Posted by caleb on Sep 12, 2008 in
Uncategorized
I love the article from yesterday’s USA Today entitled “Feminist template obliterated” and authored by Kathleen Parker, because it is, thankfully, very true. You see, many women in America, at least from what they tell me, have become increasingly fed up with groups such as Code Pink and Planned Parenthood who claim to represent all women. In reality, however, they really only support those who fit their mold and agree to further the liberal mindset, as we have learned in recent weeks. Anyone else check out last week’s US Weekly or People covers? She’s sure causing a ruckus. They apparently don’t like to mess with superfluous things like facts, I guess. I commend the ensuing outrage- the “silent majority” has spoken and its leader is Sarah Palin.
It should be obvious why: Palin is breaking down gender barriers and shattering “politically correct” (and just plain incorrect ones, too) views of women, because she doesn’t try to be a man; she is utterly and completely female, and that’s okay. It’s like I said in a previous article, men and women are different, but haven’t we learned by now that differences are what make us stronger? Gov. Palin is a strong woman who sticks to her guns (yes, the real ones, too) and stands firm on her policy issues. Unlike the “model” (liberal) woman, she’s not pro-choice and she believes God runs the show. She fights corruption, she runs a state, she helps parent her five children, but she doesn’t apologize for her femininity, she embraces it, and that’s what will win the election for her and for McCain. Actually, let me rephrase that. That’s what will win the election for America.
Because it shouldn’t be about how men are better than women or about how women are better than men. We each are good at certain things because of who we are, individually. It’s more like, “Sarah Palin really is good at all those things they say she’s good at, like hunting, politics, taking down the bad guys, and raising her family. Oh, and, by the way, she’s a woman.” This is America! It should be just fine for women to be independent and capable, and basically as opposite as possible to a Stepford Wife.
Women of America, I hope you don’t mind if I say I hope you’ve found your voice in Sarah Barracuda. If she’s the face of the future of the American Women, I think the future is bright. Perhaps our nation really will be spared the resounding defeat that is Barack Obama. Honestly, I think she and McCain are the only two that can do it.
Tags: Code Pink, evil, mccain, obama, Palin, Planned Parenthood, women
Posted by caleb on Sep 11, 2008 in
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Seven years ago today, our very notion of what is true and fair came under attack when Muslim terrorist groups launched a wide-scale attack on our nation. They meant to bring our nation down, economically and ideologically. Today’s USA Today put it most succinctly when they said the terrorists’ message was all about hate and, more specifically, hatred toward America.
Thousands of people died that day, and our world as a whole was shaken. Truly, our lives changed that morning in September, and they’re not going back to the way they were. It’s simply not possible. The dangers are too real and are too close to home. According to NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg, the attacks were too close to home for the whole world, saying “Citizens of more than 95 countries and territories” lost their lives that day.
JFK said, “Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country.” I believe the acts of normal, everyday men and women from all walks of life exemplified that statement on 9/11. From the heroes of Flight 93 to the countless firefighters, police officers, relief and aid workers, and ordinary bystanders who gave their all to raise others above self, I give you my utmost gratitude. Thank you, and may you never be forgotten.
Tags: 9/11, attacks, country, heroes, patriotism
Posted by caleb on Sep 9, 2008 in
Uncategorized
I believe in limited government.
I believe in lower taxes.
I believe in a strong military.
I believe every vote counts.
I believe we should be environmentally smart without going overboard.
I believe in free markets.
I believe in a future of hope for our nation.
I believe in the necessity of Christian leaders.
I believe in the First and Second Amendments.
I believe in the static nature of the Constitution.
I believe in the value of privatization.
I believe in individual freedoms.
I believe in personal property.
I believe in the ability of Americans to be anything they set their minds on.
What are your conservative beliefs? How should McCain and Palin lead our nation to victory?
Tags: conservative, government
Posted by caleb on Sep 7, 2008 in
Uncategorized
FoxNews.com is reporting that the latest Gallup Daily Tracking poll, released today. John McCain now leads Barack Obama 48-45, the largest lead he has ever had over the Senator from Illinois. While the Fox website says McCain’s lead is still within the poll’s ±2% margin of error, that math doesn’t look quite right to me. 48-45 looks like a dead-even race, but also like a 1% lead out of the margin for McCain.
Apparently, this is the bounce (or at least part of it) that the McCain-Palin team received from their convention in St. Paul. While I would have liked to have seen something a little larger than 3%, it is still respectable, considering Barack Obama only received 4% and the second convention usually receives a smaller bounce.

McCain leads Obama 48-45 in most recent Gallup Daily Tracking Poll
The poll surveyed 2,765 registered voters and was completed two days after the last day of the RNCC, according, at least, to Gallup. Fox says it was completed the last day of the RNCC. That means this did include both Gov. Palin’s and Sen. McCain’s speeches, maybe. Gallup does say the most accurate measurement of the convention bounce will come with the poll released tomorrow.
Gallup says this is the largest lead McCain has had over Obama since May.
Tags: mccain, obama, presidential election
Posted by caleb on Sep 7, 2008 in
Uncategorized
Arizona Senator John S. McCain gave his acceptance speech for the GOP Nomination for President of the United States a few nights ago in St. Paul, MN at the Republican National Convention. It’s been said by the Fox News Channel that more people watched McCain’s speech than watch Barack Obama’s, an accomplishment few would have thought possible a week ago, before Sarah Palin stepped onto the scene. While Gov. Palin is an incredible individual whom I greatly respect and support, it is the top of the ticket that must provide the utmost leadership for America. John McCain delivered beautifully.
To quote one of McCain’s commercials, “Washington is broken. John McCain knows it.” In the Xcel Center, John McCain lined out for American people his hopeful and forward-looking plans for the future. He said, ” In America, we change things that need to be changed.” He promised real reform and progress in government and help for the everyday American family. He said, “We lost their trust when we [the former GOP Congress] valued our power over their principles. [Gov. Palin and I are] going to change that.” I believe him, too, because of his increasingly apparent “maverick-style” ability to work against the Party (when necessary) and instead do what is right for the country. In other words, McCain is the leader we need for putting “Country First.” The man himself said it best, “…I’ve been called a maverick… what it really means is I understand who I work for… not a party, … for you.”
Sen. McCain also promised to fight so-called “pork barrel” spending in Congress by vetoing anything that resembles earmarks. Of the those that ask for them, he said, “You will know their names.” He feels it will be his duty, as President, to report to you those who try to wastefully spend your money. And frankly, he’s sick of it. As a Senator, John McCain has never asked for a single earmark. He is fully and faithfully committed to fiscal responsibility in the government. Now, some preach the benefits of earmarks, saying many local and state projects wouldn’t ever be completed without them. John McCain seems to feel that there are better ways to go about acquiring federal funds, like putting those requests and monetary disbursements out in the open, so the American people can see them for what they truly are. Only reforms such as these will serve to break the chokehold lobbyists have on Congress.
As for education in America, teachers and parents, alike, should be rejoicing and throwing themselves fully behind Senator John S. McCain’s plan for education reformation. I honestly believe that President Bush had the right general idea for greater accountability when he introduced the No Child Left Behind legislation, but as a person who had to endure seven years of schooling under it, I can testify to its many shortcomings. Students must be accountable, as well. Teachers need the authority to discipline them. Students must take responsibility for their own education. Ultimately, it is they who will have to live with their choice of how hard they studied and how much they applied themselves when the opportunity presented itself. To illustrate this struggle, Sen. McCain put it this way: “Education is the civil rights issue of this century.”
Teachers are being blamed for their failure of their slacker students. While on the surface it appears that the gap between lower-achieving and higher achieving students is decreasing, the numbers are misleading. Many special education students (not all, mind you, but anecdotally a large number) have discovered that because of this legislation and the concessions it makes, they don’t actually have to work hard to succeed, at least in school. This in turn means that teachers (due to increased mainstreaming) must teach to a lower and lower target level in the classroom. Thus, the gap is narrowing, because it is no longer the lower students being left behind, it’s the upper students, the gifted students and the ones who have above average intelligence who are, while those below them hardly move up academically at all. When these either frustrated or slacking students fail the state-mandated standardized tests and cause their school to lose AYP approval, the teachers are the ones who are sacked, and many of them are wonderful, 25 year+ teachers who were simply the victims of a failed system. John McCain promises to change all of that.
He wants to remove those barriers for qualified teachers and open up more funding for private and charter schools and options for parents who want to send their children to institutions such as those. For teachers who truly don’t make the grade, and for workers whose jobs have disappeared forever, he will increase funding to community colleges to help them retrain for either a more permanent job or one more suited to their skills, talents, and abilities. “We’re going to help workers, who’ve lost a job that won’t come back, find a new one that won’t go away.” In terms of those outsourced jobs, McCain says he’ll “…help American companies compete and keep jobs from going overseas.” He says “It’s time for us to show the world, again, how Americans lead.” John McCain believes firmly in the principles of work, and is against the entitlement society left-wing liberals and Democrats seem to be pushing for, saying, “We believe in government that gives you the choices to do the best you can.”
His other main theme was the fight for America. He told the cheering crowds in Minnesota he is “…running for President to keep the country I love safe” and to keep other families from losing loved ones to war. John McCain knows the threats facing our country are real and everyday grow closer to home. He wants “… a freer, safer, more prosperous world” and he’ll go about accomplishing that by fighting for freedom and democracy diplomatically, and as a last-resort option, militarily, across the globe. “We’ve faced many dangerous threats in this world, but I’m not afraid of them. I’m prepared for them … I have the scars to prove it.”
Senator John S. McCain will be our next President. I have no doubt in this soon-to-be fact, but it will only occur if the American people continue the excitement gained from the Republican National Convention last week in St. Paul. Without John McCain, I’m not sure we’ll even be able to call this great nation the “United States of America” any more. It might need a “Socialist” or “Communist” prefix with an Obama presidency.
I’ll leave you with some inspirational words from our next president:
In a rallying cry for America, he said, “I will fight for her [the USA] as long as I draw a breath… Fight. Fight. Fight. Fight with me. Fight for what’s right for our country’s future… Stand up and fight. We’re Americans. We never give up. We never quit. We never run from history. We make history.”
Tags: mccain, obama, Palin, President, presidential election, Vice President
Posted by caleb on Sep 5, 2008 in
Uncategorized
Two nights ago was the national coming out party for Alaska Governor and GOP Vice Presidential Nominee Sarah Palin. The expectations were high; this upstart governor from Alaska had been a surprise choice by Senator John McCain just days before, and not many people knew much about her. That didn’t stop the attacks by the leftist-liberal media, though. They checked her out from top to bottom, as we expect and appreciate, but when they found nothing at all fishy with her record, they took their biased attacks personal.
First, they attacked her for being, what they called, a “bad mother” for choosing to have a life separate from her kids. They say she won’t have time to take care of them and be Vice President. I don’t know about you, but if I ever said that about any woman, I’d be crucified, right on the spot. Most women I know are just as capable as men, but there’s my point. We’ve got to stop looking at gender as the deciding factor on a person’s abilities. Individual women are better at certain things, just as individual men are better at certain things. We all have a specific niche that we fill, but not as a gender group; we fit because of who we are.
So in other words, bunk, bunk, bunk on Sarah Palin not being able to have a family and be second-in-command. Previous Vice Presidents have done it! Why should a woman be any different? It’s true men and women handle things differently, but unless I’ve just been living under a rock all of my life, fathers helped create their children, and they should have a major part in raising them.
With all of that (and more) coming at Gov. Palin before her national debut, one can imagine the stress she felt and the anticipation the rest of the world felt. Republicans and other conservatives waited with huge excitement and anxiousness that she would pull it off without a hitch. Left wingers watched and licked their chops, waiting to jump in a tear her to pieces should she even stutter. She didn’t, which is more than can be said for Senator Obama, who is tied to his teleprompter. From what I’ve heard, Gov. Palin’s teleprompter didn’t work right throughout the entire speech. She couldn’t read any of the first two lines on the screen, and so did most of it extemporaneously, or at least from memory. She did have a slightly-rumpled copy of it on the podium, but one didn’t see her use it that much. Oh, and the pitbull joke? It was probably the line that will be most remembered from the entire speech. That, my friends (to quote the next President of the USA, John McCain), was an ad lib!
So, Sarah Palin took the stage with all of that pressure upon her, and she shone beautifully. She was incredible and beyond impressive. She took to the stage with an aura of power and confidence surrounding her. As Brit Hume said, she is one of the few “who make it look easy.” And she did, without a doubt. She came, and she delivered the Republican Party to John McCain. Even on her premiere night, she took swings at Barry, saying, “I guess a small-town mayor is sort of like a ‘community organizer,’ except that you have actual responsibilities.” The crowd leapt to its feet in support and applause.
Barack Obama responded the next day after leaving an interview with Bill O’Reilly, saying that organizing communities really is the same thing as being a mayor. In fact, he points out that his duties as a person “who brought people together” equaled those of Gov. Palin, who ran the city of Wasilla, AK and then, while he was a do-nothing Senator in a do-nothing Congress, became Governor of her entire state! Another bunk goes to Obama. He is truly feeling the burn. He even went as far to say (in the midst of incessant stuttering) that the GOP has no agenda but to attack him. What? That sounds a little self-centered and self-conscious to me. The GOP has a plenty big enough agenda, starting with an actual plan for energy independence, tax breaks, education, and true reform in Washington. In the meantime, calls from the leftist media for McCain to replace Palin were replaced with calls from the same leftist media for Obama to replace Biden! I agree with Rush Limbaugh what said last night on FNC. Just the fact that this media is even discussing this idea means the Obama camp is, too. And why not? Gov. Palin’s historic and magnificent speech garnered 37 million viewers, just a paltry 1 million less than Obama’s speech at the Invesco Center.
Palin, in her speech, unabashedly proclaimed her support for the Pro-Life movement and told parents of children with special needs, “You will have an an advocate in Washington.” Palin, 44, is the mother of Trig Palin, an infant she chose to carry full term and deliver earlier this year, even though he had been diagnosed with Down Syndrome in utero. She also pushed forward with the reform mantra, telling the media that it didn’t bother her that she wasn’t a member in good standing of the “Washington Elite.” Gov. Palin told the crowds she wasn’t going to Washington to be part of the in-crowd. She was going to help fix Washington; according to Palin, her boss is the American people.
With a clear voice and an unforgettable message, Palin did in one night what it has taken Barack Obama nineteen months: she won over the hearts of the American people. Yes, the Obama-Biden ticket is popular, and will be hard to defeat, but the truth is, they’re scared of the Barracuda. And let me tell you, they’ve got a reason to be.
McCain-Palin 08
More over at McCain Blogs.
Tags: barracuda, biden, community organizer, mayor, mccain, obama, Palin, President, presidential election, rush limbaugh, Vice President
Posted by caleb on Sep 4, 2008 in
Uncategorized
I’ll blog more on this later, but I just wanted to get out a quick update to let you all know what I thought of Governor Sarah Palin’s acceptance speech tonight. In a word, incredible. In a few more, I think we’ve just heard from the next Vice President of the United States of America. In the words of Fox News Channel, “A star has been born in the Republican Party tonight…”
I also watched Mike Huckabee‘s speech. It was magnificent, as well, and I think his support, and the support of the movement he’s begun with HuckPAC will help elect McCain-Palin to the White House.
I’ll post back tomorrow with a full opinion, but now I’ve got to get some sleep. Whew! What a wonderful night!
Tags: conservative, Fox News, Huckabee, HuckPAC, mccain, Palin, President, presidential election, Republican, speech, Vice President
Posted by caleb on Sep 3, 2008 in
Uncategorized
Let me just say this upfront: I think we need to end our dependence on foreign energy, especially foreign oil. However, for the Pickens Plan to be successful, they’ve got to get their numbers right.
T. Boone Pickens has a commercial running that says America uses 25% of the world’s oil and they since we only possess 3% of the world’s oil reserves, drilling isn’t going to be that significant.
However, his math’s a little bit off. It’s a fact that America uses 25% of the world’s oil available, as in drilled, processed and refined resources, that much is true. What’s slanted is the idea that the 3% number he’s quoting is related. That 3% number refers to the world’s oil reserves, or supply that isn’t in production and may not have even been drilled yet. It doesn’t refer to the amount that is usable today!
America has billions and billions if untapped oil resources that we need to drill and need to drill now. All of this can be done in am environmentally safe way.
The Pickens Plan is great, don’t get me wrong, bit only if it presents the facts in a more accurate manner. We need his ideas, but he shouldn’t be so quick to dismiss something he doesn’t correctly report.
Tags: cng, energy, pickens
Posted by caleb on Sep 2, 2008 in
Uncategorized
As many of you know, until the end in March I was an ardent Huckabee for President supporter. I campaigned for Huck up and down the web and even made telephone calls for him. In fact, up until McCain’s announcement on Friday, I supported Gov. Huckabee for the vice presidential nomination. He was my first pick.
What many of you probably don’t know is that once Huckabee dropped out, I began to begrudgingly “support” McCain, but only in the fact that I was going to vote for him. I had no intentions whatsoever of campaigning for him. He was too liberal for my tastes and didn’t really seem to have the leadership necessary for the highest position in the land. In reality, I was more or less voting against Obama. Because of my disaffection for Senator McCain, I was eagerly waiting on his pick for the VP nomination. Only a true conservative pick was going to get me fired up.
It was, in fact, a blessing in disguise that Sen. McCain waited until Friday to announce. It gave me time to reconsider his policies and his issues. Actually, it seemed like it gave McCain the needed time to really streamline his policies and hit his streak. In the past few weeks, he has really gotten his act together. The stronger he sounded on television with his ads against Obama and the stronger he sounded in his speeches, the more I realized that McCain really could win this thing, and he would probably do it with my support.
Then came last Friday when Senator McCain of Arizona made his two best political decisions ever. First, he announced that he would be announcing his VP pick on Friday at noon, right after Barack Obama’s historic speech. Second, he really delivered by announcing my second choice for VP, Governor Sarah Palin of Alaska, as his vice presidential running mate, wiping out any Obama media coverage. Sen. McCain really couldn’t have picked a better time to announce, nor could he have picked a better running mate.
Gov. Palin has a proven track record of reform and integrity and has true conservative grit. Face it, there is no one else who could oust corrupt (but highly popular) incumbents at the city and state levels. After serving ten years for the citizens of Wasilla, AK, first as a council member and then as mayor, she became the Chairwoman of the Alaska Oil and Natural Gas Commission. That first statewide position didn’t work out well for the ruling class, as it never has for anyone when Gov. Palin is around. She quickly blew the whistle on major corruption involving the government and oil companies with Alaskan interests. In fact, she resigned her position shortly after accepting it in protest of the ineffectiveness of the current administrations corruption battle.
Palin believed she could do a better job, so she ran for governor of the whole state. In a resounding victory, she became the youngest and first female governor of the State of Alaska in 2006. Governor Palin has become the country’s most popular governor and accomplished many of her campaign goals, all while being highly involved in her five children’s lives, most recently giving birth to a child whom she knew would be born with Down’s Syndrome. Obviously, Palin is adamantly Pro-Life. Raised in a Christian home, she has held true to her morals. As a hunter and fisher, she vehemently supports Second Amendment rights and environmental conservatism when drilling for much needed oil. She believes in a limited government and in limited government involvement. She knows we, as Americans, can take care of ourselves and our fellow citizen. Truly, Sarah Palin understands “real” America. She’s been there. She knows. And she’ll take it all the way to the White House.
McCain-Palin 08.
Related thoughts at McCain Blogs.
Tags: 2008, election, mccain, Palin, President