Monday, July 26, 2010

My New Job... UPDATE: JOBS!


I am now a freelance political writer for Examiner.com St. Louis. I will be posting several commentary pieces each week which I encourage you to link through and read.

My profile and all my articles are HERE .

I will also post a link on the sidebar ---------->

This is an exciting opportunity and I encourage all my readers to check out my frequent articles over at Examiner.com!!!

UPDATE: I'm also a contributer to Big Journalism... linked HERE.


Always follow me on Twitter to connect to everything...

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Does the Internet need “checks and balances”?


My commentary from Examiner.com...

CNN anchors Kyra Phillps and John Roberts recently discussed what apparently is a pressing issue in America today, Internet restrictions. In the course of interviewing Andrew Keen, who authors a book about the evils of blogging and the Internet’s vast openness, they chewed over restrictions on anonymous blogging and a need for “gatekeepers”. All three seemed to be in agreement that in the wake of the Shirley Sherrod controversy, we must do something about Internet freedom.

Phillps going so far as to think that something must be done “legally” to “crack down” on the false or defamatory language from the blogosphere. There’s just a small stumbling block on the road to Internet utopia, the first Amendment. Broadly, all Americans have the right to speak their mind anywhere they go and through all mediums. While the Internet is the most recent and successful disseminator of speech, it is covered by freedom of speech and press as well.

I tend to see a pattern of language about “crack downs” and “gatekeepers” a lot lately, mainly from the left. They focus on Sherrod as the poor victim of the Internet’s “wild west atmosphere” but forget that it was the same medium that vindicated her within 24 hours. In the same way President John Adams attempted to censor self-titled “seditious” speech from local papers and penny presses, folks like these CNN anchors feel the need to regulate something that is fallible.

America is unique in the world. The bedrock of our freedom is that to speak freely. Even if we get the story wrong, we can use our speech to correct it. We should not regulate out of a fear of failure, we simply need to learn to avoid it naturally.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

The Cold War of Race

They say talking about entitlements like Medicare and Social Security are the “third rail” in American politics. I would venture that the third rail in American culture is race. It’s an issue that is ever present with us throughout our history. Only at certain times does it rear its head. When this happens our ugly racial history yields an ugly skirmish, the firestorm dies down, and we go back to normal trying to ignore the cultural third rail.

We’ve seen a skirmish the past couple weeks. I liken it to a Cold War era limited engagement. But like all war engagements it is an escalation that ends in bloodshed. The NAACP passed a resolution that condemned Tea Party racism. This prompted Tea Party elements to defend their dignity as not racists. The NAACP showed some racial signs in Tea Party crowds. Andrew Breitbart posted a tape of a NAACP event that seemed to show racial intolerance getting a welcome reaction by the crowd. But like most engagements, the crossfire enveloped a non-target. Breitbart says he never was targeting Shirley Sherrod, he was pointing out the reaction of her story by the audience. Nevertheless, Sherrod became a target and a thin-skinned White House forced her to resign her job because of an edited tape they hadn’t even seen. The NAACP, in direct contradiction of their acronym, shoved Sherrod out too, even though they possessed the full tape that would have proved her innocent of racial bias.

Eventually the tape did come out, albeit not fast enough to save Sherrod’s job. The apologies came fast and furious from the White House, the Agriculture Department. The point of Breitbart’s video ignored, the finger pointing has commenced. And so goes another chapter in America’s racial Cold War.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

The Truth on Race & Tea

Racism is one of the worst attributes that can be shown and espoused today. Just as hurtful is falsely being accused of being racist when you’re not. This issue comes to a head due to the NAACP’s proclamation that condemns supposed ‘Tea Party racism’.

First, let me speak for myself: I would like to think that I don’t have a racist bone in my body. I don’t know any racists. I don’t have any friends that are racists. If I saw a racist, I wouldn’t associate with them. I tend to think that a very large majority of my fellow Americans thinks like I do. When I judge a person, I use Dr. Martin Luther King’s way, I judge on the content of one’s character.

Next, let me explain the Tea Parties I’ve been to. I’ve attended numerous and spoken at one. I personally haven’t seen any racial signs when I’ve been to Tea Party rallies. I’m honored to know personally the organizers here in St. Louis, none of which harbor racial animus.

Beyond that, I must speak extremely broadly. The Tea Party movement is a broad and open movement. We don’t have ID cards, stamp entrances, or private/secret meetings. Like many other public demonstrations, people are free to come and go as they please. The likelihood of uninvited or unwanted guests exists here as it does everywhere in America. Legally, it’s difficult for Tea Parties to expel these people because more often than not, the event is on public land.

Furthermore, I would argue that it is unfair to judge any movement based on individual acts like single signs. So to be fair you can’t say that the Tea Party is racist because there’s a nut with a racist sign. Even if you find 100 examples of this around the country, it pales in comparison to the millions who are at Tea Parties for the right reasons. It would be slightly fairer to judge the organizers of Tea Parties and whom they themselves invite to speak. That’s fair to judge. If it’s sponsored by the official organization, then talk about it. I must also point out that the hierarchy of Tea Party groups is very fractured. There are local town groups, citywide groups, and national sponsors. Not every group thinks the same or endorses every one of each other’s actions.

To take an example, the Northern Iowa Tea Party placed a sign off a road that has a picture of Adolf Hitler, Vladmir Lenin, and President Barack Obama. This was in reference to the three variations of socialism. Personally, I wouldn’t characterize Obama in such a way. He is the most left wing President in history, but not quite socialist in my opinion. But on another level, I think plastering Hitler and Obama together is just not politically smart. It’s easy to marginalize you when you do that. Just as we rightfully dismissed the Bush-Hitler signs by the left. But in terms of criticizing the sign, I think it’s fair. The sign was put up by a Tea Party organization. I would condemn such a reference, as did some national sponsors.

On the whole, this Hitler comparison or racist displays are extremely rare on the individual nut level and from an organizational level. By no means should these small incidents be taken to indict an entire movement. If people still are fuzzy about what Tea Parties actually stand for, it’s fiscal conservatism and individual freedom at its core. Race doesn’t now nor ever did play a part. The rhetoric can get heated, but above it all, it’s fiscal issues that drive the movement.

The above points were intended to inform and sway open minded, level headed people who had questions about racism in the Tea Party. But to be honest, I know why members of the media and elements of the left are driving the racial narrative, fear. For the better part of four decades, the left has been using freedom of assembly quite well. They can mobilize on a street corner at a moment’s notice. Only in the last 18 months has the right waded into this zone. The threat is being treated with vicious hate and bitter division. And the easiest way to smear and divide is racially. I doubt that the left really cares about supposed racial rhetoric as much as discrediting a legitimate movement that has garnered majority support across the nation. It is the vilest of smears to be called racist when false. And I encourage people on the left who hurl it to be careful about the broadness of your brush (unless you intend to insult and smear patriotic Americans).

I would hope the truth prevails in the end. Instead of smearing, why don’t liberals defend the disastrous policies of the Obama Administration? I’d much rather be posting on it, rather than defending against ugly smears.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Happy Independence Day America

Here are some of my personal thoughts...




Text:

Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness… it is the birthright of every American… defended by the bravest among us, to protect the most innocent among us… to ensure for them and future generations the freedom granted by God and fulfilled by humanity… it is fitting then that we honor such a unique nation… founded in freedom… living on for over two centuries… for the 234th time we wish a happy birthday to the greatest nation the world has ever known… the land of the free and the home of the brave.