Category Archives: Politics

“Please sir, I want some more”…

Rep. Jack Kingston instigated one big food fight recently when a secretly taped video by his political opponent got hyped to show Kingston as an heartless elitist, intent on making poor children grovel, well actually “work” for their free lunches.  The political left, in typical partisan fashion, swept the floor with Kingston, instead of looking at the important lesson he, perhaps inelegantly, was trying to discuss.  He explained his views more clearly during a CNN interview.

It would not be a good idea to tie aprons on only children receiving free lunches, but the idea of making all children do some chores in their lunchroom, classroom and school would be a good first step toward teaching kids to respect community property and also to teach them many other lessons, like the importance of work, civic responsibility and on a much more basic level, how to be part of a team.   Somehow, among the political left, any suggestion that learning to do manual labor offers valuable character-building lessons, incites shrill recitations about the evils of child labor and vivid imagery-filled prose alluding to Oliver Twist begging, “Please sir, I want some more.”  C’mon, so many kids and their parents exhibit such a sense of entitlement over perceived victimization and the Democratic Party toils away to keep this constituency firmly entrenched in poverty, which requires relentless propaganda and setting up straw men to set ablaze in the public square.  Kingston surely felt that heat recently.

With refreshing clarity, a writer at National Review, Jillian Kay Melchior, scrubbed away the ashes left from Kingston’s unfortunate liberal fire bombing and explained why exactly work provides valuable lessons, for all children. (“Why All Children Should Learn To Work”).  We, as a society, embrace full-throated exhortations about “rights”, but any who dare offer the ticket to individual liberty (learning about responsibilities), speedily get marginalized, pegged as insensitive to the poor, or worse get tarred with the racist label. One liberal pundit suggested Kingston’s suggestion would be using  poor, minority children  as slave labor.  Yep, that’s how absurd things get at the mere suggestion that  kids should learn to work and that there is no such thing as a free lunch.

Leave a comment

Filed under Culture Wars, Education, General Interest, Politics

Firing back at gun control lunacy

The headline from the Washington Times says it all:

“Armed response, not restrictive gun laws, brought swift end to school shooting”

Leave a comment

Filed under Gun Control, Politics

THE ONE and a few lesser stories…

Unexpected work demands hampered my blogging lately, so this will be just a short list of links.  Number one, or should I say, THE ONE, oh my, what an ego maniac he is: Mark Steyn on himlarger than life here, and Thomas Lifson  weaves a larger tapestry.

Came across a blog post at The Orthosphere about a futuristic 1950s paperback, “World Without Men”, by Charles Eric Maine, which ties in with my ongoing commentary on feminism’s darker side – the war against men.  The blogger, Thomas Bertonneau, calls the fictional society created in this novel a totalitarian lesbiocracy and truly it’s a scary place to be.  I intend to purchase this book and read it for myself.   Just for the record, I adore men, but long for a return of stronger, more confident manhood in America.  Enough with the metrosexuals and the feminist harpies controlling public discourse – I call for a return of the gentlemen to politely take charge again.

Here is a video and story about the NSA and 60 Minutes interview with NSA officials, to include the head of the agency, General Keith Alexander.  I don’t know a thing about General Alexander, but watching him speak creeped me out.  My female intuition started twitching and I kept thinking he’s lying based solely on his facial expressions and watching his eyes.  I could never trust this man, based on my gut reaction and yet I have no solid basis for this feeling.

Fitting with my rural upbringing, I grew up listening to country music.  It resonates with a realistic take on American culture and lately a couple of young female country artists caught my attention.  Kacey Musgraves writes songs that have many conservatives on edge where she talks about alternative lifestyles and smoking weed.  I love her frank take on American life from her real life experiences – it’s honest and refreshing actually – here’s Follow Your Arrow.  Danielle Bradbury looks the part of a budding country music starlet, blond, blue-eyed,  and cute as can be.  Her song, The Heart of Dixie, while one of  those with a female empowerment theme that usually grates on my nerves, centers on a road trip, with the bigger theme of leaving a troubled past behind you and  being brave enough to seek a better future.  I embrace those kinds of stories, regardless of gender, where the plot device of being on a journey offers endless possibilities for twists, turns and unexpected discoveries.

Since I veered onto the topic of road trips, I’ll mention a late 80s novel, The Bean Trees, by Barbara Kingsolver, whom one of my sons told me is a left-wing whack job, but hey I don’t judge novels by the politics of the author and I loved this road trip story.  The sequel, Pigs In Heaven, continued the story without losing any of the spirit of the first novel.

Time to get ready for work now.  Have a great day!

Leave a comment

Filed under Culture Wars, General Interest, Politics

Back in the kitchen…. (liberal female pols blaze new trails)

Why do women running for public office find it necessary to submit family recipes, examples here & here. If you have a busy career or never learned to cook or bake, where’s the harm in saying,  “I don’t know how to do that?”   Here’s  a Free Beacon story on Mitch McConnell’s democratic opponent, Alison Lundergan purportedly posting “stolen” recipes as “family favorites” from her grandmother, whom she has used to attack McConnell of being “anti-woman”.  Somehow, it seems highly likely that the issues that make one “anti-woman” to the liberal left percolate far from the heat of the home cooking range and cozy kitchen or Granny’s favorite holiday eats.   This endless “Mommy Wars”, pitting traditional women vs. career women, rages on in America.  That political operatives from both political persuasions and reporters actually spend time browsing online recipes to validate the “authenticity” of posted family recipes speaks to a belittling of women as serious candidates and that women in politics play this game speaks to some deep-seated insecurities.   As a confident cookie-baker and Mom, well, it seems to me that confident women, of any political party, should be above this sort of pandering and resorting to lying about “domesticity” to win votes.  If you spent your time as a career woman rather that at home, just say so without apologies.  At the same time, how about showing a little respect for the women who made other choices rather than mocking and belittling them?  It’s not men who are the raging sexists in America – it’s the women!  (example of how it plays out  here).  Honesty would be a refreshing new course to serve up, instead of pilfered recipes.

Leave a comment

Filed under Culture Wars, Politics

Change where we can believe again

Interesting poll about trust: “In God we trust, maybe, but not each other”.   It made me think about my May blog post, “The Mom World Peace Solution”.

With any hope for building trust on the international stage diminishing daily, it’s no surprise that our little picture view trends the same as our big picture view.  Arguing which one causes the other, well, that’s the chicken and egg dilemma, and really, in America all we need to know is that chicken has come home to roost – we’re headed down a very dangerous path where the lying and believing lies leaves people unsure and ready to believe the worst about others.  It sure would be nice to have change where we can believe again.

Leave a comment

Filed under Culture Wars, Foreign Policy, General Interest, Politics

George Washington Issued the first Thanksgiving Proclamation

Thanksgiving Proclamation

[New York, 3 October 1789]

By the President of the United States of America. a Proclamation.

Whereas it is the duty of all Nations to acknowledge the providence of Almighty God, to obey his will, to be grateful for his benefits, and humbly to implore his protection and favor—and whereas both Houses of Congress have by their joint Committee requested me “to recommend to the People of the United States a day of public thanksgiving and prayer to be observed by acknowledging with grateful hearts the many signal favors of Almighty God especially by affording them an opportunity peaceably to establish a form of government for their safety and happiness.”

Now therefore I do recommend and assign Thursday the 26th day of November next to be devoted by the People of these States to the service of that great and glorious Being, who is the beneficent Author of all the good that was, that is, or that will be—That we may then all unite in rendering unto him our sincere and humble thanks—for his kind care and protection of the People of this Country previous to their becoming a Nation—for the signal and manifold mercies, and the favorable interpositions of his Providence which we experienced in the course and conclusion of the late war—for the great degree of tranquillity, union, and plenty, which we have since enjoyed—for the peaceable and rational manner, in which we have been enabled to establish constitutions of government for our safety and happiness, and particularly the national One now lately instituted—for the civil and religious liberty with which we are blessed; and the means we have of acquiring and diffusing useful knowledge; and in general for all the great and various favors which he hath been pleased to confer upon us.

and also that we may then unite in most humbly offering our prayers and supplications to the great Lord and Ruler of Nations and beseech him to pardon our national and other transgressions—to enable us all, whether in public or private stations, to perform our several and relative duties properly and punctually—to render our national government a blessing to all the people, by constantly being a Government of wise, just, and constitutional laws, discreetly and faithfully executed and obeyed—to protect and guide all Sovereigns and Nations (especially such as have shewn kindness unto us) and to bless them with good government, peace, and concord—To promote the knowledge and practice of true religion and virtue, and the encrease of science among them and us—and generally to grant unto all Mankind such a degree of temporal prosperity as he alone knows to be best.

Given under my hand at the City of New-York the third day of October in the year of our Lord 1789.

Go: Washington

Leave a comment

Filed under American History, General Interest, Politics

Why America needs gentlemen…. and ladies too

The other day I posted a link to a blunt article on feminism’s ruinous effect on boys written by Fred Reed (here), so now I’d like to take a few minutes to wax on about manners and child-rearing, which maybe, is the one topic where I have some real credentials, after spending 18 years as a homemaker.  Children come into this world completely dependent on adults to care for all of their needs and they also come devoid of all those finer virtues, upon which civilization depends.

The ancient Greeks kept their cardinal virtues to four: temperance, prudence, courage, and justice, but with the advent of Christianity, the list grew to seven: chastity, temperance, charity, diligence, patience, kindness, and humility.  Of course, many other cultures and religions around the world offer up some varied assortment of similar virtues, although there are some examples, if you care to be an honest observer, where the cultural norms seem to be a mishmash of extremes, allowing barbarism to return and life for the weak in these places becomes a precarious struggle, fraught with danger.

Being the mother of two sons and two daughters and spending many, many hours amongst babies and small children (my own and many others) let’s agree that despite all the feminist bullshit to the contrary, boys and girls are very different and not just in the obvious anatomical sense.  Boys and girls react differently to the world, they play differently and they think differently.

I abhor violence and I refused to buy my sons toy guns when they were very young, thinking that teaching them not to fight is a good thing.  Well, how did that work out?  My sons, even as toddlers, turned everything, even their sister’s Barbie dolls into a weapon of some sort, gun or club, it mattered not.  Boys like actively interacting with their world, often in surprising and destructive ways.

Quickly, I realized my idea had little real merit and as they began to play with other children, it dawned on me that sometimes fighting is the right course of action, especially when confronted by barbarians who lacked parenting and behaved like bullies.  So, my “no fighting” idea needed some refinement and the trickier moral lessons weren’t as simple to teach as I had originally thought.

Sometimes you should fight back.  Finding this point on the scale, between complete pacifism and barbarism, where civilized behavior holds culture’s high ground position and barbarism falls to an outcast behavior, reviled, shunned and unaccepted by the majority of citizens, isn’t etched in stone, but we must agree on a small range on this scale for civilization to advance (or survive in our own sad case).  The sociologists refer to this informal, commonly accepted range of acceptable behavior, as social norms. –>

3 Comments

Filed under American Character, American History, Culture Wars, Food for Thought, Politics

An afternoon in the doctor’s waiting room

We’re approaching that American holiday that’s come to symbolize two diverse cultures,  American settlers and American Indians, oops Native Americans or whatever is the PC-approved term, sitting together to share a meal and offer thanks to God for a successful harvest.  Agrarian societies through the ages have held similar celebrations at the end of the harvest season.  The unique component of our Thanksgiving rests heavily on our national self-image of a melting pot of cultures living in harmony, where Martin Luther King, Jr.’s dream of a place where we will “sit down at a table of brotherhood” evokes a national yearning for the America we hope we can someday be.

The more enlightened our intellectual and political elites become, the further removed from this dream we seem to be drifting.  We’ve allowed our educational experts to confuse, conflate and completely confound our language into a mass of hidden meanings, ripe with rhetorical landmines, so that we hesitate before speaking for fear of offending someone, somehow, in some way through word choice, inflection or even failing to see some mysterious allusion.  Just when you think this insanity can go no further, along comes a news report to prove, yes, “educated” people really can twist concepts beyond any recognizable bounds of reasonable meaning.  Who knew the simple peanut butter and jelly sandwich should be avoided in classroom discussions about food, because it’s emblematic of “white privilege” and therefore a racist symbol.  Yes, really, according to a Portland school official, where they’ve had lengthy discussions on this pressing topic (here).  That educators in this school actually sat around having serious discussions about racial implications with peanut butter and jelly sandwiches speaks volumes about why our children keep falling further behind when compared to other children around the world.    No one spoke up about the idiocy, but instead they collectively, as good followers do, centered their attention on being more aware of “white privilege”.

The other day I had a long wait at the doctor’s office, where a lovely old lady entertained me with a lively conversation about everything from homestyle cooking to motorcycle riding.  This lady told me about her daughter, a school teacher, who brought a problem to her attention that she wasn’t aware of and it sure wasn’t about the racial overtones of peanut butter and jelly sandwiches.  She stated her daughter and other teachers noticed a lot of children coming to school Monday mornings very hungry, due to food insecurity at home.    This lady talked about a program to provide food for school children on Monday mornings that her son’s church started and how hard he works as a young pastor.  Unbeknownst to me, Mondays bring an influx of children who haven’t eaten hardly anything on the weekend and whose primary food source is government-funded meals at school during the school week.  Yes, here was an old, Southern white lady telling me about the children in need in our own community and about a problem, which I knew nothing about.

We discussed holiday meals and she informed me that in recent years her daughter does the main cooking, while she provides a few dishes that her family requests she make.  One recipe she mentioned is shoe peg corn salad, which I plan to make soon.  She talked about how her grandchildren frequently request that she make her special hamburgers, that according to them, are the best hamburgers ever.  I inquired what her secret ingredients are for the best hamburgers ever.  She said she chops up onions and stuff  fine, like she would for meatloaf, then adds breadcrumbs and an egg.  Her mother-in-law taught her to make hamburgers like this and she said, “You know why she added the breadcrumbs and stuff?”  Coming from a large family, it seemed obvious to me.  She added the breadcrumbs to make the meat stretch farther to feed more people.  This is the common sense stuff, that the type of people who devote time to discussions of the racial overtones to peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, will never acquire.

An afternoon chat in a waiting room provided me with a memorable meeting .  I’ve been looking for a church  to join for a long time, after spending decades avoiding organized religion and her’s son’s church might be worth checking out.  Yes, this old lady dared to mention God in our conversation too.  Her uncomplicated dedication to putting real time and hard work into community service seemed to me,  to be exactly what we need more of in America.  Whenever you rely on stereotypes, like the “educated types” who wax on about “white privilege”, you erect barriers to ever reaching the very goals you think you’re working to achieve.

It’s not about making race the central theme at the dinner table, but to learn to make a seat at the table and feed as many people as possible that will lead us to the fulfillment of Martin Luther King’s dream.  Only by taking the time to get to know people, can you ever find out who they are.  People will surprise you, if you let them.  She told me that she won a motorcycle in a raffle recently, but she traded it in for a new Harley-Davidson trike.  She ended our conversation by telling me, her husband doesn’t have to ask her twice if she wants to ride, because she has always loved to ride motorcycles.

5 Comments

Filed under Culture Wars, Education, Food for Thought, Politics

A few quick links

Ed Driscoll at PJ Media offers several excellent video clips of Obama and top dems lying about Obamacare. (here)

Gay parent laments on her real life roadblocks to living life with kids true to her politically liberal ideology.  You can feel her angst as she admits that she allowed her son to become a Cub Scout.   Oh the horrors, she confesses that pack has helped her shy son develop much needed social skills and even more – the pack is doing good things in the community.  (story here)

A short article at New English Review,  The Stupidest Generation, by Larry Eubank illuminating the many signs that point to our declining ability to speak and write at a grade school level. (here)

“Al Qaeda has metastasized” according to this SFGate article, “Al Qaeda cancer spreading worldwide”.  Now a libertybelle flashback from May 2013 on this very subject,America at the crossroads.

Leave a comment

Filed under Culture Wars, Foreign Policy, General Interest, Islam, Politics

Danger Will Robinson Danger…

“Danger Will Robinson Danger…”  Just like in the 60s TV show, Lost In Space, now is not the time to trust our President, who behaves much like the cowardly Dr. Smith  (who actually was a foreign agent) with lies and  finger-pointing for the meteor storm that Obamacare created.  Although, the Affordable Care Act debacle feels almost like a gift to those opposed to socialized medicine, from previous experience this isn’t a time to gloat, claim ideological victory or become complacent, because the real fight hasn’t even begun.  As implementation failures escalate, the proponents of socialized medicine will resort to brazen attempts to force single-payer (total government control) of healthcare as the sensible, only practical recourse to “fix” the huge mess their very policy has created.  If Republicans take this issue seriously, the only option they should insist upon is a total repeal of this unworkable behemoth.  It remains to be seen if the political movers in the GOP can see beyond their own shallow political interests and really take this kind of stand, but failure to do so will unleash an unstoppable, derailment of the entire American healthcare train, which will happen over months.  This lengthy collapse will offer the Obama administration and the loyal Democratic party faithful many opportunities to spin the story and defuse, confuse and accuse, placing the blame on the GOP, the Tea Party, the evil insurance companies,  GWB, anyone who is not for socialized medicine.

Leave a comment

Filed under Culture Wars, Politics