Category Archives: Politics

Political Compass


From The Political Compass:

“There’s abundant evidence for the need of it. The old one-dimensional categories of ‘right’ and ‘left’, established for the seating arrangement of the French National Assembly of 1789, are overly simplistic for today’s complex political landscape. For example, who are the ‘conservatives’ in today’s Russia? Are they the unreconstructed Stalinists, or the reformers who have adopted the right-wing views of conservatives like Margaret Thatcher?

On the standard left-right scale, how do you distinguish leftists like Stalin and Gandhi? It’s not sufficient to say that Stalin was simply more left than Gandhi. There are fundamental political differences between them that the old categories on their own can’t explain. Similarly, we generally describe social reactionaries as ‘right-wingers’, yet that leaves left-wing reactionaries like Robert Mugabe and Pol Pot off the hook.”

Take five minutes and see where you stand on the Political Compass. Click on the image up top to go to the website. On the main page, there is a link at the top left of the page to start your quiz.

It shows that I’m: Economic Left/Right: +4.75
It shows that I’m: Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: +2.97
Meaning: Authoritarian Right (and so are most world leaders, like Thatcher and Hitler!)

OR, take The shortest political quiz (literally 30 seconds) and see where you sit. It shows I’m conservative.

TobyLaura.com

The “high price” of Gas


It seems that all I hear today is complaining about the high price of gasoline in this country. Congress is demanding that oil executives lower the price of their product, people blame the sitting president for gas prices, and we act like we cannot afford gas at this price.

I know that in some industries, like my own, high oil is causing companies to go out of business. Truckers are especially hurting as well too. I think those industries have valid complaints. But for the average American, who happens to be the “average complainer,” please spare me your crying about high priced gas.

We drive around in our SUV’s, drinking our five dollar Starbucks or our three dollar Evian water (interestingly enough, Evian, spelled backwards, spells ‘Naive.’ Does that say something about someone who pays that kind of money for water?) We drive 80 miles per hour while talking on our $80 dollar-a-month-gee-whiz mobile phone, while shopping at Prada or Restoration Hardware, with our fancy hairdo and expensive makeup or tailored suite. We have cable, HD cable, highspeed internet, four cars (with two drivers!), huge homes, trendy this, instyle that, and bliss on tap. We in the U.S. want for nothing! Our poorest people are still the wealthiest 15% in the entire world. Go to GlobalRichList for more. Seriously, put in your salary and see where YOU rank — it takes 7 seconds.

And yet we complain about $3.50 a gallon . . .

I drive 60 mph everywhere I go, because I’m trying to save my hard earned cash. While on the interstate, I’m passed like I’m standing still! Americans can (and will) complain about anything, including high gas prices, but they don’t really mean it, at all. If they did, they’d change their driving habits. They’d buy less Starbucks and iPods. They’d put money in the bank and Roth IRA’s, where their money belongs. But we as a nation don’t. Sigh, oh well, but spare me the complaining!

I don’t mind people driving fast. I don’t mind people driving Hummers. I don’t mind people owning 8 cars and 10 iPhones. I really don’t. To do so is simply envious — and I like to think that I am above that. It only makes those who have less look terrible when they despise those who have more. Many people have lots and lots of money, and if they have 10 million in the bank, then go get five Hummers — I shouldn’t judge. Just don’t complain to me about high gas prices. I know several people who have so much money, gas could be 10 bucks a gallon and they wouldn’t care. But they also aren’t complaining like the rest of us.

Slow down, straighten out priorities on spending, watch every dollar, and don’t despise the wealthy simply because they are so. Our blood pressure will thank us for it!

*****

Some perspective:

In the 1973 oil crisis, the Arabs decided to hold out on production. Back then, a barrel of oil was about $1.50 a barrel. During the embargo, a barrel of oil shot up to over $11 dollars a barrel. Long lines at the pump preceded. In comparison, if that size of spike happened today, the price of a barrel of oil would be over $1,100 dollars for one barrel of oil! So, things aren’t as bad as they could be.

*****

From MJ Perry’s blog:

After crude oil costs, gasoline taxes are the second largest contributor to the price paid at the pump. Together Federal and State excise taxes on fuel account for an average cost of approximately 62 cents per gallon. That’s a combined tax of about 20% per gallon of gas.

The federal tax per gallon is 18.4 cents per gallon, see the history of federal gasoline taxes here, and the state tax per gallon varies by state, see the complete list of state gasoline taxes here.

Average profit per gallon of gas for oil companies: 10 cents according to the EIA.

Quote: The government collects far more in taxes on every gallon of gasoline than the oil companies collect in profits. If oil company profits are “obscene,” as some politicians claim, are the government’s taxes PG-13?

~Thomas Sowell

*****

And Finally, George Will sums it up best with his article here, on our historical price of gas. Hint: We are paying less for gas today than we were in 1981 . . .

To post comments and more, visit TobyLaura.com

Global Warming: Man-made?


I came across an excerpt from Michael Crichton’s prologue of Jurassic Park. It is a fascinating read from a secular scientist’s point of view. There is no debate that our planet’s average temperature is slowly rising — a little bit. But, where the rub comes into play, is what is causing it. Is it man-made or natural? How one answers that question will place them on one side or the other of a huge divide in this country over global warming. Read Crichton and see what you think.

“You think man can destroy the planet? What intoxicating vanity. Let me tell you about our planet. Earth is four-and-a-half-billion-years-old. There’s been life on it for nearly that long, 3.8 billion years. Bacteria first; later the first multicellular life, then the first complex creatures in the sea, on the land. Then finally the great sweeping ages of animals, the amphibians, the dinosaurs, at last the mammals, each one enduring millions on millions of years, great dynasties of creatures rising, flourishing, dying away — all this against a background of continuous and violent upheaval. Mountain ranges thrust up, eroded away, cometary impacts, volcano eruptions, oceans rising and falling, whole continents moving, an endless, constant, violent change, colliding, buckling to make mountains over millions of years. Earth has survived everything in its time.

“It will certainly survive us. If all the nuclear weapons in the world went off at once and all the plants, all the animals died and the earth was sizzling hot for a hundred thousand years, life would survive, somewhere: under the soil, frozen in arctic ice. Sooner or later, when the planet was no longer inhospitable, life would spread again. The evolutionary process would begin again. Might take a few billion years for life to regain its present variety. Of course, it would be very different from what it is now, but the earth would survive our folly, only we would not. If the ozone layer gets thinner, ultraviolet radiation sears earth, so what? Ultraviolet radiation is good for life. It’s powerful energy. It promotes mutation, change. Many forms of life will thrive with more UV radiation. Many others will die out. You think this is the first time that’s happened? Think about oxygen. Necessary for life now, but oxygen is actually a metabolic poison, a corrosive glass, like fluorine.

“When oxygen was first produced as a waste product by certain plant cells some three billion years ago, it created a crisis for all other life on earth. Those plants were polluting the environment, exhaling a lethal gas. Earth eventually had an atmosphere incompatible with life. Nevertheless, life on earth took care of itself. In the thinking of the human being a hundred years is a long time. Hundred years ago we didn’t have cars, airplanes, computers or vaccines. It was a whole different world, but to the earth, a hundred years is nothing. A million years is nothing. This planet lives and breathes on a much vaster scale. We can’t imagine its slow and powerful rhythms, and we haven’t got the humility to try. We’ve been residents here for the blink of an eye. If we’re gone tomorrow, the earth will not miss us.”

For more, visit TobyLaura.com!

Ignorance: Our most expensive commodity

Our Most Expensive Commodity


From the EIB Network, Rush Limbaugh:

“I keep telling people: The most expensive commodity we have in this country is ignorance, not gasoline, not rice, not wheat, not corn. The most expensive commodity we have is the ignorance of way too many Americans.  It is ignorance that allows liberalism to prosper.  Get this: “Three out of 10 US public school students do not graduate from high school, and major city school districts only graduate one out of two students, according to a study released Tuesday.  In a report on graduation rates around the country, the EPE Research Center and the America’s Promise Alliance also showed that the high school graduation rate — finishing 12 grades of school…” They have to even throw that in there because half the country reading the story doesn’t know what it takes to graduate!  Can you believe this?

“The high school graduation rate — finishing 12 grades of school…” They have to add that?  Really?  I thought you only had to get to tenth grade and you graduated!  “The high school graduation rate — finishing 12 grades of school — in big cities falls to as low as just 34.6 percent in Baltimore, Maryland, and barely over 40 percent for the troubled Ohio cities of Columbus and Cleveland.  And it said that black and Native American students have effectively a one-in-two chance of getting a high school diploma.”  Now, stick with me on this, because while this is tragic and while it is horrible and while it is disconcerting, this is a French News Agency story, and it doesn’t even bother to analyze why this is.  It doesn’t even bother.  Let me give you the dirty little secret here.  America’s Promise Alliance was a group founded by Colin Powell, and they looked at high school graduation rates at America’s 50 largest cities.  In 17 of our 50 largest cities, not even half the kids attending high school finish.  That doesn’t even touch on what the hell they’re being taught while they’re there.  

But I will guaran-damn-tee you it’s not Economics 101 in a way that they could understand it. I will guarantee you that most of what they’re being taught is a multicultural hybrid of hate America; America sucks. America’s out to screw you. You don’t have a prayer in America. Ronald Reagan sucks. George Bush sucks. Bill Clinton was fabulous. The Founding Fathers were racists, and they were atheists, and this country originally belongs to the Indians from whom it was stolen by evil white Europeans. This is what these people come out of school knowing, thinking.  “In large metropolitan areas, you may as well draw a target around the inner cities if you want to isolate this problem. In Baltimore suburbs, over 80% of the kids graduate.  Thirty-four percent who live in Baltimore’s inner city graduate.”  Suburbs okay, not great, 80%. We shouldn’t even be happy with that.  There’s no excuse for anything less than a hundred percent! It’s basic.  We all talk about education. “We gotta educate our children. We need more money to educate our children.” then how can we be happy with anything less than a hundred percent?

Anyway, by contrast, we’re ecstatic about 80% in the suburbs of Baltimore, because the inner city is 34%.  In Detroit, about a quarter, 25% of the kids graduate. Twenty-five percent!  Indianapolis public school system, 30% graduation rate, Cleveland, 35%, inner city.  In response to the report, Secretary Powell said, “When more than one million students a year drop out of high school, it’s more than a problem. It’s a catastrophe.”  It’s worse than that, Secretary Powell.  Let’s go back to Obama’s big race speech for a second, shall we?  Obama like every other Democrat, talks about schools failing minority kids, but he never addresses how they got that way.  There’s no question that inner city schools are failing minority kids.  Why do you think the biggest supporters of school vouchers are the parents of kids in inner city schools that will take the first chance they can to get them out of there and get them into a decent school?  These are primarily black and Hispanic kids in Democrat Party-run cities, and they are left to fail year after year, decade after decade!  Liberalism is giving us this problem, and it has for a long time — and look at the billions that we are spending on education to boot.  You now throw that into the mix.

You talk about being mad about something? You talk about being mad at the high cost of something and getting nothing for it?  These kids are caught in a stranglehold, folks, of liberal politics.  Liberal politics is designed to keep unions strong, including the teachers, and minority kids underachieving.  I mean, to the extent that there’s institutional racism in America, it is in these blue states, run by liberal Democrats for years. Their own kids are not even being disserviced. It’s just criminal, the way they’re not being taught and what they are being taught.  So I was asked, “How do we get this way where people don’t understand we gotta go get our own oil to become independent?” They don’t have the education; they don’t have the information.  They’ve been taught that America is bad, that America is rotten, that America steals from the rest of the world. America deserves to suffer. America deserves to be hated by the rest of the world.  That’s what they’re taught.  So when Big Oil boys get calls up to Capital Hill, and get called on the carpet for these prices, “Yeah! Yeah! You stick it to them. You stick it to them, those big, fat white guys taking all the profits, just getting rich while I’m sitting here poor. That’s right, you stick it to them!” The sad thing is that, actually, this is not a catastrophe, Secretary Powell. This is just liberal business as usual.

In all of this stuff, the education problems in the inner cities of this country, the problem’s not the American people.  I’m still bouncing off Senator McCain’s speech to the midshipmen at Annapolis.  The American people are spoiled and they’re a little too cynical and they take their freedom for granted, blah, blah, blah.  Overall the problem is not the American people.  The problem is the government and how government manipulates people, how the government literally abuses people, and how the government uses them.  The problem, folks, is liberalism. Liberalism that controls most of the government and how it seeks to transform our society for the worst.  We can’t run around and say the American people are great one day, that left to their own devices they’ll succeed, but on the other hand condemn them or most of them or a lot of them.  This is an argument against liberalism and Big Government.  

Here’s what liberals do.  Liberals say that people are too lazy, too stupid, and that they need to be managed.  Liberals have contempt for the average American. Liberals do not believe the average American can overcome obstacles in life. Our position is just the opposite.  We have the greatest faith in the world and in the American people.  We want a great nation.  We as conservatives do.  We want people to be the greatest they can be.  We don’t want to hold anybody down and we don’t want to give anybody any excuses.  And we don’t want to make them victims of anything.  We don’t want to treat them like children.  There are people out there like that, but not overall, but the liberals are out there trying to create as many of those people as they can.

For more, visit TobyLaura.com!

Big Gold?


It’s economics 101 and the general public doesn’t seem to know it. The price of things like gold or oil is set by the market, not by businesses. So why is it that Congress pulls the Oil Company CEO’s in to testify and resolve to lower the price of gas? How about calling in Jewelers to lower the price of gold? Here is Rush Limbaugh’s excellent viewpoint on it:

Big Gold


From the EIB Network, Rush Limbaugh:

I listen to people trash Big Oil. The very guys that are putting gasoline in your car are being trashed, and you are being conditioned to hate their guts while the guys on the Senate committee wouldn’t know the first thing about putting gas in your car, have not done one thing to get gas in your car, and you think they are your savior. The price of oil is going way up.  You know what?  A lot of other things are going up.  How about the price of gold?  The price of gold’s gone through the roof.  I want to know what the hell’s going on with that.  Where is a congressional hearing to bring in Big Gold?  Have you looked at the price of jewelry?  You gonna go out there and get engaged, get married — I hope not, but if you are — are you going to go out there and buy diamonds?  Have you seen the price escalations?  The Senate should bring Big Jewelry in. Is $350 an ounce is about right? I just think they just ought to set the gold price at 350 bucks an ounce — instead of close to a thousand, and make this “fair.”  This kind of stuff is really frustrating to me.

No, I’m serious about this price of gold stuff.  You bring the Big Oil guys up. Those are the guys that put gasoline in your car.  If it weren’t for them, you wouldn’t have gasoline — and yet they’re the guys that get grilled.  Have you seen the price of gold?  Now, see, this is a good illustration.  I’m trying to make a point here, but I think that the point’s lost, because I’m not being sympathetic or empathetic: that would be a better word.  It would be so easy for me to sit here and say, “Oh, gosh the price of gas! Man, it’s so hard for all of us. I don’t know what we’re going to do.  I really, really know how tough it is for you.”  That wouldn’t change your situation any at all, but you’d think somebody cares.  This is what the liberals pull off.  The liberals make people think they care about their problems.  They think they have a kindred spirit working on solving the problem.

Of course they don’t.  Liberals don’t fix anything.  All they do is break things! All they do is ruin things.  They don’t fix diddly-squat.  But people think they do because they care, and if I were to sit here and go through this little bit, “Hey, why didn’t Congress bring in Big Gold?  Have you seen the price of gold lately?  Why didn’t Congress demand that Big Gold lower the gold price, why didn’t Congress bring in Big Jewelry?  Have you seen the price of diamonds lately? It’s skyrocketing; everything is! Pull out all the stops! Find out who’s responsible! See who’s cheating the little guy when it comes to gold and jewelry.  You know how much people have suffered who want to go out and get married or get engaged to have a decent anniversary present, maybe get that solid gold toilet they’ve always dreamed about?

“Now they can’t do it because of the price of gold and the price of jewelry.  And where are Pelosi and where’s Reid and where is Ed Markey, and where is Obama, telling me again that the price of gold will come down to make it profitable and yet affordable to me?”  Now, I could make that case. I don’t know how many people would get what I’m saying.  I mean, “you people,” don’t misunderstand. You would.  I’m talking about people outside this audience. You all have above average IQs, above average education. We’ve done all the surveys. We know who you are, and you know who you are.  When I say “you,” I’m talking about people that vote liberals, people that vote Democrats.  But, boy, I could say, “Well, I feel sorry for you. It’s just so bad out there. I wish something could be done,” and of course there’s nothing I can do or anybody else can do, but if you think that somebody cares, then I guess you’re less, what? Concerned, or at least more hopeful?  Yes! People are more hopeful that something might get fixed if somebody cares . . .

And why do so many think that a sympathetic Congress can actually mandate lower oil prices? Because of our Ignorance. Read about it in the next blog entry.

For more, visit TobyLaura.com!

Think Different


A past Apple ad campaign read, “Think Different.” I love that ad because I think it’s important to think differently, especially in today’s culture. It is so easy in human nature to suffer from groupthink. We just go with the flow and we ebb down the river of life. We don’t question enough.

It’s odd, that in many ways, people hate to be the same and strive so hard to be unique, but end up just following the crowd in so many other areas of life. Sure, those forty facial piercings may look unique, but in the real things in life, the important things, is there uniqueness there? Is there different thinking?

We all hate bad drivers in front of us (but then we drive 40 in a 55 zone with others behind us!) Yeah, Bush lied and people died. Really? Or is that just what the media keeps repeating? Christianity is just a way to keep the masses in line, right? Reparations are owed to black people. I can have sex outside of marriage without consequence. I need to look like the girls in magazines to be beautiful. If I just go to church once in a while, I’ll be fine. We want to standout in the world, but sometimes we fall into the same traps and do the same silly things everyone else does.

So, what in this life is worth different thinking on my part? What is worth questioning? How do we know we aren’t desperately trying to be unique, but really just spinning our wheels along with everyone else? How do we rise above to see things from a higher perspective?

An example of going against the grain and thinking differently is Dr. James Manning. I came across his videos through a link from the DrudgeReport. I not familiar with all Manning’s sermons, but I am proud when I see people think differently, take a stand, and say what needs to be said. Manning is talking about how people need to find Christ and find answers in Him, not in racism or affirmative action. He stands against men like Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton, who preach racial divisiveness to promote their agendas. Real black men don’t blame their problems on white oppression, they turn to Christ.

I know there are areas in my life where I need to be thinking differently. How about you?

For more, visit TobyLaura.com!

Old Ruts, New Ruts


Well, I did the dirty and upgraded my laptop’s Operating System (OS) from Tiger to Leopard. For the most part, things are running smoothly, as they should for a Mac.

However, like changing to anything new, it will take awhile for me to enjoy using the computer like I did with the old system of Tiger. I know lots of Windows slaves, I mean users, have stayed with XP instead of upgrading to Vista. At some point, Vista, or a new OS will have to be upgraded to, and when that happens, we all get this feeling of unfamiliarity and want things back the old way, the better way, the way we know best. We as people get into these ruts where we have everything set up just the way we want them: especially on computers, and when that is disrupted, that warm security blanket gets ripped right off of us!

Several of my friends have had to try new e-mail programs or operating systems, and they hate it because they have to relearn what they know. That is where I am. I know Leopard’s functionality will best the old system by far, but it will take a little getting used to. I want my old baseball glove back — it fit so well!

As God’s child, I don’t often like waves made in my pond. I don’t necessarily like change or new experiences. I like my comfortable settings, my personal surroundings, and routines I am intimately familiar with. But like changing to a new OS on a computer, God finds us in our rut and kicks us out. I think He actually likes the fact that we find ruts — so He can disrupt them, and thus teach us something. Hopefully, when this happens, we learn from it. Change isn’t fun, just ask me or my wife about the pending job change ahead for me. But, it’s in those times of change that God can speak — he has us by the ear.

Change, just for the sake of change, may not be good; it may actually be bad (remember: we don’t kick a sleeping dog). But, when we trust in Him that the change is for the better, we can also trust in Him to see us through it.

I wonder what changes I need to make from the ruts I’ve formed? Am I in some bad ruts at work? Am I in some ruts in my marriage? Am I in some ruts at my church? Am I in some ruts that I don’t even see? Uhhh. I am humbly prayerful that God will show me the bad ruts I’m happily trolling down. Does He always tell us when we’re “off course, on our course?” NO! Look at all the people around you that are in ruts and don’t even see it. Be praying that God will show you Grace, and point out the ruts you are in, and then be happy to change!

____________________

Ultimately, I’m glad I changed to Leopard. The transition will be tough, but in the end, it has a lot of great features, like:

Email: When someone sends you an e-mail with a date in it, the computer recognizes this date, and when I click on it, it can add that date to my calendar. Also, it recognizes when someone writes “next Thursday” as a date and puts that in as Aug 5th, or whatever. Amazing!
Chat: I can not only video chat with others, I can share my screen with another mac user (my wife, for example, on her iMac). If she is having trouble with her computer in Ohio, and I’m in Hong Kong, I can video chat with her and put her desktop on my screen and “take over” to fix the issue. Awesome!
Time Machine: I can backup my files to another hard drive automatically and behind the scenes. Then, if I look for a file that is gone or thrown away, I can simply retrieve it in Time Machine. It’s better than in sounds, Windows Users! It’s seamless and easy.
Tons of parental controls to protect future kids in our family, like deciding what they see and when they can access both their computer and the internet. If we aren’t home, their computer won’t get online, if we wish.
There is lots more, so watch the video on how it all works and fits together here.

For more, visit TobyLaura.com!