Showing posts with label GOP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GOP. Show all posts

Thursday, April 18, 2013

I’m ashamed

 

Gun laws

I have been a registered Republican my entire voting life.

I confess to voting split tickets and have no objection to loudly supporting better qualified candidate of a different party.

But today I am embarrassed and ashamed of the Republicans in Congress.

They aren’t “real” Republicans; they are National Rifle Association (NRA) flunkies.

I’ve owned guns for years. I fired a .22 rifle at age 6 and since have fired a number of other rifles, revolvers, pistols, and Derringers. I have never shot anyone even when legally allowed. I did my time, voluntarily, in the U.S. armed forces.

While I prefer to hunt with a camera, I understand hunters armed with rifles and bows.

What I FAIL to understand is the need for a hunter to have a fully automatic rifle with a 30-round clip or a person in need of self-defense with a fully automatic pistol with a high-capacity clip.

Nor do I understand the need for armor-piercing shells.

Caveat: My Number 1 Son is a cop, and while his enlightened department issues and insists that all its officers wear “bullet resistant” vests, the vests won’t stop an AK-47’s bullet nor an armor-piercing bullet.

The Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution – all 27 words of it – states simply that “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”

That would suggest that a person who was a member of “a well regulated Militia” had the right to “keep and bear arms.”

Given our love of guns for hunting and, unfortunately the need for self defense (there simply are too few cops and they take too long to get where they are needed), U.S. citizens have enjoyed the right to own firearms.

Since the U.S. does have a standing military and reserves (both with a capital “R” and as each state’s National Guard), it seems in my mind that the average citizen has no justifiable need for a fully automatic weapon with a high-capacity clip; in other words, Joe (and Jane) Citizen isn’t going to be defending the nation from invading armies.

If we – American citizens – fear a take-over by invading hordes or a megalomaniacal Commander in Chief, a/k/a President of the United States (POTUS) sending troops to take away (more of) our Constitutional and States rights, then using semi-automatic – or even single-shot – weapons with standard clips of 8-to-10 rounds could provide the citizens with sufficient fire power to overcome enough of the “enemy” to acquire the enemies’ (fully automatic) weapons. Heck, this can be achieved with a decent hunting bow and suitable arrows.

I am NOT in favor of banning firearms a la New York City where only the villains have guns; we see that this encourages crime rather than reduces it.

I am not necessarily in favor of registering allowable (semi-automatic and single-shot) firearms and clips.

I most assuredly AM in favor of national background checks of potential weapons purchasers and I AM in favor of a ban on fully automatic weapons and a ban on large-capacity clips.

No one seems to object to a limit on the number of shells a shotgun can hold, and - for the most part - a shotgun is either (a) a hunting gun or (b) a defensive weapon and no one seems to be pushing for a full automatic 12-gauge shotgun.

Further, there seems no loud complaint that functional machine guns, mortars, Howitzers, and similar weapons are restricted to military ownership and use even though the NRA defends the rights – apparently of anyone, citizen or not – to own assault weapons with high-capacity clips.

By the way, what, pray, is the difference between a true machine gun and a fully automatic rifle other than bullet capacity?

To be fair, none of the recent disasters – see Senior Legislative Attorney Janet L. Kaminski Leduc’s report to the Connecticut General Assembly at http://www.cga.ct.gov/2013/rpt/2013-R-0057.htm - have been caused by fully automatic weapons. The report did not specify if high-capacity clips were used with semi-automatic rifles and pistols.

In an article titled Twelve facts about guns and mass shootings in the United States at http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2012/12/14/nine-facts-about-guns-and-mass-shootings-in-the-united-states/ , author Ezra Klein

• Cites a study by Richard Florida that concludes that “Deaths are significantly lower in states with stricter gun control legislation. Though the sample sizes are small, we find substantial negative correlations between firearm deaths and states that ban assault weapons (-.45), require trigger locks (-.42), and mandate safe storage requirements for guns (-.48).”

• Includes, as a graphic, results an August CNN/ORC poll that asked respondents whether they favor or oppose a number of specific policies to restrict gun ownership. Unfortunately, as with most poll results, no demographics are provided and the phrasing of the questions was omitted, making the results suspect and arguable regardless of an individual's position on gun control.

The poll, keeping the above caveat in mind, indicated that the gun control measure most favored was a requirement for background checks. Closely behind this was a prohibition of gun sales to the mentally ill and felons (with neither “mentally ill” nor “felon” defined). Other popular measures were gun registration, a ban on high-capacity clips, a ban on semi-automatic weapons, and a limit on the number of guns per individual.

I suppose the NRA’s position on any gun control is that once “the camel gets its nose in the tent” the rest (of the camel) will quickly follow; in other words, if any gun control laws are passed, more restrictive laws will follow.

That may not necessarily be true.

IN Florida the main concerns are protecting children, preferably by keeping a weapon out of sight and out of reach or, failing that, storing the weapon in a gun safe or, minimally, using a trigger lock to prevent the weapon from firing. In a vehicle, a gun owner may carry the weapon inside a private vehicle as long as it remains secured in the trunk, inside a gun case, inside a closed box, or inside a closed glove compartment.

Against that, Florida concealed carry permits are relatively easy to acquire, albeit for a fee. The state does not require a permit to purchase a weapon or gun registration, nor does it ban assault weapons (e.g. AK-47) according to a Wikipedia entry at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_Laws_in_Florida .

My personal “bottom line” is that we DO need some gun control laws. The most important is having a national background check. It’s simply too easy and too common for a person in State A to relocate to State B to buy a weapon there that the person could not buy in State A due to a criminal or mental health issue. At the same time, both criminal and mental health issues need to be clearly defined. A case of obsessive-compulsive disorder is hardly the same as paranoid schizophrenia; likewise shoplifting is far different from battery or any crime with a weapon of any type.

If the Janet L. Kaminski Leduc report, ibid., is accurate, a ban on assault rifles is a waste of time. Most of the shootings were done with semi-automatics.

The idea of limiting the number of guns owned by an individual is worth consideration. But that means gun registration that both the NRA and this scrivener oppose.

Unfortunately, the people we sent to Washington seem to prefer extremist obstinacy to working for the welfare of the country; perhaps they just are working for their self-defined owners at the expense of their constituents.







Thursday, September 6, 2012

G-d, Jerusalem, and the DNC


 

According to Agence France Presse (AFP), "President Barack Obama was the one who on Wednesday ordered his Democratic party to reinsert references to G-d and Jerusalem in their party platform, AFP reported.

"The report hinted that the move was not too pleasing to party members.

"A campaign official told AFP that the president, who has been hammered by Republicans who see him as too tough on Israel, personally intervened to have language on Jerusalem, a feature of past party platforms, restored. "

The AFP article also noted that when the delegates were asked to vote to include G-d and Jerusalem, the "nays" (against inclusion) appeared to match the "ayes."

See the CNN video at http://www.whitehousedossier.com/2012/09/05/delegates-oppose-adding-god-jerusalem-platform/; there is a 30-second commercial to ignore before the vote video commences.

Now comes the interesting part.

Who is in chair of the DNC?

A person who claims, on her government Web site biography, to be the "The first Jewish Congresswoman ever elected from Florida," Representative Debbie Wassermann-Schultz.

Rep. Wasserman-Schultz' claim to Jewish fame is that she "introduced a resolution, which passed the House of Representatives and called on the President to declare an annual Jewish American Heritage Month."

Rep. Wasserman-Schultz seems - based on her response to constituents' appeals for assistance regarding Israel issues - to limit herself to introducing non-essential resolutions in Congress. When asked to help a local family cut bureaucratic red tape to allow the family's son-in-law to join his American bride, she ignored the appeal.


Congressman Allen West, the Republican in the adjacent congressional district, did manage to cut through the State Department's continuing anti-Jewish and anti-Israel delaying tactics.

Given her apparent unwillingness to touch anything "Israel" and the absence of both G-d and Jerusalem in the DNC platform, it's no surprise that Obama had to insist on inserting the changes.

But one has to suspect that Obama only is giving lip service to the Jerusalem plank since on July 26, 2012, White House press secretary Jay Carney repeatedly refused to answer journalists' demands to know if Obama felt Jerusalem should be recognized by the US as Israel's capital. (See http://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2012/07/26/whs_carney_refuses_to_name_the_capital_of_israel.html.)

According to Democratic National Convention Chairman and Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, the measure to add G-d and Jerusalem as Israel's capital to the party platform requires a two-third affirmative vote.

Villaraigosa called for a voice vote not once, not twice, but three times and each time it seemed that the delegates were equally split. Villaraigosa, declared the motion passed anyway. (See the CNN video, link in fifth paragraph, above.)

From a Jewish perspective, from an Israeli perspective, the initial lack of inclusion of G-d and Jerusalem-as-Israel's-capital, coupled with the Obama spokesman's refusal to answer journalists' questions regarding Jerusalem as Israel's capital would indicate that, if Obama is re-elected, he will continue to distance himself from Israel while continuing to cozy up to Israel's sworn enemies. Another four years of Obama does not bode well for Israel or for Jews, at least observant Jews.

Admittedly, we should not be "one-issue" voters and social concerns need to be considered.

The Democrats contend that if Romney moved into 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, Medicare will go away and women's rights will be violated.

Unless something is done soon, Medicare WILL go away; what the GOP is proposing is a change in Medicare that will impact people LESS THAN 55 years old. They won't loose Medicare, it just will be a different approach.

As for cancelling Roe vs. Wade, that is not an executive branch option; that is a matter for Congress and the Supremes. Indeed, domestically, there is not much the executive branch CAN do.

As far as Jerusalem-as-Israel's-capital goes, the best thing ANY president can do is to follow the 1995 Congressional mandate to MOVE THE EMBASSY TO JERUSALEM.

From Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerusalem_Embassy_Act:

The Jerusalem Embassy Act of 1995is a public law of the United States passed by the 104th Congress on October 23, 1995. It was passed for the purposes of initiating and funding the relocation of the Embassy of the United States in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, no later than May 31, 1999, and attempted to withhold 50 percent of the funds appropriated to the State Department specifically for ‘‘Acquisition and Maintenance of Buildings Abroad’’ as allocated in fiscal year 1999 until the United States Embassy in Jerusalem had officially opened


Wednesday, July 11, 2012

No candidate worth my vote

 
I am a fiscal conservative and social liberal.
That is not an oxymoron.
I am not a fan of the incumbent at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
BUT
Let's think about "Obamacare."
I am against "Obamacare" for one reason and one reason only: it was rammed down our throats before anyone KNEW what was in the bill. The president and his toadies were sneaky, and that's the nicest thing I can say about him and his groupies.
As a nation we are one of the least taxed on earth.
As a nation we still are one of the richest, most productive on earth. Granted China owns too much of our wealth, but that can be changed.
We NEED social welfare programs.
Social welfare programs cost money.
Education is a "social welfare program."
Indigent care is a "social welfare program."
Libraries are a "social welfare program."
Ditto Head Start, VISTA, and a wealth of other programs.
Yes, Social Security and Medicare also are "social welfare programs," but these programs were supposed to be funded by the people receiving benefits from those programs. I paid Social Security taxes my entire working life - and that started at age 14. I paid into Medicare since its inception.
My local taxes have gone to fund libraries, schools, medical facilities, police and fire services, and too many boards and committees to name.
I have received a return on my investment, an "ROI."
Now "Obamacare" has been declared to be a "tax."The Supremes said so.
Fair enough. Let it be a tax.
I'm willing to help fund not only health care for those who cannot fund it for themselves, I also am willing to help retrain people to find jobs to get them off the dole; to provide suitable work clothes - perhaps not Armani suits, but an off-the-rack suit from J.C. Penny or Sears - pity S&K Men's Ware went out of business.
If I am a small businessman - I have friends who fall into that category - I would be hard pressed to provide my few employees with health insurance. I would expect my employees to fund their own coverage. If I have to pay for it, I may as well close up shop. End result: Several more people on the dole.
So if I am asked to pay a bit more in taxes - say from 28 percent to 30 percent - I don't think I would complain.
At the same time, I want everyone who can kick a little into the kitty to contribute to that kitty. If the person is a hamburger flipper making minimum wage - a long way from the $1-an-hour when I got out of the Flyin' Corps - let that person kick in at least few bucks from every paycheck ; again, raise the flipper's taxes by 2 percent.
At the same time, let's end the inequality of the wealthy.
I'm a life-long Republican, but the GOP's protection of the rich - in this case we're talking about incomes of $250,000 a year and more - need to pay a fair share of the tax burden - getting a legal tax break, as Mitt Romney does, needs to be revisited and the fairer across-the-board tax needs to replace it.
I don't want to DISCOURAGE anyone from making "Big Bucks," and if someone is making an honest million a year, good for that person. But TAX ALL INCOME; no exemptions carved out by the people who already have all the exemptions.
I am getting Vote-for-Me mail (and email) from GOP candidates all promising to work to defeat Obamacare, to balance the budget, to make the world right.
I WANT a healthcare program.
If the GOP wants to balance the budget, beside cutting out the pork and perks, it should work to revise the tax laws.
Unfortunately, there is no party for a fiscal conservative who also is a social liberal.
Right now it seems we are locked in a political war of extremists. If this continues, it will destroy the country.
Parts of "Obamacare" certainly are good for the country - call it a tax or call it what you will.
The problem is the way a sneaky executive - let's start with the birth certificate that didn't show up until way after the election; who apparently thinks, perhaps knows, that his bills won't withstand scrutiny - goes about the business of his office.
Will Mitt Romney be better? Given his reluctance to share his tax information, one has little hope of an improvement if he is elected.
I have no candidates worthy of my vote in November.
That's sad.