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Thingish Things

Bachmann Has Earned National Respect

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Dec• 16•11

Even if Michelle Bachmann were to somehow win Iowa, it would be unlikely that she could put together the financing or institutional support to be an effective challenger in the other 49 states.

But last night’s debate performance, like so many before it, showed that Mrs. Bachmann belongs on the national stage. Sure, she has made mistakes here and there.  And her ardent social positions are a put-off to some.  But the Minnesota congresswoman, who stepped into politics just five years ago, has gone toe-to-toe with the other seven Republican challengers in a dozen debates.  She has been the most consistently good debater among them, unblinkingly taking the fight to Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul last night, each of whom have been in national politics for decades. By my count, she won both exchanges.

Bachmann’s detractors – the ones who used to call her “batsh*t crazy” in blog posts – have waited for the meltdown that never came. Bachmann has been prepared, measured, and unflappable in every performance.

One can disagree with anything or everything that Mrs. Bachmann believes in, but I think it would be difficult to argue that she has  not earned national respect. Her debate composure alone make her a significant voice in American politics going forward.  

Newt Planned U.S. States in Outer Space — For Real

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Dec• 15•11

Anyone who says Newt Gingrich doesn’t like big government hasn’t read his National Space and Aeronautics Policy Act of 1981.” Mr. Gingrich wanted to bring government to Jupiter and Mars, as Frank Sinatra might sing, but his legislation was shot out of the sky by sane minds in Congress. 

The bill amendment  — you can’t make this up  — was designed to create governments in American colonies in space and on other planets. Here is Title IV of Gingrich’s act: 

Title IV: Government of Space Territories – Sets forth provisions for the government of space territories, including constitutional protections, the right to self- government, and admission to statehood.

 Statehood!

As for the cost of all this, the Gingrich legislation as written at the time: 

Directs the Administrator of NASA, together with the Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy, in consultation with appropriate Federal agencies, to develop and submit to Congress a preliminary five year program including proposed annual funding requirements and a detailed research and development schedule. Requires a final five-year program, a ten-year plan, and 30-year policy goal to be submitted to Congress no later than one year after the date of enactment of thisAct. Requires that status reports and revisions to the plan be submitted annually with the budget request beginning the third year after the enactment of this Act.

In short, Mr. Gingrich was seeking a 30-year funding stream to prepare for the colonization of God knows where, statehood for democracies in God knows where, and the bureaucracies to manage it all. 

That funding would be running out just about, well, now, 2011. 

This would all make a very good ad…

Is Newt Slipping?

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Dec• 15•11

The latest Rasmussen Poll has Newt Gingrich dropping a dozen points in Iowa.  This is either an anomaly, or the result concerted battering of Mr. Gingrich in the opinion pages from wary conservative intellectuals.  I suspect it is the former. 

Barring a fresh public slip, one wouldn’t expect Newt to plunge in the polls, but to gradually disintegrate under the weight of his past. Whatever this is, it provides hope to hundreds of down-ballot Republicans running in Democratic-leaning states. 

Our Moral Obligation to Iraq

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Dec• 15•11

The U.S. war in Iraq formally ended today, but hostilities will continue in that nation for years to come. Neighboring Shiite Iran will make sure of that.

Needless to say, Americans are overjoyed at getting so many of its sons and daughters back for Chanukah and Christmas. Whether one supported the war or not, our soldiers made us proud.  They did everything they were asked to do, and they removed one of the cruelest tyrants in history.

No matter our economic situation here at home — no matter how quickly the American public forgets about that war torn nation — we have an obligation moving forward to do whatever we can to see Iraq thrive as a free nation. Iraq is our ally now. If it needs help fending off encroachment from Iranian-directed militias, we need to provide it in whatever way we can. If it needs partners for economic projects, we should be the first in line. 

The utter abandonment of the South Vietnamese in 1975 is a black mark on our history. We promised the free Vietnamese arms aid after we left, and then turned our backs on them. What occurred in the years immediately following was unforgivable.

This congress must not do to free Iraqis what the post-Vietnam War congress did to the free Vietnamese, no matter what we have to do without here at home. There is no price tag on honor; there is a heavy price for relinquishing it. 

Bad-Ass Patriots

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Dec• 15•11

http://youtu.be/7dKWBDdAN0Y

Only in today’s music world would a patriotic rock band be seen as radical, but that’s exactly what Madison Rising is quickly becoming known as in the liberal-dominated music industry — bad-ass radical.  The pro-military, pro-free-market, anti-protest rockers are considered so against the grain, in fact, that they were banned from playing in Zuccotti Park!  (Full disclosure: My company helped MR launch, but we do no work for them now.)

 The New York Post has a piece today describing some reaction to the band.  Writes Post scribe Todd Seavey: 

Madison Rising goes against the political grain in rock. Drummer Sam Fishman recalls, “I played [the Madison Rising song] ‘In the Days That Reagan Ruled’ for a college friend” and he “thought it was a joke.”

Guitar player Chris Schreiner says, “My friend’s wife told me that I wouldn’t be allowed back in the house if I appeared on Glenn Beck.” He recalls performances where the band had “girls throwing themselves at us, only for them to run when they heard we were a pro-American band.”

At the band’s recent show at the downtown club National Underground, Mgrdechian noticed some “pierced faces” exiting during the song “Walking Through That Door,” which is about a soldier heading off to duty with his “head held high” (lead singer Dave Bray is a Navy vet). During the next number, the pro-gun “Right to Bear,” Mgrdechian says, “several other people left in a huff.”

Madison Rising has struck a chord. Love ’em or hate ’em, they have arrived and are getting noticed. They are a great bunch of guys and they deserve all the success they will achieve. “In the Days that Reagan Ruled.” From a hard rock band? Imagine that! 

Newt’s $30,000-Per-Hour Question

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Dec• 14•11

Newt Gingrich is such a target rich candidate that his fellow GOP primary candidates don’t seem to know where to begin harming him politically.  They hit him with a quip on one thing and then move to another — before any real damage is done to his candidacy. What needs to be performed is a sustained assault on one crack in the armor at a time.

George Will points the way today in a single paragraph in his syndicated column:

“In the service of Washington’s bipartisan certitude that too few people owned houses, Freddie Mac helped produce the housing bubble and subsequent crash. It did so even though it paid Gingrich $30,000 an hour. That is about what he received if, as he says, he worked for Freddie Mac about an hour a month, telling it that what it was doing was “insane.”  

I know we’ve gone over this before, but have we really? Let’s slow down for a minute. Has Mr. Gingrich really explained what he did for Freddie Mac?  The historian line was absolute nonsense, but he has almost gotten away with it. Historians aren’t paid $30,000 per hour.  

So why was Mr. Gingrich paid hourly what it takes the median American worker a full year to make? What did he do for that money?  Who hired him?  What meetings took place?  Where are Mr. Gingrich’s files and memos on the account?  If he won’t release them, why won’t he release them? What about his emails? (It’s a legitimate public question. Freddie Mac cost U.S. homeowners trillions in lost market value.) What did Mr. Gingrich actually do for the $1.6 million he was paid?  Seriously. What did he do? Mr. Gingrich…?

If the other Republican candidates in this race want to stop the  former Georgia congressman in his tracks — and they all do, save maybe Rick Santorum who may be eyeing a VP slot —  this is where they need to go. Mr. Gingrich’s explanation of his lucrative involvement with Freddie is so preposterous that they should never have allowed the spotlight to get off of it.  

Americans hate to be lied to by politicians. And they despise Washington insiders.  Mr. Gingrich’s “historian” hubris  did the former and proves he is the latter. 

It’s not too late on Freddie Mac. Surely there must be a taker.  Anyone? 

Dinner and a Movement

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Dec• 14•11

Had a great dinner last night with a couple of good friends. Both are from the political left (one used to weigh in daily on this blog under “your friend” before writing me off as hopeless; the other, a young Ph.D. in philosophy and an adjunct professor at a leading university, I had not seen in more than six years.)

After rhetorical appetizers — what have you been up to?  Where are you working? — we dived into the main course of politics, the upcoming elections, etc.

In discussing President Obama, I could sense discomfort emanating from the professor, who is one of the nicest people I have met, and someone who has never worn politics on her sleeve in my company. Sensing the division, I pressed.

“Are you not thrilled with President Obama,?” I asked, hoping to gain an ally against “your friend,” a childhood buddy, and a far better political debater than I.

She was not thrilled, but I was floored to learn why. She is an avowed political anarchist, way to the left of President Obama, who had spent July-November as a member of the central committee of Occupy Wall Street. I was thinking she might have turned Republican

My immediate thought was, “No sh*t! — I almost fell off my seat — followed closely by “I really hope she wasn’t reading my OWS-bashing blogs.” As much as I enjoy the combat of politics, I don’t like hurting people’s feelings. She was too polite to tell me if she had. I then went on to pepper her with a hundred questions about what it was like on the ground, how the group evolved, and what happens next. (No prying for trade secrets, just genuine interest questions.)

One thing about the political left I’ve always found alluring is the grandiosity of its thinking, however much I reject it philosophically. The Left seeks to remake society in an unlimited number of ways, while conservatives believe in the tried and true — stick with the time-tested wisdom of generations past until change is absolutely necessary. Radical change is dangerous.

I believe the latter to be true — I know it to be true — but it is vitalizing nonetheless, every once in a while, to listen to idealistic people of good will think outside the box. Way outside it.

Dinner last night changed our opinions and outlooks on life not one iota, but it did remind me how very easy it is to like the heck out of people with whom you totally disagree.

Is Voting the Next Big Fight Over Illegal Immigration?

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Dec• 14•11

New Haven Mayor John DeStefano is asking the Connecticut state legsilature to allow illegal immigrants to vote in his city’s municipal elections. I would be shocked if a Republican presidential campaign didn’t have a news release out on this before I can press “publish” on this blog item. Mitt Romney should not miss this opportunity. 

I would also be surprised if the far left did not embrace this cause in an attempt to gradually break down the walls between citizens and non-citizens, just as domestic partnerships were used to lead to gay marriage.  

We all remember the fight over driver licenses for illegal/undocumented immigrants; it was the issue that first tripped up Hillary Clinton on a presidential primary stage. That would be nothing, I would think, compared to the uproar that would occur over non-citizen voting legislation. 

Republicans should jump all over it.  And President Obama should shoot down the notion as fast as he possibly can. Will be interesting to see. 

 

One Extra Gift to Give

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Dec• 13•11

A 47-year-old New York City Police officer, Peter Figoski, the single father of four daughters, was shot in the face and killed yesterday while trying to stop a burglary.  

The New York Post has started a college fund for his daughters, ages 20, 18, 16, and 14. 

Checks should be mailed to:

The Peter Figoski Education Fund

c/o New York Post

PO Box 1013

NewYork, NY 10108

Quote of the Day, Charles C. W. Cooke

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Dec• 12•11

“As of next semester, we will live in a country in which Harvard — the second most expensive college in the United States — doesn’t consider it necessary to offer a course about the American Revolution, but NYU offers two in Occupy Wall Street.” — Charles C. W. Cooke in National Review. (Thanks, BVL.)