Tag: Politics

  • American Majority Activist Training a Success

    On a Saturday morning, about 35 citizen activists and want-to-be activists met at the offices of Americans For Prosperity in Wichita for training provided by American Majority.

    The training covered traditional topics and factors in political activism such as coalitions, holding events, the structure of government in Kansas, and holding elected officials accountable. Then the focus shifted to recent developments in activism such as blogs, wikis, and social media like Facebook.

    Shari Weber, executive director of American Majority, introduced her organization and set the tone for the day. American Majority is a training institute for liberty-minded individuals, she explained. American Majority chose Kansas and Oklahoma as states to be involved in first (Minnesota and Louisiana are the other states) because they’re the heartland. Colorado was “flipped” in just a few years, and it’s important to resist this in Kansas.

    She went on to explain that American Majority believes in freedom for the individual and freedom in the marketplace. She referenced and explained Lawrence Reed’s Seven Principles of Sound Public Policy, which are:

    • Free people are not equal, and equal people are not free.
    • What belongs to you, you tend to take care of; what belongs to no one or everyone tends to fall into disrepair.
    • Sound policy requires that we consider long-run effects and all people, not simply short-run effects and a few people.
    • If you encourage something, you get more of it; if you discourage something, you get less of it.
    • Nobody spends somebody else’s money as carefully as he spends his own.
    • Government has nothing to give anybody except what it first takes from somebody, and a government that’s big enough to give you everything you want is big enough to take away everything you’ve got.
    • Liberty makes all the difference in the world.

    American Majority staff members Elizabeth Patton and Beka Romm provided most of the training.

    Activists I talked to said the training was worthwhile and beneficial.

  • Articles of Interest

    Obama’s budget, Citigroup rescue, Twitter, climate change, lobbying.

    The Era of Even Bigger Government: There is very little to be happy about in Obama’s first budget (Veronique de Rugy at Reason) Does the Obama budget work? According to this author, some of the accounting tricks used in the past are gone, but dissembling remains: “To cut the size of the federal government, one actually has to, you know, cut programs. While Obama’s overall numbers do show a spending decrease between 2009 and 2010, he actually increases many categories of spending, which remains far above 2008 levels in any case. In fact, his ‘cuts’ are basically the results of 2009 bailout payments not being extended into 2010. The bottom line is that there is very little to be happy about in Obama’s first budget. It simply expands the Bush policies of bigger government and increased centralization, which threatens to permanently transform America’s culture and economic outlook by making more and more Americans dependent on government.”

    Latest Citigroup Rescue May Not Be Its Last (New York Times) “The big question, of course, is this: Will this plan, the third since October, be the one that finally works? Will it shore up this $2 trillion behemoth? Or is the outcome that the banks and the government are so desperately trying to avoid — nationalization, under whatever guise — only a matter of time? Wall Street’s judgment was swift and brutal. Citigroup’s share price, which a little over two years ago was flying high at $55, plunged 96 cents to a mere $1.50.”

    What Are You Doing? Media Twitterers Can’t Stop Typing (New York Times) A look at the popular service Twitter and how some news media personalities use it.

    The Doomsday Bias. American Spectator article describing testimony of Dr. John P. Holdren, nominated for chief White House Science Advisor. “Holdren’s particular brand of science is infected by what we can only call a doomsday bias.”

    Liberal Groups Are Flexing New Muscle in Lobby Wars (New York Times) Just a short few years ago, Democrats were railing against the lobbying efforts of Republicans. But now: “When Newt Gingrich’s Congress was moving full-speed in its efforts to shrink the government more than a dozen years ago, Ralph G. Neas, an indefatigable champion of liberal causes, threw up his hands and declared that his side had been outmaneuvered. … Recent days have found Mr. Neas in a new perch … this time, he is supported by his own phalanx of big business backers, including the Exelon power company and Giant food stores.” It’s a mistake to assume that business is against bigger government and in favor of free markets. As Milton Friedman said: “Naturally, existing businesses generally prefer to keep out competitors in other ways. That is why the business community, despite its rhetoric, has so often been a major enemy of truly free enterprise.”

    What is Seen and What is Unseen: Government “Job Creation” (Foundation for Economic Education). A nice explanation of unseen consequences of government action and how this concept applied during the New Deal. “Barack Obama and his advisers should take a lesson from history: the New Deal and its public-works projects were a disaster, and it would be remiss to think they should be given another try. As Bastiat explained, government doesn’t create wealth; it only diverts it. When wealth is in the hands of the government it inevitably tends to serve political ends rather than consumers. FDR’s New Deal policies are a testament to that, and if they are repeated in response to our current economic crisis, it will only hinder the recovery.”

  • Seeding Bobby Jindal attacks, for later harvest

    The Left builds a “paper trail” of false information about Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal. Should he become a contender for national office, these false attacks will be dug up and presented as authoritative.

    Erick Erickson explains when you click on The Importance of the Coordinated Attacks on Bobby Jindal. Also click on VIDEO PROOF the Left Is Lying About Bobby Jindal (Updated) at the Gateway Pundit.

  • Kansas City Star covers tea party — sort of

    The Kansas City Star covers yesterday’s tea party protest in the story Protesters gather at Sen. Claire McCaskill’s office in Westport. But, the phrase “tea party” isn’t mentioned. I don’t know why.

    See more coverage of the event by clicking on Kansas City Tea Party Protest Photos.

  • Kansas City Tea Party Protest Photos

    Coverage of a snowy Kansas City tea party protest provided by Chuck Armstrong. Click on Kansas City Tea Party: February 28, 2009.

    Coverage from the Kansas Meadowlark is at “Tea Party” Rally and March to Senator McCaskill’s Office in Kansas City.

    Also photos at Kansas City “Tea Party” (Stimulus and Bailout Protest).

  • Wichita Tea Party News Coverage on KSN Television

    The Wichita Tea Party protest as covered by KSN Television, February 27, 2009. A very good job by reporter Josh Witsman.

    “Someone needs to go and cut up Congress and President Obama’s credit card, because it’s not their credit card — it’s our credit card.”

  • Wichita Tea Party: Susan Estes

    Susan Estes addresses the crowd at the Wichita Tea Party protest, February 27, 2009.

  • Wichita Tea Party: Nancy Armstrong

    Nancy Armstrong addresses the crowd at the Wichita Tea Party protest, February 27, 2009.

  • Wichita Tea Party: Cheryl Green

    Cheryl Green explains why she’s protesting at the Wichita Tea Party, February 27, 2009.