Tuesday, December 21, 2010

And Now For An Internet Takeover...

This morning, Meredith Attwell Baker, a Republican FCC Commissioner warned on the Washington Post’s Opinions section that, “On Tuesday, in a party-line vote, the three Democratic commissioners of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) will adopt ‘net neutrality’ rules.”

And indeed, FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski and his two fellow Democrats will be approving this, despite the strong protest of the two Republican members of the commission. But why should this worry us and what can we do to stop it?

Baker explained, “The rules will give government, for the first time, a substantive role in how the Internet will be operated and managed, how broadband services will be priced and structured, and potentially how broadband networks will be financed. By replacing market forces and technological solutions with bureaucratic oversight, we may see an Internet future not quite as bright as we need, with less investment, less innovation and more congestion.”

For several years now, those in favor of “net neutrality” have been calling for stronger regulation of internet “on-ramps” to ensure that the internet and broadband stay open for consumers, according to Robert McDowell, fellow Republican commissioner of the FCC. Yet, he also adds that the measure is unnecessary. The internet, he explains, has been free since the early 1990’s, thanks to its revolutionary structure defying top-down authority, its already-existing laws to protect consumers, and even the Justice Department and European Commission’s conclusions that net neutrality regulation would not only be unnecessary, but may deter investments in Internet technology and infrastructure.

This has receiving an overwhelming lack of support from Congress, where over 300 members have signed letters of opposition and only 27 have sponsored a bill imposing net neutrality, as well as from the DC Court of Appeals, which rejected FCC jurisdiction claims over internet regulation in Comcast v. FCC , and the electoral oppositions to bigger government. Phil Kerpen reminded his readers that, “the election included an embarrassing display on the network neutrality issue by the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, which touted a net neutrality pledge signed by 95 candidates. All 95 lost.”

Despite an overwhelming lack of support, the FCC’s unelected officialls will be further expanding government control towards Internet regulation, which many, including the two Republican commissioners, worry will create a risk of government censorship and inhibit Internet growth and competition. The Internet has quickly become the hub for traditional media as well as new media and the blogosphere. It has also allowed for companies and innovators to unleash a flood of new products, services and advertising. By limiting what was meant to be an atmosphere of freely innovating and developing companies, government regulation and censorship will handicap certain companies and businesses to the benefit of others. This has already begun in the case of telecommunications.

Timothy Karr of the Huffington Post wrote:
For the first time in history of telecommunications law, the FCC has given its stamp of approval to online discrimination. Instead of a rule to protect Internet users' freedom to choose, the Commission has opened the door for broadband payola - letting phone and cable companies charge steep tolls to favor the content and services of a select group of corporate partners, relegating everyone else to the cyber-equivalent of a winding dirt road.

Instead of protecting openness on wireless Internet devices like the iPhone and Droid, the Commission has exempted the mobile Internet from Net Neutrality protections. This move enshrines Verizon and AT&T as gatekeepers to the expanding world of mobile Internet access, allowing them to favor their own applications while blocking, degrading or de-prioritizing others.

Instead of re-establishing the FCC's authority to act as a consumer watchdog over the Internet, it places the agency's authority on a shaky and indefensible legal footing -- giving ultimate control over the Internet to a small handful of carriers.

Writing the complete opposite, Joelle Tessler of the Associated Press are favored Democrat commissioners and these new rules as ones prohibiting broadband providers from becoming gatekeepers of Internet traffic and prohibiting phone and cable companies from abusing control of broadband to “discriminate against rival services.”

In a statement, Democrat Commissioner Mignon Clyburn said, "The open Internet is a crucial American marketplace, and I believe that it is appropriate for the FCC to safeguard it by adopting an order that will establish clear rules to protect consumers' access.”

So apparently, in order to keep companies from discriminating against one another as they increase their power over certain portions of the services that bring us the internet, the FCC will now be assuming that power to discriminate for itself. Personally, when it comes to such power, I have far more faith in the free market and its processes than a government agency. But apparently, even as a voter, my opinion on the matter is irrelevant during the Obama reign anyways.

The decision to protect the internet from such potentially harmful and frankly, unnerving, federal regulation was once a bipartisan measure. Unfortunately, current President Obama called for more regulation during his 2008 presidential campaign, and, according to Karr, promised to “take a back seat to no one in (his) commitment to Net Neutrality.” Once again, both our current President and FCC have decided to put the interests and opinions of the citizenry second to their notions of “protection” through government control, and their unending favoritism for certain companies and industries over others. I say this because, while their rhetoric and traditional media coverage will make Obama and the FCC look like heroes for once again protecting us from ourselves, in reality, this vague measure of numerous loopholes is bad news for consumers.

Fellow Republican commissioner, Robert M. McDowell wrote, “Analysts and broadband companies of all sizes have told the FCC that new rules are likely to have the perverse effect of inhibiting capital investment, deterring innovation, raising operating costs, and ultimately increasing consumer prices. Others maintain that the new rules will kill jobs. By moving forward with Internet rules anyway, the FCC is not living up to its promise of being ‘data driven’ in its pursuit of mandates—i.e., listening to the needs of the market.”

Republican commissioner Baker added that, “Efforts to ensure that all Americans have access to broadband service would be put at risk. Efforts to get the third of American households that do not subscribe to online broadband service to do so will be challenged. Affordability concerns will be magnified by forcing more of the network investment cost onto consumers. And consumers and entrepreneurs will be affected if network upgrades and improvements are delayed or forgone, as will their ability to create or use the next great application or service.”

Baker continued, “I keep returning to what should be a threshold question: Why does the FCC plan to intervene in a rushed manner, days before the year's end, in the one sector of the economy that is working so well to create consumer choice, jobs and entrepreneurial opportunity? Until we can answer that, I hope my colleagues will stand down and allow Congress to take the lead on these issues. The Internet will be open on Wednesday with or without our action; we have the time to do it right.”

Kerper added:
Congress should act immediately next year to overturn the FCC’s network neutrality regulations with a joint resolution of disapproval under the Congressional Review Act, which the new Republican majority can pass in the House and which can then be forced onto the Senate floor with 30-senator petition. It cannot be filibustered and would need just 51 votes to pass.

Obama could veto it, but to do so he would have to take full personal responsibility for ending the most remarkable driver of economic growth, innovation, and free expression we have in this country: the free-market, unregulated Internet.

Congress must show the White House that the strategy of pushing hard left inside the executive branch won’t stand. Congress must do what the American people asked for in this election: stop Obama’s big government agenda.

We can only hope that through some measure we will be able to check over the ever-expanding executive branch. The populace has voted in a wave of new legislators who have the ability to fix this, along with various other far-left legislation forced through against our will, as part of Obama’s grand “change” in how this nation operates and what it is allowed to value. We also have hope that the Court will once again rule that the FCC does not have the authority to assert this degree of control over the “free” market, or over the channels through which citizens are supposed to be able to directly access media and consumer services. If we stay vocal and remind our new representatives that, though they have a lot on their plates and so many problems to undo, it is important that this be made a priority as well. The FCC has no right to assume this authority, and cannot turn its back on voters and consumers like this without losing sight of the values that justified the creation of this commission in the first place.

Cross-posted at True North and Ladies Logic.

Friday, December 10, 2010

What Our Generation Goes Through: An Analogy

I like to think that much of what the current leadership has been allowed to put my generation through is simply due to voters not quite understanding what they are voting on. Just in case that is true, I thought of an analogy to illustrate my frustration.

You’re sitting in a restaurant with a group of politicians who of course are planning to order the most expensive things off the menu. With how much more they make than you do, you figure they can probably afford it.

“I’ll take a stimulus to help my friend here,” the one just to your left announces to the waiter. To you he adds, “Most of it won’t actually stimulate much of anything aside from the pockets of those paying me on the side. But I may or may not let you have a few bites too.”

“Oh,” you answer. “Well, uh, thanks I guess.”

“And I’ll take some socialized medicine,” the one on your far left says. “It may cause an industry collapse, a loss of quality, and, to be honest, it’ll require you to buy premiums later, but for a short while if you ignore how much we’ll be taxing you to start, maintain and later fix it, it’ll appear that you’re paying less.”

“Are you sure?” you ask, thinking that this sounds like a pretty terrible option.

The politician on your far left waves a hand, “Of course I’m sure. And you should be sure too. Thanks to your generosity, everyone will get delayed, low-quality, bureaucrat-regulated care, provided that they are willing to sit patiently on the waiting list. That’ll be a huge improvement from having the option of some of the highest-quality care on earth and emergency care for anyone who needs it no matter their socioeconomic or insurance statuses. There are some people who can’t afford insurance right now or aren’t prioritizing it, so it’s best we charge those who have more so that these people can receive it anyways.”

“Wait,” you stumble over that train of thought. “ I don’t really think that sounds like a good idea. There are plenty of better options that will help more people obtain insurance at more competitive rates without costing the American taxpayer so much and…”

The politician cuts you off. “I wouldn’t let those options get printed on the menu.” He snapped it shut and handed it to the waiter who had finished jotting down his order by now. “So, since this is now the only option people can choose if they want an improvement at all, that’s what I’ll have.”

You frown, but now that the waiter’s written it down, it’s out of your hands. You decide to let your political friend buy what he wishes to buy. It’s his bloated salary. “I’ll take the job option,” you tell the waiter.

“I could look,” the waiter says. “But the stimulus and health care options being ordered tonight have depleted the restaurant's supply of ingredients, so it's likely that we're out.”

“Oh,” you scan through the menu again. “Ok well I guess I’ll take the college education. Are there any of those left?”

“Sure,” the waiter said, jotting that down. “But the price on the menu is a minimum estimate and the dish may or may not come with all of the ingredients it used to.”

“Will it have ideological diversity and tolerance? I feel like that’s an important when earning an education, you know?”

“Nope.”

“Oh.”

The waiter clears the other menus off the table, since the friends on your right don’t have the authority to order anything. “It comes with a side of student fees to buy mopeds for the football team and fund certain student groups and ethnic groups over others according to the Chef’s tastes,” the waiter adds.

You shake your head. “Can I not get the side? I don’t really think I’d end up eating any of that anyways.”

“Sorry, it comes with the college education option.”

“Oh,” you sigh. “Fine.”

The waiter tallies it up. “Here’s your estimated bill for now.”

“Wait, what?” you ask, surprised. “I haven’t even gotten my order yet. And these guys are paying for their own right?” you glance to your left for confirmation.

The politicians shrug. “You’re the one with the wallet. We just serve your needs.”

“Serve my…” Then it dawns on you. “What?? Well I can’t afford all of this! I don’t even want it. And since I haven’t seen any results yet anyways, I should have to pay.”

“Sorry,” the waiter hands you your bill. “Results or not, you agreed to pay when your parents and friends invited these guys to dinner with you. Cash or check?”

The Governor's Race: We Have Yet To Learn From Our Mistakes

Since Emmer conceded to Dayton in a press conference yesterday, a frenzy of Twitter tweets has been asking everything from how this happened to what this means for Minnesotans, to what we can learn from this election for the next time around. As is typical with hindsight, many are understanding points where we went right and wrong in the Emmer campaign.

Is it possible that the Republican Party in Minnesota repeated the same mistakes we made on a national level during the Presidential race? Once again we were facing a huge-government official with controversial and concerning affiliations, a record and history pointing to uncertainty, and a left-funded smear campaign drawing attention to personal attacks on our candidates, rather than the more important issues at hand. And once again, our candidate took the high road, focused on issues and solutions, had the better and more concrete plan, and was not elected. It is of course worth investigating where we have continued to go wrong, especially with the 2012 elections on the horizon.

In light of our encouraging success in the House and Senate this last election, the outcome of the governors race was baffling to many. Sure, the role of extensive voter fraud and corruption within the system designed to account for said fraud remains to be fully assessed, but it won't change the fact that the next Minnesota governor will be Mark Dayton.

What disappointed me most about how this election played out was it's shocking similarity in many way to the outcome of Senator John McCain's campaign for the Presidency. I still remember sitting just a few feet from John McCain during his town hall meeting in the new gym of Lakeville South High School as he handled a comment by one of his supporters about Obama being "an Arab," by defending his opponent and insisting that we focus on the issues and platforms, rather than any personal attacks. McCain never swayed in his strict and righteous adherence to a campaign of facts and integrity. But what exactly constitutes integrity? Should the personal qualifications and associations of a candidate be entirely ignored and his or her plan solely focused on?

The Democrats ran a campaign based almost entirely on the charisma and image of their opponent's ideas and personal attacks on their opponent's personal life. Palin's daughter got pregnant and Emmer drove under the influence 20 years ago. Do either of those attacks really tell the public whether or not these opponents will serve us well in office? No. The Democrats were also the ones who pushed arguments about Sarah Palin being a bad mother for running, because she had children who needed care and attention. These are the same people who the media claim appeal to women. Saying that a candidate shouldn't run because she belongs in the kitchen feeding her children is appalling and insulting. And yet, it was acceptable coming from Democrats. If men can serve in office and have children, then so can women. Palin's children did not in any way constitute a legitimate reason for why she would not be suited for the job.

Yet, when we mention Dayton's recent issues with alcoholism and relapses, we're derided for our "shameful" character attack. This is a criticism of Mark Dayton, rather than his ideas, yes, but isn't this an arguably more valid criticism than drinking and driving twenty years ago, in terms of having a relevant impact on performance?

It is important that Republicans maintain campaigns based in integrity, but it is also important that we understand that omitting certain things from the public that are clearly relevant is quite the opposite of integrity. People deserved to know about Obama's affiliations. Granted, Obama came in sort of as a ghost candidate, present but without anything solid to characterize him, let alone criticize, but had we known even a little more about the man, perhaps voters would have sensed the warning and cast their vote in favor of a more suited candidate. If you're thinking that such information is the media's responsibility to present, as the nation's self-called watchdog, then you're right. The media workforce failed the American people last election to say the least. They were so busy presenting Obama as some sort pop culture icon to boost their ratings, that they forgot completely that the purpose of having our media is for it to serve the public. Just as their star candidate forgot that the purpose of having a government is also to serve the public.

But be that as it may, representing the actual beliefs and ideals of the citizenry requires that we better support our reasons for presenting this candidate instead of simply agreeing with the other party's choice. And that involves not only what our candidate has to offer, but why we feel the other candidate will be unfit to represent or hold office.

Mitch Berg outlined several points about Dayton that the media neglected to mention during the endorsement process and election, among which were of course the alcoholism and relapses, along with "quitting his job as economic development commissioner under Rudy Perpich, the closure of his DC Senate offices in 2005, his record as a New York 'Teacher'-it was up to Sheila Kihne to find out that 'the toughest job of his life' lasted sixteen months of working about 1/3 of the time until his draft status let up." He also listed Dayton's educational record, commenting, "the University of Massachusetts at Amherst won't say if he got his teaching certificate (or, indeed, whether he completed any coursework at all), which'd be an odd bit of history for someone who opposes alternative teacher licensing."

Erin Haust, writing for the Minneapolis Conservative Examiner wrote:

Dayton's history of ties to socialist, progressive groups is far from secret. Dayton spokeswoman and Executive Director for Alliance for a Better Minnesota, Denise Cardinal, was a featured speaker alongside self-avowed communist and community organizer Van Jones at the America's Future Now! conference last summer. They and other speakers demanded redistribution of wealth in the United States and discussed radical, revolutionary tactics to accomplish that end. Neither the state party nor the Emmer campaign made the connection between radicals like Cardinal and Van Jones and the Dayton campaign.

She mentioned as well that Alliance for a Better Minnesota led a smear campaign against Target. Bill O'Reilly luckily exposed them for this "hypocritical and shameful tactic used by ABM to disillusion Minnesota voters." Haust pointed out that once again, "the state party and Emmer campaign was silent."

She continued:

Dayton's campaign received millions of dollars from groups and individuals linked to socialists, progressives and communists. George Soros funded organizations like Democracy Alliance contributed heavily to his campaign. Soros himself is scheduled to co-host a fundraiser for Dayton in the coming week.

The Republican Party of Minnesota and the Emmer campaign failed to take advantage of the national media attention Dayton's friends and allies were receiving during the campaign and throughout the recount. The opposition research was non-existent. The state party and the Emmer campaign failed miserably to expose Dayton's past and present relationships, even when national media outlets were on the cusp of breaking the stories wide open.

Though Tom Emmer ran a campaign focused on the facts and issues of the race which were of course to his advantage, the Emmer campaign and state party did appear to forget that smear still is effective. That false ad that played over and over again with the mom talking about how Emmer voted to lessen punishments for drunk drivers received no response from the campaign, which was basically the same as confirming it. The Republican Party desperately needs to touch up on some of the basics of public relations, because the opposition is using it with such proficiency that they can bring in candidates like Mark Dayton and win elections.

We should continue to run the more professional and respectful campaigns, by focusing on the issues and facts and only mentioning those personal and character attributes that directly affect how well a candidate can perform a job. We shouldn't simply rule out all personal criticisms, though, because those affiliations and personal issues will surface while Dayton is in office, just as we saw the manifestations of the concerning beliefs and affiliations of Obama's surface in his radical reign. I would have hoped that history would have taught us just how dangerous it is to choose representatives based on intentions rather than their ability to carry through those intentions, the means they are willing to justify in getting there, and whether or not public opinion or reaction holds any weight with them in terms of evaluating their grand plans.

Apparently, it hasn't yet. But I still hold out hope that this is not due to the carelessness or selfishness of the voter in most cases, so much as the general ignorance, fostered by a negligent and agenda-driven media, which had allowed for campaigns like these to turn out the way they do. If we truly care about our fellow citizens, we will ensure that next time around, our campaign presents all of the facts, including why voters should not vote for our opposition, and about which attacks on our candidate are or aren't true. Despite how it sounds, it won't be simple. But it will certainly be necessary if we don't wish to repeat these same mistakes a third time.

Cross-posted at True North and Ladies Logic.

Monday, November 29, 2010

Obama's Pay Freeze Proposal: Placating The Public And Perpetuating The Problem

The President’s recent call to freeze worker pay will hurt us precisely because it is meant to appear to be a step in the right direction. As the media broadcasts this symbolic political gesture, many will be inclined to think that something is actually being done about the grave issue of overspending on public center employees and representatives, and that means that we now may or may not see an actual improvement. For proponents of fiscal responsibility, this attempt to placate the public in order to sweep the issue under the rug poses yet another dimension to a persisting problem.

Let’s start with the details of this crafty political ploy. Obama announced the two-year pay freeze today, which will apply to civilian employees, but not to postal workers, government contractors, federal court judges and workers, or the members and staff of Congress. If approved, the freeze would take effect on the 1st of January as part of the 2012 budget proposals, according to the writers of the Washington Post blog, the Federal Eye.

While the Obama is labeling this act as a broad sacrifice in a bipartisan effort to increase fiscal responsibility in government, this doesn’t actually appear to be very broad. According to the writers of the Washington Post blog, the Federal Eye, the two-year pay freeze announced today, which, if approved, would take effect on January 1st as part of the 2012 budget proposals, will apply to civilian employees, but not to postal workers, government contractors, federal court judges and workers, or Congressional members and staff.

It also isn’t much of a sacrifice. Julie Pace of the Associated Press reported that, “The savings from the pay freeze make only a small dent in the nation's $1 trillion-plus budget deficit. But with voters voicing their anger over Washington's spending during the midterm elections, even a symbolic gesture would show the White House got the message.”

In addition, the freeze will not affect bonuses or promotions for federal employees to higher levels of pay. It will simply limit one method of increased payments, annual raises. Indeed, earlier today, Ed Morrissey posted on True North and Hot Air that “Gabriel Malor received an official explanation given to federal employees today, which assured them that the freeze ‘will not impact step increases or bonuses for federal workers.’ It applies to cost-of-living increases, mainly. If an agency wants to give a worker an increase, they just need to increase their pay grade or boost their bonuses to make it happen.”

And as far as bipartisanship goes, the main agreement we can see between the parties appears to rest in the shared opposition of Mr. Obama’s proposal. According to the Federal Eye (link), President of the American Federation of Government Employees John Gage criticized the announcement as being “a superficial, panicked reaction to the deficit commission report,” while also suggesting that certain government personnel including nurses and border patrol agents are being targeted for Democratic election losses. He said that this pay freeze “amounts to nothing more than political public relations.”
Two aspects of this proposal were acknowledged by the Heritage Foundation (http://blog.heritage.org/2010/11/29/after-the-freeze-real-reforms-toward-fair-federal-pay/) as being a step in the right direction: the fact that federal workers are paid more than private sector counterparts, even when considering skills and education, and that our federal deficits are driven by issues in spending. Senior Labor Analyst James Sherk (http://www.heritage.org/Research/Reports/2010/07/Inflated-Federal-Pay-How-Americans-Are-Overtaxed-to-Overpay-the-Civil-Service) acknowledged that not all government employees are overpaid and that determining comparative salaries requires accounting for differences in skill levels as well. However, what he found was that, even when adjusting for skill levels, salaries and benefits are “30 to 40% higher in the federal government than in the private sector.” He also explained that federal employees can rarely be fired, regardless of performance, unlike private sector workers.

His detailed analysis shows that:
• The federal pay system gives the average federal employee hourly cash earnings 22 percent above the average private worker’s, controlling for observable skills and characteristics.
• Including non-cash benefits adds to this disparity. The average private-sector employer pays $9,882 per employee in annual benefits, while the federal government pays an average of $32,115 per employee.
• Overall, controlling for other factors, federal employees earn approximately 30 percent to 40 percent more in total compensation (wages and benefits) than comparable private-sector workers.
• Federal employees enjoy job security irrespective of the state of the economy. Since the recession began, federal employment has risen by 240,000—12 percent. The unemployment rate for federal employees has only slightly risen from 2.0 percent to 2.9 percent between 2007 and 2009.
• Federal employees demonstrate with their actions that they receive better compensation in the public sector than in the private sector: They quit their jobs at one-third the rate of the private employees.
• Bringing federal compensation in line with private-sector compensation would save taxpayers approximately $47 billion in 2011.

Sherk concluded that, “Congress should not overtax all Americans to overpay the privileged workers in the federal civil service. Aligning federal compensation with market rates would save taxpayers between $40 billion and $50 billion a year. Congress should immediately act to bring equity to federal pay. Congress should abolish the General Schedule and implement performance-based pay, require federal agencies to compete with the private sector, and bring the benefits to market levels.”

Aside from implementing performance-based pay, hiring more private contractors to get task and services accomplished at a more competitive rate while also stimulating the economy, and reducing federal benefits, Sherk also proposed that dismissal restrictions be lifted in order to keep government employees more accountable to their job performance.

This is fairly consistent with the reported statement (http://politics.blogs.foxnews.com/2010/11/29/reaction-president-obamas-federal-pay-freeze-plan) issued by Republican Speaker-designate John Boehner:
"I welcome President Obama's announcement, and hope he will build on it by embracing much-needed steps to reduce both the size and the cost of government, including the net federal hiring freeze Republicans propose in our Pledge to America. Without a hiring freeze, a pay freeze won't do much to rein in a federal bureaucracy that added hundreds of thousands of employees to its payroll over the last two years while the private sector shed millions of jobs.
"Today's action is a clear indication that the Pledge to America, which lays out concrete steps to cut spending and reduce the size of government, is the right plan to address the people's priorities. Republicans and Democrats don't have to wait until January to cut spending and stop all the tax hikes. We can - and should - start right now."

Representative Darrell Issa (R-CA) of the House Committee on Oversight and Government reform stated that:
"At a time when our nation's seniors have been denied a cost-of-living-increase and private sector hiring is stagnant, it is both necessary and quite frankly, long over-due to institute a pay-freeze for the federal workforce. As Republicans outlined in our Pledge to America there are a number of actions the President and Congress should immediately act on to demonstrate a real commitment to reigning in the excessive growth and spending of the federal government.
"To put this in perspective, the Obama Administration says this two-year pay freeze will save $2 billion, however, just last week, OMB released a report revealing that the federal government's improper payments for FY-2010 totaled $125 billion, $15 billion higher than the previous year. It is unthinkable that we have come to accept having a bureaucracy that has institutionalized waste, fraud and abuse to the point where $125 billion in improper payments were made last year. The first place we should look to make progress on higher costs, increased debt and a stagnant economy is look inward at how taxpayer dollars are being spent and doing more to ensure that tens of billions of dollars are no longer erroneously paid out."

Clearly the President’s proposal leaves much to be desired in actually solving issues in government spending and growth which are causing this deficit, as the problems lie not only in the increasing expenditures in the specific area of annual raises for certain employees, but in the general overspending and misuses of taxpayer’s money across various levels of this ever-growing bureaucracy. Caution should be taken therefore, in crediting this as a “step in the right direction.” While this proposal appears to be incapable of producing significant improvements, its tag line may yet convince many that it is indeed providing some relief to the fiscal irresponsibility we have been seeing, and therefore weaken the efforts to bring about true remedies to these economic concerns.

Cross-posted at True North and Ladies Logic.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

What We, As Americans, Can Be Thankful For

Even this Thanksgiving, we have a lot to be thankful for. We can be thankful for the principles and liberties that have made this nation a beacon of hope for the oppressed, the hardworking, the outspoken, the go-getters, and the free thinkers. In honor of today, I started jotting down some (but of course nowhere near all) of the things for which we Americans can be thankful. Here’s that list in no particular order.

We can be thankful that, as seen in the last election, Americans can see through catchy rhetoric and pop culture charisma, and eventually sober up and recognize tyranny once it reaches a certain point. And that those Americans will yield one of the most basic protections we have to remove those from power who are abusing it-the American vote. We can be thankful that each and every one of us, regardless of race, socioeconomic status, ideology, religion, opinion or preferences, can cast an equal vote and participate in our own government. Too often, we forget how truly remarkable that right is.

We can be thankful because members of our military are still out there fighting for our liberties. Despite those who live off of the freedoms, opportunities and success of America while burning its flag and spitting on the principles that have protected their right to live and think as they do, countless brave and selfless men and women have found their own reasons to appreciate what America stands for, and have risked their lives to defend that.

Along those lines, we can be thankful that members of our military have succeeded in protecting us, because it means that we are still answering only to American laws, and therefore answering to no one but ourselves.

We can be thankful that even under heavy taxes and discrimination against higher economic status, some Americans still choose to invest their lives into their business to produce innovative products and services, provide countless jobs, and stimulate the economy. Even when such hard work will bring on a hoard of people demanding their “share” of another individual’s earnings and when success means the objectification of real, working American citizens into a “company” or “big business” in order for society to justify bleeding these citizens’ resources out for societal uses, even then, some Americans will still take advantage of all of the opportunities we have, overcome all of the social and political obstacles, and achieve the American dream.

We can be thankful that we can raise our children to think critically and for themselves, in order to recognize the biases in the media and the classroom. We can still bring up our kids with the religion, principles and ethnic culture we see fit, and still be able to be Americans, united by our appreciation of liberty and intolerance for tyranny.

We can be thankful that the Supreme Laws of this country were written to protect our rights to live, worship, speak, assemble, petition and work as we see fit, in accordance with the lives we want to lead. We are lucky enough to be living in a nation where the framework has already been set for us to embrace our individual freedoms and varying paths in life without the threat of some authority imposing itself on us to force us to live a certain way-whether it be eating certain foods, buying certain products, or supporting certain administrations. Our Constitutional principles already protect us from these things. All we have to do is check our leaders and administrations to ensure that they follow the guidelines they swore to protect.

We can be thankful that if we prioritize our insurance, encourage more competition, and are smart consumers, we will be able to access the highest quality health care available today. Leaders from across the world have flown here for their care, but we have it right at our fingertips.

We have so much to be thankful for. As we eat our thanksgiving feasts surrounded by close family and friends in a warm house, we can be thankful for everything that has brought us here to this point of well-being, abundance and happiness. And tomorrow morning at the doorbusters, we can be thankful for the survival of capitalism and the fact that even in this recession, new technologies, exciting entertainment and quality gifts for those we love are available and affordable to those willing to invest money in them.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Increasing The FDA's Regulatory Power: Should Local Farmers Be Worried?

To the horror of libertarians, constitutionalists and small farmers, the FDA Food Safety Modernization Bill reached the Senate floor yesterday, with the potential to reach the President’s desk by the end of the year. First introduced by Senator Richard Durbin (D-IL) as “a bill to amend the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act with respect to the safety of the food supply," became the “FDA Food Safety Modernization Bill” on a vote of 72-25. The food safety bill aims to increase the federal regulatory power over food production and distribution in hopes of preventing food contamination and outbreaks.

In the words of Bill Tomsom, reporting for the Dow Jones Newswires, the bill "would give the FDA the power to mandate food recals, keep better track of fruit and vegetable shipments so that contaminated commodities can be found more quickly, and a set of new standards for food manufacturers." But many worry that this government expansion could have severe effects on small farmers, family restaurants, and even our local farmer’s market. “Health Ranger” Mike Adams of NaturalNews.com wrote:

Senate Bill 510, the Food Safety Modernization Act, has been called “the most dangerous bill in the history of the Unites States of America.” It would grant the U.S. government new authority over the public’s right to grow, trade and transport any foods. This would give Big brother the power to regulate the tomato plants in your backyard. It would grant them the power to arrest and imprison people selling cucumbers at farmer’s markets. It would criminalize the transporting of organic produce if you don’t comply with the authoritarian rules of the federal government.

On a more moderate note, Thomas Eddlem writing for New America reported:

The bill would increase funding to the Food and Drug Administration and give it greater regulatory power over foods and medicines. It would require all food producers to register with the FDA and pay new taxes (which the bill calls “fees”) that recoup all the inspection costs for the new army of regulators the bill would create. The impact of S. 510 upon small producers and farms is unclear at best.

If FDA regulators determine a “reasonable probability” exists that the food “will cause serious adverse health consequences or death to humans or animals,” then S. 150 also gives the FDA authority to shut down the business or farm.

Again, another huge problem that can be seen lies not in the intentions (preventing food-borne illnesses is a worthy cause), but in the dangerously vague wording within the bill, which would grant significant increases in federal power, without establishing clear limits or checks on that new power. “Reasonable probability” can be interpreted in so many different ways, that it will be almost impossible to maintain just standards of consistency and predictability when applying this law.

In regard to the financial burdens that smaller operations will be facing, Senator Jon Tester (D-Mont.) proposed an amendment that would exempt family farms and small restaurants from FDA regulations. Unfortunately, Senator Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) has said that he already has the votes necessary to pass the bill without that amendment.

In anticipation of the impending vote on this bill, the John Birch Society, along with countless other libertarian, limited-government, and constitutionalist groups, encouraged citizens to write to their senators. In a sample letter they provided, they wrote:

The Food Safety Modernization Act, S. 150, represents a massive expansion of government regulation of the food industry, even though there is no authorization in the Constitution for this. My right to produce, distribute, and consume the foods of my choice is part of my right to life and liberty under the Constitution. I reject the imposition of an extensive and all-controlling regulatory food bureaucracy.

Food safety is best achieved at the local level; small farmers and local food processors are part of the solution to the food supply, yet S. 150 would grant more power to an opaque and unaccountable agency, hyper-regulating small producers out of business, leaving the industrial food system with the highest ranking of problems of disease and illnesses, to commandeer the marketplace.

This “Food and Safety Bill” poses a threat to local markets and economies, not only due to the regulations which could cripple our local farmers and organic growers, but through inevitable price increases as producers are forced to comply with vague and burdening federal mandates. And, as if that weren’t enough, the bill also includes a foreign aid program designed to assist foreign importers in competing with U.S. farmers.

The producers selling at our Farmer’s Market, or growing vegetables for their family business weren’t the ones responsible for the massive outbreaks we’ve seen, including the salmonella outbreak. And yet, it won’t be corporate producers who will be at risk of going out of business. While regulations may or may not be a step in the right direction at a corporate level, imposing further burdens on local markets, which are already struggling in this recession, by indirectly causing price increases and job losses is not a solution.

Yet opponents of this bill are upset by more than just the impacts on local economies. This bill, as another in what has been a ridiculously expensive series of government expansions, will again follow the now hackneyed assumption that problems can only be fixed by increasing the size of the already incapable bureaucracy that has not been able to fix them. We already have twelve agencies responsible for food safety. And yet here we are spending huge sums of money once again and handing over even more power and control to these agencies that have obviously not fixed the underlying problems.

Dr. Coburn addresses the issues of underlying problems with the way the FDA is attempting to “fix these problems,” which includesd some pretty enlightening points and information.(Check out the YouTube video at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ddz58kpAl_Y&feature=channel)

And finally, aside from the arguments about how this will hurt us economically and about how it won’t actually solve the underlying problem, we still are faced with the issue of increased government control and regulation about what we can eat, which medicines we can take, and other important, individual life and health decisions. Until the end of this lame duck session, we can only hope that our letters and our clearly voiced and written opposition will actually be considered when our representatives in the Senate vote on this bill.

Our current government may tell us that we need them to decide these things for us because it’s for our own good or our own safety, but Thomas Jefferson warned us back in 1778 that “If people let the government decide what foods they eat and what medicines they take, their bodies will soon be in as sorry a state as are the souls of those who live under tyranny.”


Cross-posted at True North and Ladies Logic.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

A Risky and Premature Lift on University Drinking Bans

The Intrafraternity Council at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities campus has decided after a mere six weeks to lift the drinking ban with the assumption that their high rates of sexual assault are due to letting in too many “non-greeks,” and that if they can maintain a 1 to 1 ratio between Greeks and non-greeks, it will once again be safe to continue their binge-drinking, grinding-in-a-dirty-basement tributes to stereotypical college night life.

With increasing pressure from bored and thirsty fraternity houses, the focus appears to have fallen on preserving the reputation of the Greek community. While the IFC’s cooperation with the Office of Student Affairs to create the peer-monitoring group “Arkeo” to ensure that new policies are followed may provide some level of accountability in these parties, it falls short of actually solving the problem. The issue of sexual assault on our campus runs far deeper than just the recent and terrifying cases which survivors were brave enough to report. Until members of campus communities are willing to recognize the true causes of sexual assault and to accept what that means in terms of core prevention, fraternities will continue to be unsafe for guests and Greeks alike.

Even if we can assume that these Arkeo monitors will be willing to crack down on and report their peers in a manner that will actually protect victims or potential victims of sexual assault, the “solution” that has been proposed by the IFC is based on a series of common myths about sexual assault, and for reasons I will now discuss, will be more likely to silence current and future victims of sexual assault than to prevent the actual incidents of sexual assault and rape on campus.

The University’s campus newspaper, the Minnesota Daily, reported that IFC President Martin Chorzempa “said this was put in place to ensure things remain under control and that the people who have been part of these new solutions will be able to participate, instead of non-greeks, who may view this as a free-for-all.”

Rather than taking responsibility for their part in these sexual assaults, too many members of the Greek community have taken the easy route in assuming that, because the sexual assaults that happened earlier this semester were committed by young men who were not members of the fraternity, sexual assault in general has been something perpetrated by non-greeks sneaking into otherwise-safe greek parties. It sounds ridiculous when worded bluntly doesn’t it?

Yes, the men who committed these rapes earlier in the semester were non-greeks, but, according to the Department of Justice, these stranger-rapes constitute only 10% of rape crimes. Though the first thing that comes to mind for us when we think of rape tends to be this idea of a man in a dark alley, or a man who shows up in a bathroom in this case, in reality, 90% of rapes are committed by acquaintances. This means that a large majority of the rapes which will occur in these communities are actually between acquaintances, often using alcohol as a tool in committing the crime. The act alone of imiting the number of strangers who can attend a party won’t protect sorority women and guests from the incidence of sexual assault.

In addition, it was found that 50% of all sexual assaults were committed by men who were drinking at the time, according to the study “Alcohol and Sexual Assault,” by Abbey et.al. Depending on the samples taken and measures used, estimates for the percentage of perpetrators who raped under the influence of alcohol ranged between about 34 and 75%. According to a study done by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University, alcohol is implicated in more incidents of sexual violence than any other drug. So, even though statistically speaking, the presence of strangers is far less risky than the presence of alcohol, the fraternities’ “solution” conveniently chose to ignore the detrimental effects of the latter.

But I don’t mean to give alcohol too much credit here. After all, a beer doesn’t commit sexual assault-the guy drinking it does. (I say guy because, while 14% of sexual assault victims are male, regardless of victim gender, an overwhelming 96% of offenders are male.) Rather than asking how fraternities can satisfy the community enough to be able to keep drinking and partying, or how fraternities can keep out people who could potentially fall within that narrow category of rapists, we should be focusing on what it is about the mindsets and cultural norms that characterize college life which allow for 1 in 5 women to become the victim of rape or attempted rape while in college, according to the National Institute of Justice.

Too often, men are using alcohol at these parties to make women “less resistant.” They utilize alcohol and intoxication as a tool and even sometimes as an excuse for committing these assaults, because among our generation, there’s this widespread and completely false belief that “not taking no for answer” or pressuring someone to have sex aren’t actually considered sexual assault in certain cases, simply because “they were drunk.” People conveniently ignore the fact that consent, by legal and university standards, must be freely given, and is not considered legitimate if extracted through the use of coercion, threats or intoxication.

With all of the issues in our society that combine to create this unsafe atmosphere-the media’s sexual objectification of women, sexual violence in our music, regular derogatory comment towards women, men’s perceptions when drinking at a party that they are going to “get sex” tonight, and our knee-jerk response of blaming the victims of sexual assault for bringing these crimes onto themselves by how they dress or act or where they went-fraternities are only focusing on one tiny little piece, while ignoring some of the far larger contributing factors.
We don’t need to keep non-greeks out of fraternity houses and, if you ask me, we are certainly not ready to have frat row getting drunk again. What we need to see is change in the way campus communities view sex and intimacy. We need to implement educational and awareness programs that will draw attention to these influences in society and to the initial signs of sexual violence. Rather than trying to prevent sexual assault on the level of rapists who are willing to sneak into bathrooms and commit violent crimes against strangers, let’s address this issue even earlier. Prevention could start at that first comment, when a guy says something stupid to his friends like, “just buy her a few drinks. That’ll loosen her up.” Or perhaps addressing core causes like the messages in our culture that pressure young boys to fit into the super-masculine, violent stereotype that perverts the idea of healthy intimacy into a one-sided conquest for sex.

Luckily, there are initiatives on campus that are working to make this happen, including a potential interventions being designed by students volunteering on campus as violence prevention educators and as members of the Men Against Gender Violence group. The fraternities will be back to drinking and partying as usual soon, but the shocking amount of sexual assaults that we have been seeing have provided a rather loud wake-up call to many on campus. Hopefully as these new campaigns and initiatives are designed and implemented, we will be able to see some changes not just in the list of attendees at parties, but in the perspectives of these young men and in the treatment of women on campus.

For now, though, the changes the IFC has decided on have the potential to do more harm than good. With Greeks so desperate to prove that they aren’t the ones to blame for the assaults that we’ve seen, and some even complaining about people who, in making a “big deal” out of these incidents ruined it for the rest of them, the atmosphere at these parties will be all the more dangerous for young women. My greatest worry is that the pressure won’t be on men to treat women with more respect and hold themselves accountable, but on women to refrain from “complaining,” or reporting anything that will make the greek community look bad. As if there weren’t already huge barriers for victims of sexual assault to overcome in their process of healing, including the difficulty in reporting or talking about something that happened when others in the group know the person who assaulted you and may or may not believe you and may or may not turn the blame on you, now these women will have to deal with the possibility of their peers getting upset with them for reporting a crime because of how it will make the greek community look.

So sure, there will be an even ratio, but that will also mean that the greek community will not be able to pass the blame to non-greeks if a sexual assault is committed. And because the factors leading up to sexual assault weren’t prevented, this “solution,” won’t actually be preventing sexual assaults from occurring; it will simply prevent victims from reporting them. Some students may be excited to hear that the ban had been removed, but this isn’t good news. I just hope that the interventions that students, including myself, are planning, will be successful and reach these students before someone else gets hurt. For now, I guess we can only hope that women attacked at these parties will have the courage to at least seek help for themselves by calling 24-hour campus help-lines or taking advantage of the resources and advocates there to support them in their healing process. And hopefully some of these survivors of sexual violence, coercion and violations will also have the courage to report these crimes, in spite all of these new pressures on them to stay silent, just so that others can selfishly protect their rights to partake in their heavy (and often underage) drinking.

Cross posted on Ladies Logic and True North.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Tom Emmer Endorsement

Today, just in time for elections, my Letter to the Editor, titled "Tom Emmer for a Free Market" appeared in the Minnesota Daily:

Tom Emmer for a Free Market

Eventually, we have to stop dumping money we don’t have into temporary relief. We have to stop perpetuating debt and this recession in favor of fleeting gratification for lobbying groups and small portions of the population. We need to spare people from burdening taxes because, despite what representatives may claim, it’s the people who keep the system running.

But somewhere, tyranny adopted a softer face and started making grand and glorious promises. And we forgot that we were never meant to serve the government. We forgot that the government exists to serve us.

This is because the entrepreneurs who fuel the economy, hire workers and keep our free market running, are the people. And instead of giving them a break through tax cuts and giving them a sense of security by removing the extreme and constantly fluctuating federal measures and mandates from the market, our politicians are willing to risk causing disincentives to invest and hire.

But of course, since many of them have no real experience in business and consider themselves to be of a high moral order, politicians justify burdening us further with excessive spending, creating a deteriorating economy.

We can pay tax-and-spend Democrats until we have nothing left to give and no way of earning more, and until every house on our block is in foreclosure and every business unable to hire or even stay afloat, but they will still be saying the same thing: ‘If we only had a little more of your money, we could fix this.’

They can’t fix this. But we can. That’s why we need to elect representatives who will let us find work and earn money, who will stop pulling us deeper into recession. Aren’t you sick of voting for and paying for people who say we can’t take care of ourselves, that the reason we disagree with them is because we just don’t understand, and that they know better what to do with our money than we do? Well, I am.

We need to take our country back now, while we still have the ability to do so. If we wait another term for these same old policies of ‘tax more, spend more,’ we will be deeper in debt and further from a solution. This is why we should vote for candidates like Tom Emmer, who has been paying taxes and working in the business world. Emmer, like us, is a citizen who has earned a living here and who — unlike the DFL gubernatorial candidate Mark Dayton — actually keeps money here. But most importantly, he will actually represent us rather than rule over us.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Vote for a Solution

Eventually we have to stop dumping money we don’t have into temporary relief. We have to stop perpetuating our debt and this recession in favor of fleeting gratification for certain lobbying groups and certain small portions of the population. We need to spare the people from burdening taxes because, despite what our representatives may claim, it’s the people who have made this state and country great and it’s the people who keep the system running. When we formed this nation, freeing ourselves from crippling taxes that failed to serve those who were actually paying them, we understood that we deserved something better. But somewhere along the lines, tyranny adopted a softer face and started making grand and glorious promises. And we forgot that we were never meant to serve the government. We forgot that the government exists solely to serve us.

This is because the innovators, laborers, and entrepreneurs who fuel the economy, hire workers and keep our free market running, are the people. And instead of giving them a break through tax cuts and giving them a sense of security by removing the extreme and constantly fluctuating federal measures and mandates from the market, our politicians are willing to risk causing disincentives to invest and hire. But of course, since many of them have no real experience in business and consider themselves to be of a higher moral order than we the ignorant and senseless citizens, politicians justify burdening us further with their excessive spending, creating an unstable and deteriorating economy that no one in their right mind would invest in.

I’m sick of having our money go towards worsening our problems simply because a group of self-praising politicians continue to promise us that one day these failed methods will start to work. We have to wake up and take back our economy and businesses. We have to take back our schools so that the system is once again efficient and accountable. And we have to take back our rights to decide for ourselves what to do with our incomes, our profits, and our investments.
We can pay these tax-and-spend Democrats until we have nothing left to give and no way of earning more, and until every house on our block is in foreclosure and every business unable to hire or even stay afloat, but they will still be saying the same thing: “If we only had a little more of your money, we could fix this.”

They can’t fix this. But we can. That’s why we need to elect representatives who will let us find work and earn money, and who will stop pulling us deeper into this recession. Aren’t you sick of voting for and paying for people who say that we can’t take care of ourselves, that the reason we disagree with them is because we just don’t understand, and that they know better what to do with our money than we do? Well I am. I’m sick of other people voting for representatives who take my money with the arrogant idea that they know better how to spend my earnings and they know better how we should live our lives and raise our families.

We need to take our country back now, while we still have the ability to. If we wait another term for these same old policies of “tax more, spend more” to finally kick in, we will just be that much deeper in debt and that much further from the solution. They’ve given us a huge mess to clean up and the longer we wait, the harder that process will be. We deserve the same liberties and opportunities that this country offered the generations before us. This is why we should vote for candidates like Tom Emmer and Sanu Patel-Zellinger, who have been paying these taxes and working in the business world. They, like us, are citizens who have earned a living here and who (unlike the DFL gubernatorial candidate Mark Dayton) actually keep their money here. But most importantly, they will actually represent us, rather than rule over us.

Vote for a solution now so we aren’t stuck paying for even more of these consequences later.

Friday, October 29, 2010

UMD Bias Exemplifies the Larger Issue of Ideological Discrimation on Campuses

I posted the following on Ladies Logic this morning:

Let Freedom Ring writer Gary Gross noticed something strange posted on Twitter last night: The University of Minnesota-Duluth College Republicans tweeted, “UMD administration won’t let us put up signs for Tom Emmer, but yet the dems can put this up?” followed by a link to this photo of a Vote-for-Dayton sign endorsed by the College Democrats.

According to a recent press release, the College Republicans group had asked if they could post signs encouraging students to vote for Emmer, but were told by the University that “any type of poster or flyer that supported a candidate and encouraged students to vote for that candidate cannot be posted on campus.” The College Democrats, however, posted pro-Dayton flyers across campus. The University’s excuse for the College Democrats was apparently that these signs were giving directions to an upcoming Dayton rally, and would be taken down afterwards. Yet, after the rally, these signs were replaced with “a wave of posters telling students to vote for Mark Dayton for governor.”

Naturally, in light of this, the University denied having ever prohibited the College Republicans from doing the same and changed the rules to allow these postings on campus. Upon hearing that UMD had changed the rules to grant this privilege to the College Democrats, the College Republicans quickly came out with their own wave of “Vote for Chip” signs to support Congressional candidate Chip Cravaak who is running against 18th-term incumbent Jim Oberstar.

Though they can now post, it doesn’t change the fact that the College Democrats were able to keep their signs up “for the rally” and then post a whole series of signs encouraging students to vote for their candidate before the College Republicans were allowed to do so, giving one group an obvious campaigning advantage and demonstrating a clear bias in its dealings with student groups. The problem here is far greater than a single instance of double standards at a University. What the UMD CRs are going through is only one of many incidents of discrimination that public universities commit against conservative, libertarian and Republican students every single day, not only across campuses, but in classroom discussions and grading, in hiring faculty for academic departments and in setting the standards of academia.

As a College Republican at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities, this news didn’t surprise me at all. As a matter of fact, if I brought it up to my fellow CRs here, no one would be surprised by yet another anecdote about public universities limiting conservative and libertarian discourse and implementing their left bias in the classrooms and across campus. This bias has been forcibly instituted on students through an entire system in academia that works to keep Conservative and Libertarian ideas out of the classroom and out of academic discourse. A few years ago, Annie Karni, writing for the New York Sun, wrote:

"Conservative professors must publish more than their liberal peers to be competitive for the same university jobs and promotions, according to new reports. At a conference sponsored by the American Enterprise Institute today in Washington, D.C., researchers from across the country will present 18 papers that they say document the growing liberal bias in academia.
"Universities are tilting to the left, and it starts at the student level and goes all the way through to the hiring level and even to the promotion level," the vice president and director of the National Research Initiative at AEI, Henry Olsen, said. "This is a real problem, not anecdote masquerading as fact."

But is academia really controlled by the left because a majority of students lean to the left and that preference trickles upwards, or is it because, from an early age, students are forced to contend with the unyielding biases of their teachers and professors who present their opinions as fact? Those who would have us believe that the bias is initiated by students and works its way up to the hiring level where Conservative professors are systematically kept out of faculty positions are the same people who are implementing this institutionalized ideological discrimination in the first place. Karni also reported:

"Using national surveys that measured political party registration and ideological self-designation of faculty at 183 randomly selected four-year colleges and universities, researchers concluded that ideology had about a third as much impact as merit in determining the career success of socially conservative university professors.
"The trend is worrisome to many conservative scholars. "It hurts academia," a professor of Political Science at Villanova University, Robert Maranto, said. "It limits the questions we academics ask and the phenomenon we study, limiting the ideas which undergraduates are exposed to during their college education."

And the departments where we find the most disparities are those in which professors have the greatest opportunity to implement their political and social agendas and ideals. These are the humanities. Karni reported on this as well:

"In departments such as sociology and anthropology, "progressive" and "liberal" professors outnumber "conservative" and "libertarian" faculty members by a margin of at least 20 to 1, according to a new study by a husband and wife research team from George Mason University and the Swedish Institute for Social Research. The findings are based on dozens of national surveys about faculty voter behavior, policy views, and voter registration."

This was also found in a study Paul Kengor conducted in an issue of Policy Review examining the political affiliations of 190 social science and humanities professors at top Universities like Stanford and Cornell. He found that of those 190, 184 were self-proclaimed and/or registered Democrats and only 6 were Republicans. And this bias in professors then seeps down towards students. Kani added that:

"Some professors said a liberal bias is damaging the intellectual vitality of campus life, and they discourage conservative students from pursuing doctorate degrees in the humanities.
"If my students show conservative bias, I steer them away from the academy," a professor of English at the University of Virginia, Paul Cantor, said. "They have no future — they will not get jobs. If they want to teach traditional works in a traditional matter, they have no future in an English department today."
"Mr. Cantor, who is spending a semester at Harvard University teaching a course on Shakespeare and politics, said English departments were more intellectually diverse 50 years ago than they are today. Professors today may have broadened their syllabi, but most of them interpret those texts through the uniform lenses of race, class, and gender, he said."

Conservative students aren’t choosing to stay away from academia and conservative faculty members aren’t failing to qualify for positions. Instead, these faculty members are being held to higher standards by an increasingly discriminatory institution in order to suppress conservative and libertarian ideology and speech. And students are being discouraged from pursuing careers in the academy by self-serving leftists who hide behind the excuse that they are protecting these students from not having a job due to a system of discrimination that these same professors and their employers are creating and perpetuating.

In addition, students whose beliefs aren’t in line with the institution’s agenda are being further dissuaded through the process of obtaining an education, which often requires an adherence to the biases of their professors. Jason Dore of the Free Republic reported:

"Students detail how, time after time, professors introduce topics not included on the course description, squelch opposing opinions in discussion, misrepresent facts and encourage students to adopt the professor's point of view. A senior at UCSD detailed how he wrote a paper espousing a pro-life view that was picked apart. He rewrote it with a pro-choice stance and received an A.
"Cases of obvious bias are troubling enough, but when a teacher's opinion is taught as fact, students become indoctrinated without ever realizing they were taught lies. This often is the case in history classes when teachers present an unhistorical account of people or events.
"With the lack of accountability in the classroom and balance in teachers' views, how are students to trust the education they receive? Are they merely becoming indoctrinated members of the liberal left?"

Just this month, Richard. E. Redding of the LA Times wrote an article called, “It’s Diverse if You’re Liberal,” reporting on how “Conservative and Libertarian professors are becoming increasingly rare at colleges and universities, and this lack of diversity hampers the developments of innovative solutions to the nation’s problems.” He wrote:

"Last month, 18 million college students returned to school — to those hotbeds of debate about the crucial issues of the day, right? But not so fast. A major new study on the campus climate for viewpoint diversity — surveying 24,000 U.S. students and published by the American Assn. of University Professors — found otherwise.
"Only a third of college students felt that their professors made learning about different views a priority. In fact, most did not think it entirely safe to hold unpopular opinions on campus. Since more seniors felt this way than freshmen, it appears that the college experience makes students less comfortable about exploring and voicing diverse opinions.
"This lack of intellectual diversity at our nation's colleges and universities should be a concern to all of us. It means that our future leaders in industry, government and science are receiving a one-sided education (at an average cost of $75,000 to $155,000 for a degree) that leaves them ill-equipped, as the report explains, to work "across differences to tackle challenges and create solutions." "It also limits the phenomena studied, questions asked and solutions proposed by professors who, as the main producers of research and development in this country, fuel our innovative edge."

The left’s utilization of education as an ideological apparatus to mold the minds of students to fit their political agendas is not only unethical, but because they are paid with the money of taxpayers who believe that they are funding an open and free-thinking education system, it’s a direct violation of our American principles.

In the words of my personality psychology professor, who was teaching that a personality type characterized by discrimination and prejudice is associated with the right wing (despite the fact that it has only been tested for the far right and never the far left), those in academia tend to lean to the left themselves, so they wouldn’t be interested in looking for prejudice on the left. Despite admitting this, though, that same professor still included this assumed stereotype of prejudice against the right wing in the academic models we would be tested on in class. It didn’t matter that the research was done to find prejudice only in the right wing; he was still going to teach this idea about right-wingers as fact.

Too few studies have been conducted to expose this discrimination in the classroom and alienation of conservative students which contributes to blocking us from careers in the academy, largely due to the fact that leftists don’t find this to be a particularly “interesting” topic since it would prove the incidence of their use of our money to force their beliefs and propaganda onto students whose grades are subject to the successful reproduction of those opinions. This lack of checks on the leftists who have seized control of academia safely secures their ability to do as they please in the classroom, without any real consequences for overtly discriminating against conservative students. It also ensures that the only real proof of their doings lies in the experiences and anecdotes of college students, which are easily disregarded and ignored as simply being anecdotes.
With the discrimination that Republican, libertarian and conservative students have to face every day on campus as they try to simply get their grades and get out so that they can move into careers that will hopefully not punish them for their beliefs, does it really surprise anyone that there’s overt discrimination on campus as well?

The incident we saw at UMD was concerning, yes, but not just because it gives one party candidate an advantage over the other. The reason we should be concerned is that our public universities as a whole are suppressing free speech and targeting anyone who is not a leftist. Our country is seeing this pattern of blatant prejudice against a certain political ideology in our daily lives and experiences, but because it is being instrumented by ideological apparatuses like education and the media, students are feeling virtually powerless to expose it and even worse, virtually powerless to stop it now that it has been allowed to get this far.
What left-wing faculty create is a cycle. Left-wing bias keeps the right out of faculty positions, preventing the right from getting promotions. This in turn means that University policy, standards and fees allocations are controlled primarily and almost exclusively by members of the political left. It also means that classroom lectures, textbooks, discourse and grading are controlled by the left, which often leads to the indoctrination of students into those same views and the marginalization and alienation of those students who resist by daring to form differing opinions. Over the years, students with left-wing ideas are supported, encouraged and reinforced, while students with right-wing ideas are targeted for reform through the hostility of their peers, the expectations of their professors, and their vulnerability to subjective grading which has many students writing what the professor wants to hear, which also works psychologically to indoctrinate these students. Faculty discourage right-wing students from going into academia where they won’t find jobs due to this discrimination, which feeds into the cycle.

It’s time society stops excusing left-wing discrimination against conservative, libertarian and Republican citizens of society who pay just as much for their right to an education and deserve the same respect as both students and faculty as their left-wing counterparts.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Announcement

I was just given a great opportunity to write for Ladies Logic, so that's where you'll find most of my posts for a while. I'll do what I can to link between both and continue to post more personal and opinion pieces here, along with updates on campus politics, which Cindy's readers will be less interested in. My more researched and state-wide entries will largely by on LL, though. My alias there is "EspressoPress," which is thought sounded cool, so feel free to stop by the site and read through mine and Cindy's recent posts. :)

My post on the Emmer rally last night is there as well:
Check it out at http://www.ladieslogic.com/component/content/article/1-governor/524-mitt-romney-rallies-for-emmer.html

Monday, October 18, 2010

It's that time again!

With elections just around the corner and the politically-active community in a buzz, the College Republicans at the University of Minnesota will again be hosting Conservative Awareness Week!

But, until that happens, there are still plenty of events to keep us on our toes. Tonight, for example, Mitt Romney will be endorsing Tom Emmer in a rally at the Ramada MOA, by the Mpls Int'l Airport. The doors open to the public at 7 and it's free!

I hope to get there myself so that I can post the highlights of the event both here and on Ladies Logic, but unfortunately that will be dependent on my ability to get to Bloomington fast enough after class to secure a parking spot. I'm not entirely sure how full the lot will get, but the nice woman who picked up the phone at Ramada said that anyone who gets there early enough should be able to snag one.

Another upcoming event is the President's visit to the University of Minnesota this Saturday. Traffic will be horrific so for anyone coming to that (be it for the rally or the protest or the home football game), arrive early. The College Republicans have signs made up, so if you are as disappointed with our current executive as we are, feel free to join us in voicing that.

And remember, Conservative Awareness Week kicks off on Monday the 29th! I'll be sure to post updates on that as well!

Friday, October 1, 2010

The Truth About the "Small Business Jobs" Act

To try to break up the flood of far-left, anti-Emmer and anti-Republican posts and columns dominating the Opinions page each and every day, despite the more diverse and moderate views of the paper's audience on campus, I recently sent in a letter to the Minnesota Daily. As it becomes less and less recent, I'm guessing my letter won't actually be posted in the paper. At least I can still post it here.

Passing the “Small Business Jobs” Act
And the Controversial Dispute behind It


With elections just around the corner, Democrats were looking for a way to salvage their approval ratings. Enter the “Small Business Jobs” Act, a 42 billion-dollar addition to Stimulus package legislation. The President announced, “Now the Republicans have said this is their number one concern. I’m going to call their bluff.”

With the way Democrats designed the bill, the federal government would control and subsidize a $30 billion lending fund, regulate which businesses and products were eligible, and allocate funds for the expenses it deemed appropriate. On top of that, there would be another $12 billion in tax breaks. 38 Republican senators, wary of further government expansion and spending, voted against the bill. Yet, it wasn’t because they were all hypocrites as a previous letter to the Daily on this subject assumed. In reality, the Republicans proposed dozens of amendments to help Small Businesses through regulatory tax relief, including a safety measure to relieve small businesses from upcoming tax hikes and a bipartisan proposal to remove the government cap on the amount of loans businesses can obtain from credit unions. Senate Majority leader Harry Reid refused to let these be put to a vote, claiming they were not “germane” to the bill.

John Berlau and Andrew Kwiatkowski of the Competitive Enterprise Institute commented on this in the American Spectator saying, “[I]ndeed, actually providing relief to entrepreneurs from the government's burdens may not be ‘germane’ to a bill that purports to help small business by setting up a $30 billion big-government ‘small business lending fund’ -- what National Review writer Stephen Spruiell has called ‘Son of TARP’ -- in which the U.S. Treasury buys up stakes in banks and directs them to lend to small business with an emphasis on ‘linguistically and culturally appropriate outreach.’”

The phrase “linguistically and culturally appropriate” is concerning as well. After the President’s attack on GM, can any of us really believe he won’t let politics influence lending decisions? Republicans attempted an amendment to make loans available without government control, but of course, Reid was quick to block it, confirming their concerns that this was more about government control.

Spruiell also wrote that "this is the kind of politicized bank lending that the government has encouraged for decades through laws such as the Community Reinvestment Act and through mandates requiring Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to promote homeownership [that] actively drove the deterioration of lending standards that led to the bust."

With the real estate market seeing its highest foreclosure rate last month since the downturn, we are still feeling the ill effects of the last time the government micromanaged bank lending decisions. But, as we’ve seen with overwhelming public opposition to the Health Care bill and bloated $814 billion Stimulus, Mr. Obama won’t let trifles like the will of his constituents sway his stance on legislation.

Yet, the failure of similar measures isn’t the only reason many small businesses are voicing their disapproval. Pallavi Gogoi with the Associated Press reported that, “Bank executives say their customers don't want loans, even at low interest rates, because the sluggish economy has chilled expansion plans. Some say the federal money isn't worth it because they fear it will come with too much regulatory oversight.”

The President doesn’t appear to understand that what businesses need right now is not a pile of cash wrapped in bureaucratic tape. As Gogoi reminded us, people remain distrusting after the Troubled Asset Relief Fund (TARP), which “formed at the height of the financial meltdown to pump money into banks. Banks that accepted TARP money had to later cut dividends to shareholders and limit compensation to top executives. They were also penalized for early repayment.” He also added that, “Ninety-one percent of small business owners surveyed in August by the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) said all their credit needs were met. Only 4 percent cited a lack of financing as their top business problem. Plans for capital spending were at a 35-year low.”

Understanding that this bill was the right intention but the wrong approach, and realizing their attempts at compromising with amendments were being ignored, Republicans went for their last option, a filibuster. The President seized that opportunity to tell the press, “Understand, a majority of senators support the plan but Republican leaders in the Senate won’t even allow it to come up for a vote,” ironically casting the Republicans as the unreasonable ones.

Because of the Democrat majority’s blatant disregard for minority views and the President’s unprofessional and unyielding partisan stance, our representatives were once again unable to produce a bill that will bode well for the taxpayers funding it. With power clearly getting to their heads, Democrat leaders didn’t stop to realize that they weren’t just silencing and bashing members of the Congressional minority, but the citizens represented by that minority. As such, it’s going to take a lot more than this last political ploy to win the public back by November.

Saturday, May 1, 2010

The Truth of "Global Warming"

For day three of Conservative Awareness Week, we had the privilege of a visit from John Coleman, a man best known as the American meteorologist who founded the Weather Channel. Students strolled in and took their seats in the small lecture room in Rapson Hall Wednesday night, many also helping themselves to the free Raising Canes at the back of the room. Standing beside his slide show in his black suit and blue striped tie, Coleman introduced the discussion with a picture of the Earth. Apparently it was only 38 years ago, that this first full picture of the Earth was captured, with the sunlight hitting it just right. Young John Coleman was there at the television set, watching the photo gradually load onto the T.V. screen. It was an interesting thought to ponder for those of us in the room, especially since our memories only really ranged about 18-25 years or so. It's easy for us to forget that all that we know about the Earth is actually quite new, which is why he finds it best to retain a degree of cautious skepticism.

His message was clear and delivered with helpful visual and humorous supplementation. As he stood beside his presentation, gesturing at its main points, his career as a weatherman and newscaster were evident in his posture and speaking style. His arguments were informative and well-supported, and his monologue entertaining enough to get a group of college students to willingly spend their evenings listening to what he had to say on global warming. This holds especially true for the U of M Twin Cities campus, which is notorious for its "Green" initiatives. Ironically, no organization on campus appears to waste as much paper blanketing the campus in propaganda, as the environmentalists.

And, despite this reputation, John Coleman braved the possible backlash of questioning the globe-boiling doomsday allegedly lurking in our near future in order to reintroduce scientific facts to the discussion on climate change. He addressed the many myths about climate change, including flora and fauna dying off, ice caps melting away, terrible droughts wreaking havoc, coasts flooding, and all of the other "signs" of global warming that these politicians and leaders bent on finding means of control in order to someday construct their world government have so hollowly claimed.

Coleman, through speech and slide show, worked to shine light on the common misconceptions surrounding what we know about the environment. Cycles of change in flora and fauna are naturally occurring, along with the rise and fall of temperatures. The message we're hearing is that carbon dioxide as a greenhouse gas will cause temperatures to skyrocket, ice caps to melt, oceans to flood over shorelines, droughts to sweep the earth, and various other catastrophes. During his speech, Coleman tried to introduce scientific facts and solid evidence, in order to give us another perspective on what is going on.

The first myth he addressed in detail was the alleged north pole and ice cap catastrophe. Ice on the north pole has consistently come and gone, melted and frozen, throughout the past thousands of years as far as we can tell. At one point, remember, we cold even sail ships through the Northwest Passage. Coleman added that, "The first submarine in 1960’s went to the north pole and came up through the ice. It has always been in an ebb and flow. The newspapers and websites and TV channels were full of this news, but today (the ice level) is right back to where we started and back to the norm of the last 40 years."

He addressed the picture of "drowning polar bears," made famous by global warming's poster child Al Gore, which depicted polar bears stranded on a small, floating chunk of ice, soon to tragically drown due to their homes having melted away. The shocking truth behind this photo is that this is such a misrepresentation of what was occurring, that it's actually somewhat laughable. The scientist who took this picture was later shocked to see her stolen shot being used in Gore's exaggerated and scientifically unsound politicized presentation. Really, as she and her team had crossed through there in their boat, the polar bears had swam up to that chunk and climbed on it out of curiosity, trying to get a better view of their peculiar and unfamiliar human visitors. A little while later, they dove back into the water and swam back to their usual icy shore. There was no drowning involved at all. Polar bear deaths were actually due largely to hunting. Local communities had used their fur to keep warm and their meat as food. Since their hunting has been limited, however, the polar bear numbers have apparently risen back up to 29,000 again. Yes, we were killing polar bears through our activities, but directly, not by warping the globe itself. Coleman declared, "The polar bears are thriving."

On the myth of flooding coasts, Coleman, who has himself lived on the coast exclaimed, "Ive lived there 15 and the waters right where it was when I got there. I have friends who have lived there for 40 years and its right where it was when they got there.” Of course, when this argument was brought up to Gore, he so wittingly responded that the ocean rises differently in different places. And, granted, there will be some fluctuations due to varying factors, but these sorts of differences involving a lack of rising altogether? Not likely.

The droughts. He acknowledged that we have had some rather severe ones two years ago (in Texas and California for example), but in the last week, there's been no drought. The El NiƱo season wiped it out. He explained that he lived through the dust bowl as a kid and that droughts come and go.

"There is no climate crisis," Coleman said. "No climate crisis at all."

So how did Al get it so wrong? According to Coleman, "This whole political frenzy, this whole political hubbub, …this whole thing would not have happened" if it weren't for Al Gore. So where did this man get his idea? After showing us a video he made about Al Gore that I'm sure anyone can find amongst his other videos on his website, Coleman's Corner, John Coleman informed us about Revelle,an oceanographer, and his fellow researchers who started the research with a small report. He involved student Albert Gore in his research later and Gore ended up running with it. The surprising twist here is that, in 1988, Revelle wrote to congressmen and women about his second thoughts. He then wrote a report urging more research before any remedial action. Gore called him senile and characteristically refused to debate on it. Revelle later delivered a speech apologizing for the research he had done which sent us so far astray. And ironically, Al Gore still would go on to receive the Revelle Award for his global warming propaganda. The video provided far more detail, but in summary, explained how Albert Gore, who had gotten a D in Revelle's class, went on to somehow win the Nobel Peace Prize for something based entirely on forged, greatly refuted, and/or later disproved "scientific" evidence. Coleman explained that hearing about these two men winning the Nobel Peace Prize for such a falsity, was what really pushed him over the edge. "I really study my issues carefully and clearly," he explained. "I studied the papers that showed up online...I talked to my colleagues and friends." When he decided to speak out against it, and produce a report on the fallacy here, he explained that he was at the time working in a journalism job in San Diego, and half expected to fired for this come Monday. Instead, he received a ton of support for what he wrote. More than 700 international scientists had then expressed dissent on man-made global warming. Coleman was invited to an international convention on climate change in New York, and he showed us the speech that he made there.

We were told they have 4000 scientists in consensus at UN. First of all, there are only 2900 members of the IPCC, and most are politicians and bureaucrats, not scientists. Only 60 scientists contributed to or reviewed the key chapter 9, and even of those, they weren’t totally convinced it was true.

From here, he moved into what he knows about the Earth:
The interglacial period is nature’s global warming. The other ones couldn’t have been man-made because there weren’t any human beings around. We didn't start building fossil fuels until recently (see picture of the graph he presented). The IPCC printed it out very differently. This became known as the hockey stick chart, produced by Professor Michael Man. We found out that the IPCC manipulated the formula for this chart so much that no matter what you put into it, it would come up as a hockey stick. All the warming there is is actually 6/10 of a degree. That’s it. Nature’s global warming is about one degree every hundred years, so there is nothing unusual about this.

So why is 4.5 billion dollars a year being spent on global warming?
The objective, Coleman explained, was to be able to tax industrialized nations in order to fund a single world government, and to help the U.N. and underdeveloped nations.

He concluded with points on energy sources and fuel. "Is it possible to have a modern, fossil fuel-powered civilization without destroying the climate and our clean air and water? Thanks to real scientists, we could. The technology we have in the 19th century allows us the opportunity to work towards this goal. What are you going to do, though? Wind power? Our wind farms have proved economically unviable because it only works between 17 and 24 mph.

"How about solar? That's beautiful if the sun is out. (He looks out the window) The sun isn’t out right now. Solar wouldn’t have worked tonight or over the winter. Even in San Diego it doesn’t nearly cut it.

"We have learned to use our fossil fuels cleanly thanks to real scientists. We can even power Las Vegas without damaging the environment. We can do it. We have done it. And I am proud of our scientists who have done it.

"I don’t want you to lose any more sleep about your carbon footprint. It is not real."

His last slide was a picture of underwear (included below), which he humorously explained was the only evidence he has seen for global warming.

From here he moved into an interesting question and answer session that I shall detail below, once I have a spare moment between final projects, papers and exams.
For more information, feel free to visit Coleman's Corner, off of the Kusi.com website. There should also be plenty of youtube videos you can access, in order to reach the other side of the story, and to understand not only what the government would like us to think is occurring around us, but what is actually occurring.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Cemetery of Innocents

The Display
Yesterday morning, two of my fellow College Republicans and I joined a handful of dedicated members of the Students for Life of America in setting up their third annual display called the "Cemetery of Innocents."
For anyone who passed by the lawn in front of Coffman and saw rows of black balloons attached to a variety of baby toys, diapers, shampoos, wet wipes, story books, outfits, burp cloths, etc, but did not see the sign in front of it, the 138 black balloons in this display were put out to represent the 138 babies who die every hour in the U.S. alone through abortions.
Members of the group spent the day handing out pamphlets to raise awareness of the issue and to protect the display from pro-choice students, who have tried each year to ruin the display. Actually, I was shocked and disappointed to hear that pro-choice last year students had actually rushed in with scissors to cut the strings off of the balloons. One of the SFLA members joked that it was ironic, since that wasn't very eco-friendly behavior, letting balloons loose like that. Unfortunately, after looking into it, I found out that this has happened quite a bit. This last January, at George Washington University, the College Democrats vandalized a pro-life display that the Young America's Foundation group had erected with crosses in memory of babies killed in abortions. The College Republicans, who shared a joint office with the College Democrats, came in to find that the crosses had been pinned around the office upside down with anti-Christian messages written on them and even condoms pulled over some of them. The crosses had been donated to the group for awareness purposes by a New York-based church, and this vandalism was a blatant act of assault on public property and disrespect against the pro-life students. There have been a list of incidents, ranging from tearing down and destroying or burning displays to slashing the tires of pro-life student group leaders. I was extremely disappointed to hear all of this. It's really unfortunate to see such an affront to free speech, especially on college campuses, which were meant to be forums for students to learn to open their minds to or at least respect the ideas of their peers.
Today was a beautiful day, though. Not too windy and to my knowledge things went smoothly.
The group, Students for Life of America, is a national non-profit organization, originally founded in 1988 as the American Collegians for Life. It has evolved and expanded and is now run by a board of directors, in order to create a more stable representation on campuses in order to raise awareness and promote activism on the issue. The group works with student groups on campuses across 43 states in order to educate the public about abortion, euthanasia and infanticide.
And not to worry. All of the items that were bought for the display were saved (and in some cases protected in Ziploc baggies) so that they could be donated after. The message was concise but powerful, with a shocking stat and an attention-grabbing visual that combined to spread awareness about the sheer numbers of lives lost to abortions every hour in our country.

Abortion
And, in order to do the Conservative Awareness Week's awareness topic of the day justice, I went online to the SFLA website, where they have information and facts about abortions. I know we all know that an abortion is a method used to end a pregnancy, but beyond that, most people don't know too much. According to the SFLA website's fact sheet from the Alan Guttmacher Institute, 1.31 million abortions occur every year in the United States. The U.S. abortion rate is unfortunately one of the highest among developed countries. In addition, if you go onto the Planned Parenthood website, it reassures readers that, "Abortions are very common. In fact, more than 1 out of 3 women in the U.S. have an abortion by the time they are 45 years old."
So what do abortions actually entail? I won't go into highly descriptive detail here, for those of you who are squeamish, but I am going to be honest, so if this is going to disturb you as much as it disturbs me, you need only know that there are various methods, including curettage, evacuation, extraction, injection, drugs and suction. There's a list of medical complications which come along with abortions. According to the SFLA site, these include heavy bleeding, infection, incomplete abortion, sepsis, anesthesia, damage to the cervix, scarring of the uterine lining, damage to internal organs and in severe cases, death. In addition, there are emotional complications such as eating disorders, relationship issues, guilt, depression, flashbacks to the abortion, suicidal thoughts, sexual dysfunction and alcohol or substance abuse. 52% of abortions are performed on women under 25 years old as well, so we are seeing more and more young women making this decision and then suffering the consequences of it.

While I believe strongly that abortions are morally wrong, however, my goal is to spread awareness so that when women make the decision to abort a baby, they realize that they aren't simply clicking the edit-undo keys on their computer. They really are having a baby medically murdered. The baby is extremely young and has not yet seen the world, but it is still a human life. I sincerely wish that women didn't have to pay the heavier price for unprotected or insufficiently protected sex more so than men, because it obviously took two to conceive. And, in the cases of rape and sexual assault, the woman may not have had any choice in conception. This is why I am hesitant to advocate for a law prohibiting all abortions. It's a difficult issue. On the one hand, the government does have the responsibility to enforce the protection of our right to life, and abortion is an obvious attack on that. In addition, in the case of abortions, the victim is hidden from the world, within the one who will be permitting the kill. I do feel that we owe it to these children to speak up for them in at least some way, seeing as they still have life and are still human beings. The fact that they are so heavily dependent and fragile still, and that they require further gestation and nurturing before they can speak for themselves should not provide reasoning against their right to live, but provide us an extra incentive to protect them. This is why I support raising awareness and educating women (and men) about the abortion issue. Perhaps if they realized the true nature of the procedures and the harsh reality of the choice they are making, they would decide not to go through with the abortion.

It is important that we stop letting society see murder as a solution.

Here is the link to the page where these procedures are described, and to where more information can be found:
http://www.studentsforlife.org/index.php/getthefacts/facts-and-talking-points/

I encourage everyone to familiarize themselves as much as possible with the harsh reality of abortion, and to do what you can to help those around you to understand exactly what such a thing means when they are considering getting one. The information is difficult to read and disturbing and painful to imagine, but if we don't become more aware of it, we will continue to death tolls in the millions every year, and it will be those innocent lives paying for society's ignorance.