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Name: Voice Guy
Location: Laramie, WY
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Legacy... isn't that a car made by Subaru?

Well, it’s been nearly a month since my last post. I want to disabuse the notion that I haven’t posted because of post-election depression or anything like that. Rather, with the advent of the Christmas holiday, and a new line of work I simply wasn’t able to find the time to blog regularly. But let’s embrace the fact that I have now shown up to the party, rather than focus on the fact that I came perhaps a little bit late.

There’s been a lot going on, but most of that will materialize and coalesce on January 25th, 2009. So I want to focus on what we are leaving behind in the wake of all of this change and hope. That is Bush’ legacy. I have no doubt that many of you will have read blogs and articles rambling on about the Iraq War, the financial crisis, 911 and the war on terror, as well as the expanding nature of the executive branch of government. Many of these writings will try to postulate whether history will look favorably on our 43rd president, but rather than follow their lead, I would like to comment on this fascination and preoccupation with legacy and legacy shopping.

I don’t think that President Bush is really concerned with legacy shopping. If his past behavior is any guide to his future or current behavior I feel that we can be fairly certain that he doesn’t care whether or not he has high favorability ratings, now or in the future. He has always seemed much more concerned with doing what he thought was best and most appropriate for our nation. He took, I believe, the job of the Presidency very seriously. And why not, he saw his father in the Whitehouse for many years not only as President, but Vice President as well. I think he understood the incredible weight of the office and its import.

So I think that thinking or talking too much about legacy is the Media’s purview. It is nearly impossible to predict how future generations will view the actions of today’s movers and shakers. We cannot hope to have the impartiality or perspective needed to judge them. It is far too vain and self aggrandizing to talk about legacy. Essentially, it is guessing how someone will be famous, rather than assessing how appropriate or needful someone’s actions have been. I say we all leave legacy shopping to the media, and instead applaud our President for a job well done and if not always completed successfully, attempted with absolute commitment. 

Until next time….

Go Broncos! Beat the Chargers!     

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Let's Go Broncos!!!!

Let’s talk Broncos.

After a stellar win last week at Cleveland the Broncos are poised to take on the rest of the season with gusto! Now, I know that a lot of people are saying, “They beat the Browns! Of course they beat the Browns!” But let’s face it, even the worst team in the NFL is still a professional football team. And I don’t think that the Browns are the worst team in the NFL. With that said, it is entirely possible for any team in football to beat any other team on any given Sunday.   So this win against Cleveland wasn’t a gimme. 

What I was impressed with in that game was how the Broncos didn’t just fall backwards into the win. They had to work for it, and eventually got it. We didn’t win because of bad officiating – or especially good for that matter. We simply won. And that is good at this point in the season with all of the injuries that our team has suffered. Of course, every team has injuries and still needs to find a way to get that big W. 

So now it’s on to Atalanta. The A-T-L yo!   I think that this is another one that we can win. The Falcons aren’t the best team in the NFL, nor are they the worst. (Whereas I believe that the Broncos are always the best team in the NFL J) This is another game we will have to work to win, but I think it can be done. Tony Scheffler will be back to his full speed, and with Eddie Royal, and #15 in the field of play, things look good. I’m not worried about our running back situation, because let’s face it, you or I could run for 125 yards a game behind the Broncos offensive line.

So let’s go Broncos! Let’s Go!!

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A Brief Aside From the Election...

I am an American, and as such, I believe in four basic tenets.  One: Life.  Two: Liberty. Three: The pursuit of happiness. And Four: Denver Broncos Football. 

Now, I know that with the election going on right now it may seem a bit trite to discuss the Denver Broncos.  But I remind you all that no matter what the outcome of the election next Tuesday the Broncos will play on Sunday and will still be at the top of the AFC West Division.

I am happy to note that this weekend we will have Tony Scheffler, Selvin Young, and Eddie Royal back in the mix. This is great news for Jay Cutler (the incomparable #6) as he will again have ALL his weapons back on offence and will no longer be relegated to throwing only to Brandon Marshall (the incomparable #15). 

Now we will be coming off of a loss to the Patriots – heck, even a blind squirrel finds an acorn every once in a while – and a bye week. But with our record of wins after a bye week being unquestionable, I feel great about this weekend.

So remember, even if the outcome of the election stifles your joy, and your cup is less than full, the Broncos will still play, the Broncos will still win, and Mile High Magic will still be magical. 

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Obama-nomics

In the recent weeks we’ve heard much from both presidential candidates on how they intend to fix this economic mess that we have found ourselves in. On the one hand, we have John McCain who is advocating the growth of our markets through free-market principled economics; while on the other hand Barak Obama is telling Americans that he wants to help the middle classes but what he proposes is the largest growth of taxation and government spending since the Carter Administration.

Obama begins by telling us that he will make sure that only the wealthy or rich will be burdened with a tax raise. He means those that make $250 thousand per year or more. How this arbitrary number was reached, I have no idea – maybe someone should ask him. The first problem with this plan is that the top 25% of income earners in this nation already pay 86% of the tax burden for our nation, and simply because they can afford it is not a good enough reason for people to be levied a tax. In fact, it is not a reason to do anything at all; they earned that money and should keep what they have worked so hard for. 

The second problem is that he applies this to small businesses. He says that only a very small percentage of small businesses make over $250 thousand dollars a year anyway so the small business market will not feel the burden of a new tax. Well, I have news for Obama. He was confused and got it backwards. In fact, only a very small percentage of small businesses make less than $250 thousand per year. The vast majority make between half a million and $10 to $15 Million. Obama has tried to mislead us here as he has on many other issues.

The last thing I’ll mention about this plan of Obama’s is that he never states what portion of that supposed $250,000 and above he will tax. Is it gross income? Net Worth? With Inventory included? What? Because that is a game changer as well, and for him to be so vague about this is dangerous. He will definitely cause small businesses to lose money. If they lose money, then they lose jobs, and when they lose jobs, business decreases, and when that happens, the markets struggle and before you know it, recession time – and all in the guise of helping the middle classes by punishing the so-called rich with taxes.     

Today, Obama has mentioned a $3000 tax credit for businesses that create jobs. Again, Obama’s ignorance gets the best of him. How on Earth is lucrative for a business to spend – and this is just a guess – $65,000 to create a job (salary, benefits, etc.) just to get $3000 in tax credits. That’s like giving a homeless man $3 and then taking him to the most expensive restaurant in town and telling him to have a full meal and then to pick up the check. (This analogy isn’t mine; I’m borrowing it from someone else!)

The point I’m trying to make with all of this is how ignorant Obama is about economics. It’s obvious to me how little these plans of his could work. But, it seems, the ignorance abounds and millions of Americans – including the middle classes – will be fooled by his rhetoric. He seems to be simply regurgitating what his handlers have told him without understanding any of it. Proof of this can be found in his speech this week where he promised a cut to the capital gains tax on investments made in small businesses. Well, the last time I checked, there was no capital gains tax on investments in small businesses – unless, of course, he is planning to institute one, and then cut it for political expedience.

The solution is simple. Cut taxes. You cannot raise taxes during an economic slowdown and hope to spur growth.  It’s like putting water on a smoldering fir and hoping that it’ll make the flames become hotter and higher. No! Remove the burdens placed upon working Americans by the government; give the economy back to the people. The government has no business running business when it can’t even seem to run itself. It is not government’s job to make my life bountiful, it is mine, and the sooner the government relinquishes that right the sooner we can get our country back on track and on the road to growth and prosperity that only our country has ever known. The idea that is America is its people – not its government. With Obama-nomics it would be the other way around – and that way lies disaster.   

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Debate: It's What you Use to Catch De-Fish

  I guess that Debate is what you use to catch de-fish. 

It certainly isn’t used anymore to thrash your opponent’s positions, or to disqualify someone else’s arguments. This trend was typified in last night’s second presidential debate. 

The problem can be traced to a couple of key components in the structure of the so-called Debate. First, we have the moderator. Now Tom Brokaw is a seasoned professional for whom we should have much respect, but last night’s moderation was abysmal. The grand thing about a town hall style debate is that the questions that get asked are generally off the beaten path, and they tend to engender responses in the candidates that lead to more personality and poise being displayed. When Brokaw stated that he had chosen the questions to be asked personally, it became clear that it was going to be just another policy vs. policy debate without much substantive argument either for or against one candidate or the other. And that is exactly what we got. 

It seems clear that McCain won’t attack Obama on his character and his associations. And it seems clear that Obama doesn’t have a leg to stand on to finish McCain off. He couldn’t finish Hillary off in the primary season without the Super Delegates, and he can’t finish McCain off with his “eloquent’ speech skills, and his “calm” demeanor. 

McCain needs to bring out all of the questionable character flaws in Obama; beginning with his association with a known domestic terrorist, Bill Ayers, then moving on to his ties to the ACORN organization – the organization that is close to the heart of our current economic woes, and more recently at the heart of an FBI voter fraud investigation. But McCain won’t do that. He wants his campaign to be as non-partisan as possible. The problem with this is that the Democrats aren’t non-partisan. How can McCain hope to defeat an opponent who he tries so hard not to annoy or make angry? McCain’s hero Ronald Regan was always partisan. He disagreed with almost everything that the opposing party believed in, and when he told them and the American public so, he won hands down. I am mystified by McCain’s tactics here.     

In the debate last night we had a moderator who negated the possible benefits to the format, and then couldn’t keep the format together. And then we had two candidates who refused to throw actual punches and simply slapped each other with limp hands. I guess that if I had to pick a winner, I would pick McCain. He definitely had more substance in his answers than Obama did, he just didn’t take the opportunities he had to smash Obama’s arguments the way he should have. I loved the way that Obama skillfully skirted around answering many of the questions that he was asked. It really showed how once he is off the teleprompter how awful he is at speaking. He would simply divert his answer back to one of his stump speeches, and go from there, hoping all the while that we would forget that he hadn’t answered the question. McCain called him on it once, but then didn’t press the issue as he should have done.

I can’t say how much the debate changes things in the election, if at all. Only time will tell. Looking to the past, candidates who have had many points’ lead in the polls with 3 weeks to go ended up losing the election in the end – Gore, Kerry and Dukakis to name a few. I think that the margin will be much closer whatever the polls say. In any case, polls have a way of being created to make the news, rather than being taken to see what the news is or will be. 

Until next time… I’m going fishing – I just need to remember to bring De-Bate!      

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Where have all the consevatives gone?

 

That is the most important question I can think of today. I watched the Senate pass a “Rescue Bill” on Wednesday that they claimed was better than the first version when it was no different than the first version at all except that it had $150 Billion in extra pork attached to it. And if that was all that was keeping the house from passing it – which it did today – then we can only form one conclusion. The vast majority of congressmen and women have little interest in “Doing what is best for the people of this country,” and instead are more focused on getting money for their own pet projects. 

How anyone who voted ‘no’ prior to today could vote ‘yes’ now on a bill that is for all intents and purposes, the same, is mystifying. There is all sorts of audio out there where senators and congressmen are saying that they didn’t want to vote for it, but they had to because something had to be done now to fix this supposed crisis. That’s like saying, “I didn’t want to sew up this gaping wound in my chest with this rusty barbed wire, but because there isn’t any thread handy I’ll go ahead and use it.” When all it would take is time to go find some thread. 

Now, I am of the mind that government should have very little to do with this economic situation’s resolution outside of getting out of the way completely. The market will correct itself. It may not be pretty, but that is what happens in a free market. Bankruptcy happens, and gradually new business comes in to fill the gap and strength is renewed in the market. That strength is stymied by the intrusion of the government. Anyone who has a safety net will be willing to take more risk than in necessary. 

I am not seeing any good conservative leadership out there anymore. It seems as though the senate and house republicans are more interested in ‘playing nice’ and ‘reaching across the aisle’ than sticking to their principles. I wonder how many liberals compromised their principles with this bill? It’s disgraceful how weak and lily livered the house and senate so-called conservatives have become. I want them to make the liberals ‘reach across the aisle.’  And now we have with Sarah Palin on the republican ticket a bonified conervative.  She cleaned up in the debate and gave America a very good look at the real, un edited Sarah Palin.  But this good performance is almost negated by the weakness of conservatism in the Senate and House. In addition to the unwillingness of John McCain to attack his opponents on their obvious lies. I say "Let the conservatives run free!"  Then we'll see the real America in all it's glory! Let's see how it shapes up here with the next presidential debate looming in the future.  Maybe it'll get better!
 Well, that’s all done now, and the president has signed the bill into law. So we’re stuck with it and all we can do is make the best of it. 

May fortune favor the foolish!

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