IRATENINJA.COM

An Irate-Nation.com Project

U.S. GOVERNMENT BANS FREEDOM OF SPEECH AND RELIGON!!!! H.R. 1388 PASSED!!!

Ω

THE U.S. GOVERNMENT HAS PASSED H.R. 1388 OR ‘GIVE’ ACT. DEMANDING CITIZENS 18-25 SERVE IN YOUTH CORPS. OR DOMESTIC ARMY SEPARATE FROM OUR MILITARY, BANNING RELIGION, AND ENDING FREEDOM OF SPEECH.

This bill has become law. It was signed by Barack Obama. [Last Updated: Jun 27, 2010 http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=h111-1388

Filed under: 411, Activism, american politics, anti-american, Communism, Congress, elections, Free Speech, indoctrination, Liberal, Liberty, Marxism, Politics, Prayer, Presidency, Religion, Truth, Video, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

It Seems Like The Toughest Thing To Do Is Support The President

The main thing I wanna do nowadays is say something that could help ease the pressure off the Executive. Things seem to be going better in Iraq; the economy is excellent; I’m still thrilled about things like the Mexico City policy and the campaigning he did in the election prior to this last one that brought Republicans into office.

Perhaps the main obstacle to recognizing that the President has done anything right isn’t on the Left or the Right. Conspiracy theory can’t go anywhere, after all, if people don’t believe it. And criticisms of the President don’t have to add up to a complete repudiation of the President’s policies.

Maybe the main obstacle is the composition of Congress. Listening to Senator Biden the other day made me want to throw up. I asserted shortly afterward that he sounded like the sort of blowhard that brags way too much in bars and gets every woman to turn far, far away from him.

Now I’m thinking that he, like the rest of Congress, didn’t just get the idea of “let’s throw lots of facts that may or may not add up at people to show how smart and concerned we are, instead of admitting we’re a bunch of wusses” from nowhere. This particular style of “argument” – bullying people with information that may or may not be true – isn’t just characteristic of idiots at bars.

It’s also the hallmark of dealing with overconfident all-knowing arrogant old people, which Congress represents all too well.

I should make it clear I love the elderly, and find them very engaging and thoughtful for the most part. And I owe people older than me quite a lot, and I’ve seen a number of them age well and I’d be happy if I aged half that well.

It is because of old people I know something. It’s because I owe so much to one segment that I have to rail against this other segment.

I think all of us know exactly what segment of the elderly I’m talking about right now.

This is the segment which only knows how to “geeze” – as Dave Barry said, regarding “how to geeze,” these are people that pick one speed for their car, and keep that speed whether in the driveway or on the interstate.

Instead of term limits, can we get an age restriction on people in Congress? I mean, this is ridiculous – at least the jerk at the bar can be made to shut up if someone bigger than him stares hard at him. But Granny and Grandpa are immune to the threat of confrontation, because they’ve got nothing to lose, and heck, I don’t want to get strangled by a hearing aid cord.

The key difference between Congress, the old people that like to hear themselves talk & bullies, and the older people that mean genuinely well, is that one set of people want to be right just for the sake of being right.

The other group wants to give to others, and wants a legacy of charity.

In a sense, these two groups of older people are symbolic for the value of knowledge: either we want to say we’re right for an ego boost or power only, or we want to be right because there’s far more on the line.

Perhaps the key is that instead of an age restriction, we should go find those who are older that are living their lives well – not just being active or being loud about politics, but instead giving back to their families, doing the best for others who are worse off – and let’s have them run. Let’s get people in politics who want nothing to do with politics, because they know how life is meant to be lived, and understand how difficult it is to do anything well.

Powered by ScribeFire.

Filed under: Congress, Double Standards, Presidency

North American union plan headed to Congress in fall

Via: World Net Daily

WASHINGTON – A powerful think tank chaired by former Sen. Sam Nunn and guided by trustees including Richard Armitage, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Harold Brown, William Cohen and Henry Kissinger, is in the final stages of preparing a report to the White House and U.S. Congress on the benefits of integrating the U.S., Mexico and Canada into one political, economic and security bloc.

The final report, published in English, Spanish and French, is scheduled for submission to all three governments by Sept. 30, according to the Center for Strategic & International Studies.

CSIS boasts of playing a large role in the passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement in 1994 – a treaty that set in motion a political movement many believe resembles the early stages of the European Community on its way to becoming the European Union.

“The results of the study will enable policymakers to make sound, strategic, long-range policy decisions about North America, with an emphasis on regional integration,” explains Armand B. Peschard-Sverdrup, director of CSIS’ Mexico Project. “Specifically, the project will focus on a detailed examination of future scenarios, which are based on current trends, and involve six areas of critical importance to the trilateral relationship: labor mobility, energy, the environment, security, competitiveness and border infrastructure and logistics.”  Read More Here

Filed under: 411, anti-americanism, Border Control, Congress, Illegal Aliens, Immigration, National Security, News, Uncategorized

Mexicans Fear Immigration Plan Moving Through Congress

MONTERREY, Mexico – Many in Mexico expressed disappointment Friday with the U.S. Congress’ immigration reform proposal, arguing it doesn’t let enough Mexicans enter the United States legally to work, while focusing on an arduous path to residency for those who have already taken the illegal path.

Mexican news media and activists attacked what they viewed as a measure to limit the number of seasonal workers allowed into the United States — even as the compromise’s proponents said it would let in many more.

Read more here: foxnews.com

Filed under: Activism, Congress, Illegal Aliens, Immigration, News, Uncategorized

DEMOCRATS TO CHANGE 185 YEAR-OLD HOUSE RULE TO ALLOW TAX HIKES WITHOUT HAVING TO VOTE

In a stunning move, House Democrats today revealed they will attempt to rewrite House rules that have gone unchanged since 1822 in order to make it possible to increase taxes and government spending without having to vote and be held accountable.  House Republican Leader John Boehner (R-OH) today vowed Republicans will use every available means to fight this unprecedented change.

Read more here: corner.nationalreview.com

Filed under: american politics, Congress, Democrats, Double Standards, liberal agenda, News, Pelosi, Uncategorized

Al Qaeda Membership Has its Privileges

Democrats in Congress are again pushing an effort to extend U.S. Constitutional protections to all the people of the world. Well, not all the people in the world, just the ones that are fanatically dedicated to slaughtering any and all Americans. If you’re not an Islamic terrorist obsessed with the wholesale murder of Americans, then you need not apply for the generous habeas corpus protections.

Astonishing as it may seem, congressional democrats are struggling in a time of war to find the best way to create an unprecedented package of legal benefits that will apply exclusively to the avowed enemies of the United States. It’s sort of a rewards plan for members of al Qaeda, and those who are of like mind. Ironically, they do this even as they look for a way to abandon the notion of bringing democracy to millions of people who have been brutally oppressed by despotic regimes and Islamic terrorist butchers whose contempt for such quaint legal concepts is well documented. Read More Here: Human Events

Filed under: american politics, Congress, Democrats, War On Terror

A Longish Rant: Good Candidates Don’t Listen to the Blogosphere

One thing that is always on my mind is how we can improve the current stock of candidates for public office generally. This line of thought also goes hand-in-hand with how we can get better bureaucrats, although I should say I think most people who work in the US government aren’t bad people at all. In India, for example, one has to bribe every other person in order to get things done (they say that’s changing. They also say Sanjaya can sing).

Perhaps we should learn something from our Leftist friends in this endeavor. They’ve wanted candidates to be more responsive to them, and they’ve gotten exactly what they desired – a bunch of nasty, incompetent scumwads in Congress playing on their worst passions in order to obstruct the Bush administration merely for the heck of it. If you’re a Lefty and don’t believe this, look at Pat Leahy. Does he stand for anything besides attacking Republicans?

I mean, seriously. If I were a Leftist, I’d have to be mad at the way things are going. Then again, I’d be a Lefty with an agenda: I’d want greater youth involvement in voting and initiatives to educate and work with them; I’d want more money spent on the cities and an auditing system for local police and local elections at the federal level. I’d be aiming to turn this place into a welfare state, but I’d do it by deficit spending and lowering taxes, and hope that the long term returns could fund whatever project I had in mind.

Now I’m not a Lefty, but I don’t think it takes a genius to figure out that the Democrats in Congress and running for President have no agenda besides “war is bad, if you hate war, vote for us.” And that’s the positive part of their spiel.

I think it’s time to see that populist rage through the blogosphere created this monster whereby people manipulate themselves. There’s no discussion about policy occurring on the Left, no attempt to seriously appraise proposals or plan anything. At least some on the Right try – to defend the President’s policy, for example, is to contemplate what that policy could do, good or bad. To attack is far easier, because attacking can be character assassination, and I think we can see that 99% of the conspiracy theory that passes for information on the Net reduces to “Bush strangles little kittens.”

What we can learn from the Left is that while positive criteria for a candidate is hard to come by, one criterion that’s critical is the ability of a candidate to ignore the baser elements in his party.

While I know all of us are rational, I think it’s a good thing we’re ignored if that means conservative candidates are ignoring much of the blogosphere. There’s a lot of stuff out here on the Right I know none of us want to be associated with – in my case, don’t bring those arguments for secession or states’ rights anywhere near me. I know what that’s code for, and it’s not a legitimate part of political discourse in any sense.

I suppose then I need to say what the value of the blogosphere is, if we can’t influence candidates directly.

I’d actually say the value is more important than dealing with individual candidates and exercising power – if we get to know each other as Americans, isn’t that something? There’s a poem of Emily Dickinson’s I like to cite in which I think she takes the idea there is no God literally, and comes to the conclusion that what is divine in that case is the time we spend with each other (perhaps it is my taking that idea seriously that has led me to missing my exes way too much).

Powered by ScribeFire.

Filed under: american politics, Congress, Democrats, elections, liberalism

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.