheep in the midst of wolves: be ye therefore wise as serpents, and harmless as doves."</span></li><li><span style="font-size:100%;"><span style="font-size:100%;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">You've been divorced more than once.</span> If you've had two or more divorces in your life, you have my sympathy. Divorce is hard. It's tough. It's damaging. If you've had three or more, something is wrong. Either you're attracting the wrong kind of person, you're attracted to the wrong kind of person, or you're doing something that's in serious error somewhere in the process. You should err on the side of caution - waaaay on the side of caution. I would recommend paying close attention to any clues you may get from your friends or family. Watch for the above flags, and take them very seriously. Get reliable counseling. And for goodness sakes, insist on a long engagement. Be patient.</span></span></li><li><span style="font-size:100%;"><span style="font-size:100%;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">He's married... for now.</span> This flag is <span style="font-style: italic;">always</span> reliable. If he is a decent person, he will not show any interest in dating while he is still married, no matter how bad the marriage, no matter what he may say about it. I can almost guarantee this: if you cuddle up with such a person, you will find yourself taking his wife's place in more ways than you ever want to, including his stories about what a horrid woman he's stuck with. Ignore this flag at your peril.</span></span></li></ul><span style="font-size:100%;"><span style="font-size:100%;"><br />Now one more thing. You may think that love is the most important thing in a marriage or dating relationship. The problem is that none of us can accurately gauge "love" when we're in it. It's so hard to define, and it's so easily confused with physical attraction. But there is a quality that any of us can tell when it's there or when it's not there, whether on our part or somebody else's. That quality is respect, and it becomes quite useful when you understand that you cannot have love without respect. Do you sometimes find yourself feeling a mild contempt for this person? Chances are you don't love him. Do you sometimes find that he fails to respect you? Maybe he doesn't love you.<br /><br />Be careful. Love is a many splendored thing, but it can also be a many splintered thing.<br /><br /><br /></span><br /></span>wmhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07272090780586918978noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3235005380091997150.post-58424224917774461002008-01-13T10:34:00.000-06:002008-01-14T16:21:40.338-06:00The evolution of racismThat attack on Ron Paul by Jolly James got me to thinking.<br /><br />We live in a time when a racist remark will not only end your career - not only will the mere <span style="font-style: italic;">accusation</span> of a racist remark end your career - but an accusation of a remark being <span style="font-style: italic;">maybe</span> sort of kind of racist will threaten your career. And I had no idea that "kid" or "fairy tale" could be racist. Maybe "kid" is sort of like "boy," but this is all beyond me.<br /><br />I know several people (well, I know them online - most real people don't know or care) who used to support Ron Paul with enthusiasm, but turned a quick 180 when the newsletter scandal was "exposed" yet again. They seem to understand that Paul never wrote those words, simply because they had heard him enough and read him enough to know he couldn't have been the source. But they quickly say they can't support him because if he couldn't oversee a newsletter with his name on it, how is he qualified for president? This astounds me. You're disqualified from holding office because you trusted the wrong people with a cheaply printed rag? I've trusted people when I shouldn't have. But I learned the lesson from it when it bit me, and I am quite sure that Ron Paul learned it too.<br /><br />So I observed a little, as I often do when I am puzzled, and I notice that those who did this 180 are young - in their 20's, maybe early 30's. And I suspect (note the word suspect) that this has more to do with avoiding the stigma of failing to condemn racism than it does with a sincere, honest belief that Ron Paul is too incompetent to run a country because he didn't fully supervise a newsletter decades ago.<br /><br />How the world has changed; and it didn't do it overnight. We didn't have a country full of people suddenly wake up one morning and say, "I was wrong. Black people aren't inferior, and shouldn't be treated as property, and segregated and not allowed to vote. I will change my ways and be a better person." Somewhere in the transition, many people had to struggle with what they had been taught and shown by example, and then figure out that it had to stop.<br /><br />When I was a young lad, I attended a family reunion and had the pleasure of talking to a nice little old lady, frail and slow, who had been born in the 1800's. She shared two family stories with me which I enjoyed more than many of the others, because they were so vivid and so far in the past. It seems I had two slave owners in my family tree. The first was a plantation owner, and therefore was probably the only rich person I've ever been related to. But he was different. His policy was to buy slaves and immediately free them - and offer them employment on his plantation. Other land owners thought that was a little nuts, but I'll bet he was richer in many ways than his neighbors. Nevertheless, I think maybe it took a little courage to do things a different way.<br /><br />The other one was not so rich. He was walking home one afternoon, and came upon a man beating the living crap out of a little boy, whom he "owned," and therefore assumed the right to discipline as he pleased. My ancestor asked him why he was doing that, and asked him to please stop it. "He ain't worth two bits! You want him, I'll sell him to you!" So he bought him, for the price of 25¢, and took him home to take care of him. The story is that he intended to find out how to draw up the papers to free him the next day, but the boy died of his injuries before morning.<br /><br />Now, my elderly story-teller used the word "nigra" as she related it, and by today's standards, she would be accused of racism, as the word is too close to the N word (which must never be spoken except on a rap song). I don't know how racist she actually was, but she no doubt had some viewpoints that had carried over from the late 1800's, when she learned most of her world view. But she was a kind woman, and gentle, and soft spoken.<br /><br />My earliest memories are from the 1950's, when I was five years old in Savannah GA. My friends gave me my earliest experiences with racism as it existed then. A person who drank a soft drink from a bottle the wrong way was accused of "nigger-lipping." In fact, you shouldn't even drink straight from the bottle, because "you never know if a nigger might've drunk from that bottle sometime." One was told to be careful, or a "nigger might get you." We didn't have to be cautioned not to play with the "colored kids" - they weren't allowed anywhere near us, and none of us ever even thought about it. (This wasn't my parents saying any of this, by the way). What you have to realize is that segregation was the prevailing thought. Anyone suggesting that it ought to be different was way out on the fringes, and it would have taken a great deal of courage to say such a thing out loud - such attitudes could get you beaten up, or it could ruin your career. It took courage to express such things.<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">On to the 60's. Now I'm a teenager living in Texas. Racism in Texas is weaker, and a person would no longer be criticized for suggesting that blacks ought to be treated no differently than anyone else. He might get an argument, yes, but he would get one back in most company, at least in the circles I ran with. Now if he suggests that a mixed marriage might be a good idea, he would be thoroughly criticized, so that would take some courage, but the topic seldom comes up. </span><br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">The riots in LA are still to come. We consider Bill Cosby's comedy albums to be the best stuff ever, and we want to be like him. The first TV kiss between a white man and a black woman (on Star Trek) is on its way, and I see the scene and don't even notice its significance for some reason.</span> (I guess it took some courage for the producers of the show, but apparently it didn't hurt William Shatner's career. He would have to wait for Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds for that).<br /><br />A few years later.<span style="font-style: italic;"> I get my first job with a paycheck and deductions. I work as a bus boy in the Airmen's Club at Sheppard AFB. Now, the club isn't supposed to be segregated, but there is a room just off the main room but angled so that most of it isn't seen unless you stand in the doorway. The black airmen congregate there.</span> Now, here is where you younger bloggers will have no memory of the way things were. There were riots in those days. There was white on black violence, and there was black on white violence. Either way, there were angry people on both sides of the color divide. And some nights, nobody wanted to go into that room, because it was full of angry young black men with lots of beer bottles on their tables. My co-workers refused to go, and it fell to me to cruise that room with my bus cart. So I went in and we all held hands and sang Kumbaya together.<br /><br />Like hell we did. I bussed the tables, and I was <span style="font-style: italic;">scared</span>. Really scared. I heard "Clean up that puke you little white f---!" Now, my point is not that it took courage to go into that room, though I assure you it did. My point is that it took courage to hold onto race-tolerant attitudes. It took courage not to absolutely hate them. If you don't believe that, wait until you fear for your safety or your life and see how much love you can work up for your fellow man.<br /><br />Fast forward a few years, to the 80's or 90's. It's so much easier these days, when I can work in the same place as black men, when I have their backs and they have mine, when we can be in the same play at the community theatre and forget our lines and bail each other out so the show goes on. I can have a genuine friendship with a mixed-race couple and nobody cares about it. Things have really improved.<br /><br />Fast forward a little further, to this century. A blogger, one of my favorites, <a href="http://girlinshortshorts.blogspot.com/2008/01/fuck-ron-paulthe-betrayal.html">changes her mind about Ron Paul</a> because of those damn newsletters, feels betrayed by him, turns against him, does that 180 I was talking about - even though he is the only man running who shares her political stance. And she gets a comment complimenting her on her "courage" and honesty. Courage? COURAGE?? For sitting at a nice warm keyboard in 2008, when racism is on the fringes, when racism will ruin your career, when even the mere suggestion of what might be considered maybe sort of kind of racism will ruin your career or get you beat up?<br /><br />The world has changed, indeed. But it was a relatively fast <span style="font-style: italic;">evolution</span>, not a revolution, though taking place in one lifespan, and I think it's a little late to cash in on having <span style="font-style: italic;">courage</span> for being open minded. I think maybe these days it may take more courage to risk being a target of race baiting bigots like Al Sharpton or Louis Farrakhan or James Kirchick<span style="font-weight: bold;"></span>. Maybe with a little more evolution, we can achieve tolerance without demagogues.<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">Note: I am not accusing <a href="http://girlinshortshorts.blogspot.com/">Becky</a> of claiming to have courage. It's more like the person leaving the comment is implying that, as he attempts to practice his special brand of patronizing for political purposes.</span>wmhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07272090780586918978noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3235005380091997150.post-67266146735974148192008-01-02T22:07:00.000-06:002008-01-02T22:09:55.262-06:00The Ron Paul youth brigadeWant to know what the Ron Paul youth are like? Learn about them in the <a href="http://www.tnr.com/politics/story.html?id=4a9629c8-4063-4aa6-b5a7-de49cfb49e48">New Republic</a> online.wmhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07272090780586918978noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3235005380091997150.post-69045332723030894162007-11-17T15:11:00.000-06:002007-11-17T15:14:10.176-06:00I read on a forum today that Ron Paul cannot get elected and if he does, they'll kill him or have a coup.<br /><br />I don't agree that he <i>can't</i> get elected. I do agree that the established parties will do pretty much anything in their power to prevent it, and it isn't really inconceivable that he could have an accident or something if it came to that. But it would sure take some brass nerve to actually kill him. Sure, these are the people that have set up election laws and ballot access laws to keep themselves in power, unchallenged. And you know, things happen. But let's not prophecy doom.<br /><br />Oh, they might have the Supreme court find something we hadn't noticed before, that says you can't be president if you were born in a certain month with the moon in a certain phase. Kind of a Roe v Wade for election abortions.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;"> Everybody in America seems to think that unrestrained power is a good thing, as long as it's in the hands of the party they voted for. We Libertarians are alone in our belief that it's a bad thing no matter who holds the gavel. </span>(There's a good quote line, eh?)<br /><br />When Hillary takes office after beating Rudy, the Republicans may regret having established all those tools to fight terrorism with. The Clinton family has a well-earned reputation for using such power very creatively - how long will it be before Sean Hannity or Rush Limbaugh are accused of inciting terrorism? Oh, wait - they did that already, didn't they? Oklahoma City Bombings, I think it was. All that "hate speech" on talk radio.<br /><br />And now that you can be <i>jailed</i> for that sort of thing, without <i>habeas corpus</i>, some of us may be reminded the hard way what those safe guards were for.<br /><br />I plan to send more money to the campaign. I don't think it's wasted - people have given their lives for freedom in this country, I guess I can give a little money.wmhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07272090780586918978noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3235005380091997150.post-22852615474965793782007-11-15T11:21:00.000-06:002007-11-15T11:23:47.772-06:00Red Pill: The Campaign Contributors of the Media AnointedYou have to read this. It lists some very interesting information about who the donors work for.<br /><a href="http://rabbit-hole-journey.blogspot.com/2007/11/campaign-contributors-of-media-anointed.html">Take the Red Pill: The Campaign Contributors of the Media Anointed</a>wmhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07272090780586918978noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3235005380091997150.post-6355141170878097492007-11-06T10:49:00.000-06:002007-11-06T10:56:22.360-06:00Ron Paul: Is there a risk he could win?Ron Paul's supporters are making signs, sending in money (4.2 million in one day), joining Meetup groups, using the internet effectively, attending rallies, voting in straw polls and online polls and texting polls, and talking to their friends and neighbors about him.<br /><br />The other candidates supporters are... um... answering the phone when the pollsters call them.<br /><br />Nope, he doesn't have a chance. Nope. Can't happen.wmhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07272090780586918978noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3235005380091997150.post-91614145613426058242007-10-31T00:04:00.000-05:002007-10-31T14:15:54.617-05:00Ron Paul and the what pistols??OK, I'm officially old.<br /><br />I watched Jay Leno just now, mostly because my hero <a href="http://www.ronpaul2008.com/">Ron Paul</a> was appearing. It was a good interview, and can't hurt him, but he was immediately followed by musical guests the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sex_pistols">Sex Pistols</a>.<br /><br />Now, the Sex Pistols are sort of nostalgic. They began their sporadic and notorious career in 1975, and I thought they had disappeared for good. But here they were on Leno, singing what sounded like "Anarchy in the UK," a song whose lyrics - were they lyrics? - were unintelligible to these old ears. They gestured in a friendly way to Dr. Paul and I heard the words "Mr. Paul" emerging from the cacophony of sound filling the studio audience. I think it was a show of support, but I'm not sure.<br /><br />Now, I'm not in favor of anarchy by any means. I am for less government, and so I suppose given the huge beast that government has become these days, an anarchist would favor the candidate who wants to govern the least. Some even think it may be a <a href="http://tulsaatlas.blogspot.com/2007/10/jay-leno-interviews-ron-paul.html">sign</a>.<br /><br />But who do the Sex Pistols influence today? Do the young folk look up to a three-decades old band whose trademark is revolt against the music popular in 1975? If so, why? Do the current 40-year-olds remember them fondly? And here I am, fondly remembering tearing off the plastic shrink wrap from my new copy of the White Album.<br /><br />So here I am, supporting a 72 year old man for president because he stays loyal to a 220 year old <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/US_constitution">document</a> that everyone else ignores, and watching him share a stage with an aging, arthritic punk rock band who also seems to like him, and feeling glad that my 86 year old father who fought the Japanese in WWII never stays up late enough to have seen anything like the Sex Pistols singing about anarchy.<br /><br />Well, shoot - I'm going to send another $17.76 to Ron Paul on November 5 just to add to the money bomb scheduled for that day. That ought to make me feel younger.wmhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07272090780586918978noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3235005380091997150.post-56249233167368671712007-10-29T15:07:00.000-05:002007-10-29T15:16:45.617-05:00Why doesn't Ron Paul run in another party?<p>Several times I have heard critics of Ron Paul suggest that he should go run in the Libertarian party or Constitution party, since he is so far out of step with the Republican party. Anyone who has ever been involved with a third party knows quite well that election laws in the United States make this impossible. The two parties have seen to this. Here's Oklahoma for an extreme example:<br /><br />"On May 14, the Oklahoma Supreme Court refused to hear <i>Libertarian Political Organization v Clingman, </i>no. 103,592. Thus ended the Libertarian Party’s most costly-ever ballot access lawsuit. The party had spent approximately $30,000 in 2004 on collecting 27,000 signatures, plus $5,000 on attorneys’ fees and court fees. The signatures had been collected in an attempt to persuade the court that the party does enjoy a modicum of voter support. No other party or candidate even tried to petition in Oklahoma in 2004.<br /><br />"The case was based on a provision of the Oklahoma Constitution that says "elections shall be free and equal." The evidence seemed overwhelming that the state’s ballot access laws relating to presidential candidates at the general election violates this part of the state Constitution. Oklahoma voters in 2004 were the only voters who could not vote for president, unless they wanted to vote for President Bush or Senator John Kerry. No write-ins are allowed, and Oklahoma was the only state in which only Bush and Kerry were on the ballot.<br /><br />"Oklahoma is one of only five states that doesn’t permit write-ins at the general election. Oklahoma is the only state in which all [signature/petition] procedures to get a minor party or independent presidential candidate on the ballot are greater than 2% of the last vote cast. Oklahoma is one of only four states in which the easiest presidential procedure is more than 1.33% of the last presidential vote cast (the others are North Carolina, West Virginia, and Wyoming). ...The median requirement of the 50 states is four-tenths of 1% of the last presidential vote cast."</p><p>Source: <a href="http://www.ballot-access.org/2007/060107.html">Ballot Access News</a><br /></p>Are these parties really all that popular? I have made a point of asking loyal Republicans and Democrats why they support their candidate. Virtually every time I hear them tell me <span style="font-style: italic;">why they oppose the other one</span> - they really have nothing good to say about their guy. They are voting against, not for, a candidate.<br /><br />The problem here is that the election process here in the USA is rigged to favor the two established parties. We hear the phrase "two-party system" as if it's a Good Thing™, when in fact it is a Bad Thing™ created for a bad reason. The two parties differ only in rhetoric - and in that regard, they differ considerably - while the difference in what their members actually do when in office, is insignificant. Yet they claim a monopoly on the ballot - all others need not apply. So we are in the habit of voting against the party we dislike the most, because we have no other real choice.<br /><br />Let me point out that whether you support a "third" party or not, you know that this is not good, it's not fair, it's not American, and it is, in fact, corrupt. A common reason given for ballot access restrictions is that we need to prevent ballot crowding. Ballot "crowding" is meaningless - there is plenty of room for more than two choices on a ballot. Another reason is that we supposedly must keep "frivolous" candidates off the ballot. In the first place, we <i>can</i> afford frivolous candidates if necessary to ensure open elections, but let that slide. When the incumbent parties get to define who is "frivolous," you can be sure that that will include anybody who wants to take their place in office. Does anybody really think that the Libertarian, Green, or Constitution parties are truly frivolous? You may disagree with their positions, you may quickly and casually (and rightly or wrongly) label them "kooks" or worse, but I assure you that they are not at all frivolous - they genuinely want to be in office and represent a point of view. And since they aren't allowed to play in the game stolen by the "real" parties, they can only be expected to rejoice when a real alternative challenges the establishment from within their own party. We all know that the Republican party would have barred Ron Paul from the process if they could have - heck, they still want to, even if it means losing the election to Ms. Clinton in 2008. We saw organizations supposedly for lower taxes and against abortion - positions Dr. Paul is aligned with - ban him from their little debate in Iowa! Why would they do that? I'll bet you can figure that out if you think about it for a minute.<br /><br />Those of us who still respect the Constitution as the supreme law of the land are supporting Ron Paul. He is the only man in Congress who has consistently kept his oath of office to obey that document. And we're doing it within the system, like it or not. If you want to call us "kooks" for that, feel free - but consider how un-American you've become if you do.<br /><br />If you want us to run along back to our little third parties and leave yours alone... then open the elections to all serious parties. Free and open elections, like they have in much of the rest of the world.wmhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07272090780586918978noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3235005380091997150.post-26130891520547791422007-10-08T11:13:00.000-05:002007-10-07T17:57:12.646-05:00My choice for presidentAnd my choice is...<br /><a href="http://www.ronpaul2008.com/"><span style="font-size:130%;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Ron Paul.</span></span></a><br /><br />Yes, I said Ron Paul. Follow the link to read more about him, but my reasons are that he votes and acts on his principles, and that he obeys the Constitution. Those are things - important things! - that no other candidate running on the two major parties can come close to saying, without having to turn around to hide some seriously cynical laughter.<br /><br />Here are reasons <span style="font-style: italic;">not</span> to vote for him, and I keep seeing them over and over.<br /><br /><ul><li><span style="font-weight: bold;">He can't win.</span> This is the most common reason, and perhaps the most irrelevant. Besides the fact that it isn't true, it is no reason to withdraw support from your candidate, especially during the primary stage of the election process. You should support the candidate you want, not someone more likely to win. What are you, some animal in the herd? Think about it - if the other guy is going to win anyway, why support him? Conserve your energy, relax, go take in a movie. He'll win without your help.<br /></li><li><span style="font-weight: bold;">His views are... out there.</span> Oh, but if his views are the same as yours, or close, then you must be out there, too. All the more reason to vote for him. Besides, the mainstream of thought has become so far from the founding principles of this country, so far from what actually works, I think we should be getting away from them as soon as possible. As for "staying the course..." as Dr. Phil would say, "How's that working for you?" You may just find that your views are more in the majority than they want you to think.<br /></li><li><span style="font-weight: bold;">One of his policies doesn't match mine!</span> Does any candidate match your thought in every way? You aren't going to find anyone that does. Decide what is most important to you in terms of government, and find someone to match that, or get close. For me, that's Dr. Ron Paul.<br /></li></ul>wmhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07272090780586918978noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3235005380091997150.post-2890963522408044132007-10-02T14:32:00.000-05:002007-10-02T17:14:58.307-05:00Welcome to the BasinWelcome to the dust-covered blog of the Permanent Basin.<br />I am setting aside my plans for world domination for the time being. Now, now - be patient. We'll get back on track for that, and then you can rule beside me. We need to get that crack-head in Venezuela out of office first, anyway.<br /><br />Tomorrow, I will reveal my choice for the president of these United States. I have spent much time and much study eliminating possibilities, and I have narrowed my choices down to that one worthy candidate.<br /><br />Just my opinion, you say? Well, yes it is. But since I am smarter than you and prettier than you and I read more books than you, and I have more money than lots of people I know, my opinion counts. And you should agree with me because I'm right 97.4% of the time, and you're right only 89.3% of the time. Besides, I never bet on sports.wmhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07272090780586918978noreply@blogger.com0