Sunday, December 21, 2008

THE ART AND BEAUTY OF CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT-

 There follows an excerpt from a paper prepared by Larry P. Arnn, President of Hillsdale College. His work is thought-provoking. To read the entire paper click Hillsdale College

A Work of Recovery”

“Should we build our political institutions upon the elimination of greed? A caution stirs the mind immediately at the thought of it.

James Madison writes in The Federalist Papers about faction, about our making combinations to serve our interests, even when those interests do not correspond to the public interest. One will read in vain to find the chief author of the Constitution suggesting that faction, much less greed, could ever be eliminated. Rather, he writes that "Ambition must be made to counteract ambition. The interest of the man must be connected with the constitutional rights of the place." In other words, we must build our political institutions to operate around the problem of human vice, to mitigate that problem by discouraging vice, but also to place our interests in alignment with the public interest. "Liberty," writes Madison "is to faction what air is to fire." To eliminate the effects of self-interest would be to eliminate freedom itself.”

“Reprinted by permission from Imprimis, a publication of Hillsdale College.”

Friday, December 19, 2008

Who was hurt by election calls?

My letter  to the editor concerning yesterday's editorial was published in the Aiken Standard today. Thanks to Jeff Wallace for his timely action.


"Who was hurt by election calls?"



"With reference to the editorial concerning election law violations I agree completely that "it is time that laws dealing with election mischief are dealt with as felonies." However, I most emphatically disagree with your statement that the "intended result of the election-eve deception was not realized." Except for Ginny Allen and her-up- till-now undisclosed co-conspirators none of us can know for sure what the intended result was. It should be quite clear to the objective observer that the only person hurt by this reprehensible ploy was Scott Singer. Certainly there was no chance it would in any way affect the outcome of the Whinghter-Ryberg race since the polls showed Ryberg with more than 70 percent of the voters backing him. Ginny Allen, as an astute political operative, certainly knew that a last-minute attempt to hurt Senator Ryberg would be a waste of time and money.

The facts are that Senator Ryberg, upon learning about the fraudulent calls, immediately issued an angry statement denying any responsibility for them and denied supporting any candidate. Senator Ryberg also requested SLED to investigate. As a consequence of this angry statement many voters may have assumed that Scott Singer had sponsored the calls. To correct this misapprehension Senator Ryberg issued another statement on June 12, wherein he "declared his belief that the other candidate for office mentioned in the illegal call, County Councilman Scott Singer, was not involved in the phone call." For some reason this statement was never published in the Aiken Standard. Meanwhile critics used this spurious charge to cut into Singer's well deserved good reputation and high favorability ratings.

I for one am glad SLED has investigated and is continuing to investigate this matter. Let us wait until all the facts are in before we rush to judgment as to the effectiveness of the calls."

Thursday, December 18, 2008

The Nativity

Merry Christmas!

I hope you enjoy this beautiful video.


Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Beautiful Downtown Aiken

The following was a special enclosure in the Aiken Standard a few weeks ago and I thought it was very well done. I know that not everyone subscribes to the Aiken Standard and those who don't would not have seen this so I am posting it here.Just click on the link if you want to view it in full size.

Downtown Paper

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Aiken Political Operative Arrested

The following is another painful example of how far politicos will go to help their preferred candidate win an election.

In addition to the Aiken Standard article I suggest that readers check out the press release on the SLED website. December 16- Aiken County Woman charged----

The following story has been updated and can be read at:.http://www.aikenstandard.com/Local/1217GinnyAllenArrested
Check out the on line comments. It appears that  law observance is unimportant to many of Ginnies supporters. Four comments sound familiar and were presumably made by the same cast of characters that produced the now defunct Easy Whiskey and the comatose Kaolin Kronicle aka as the Kremlin Kronicle.



BREAKING NEWS

FROM THE AIKEN STANDARD ONLINE

"Charges brought in robocall case"


12/16/2008 3:05 PM





















By KAREN DAILY

Staff writer

State Law Enforcement Division agents have arrested Aiken County GOP treasurer Virginia Austin Allen, 47, for her alleged role in orchestrating a number of automated phone calls earlier this summer that endorsed S.C. Sen. Greg Ryberg and then S.C. House District 81 seat candidate Scott Singer.

The calls showed Ryberg’s business office number as the origin of the calls, but Ryberg said he did not pay for, place or authorize them, denying any connection to the “robo calls.”

Singer also denies any connection to the calls.

Allen is charged with six counts of unlawful use of a telephone.

She was booked at the Aiken County detention center and released on her own personal recognizance.

State agents will be releasing arrest warrants today, according to officials.

Contact Karen Daily at kdaily@aikenstandard.com

House votes need to be recorded

The following letter from Jane Vaughters appeared in the Aiken Standard today.


"House votes need to be recorded"


"I was glad to see your editorial supporting recording votes in the state legislature so for the first time taxpayers could know how their representatives vote. Speaker of the House Bobby Harrell has once again kept this from happening.

What puzzled me was that you did not take the next obvious step and poll our delegation to see where they stand. Again, their positions were not recorded. I noticed that one House member has been appointed to a committee chairmanship by Speaker Harrell so we have a clue there. How about a survey of each member of the delegation with these specific quetions 1)Do you support Speaker Harrell's policies which hide votes from the people?

2) What are you actually doing to allow votes to be recorded for all taxpayers to see?

The press will need to be of help and ask some hard questions before this system which caters to special interests will change.


Jane Vaughters

Aiken"

Friday, December 12, 2008

Senate Leader Files Roll Call Bill

Senate leader files roll call bill



By SEANNA ADCOX Associated Press



COLUMBIA -- A continued push to increase the accountability of South Carolina lawmakers and cap government spending were among 180 proposals senators filed Wednesday for the upcoming legislative session.Republicans who control the Senate said the two issues will be a priority next year.



Senate Majority Leader Harvey Peeler filed a bill calling for more roll call votes in the Senate, mirroring one filed a day earlier in the House. Both chambers are allowing members to introduce bills ahead of the Jan. 13 start of the two-year session. Roll call votes record every lawmaker's decision on a proposal. That's in contrast to voice votes. Peeler says he's lined up 20 Senate co-sponsors and expects to get four more votes needed to get the bill out of the Senate and included in the chamber's rules."Transparency is clearly needed in South Carolina," the Gaffney Republican said.But he faces resistance within his own party.



Senate President Pro Tem Glenn McConnell said he'll fight the bill "with every bit of energy I've got," calling it a waste of time and money. The Charleston Republican, who heads the powerful Senate Judiciary Committee, said he will push instead for a change to Senate rules, requiring roll call voting for budgetary and contested measures. The specifics are still being worked out.



The House adopted rules last week that have come under question because they record every lawmaker as voting yes. Those who shout "nay" or those absent at the time must head to the clerk's desk to be properly recorded. Critics say it creates an inaccurate picture of support for legislation. Peeler said the Senate won't adopt anything like that. McConnell said that while Peeler's plan plays well publicly, roll call voting on every bill, including those without disagreement, would create gridlock in the Senate. He also called Peeler's proposal a "lawyer employability act," saying it would lead to lawsuits in which people claim procedure wasn't followed on laws they don't like.



Peeler said it may be time to consider electronic voting. In the Senate, roll call votes are handled by voice, with each of the 46 names called and those present answering. In the House, 124 members push a button and vote electronically."That's the main pushback I've received," Peeler said. "This thing is really going to take up time." But McConnell countered that made no sense."In a recession, with all of state government suffering, is not the time to be buying a voting machine for the Senate," he said.



McConnell refiled a proposed constitutional amendment that would curb state spending in surplus years and sock away extra money for lean times. Under the legislation, state spending could grow by no more than the 10-year average of the growth in population and personal income. Earlier this year, the amendment fell short of the two-thirds majority needed in the Senate by one vote."The beauty of it is in good times, it does not allow you to go on a spending binge," McConnell said. "In down years, the money is flowing back into coffers to pay the bills, rather than us hiring one year and firing the next."Other bills refiled by McConnell include one requiring state and local governments to print documents only in English, a proposal that won approval in the Senate earlier this year but died in the House.Democratic Sens. Darrell Jackson, of Hopkins, and Joel Lourie, of Columbia, proposed separate bills allowing residents to vote early in person, without needing an excuse. Jackson also wants to bar students from dropping out of school before they turn 18, instead of before age 17. But it was Sen. Robert Ford, D-Charleston, who prefiled the most proposals, with 65 -- accounting for more than one-third of measures filed so far. Those include bills that would bar smoking in bars and restaurants -- an idea that died last session, prohibit restaurants from selling food containing trans fats, allow same-sex couples to enter into civil unions, and make it illegal for people to wear pants that sag more than 3 inches below their hips.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Bobby Harrell - No Friend of SC Voters

This kind of action is an embarassment to the State of South Carolina. Why is Bobby Harrell opposed to letting South Carolina voters know how Representatives vote on important issues? Where do our local State Representatives stand? Did they vote to give Harrell this extraordinary power?

SC gov says House speaker's action 'cowardly'

By JIM DAVENPORTAssociated Press Writer
Posted: Tuesday, Dec. 09, 2008

COLUMBIA, S.C. South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford said Tuesday House Speaker Bobby Harrell made a cowardly move in how he reassigned a roll call voting reformer from a key committee last week and questioned whether punishments reflect a "Soviet model."
"It was done in a way intended to not only reprimand but also to publicly humiliate," Sanford said in a telephone interview. Meanwhile, sending a lawyer to exercise the reassignments instead of doing it in person was the wrong approach, Sanford said.
"It was just in that regard cowardly," he said.

Harrell, R-Charleston, said last week he was not punishing state Rep. Nikki Haley, R-Lexington. His spokesman said Tuesday Harrell would not respond to Sanford's criticism and would let his comments from last week stand.

During the House's organizational session last week, a fight over House rules regarding roll call votes erupted months after state Haley began pushing for more on-the-record voting. She was a vocal critic of legislators passing a retirement pay increase for themselves on a voice vote last spring.

Harrell, R-Charleston, had panned Haley and Republican Sanford's efforts on that front as pandering to voters. But Harrell pushed through his own version of on the record voting at the start of the two-day session despite protests from Haley and others who said it would create useless and misleading records of voice votes.

The next day, Harrell handed out committee assignments and kept Haley on the House Labor, Commerce and Industry Committee. For months, Haley had campaigned to be the committee's chair, but dropped out of the race.

On Wednesday, she went to the committee's first meeting and returned to her office and found Harrell's lawyer waiting with a letter that moved her to the House Education and Public Works Committee.

"The indirect message sent was: 'Look, if you really make your voice heard on something you believe in and it's against the will at the top, you're going to be punished,'" Sanford said. "In a democratic process, that's the worst of all messages that can be sent."

Harrell said last week he moved Haley from the committee because she had vied for the chairmanship. But Harrell took no similar action in the other two open House committee chairman races.

Harrell also said he always communicates committee assignments in writing.

Debate on issues shouldn't bring repercussions, Sanford said. "To do so is a whole lot closer to the Soviet model than it is to the American model," he said.

Whitewashing Fannie Mae

Congressional Democrats in still another  disgusting CYA display. The Wall Street Journal writes about it today. WSJ Editorial Page. The opening lines are quoted below:

"Henry Waxman's House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform met Tuesday to examine "The Role of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in the Financial Crisis." Alas, Mr. Waxman didn't come to bury Fan and Fred, but to bury the truth."



Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Give the Gift of Life

IMPORTANT MESSAGE FROM:

Linda Taylor

SC Community Relations Coordinator

353 Fabian Drive (near SteinMart)

Aiken, Sc 29803

ltaylor@shepeardblood,org

803.617.0007 office

706.339.5345 mobile

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




                                   

Local People Save Lives, Receive Gifts
FOR MORE INFORMATION:

Linda Petersen – GA Community Relations, (706) 339-5543, lpetersen@shepeardblood.org

Linda Taylor – SC Community Relations, (803) 643-7996, ltaylor@shepeardblood.org


Augusta, GA – Critically ill patients at our local hospitals may not know your name but they will never forget your gift of life.

In this season of giving, imagine giving the unforgettable gift of good health and winning an unforgettable gift for you! That is what is happening at Shepeard Community Blood Center blood drives and centers this December. One winner each week will choose from the following Unforgettable Gifts:

$1,000 Pre-paid Visa Gift Card

Plasma TV

MacBook Laptop

Our first Unforgettable Gift winner is Tom Paquette. Mr. Paquette is a faithful volunteer platelet donor at Shepeard West, Shepeard’s Platelet and Plasma Center, at 112 Davis Road in Martinez. Tom chose the $1,000 Pre-paid Visa Gift Card for his Unforgettable Gift. What gift will you choose?

Congratulations to the following people who won $500 Visa Gift Cards in our November drawings:

· Tammyria Jennings of Augusta who visited the Richmond County Board of Education Blood Drive

  Stacey Timmerman of North Augusta who visited the blood drive at Savannah River Site, Lower B Area

· Virginia Fox of Martinez who donated at Shepeard’s Center at 460 North Belair Road in Evans

· Russell Carter, Jr. of Warrenton, GA who presented to donate at Kimberly Clark

Platelets are the clotting part of blood. Platelets are used for cancer, transplants, and other critical injuries and illnesses. To learn more about donating platelets like Tom Paquette, our first Unforgettable Gift Winner, contact Vanessa Childs, Special Donations Coordinator: (706) 737-4551 or vchilds@shepeardblood.org

To find a place to donate with Shepeard this holiday season:

http://www.shepeardblood.org/ GA: (706) 737-4551 SC: (803) 643-7996

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Obama Derangement Syndrome

Randall Hoven addresses the Obama citizenship question and tells us why the certification of birth that has been verified and the statement made by a Hawaii  official does not eliminate the doubts about his citizenship. Michelle Malkin, David Horowitz and Ron Kessler, all good conservatives, have written that it is time to for the doubters to give it up. Marianne was right in her earlier posts and the Supreme Court will discuss another case in conference on Friday.Until this issue is put to rest the doubts will continue to haunt the Obama presidency and the Nation. These doubts can easily be removed by releasing the official record of live  birth which gives more information. A part of the American Thinker piece is quoted below. To read it all follow this link The American Thinker


"All they did was verify that Obama's original birth certificate is on record. But that doesn't tell us what we need to know. What we need to know is where he was born.

Surprisingly, Hawaii happens to issue birth certificates for babies born outside Hawaii. The Hawaiian law on that states:

"Certificates for children born out of State. (a) Upon application of an adult or the legal parents of a minor child, the director of health shall issue a birth certificate for such adult or minor, provided that proof has been submitted to the director of health that the legal parents of such individual while living without the Territory or State of Hawaii had declared the Territory or State of Hawaii as their legal residence for at least one year immediately preceding the birth or adoption of such child."

The state of Hawaii did not say what was on the certificate and it won't release a copy out of privacy considerations. The state of Hawaii simply verified that Obama has a birth certificate on record; it did not verify that he was born in Hawaii.

The released birth certificate. It is often claimed that Obama has already released his birth certificate. What we have is an online copy via the web site FightTheSmears.com. There are several significant questions about this certificate.

Did this really come from Obama? Is FightTheSmears an official conduit of information from Obama?

How genuine is the document? Is it a photo-shopped or Microsoft Word fake, ala Dan Rather's memo? (I am not a forensic documentarian, so I will remain silent here. Snopes says it isn't a forgery.)

The document itself says, "Any alterations invalidate this certificate" and it has been altered by, at least, a redacted certificate number.

Most importantly, rendering the previous points moot, this is not Obama's original birth certificate (the "long form") and thus does not tell us what we need to know. Even if totally genuine, it is not the document necessary to prove he was born in Hawaii.

As Joe the Farmer reported in the American Thinker ,

"Even the Hawaii Department of Home Lands does not accept a certified copy of a birth certificate as conclusive evidence for its homestead program. From its web site: ‘In order to process your application, DHHL utilizes information that is found only on the original Certificate of Live Birth, which is either black or green. This is a more complete record of your birth than the Certification of Live Birth (a computer-generated printout). Submitting the original Certificate of Live Birth will save you time and money since the computer-generated Certification requires additional verification by DHHL.'"

The essence of the complaint is that the "Certification of Live Birth" that is used by FightTheSmears, the Annenberg Political FactCheck and others does not have the same information as an original birth certificate, including location of birth.

Conclusion. The irony is that this would not take a protracted trial with tons of evidence and counter-evidence, examination and cross-examination, expert testimony from forensic anthropologists, or satellite imagery. All it should take is for Obama to authorize the release his original birth certificate, the "long form", the one the state of Hawaii says it has on record.

That's it; release the real certificate. If the "long form" birth certificate says Obama was born in the US, I think we are done.

Hurray!

But even if it doesn't, we are not in Constitutional crisis or civil war just yet. Real lawyers could review the law and determine that Obama's birth circumstances still meet the "natural born" criteria. Let's get this issue out of the newspapers and the blogs and into a courtroom. A courtroom, you know, where facts and the law are dealt with in this country.

But if that doesn't end it, we are still not in a crisis. Legislators could come up with some kind of retro-active legislation. I hear it's been done before. Again, I'm not a lawyer, but it doesn't seem hopeless.

Only if all of the above fail prior to January 20, 2009, would we be required to follow the Constitutional remedy of installing President Biden.

I think this series of actions is what lawyers call due process and due diligence. That, in my mind, is what we should be doing rather ignoring the entire matter because it is so unpleasant. We should also not be rope-a-doping the legal situation just to push the issue past January 20, 2009. Simply address the issue in a straightforward legal and Constitutional manner. That's all I ask.

But please, do not tell us to deny the facts, ignore the Constitution and "shut up." George Orwell reminded us that

"Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two makes four. If that is granted, all else follows."

Two plus two makes four. And the US President must be natural born."

Monday, December 8, 2008

Supreme Court Refuses Donofrio Case on Obama

This morning, the Supreme Court announced that it has denied bringing before a full hearing the Donofrio v. Wells case, one of the several cases challenging Barack Obama’s eligibility as a “natural born citizen” to serve as president.
The Donofrio case claims Obama does not meet the Constitution's Article 2, Section 1 "natural-born citizen" requirement for president because of his dual citizenship at birth. Donofrio also contends that two other candidates, Republican John McCain and Socialist Workers candidate Roger Calero, also are not natural-born citizens and thus ineligible to be president.
The case was dismissed without comment and without a dissenting opinion. At least one other appeal over Obama's citizenship remains at the Supreme Court. Philip J. Berg of Lafayette Hill, Pa., argues that Obama was born in Kenya, not Hawaii as Obama says. Berg says Obama also may be a citizen of Indonesia, where he lived as a boy. In addition, at least fifteen other suits have been brought at the state level in various states.
Much of the controversy behind these suits stems from the fact that Obama has not, or may not have offered for public record a complete, credible birth certificate. Our country has been divided over the past eight years over the question of whether George W. Bush was legitimately elected president. Unfortunately, we face the same kind of division during an Obama presidency if questions concerning his citizenship are not put to rest.

Saturday, December 6, 2008

City Update from Dick Dewar

HOUNDSLAKE GOLF COURSE - While this is my first post in a while, it does not mean that little of importance has been happening in Aiken. Most of you know about the turmoil and stress imposed on the residents of Houndslake North regarding the proposed closure of the Laurel golf course. I spent many hours helping other members of the Steering Committee to communicate options available to residents involved. We concluded with a very successful community meeting held at Odell Weeks.

While residents recently received a confirmation letter regarding the closure on December 31, I have been advised that there is a possibility of a delay in the closure while repairs are being made to the Azalea and Dogwood courses. Please keep in mind that this is a very fluid situation and plans change rapidly.

ZONING ORDINANCE CHANGE – At our last Council Meeting on November 17, we were asked to approve an ordinance dealing with Accessory Buildings in the Horse District. Currently an accessory building cannot be larger than 50% of the heated floor area of the principal building. Some feel that this has caused problems in the horse district since accessory buildings are used for horses, carriages, feed supplies, etc. While the Planning Commission recommended approval, I asked for input from the horse community since it was most affected. Accordingly, this matter has been delayed until we hear from the Equine Committee.

LANDSCAPING BY SCE&G – We received input from residents of Highland Park concerning problems caused by SCE&G tree trimming. While everyone understands that SCE&G must trim trees to prevent power disruptions, there is genuine concern about their process. In the Highland Park area, there was significant damage to the area. While SCE&G v-cuts the trees, they do not share the concern of residents who want minimum visual disruption. The City has made arrangements with SCE&G with regard to South Boundary Road to preserve a treasured city asset. The City will not permit the utility cut trees in this area; instead the City performs that task. The City Manager is working with SCE&G to determine if similar arrangements can be made elsewhere within the City to trim trees at SCE&G cost to eliminate this kind of problem. I will continue to monitor this issue.

B&W SALVAGE YARD – Much of the last Council meeting was consumed by the issue of the junk yard on Highway One. Many residents are dismayed that one of the main entrances to the City passes by this unsightly location. This issue had been long standing and dates to 1985. Nothing so far has been successful in removing this eyesore to one of the main entrances to the City. County Councilman Scott Singer has worked with County Council and South Carolina Department of Transportation with help from Senator Greg Ryberg in an effort to more effectively resolve this issue. Their recommendation is to build a fence to screen the property from public view. If the owner parks vehicles on the highway side of the fence, SCOT will enforce existing law by imposing daily fines until the law is followed. Funding for the fence would be a joint effort by both the County Council and City Council and approximate $50,000 each. While everyone wants this issue resolved, there was little consensus by the Council on action. Concern was raised about the cost of the fence, the ability and willingness of authorities to enforce the law, and public support of our efforts. At Monday’s City Council meeting we will consider a resolution supporting the County’s efforts to deal with this issue.

FISCAL YEAR 2007-2008 AUDIT OF CITY FINANCES – The firm of ElliottDavis was selected by bid process to perform an audit of city finances for the past fiscal year. We briefly reviewed their report at last Council meeting and will give final approval at Monday night’s meeting. The firm concluded that the City of Aiken is properly managing funds collected and spent. They identified no material weaknesses or significant deficiencies relating to the audit of the financial statement and no instances of noncompliance material to the financial statements. While audit reports can be dry reading, they do reveal significant findings. For example, the City has a 98.07% collection percentage for real and personal property taxes. The City has no outstanding general obligation debt. Our revenue sources are:

Charges for Services 47.74%

Property Taxes 18.08%

Business Taxes 11.61%

Capital Project Sales Taxes 9.87%

Unrestricted Investment Earnings 6.67%

Operating Grants 3.04%

Capital Grants 2.41%

Intergovernmental 1.69%

Accommodations Taxes 1.43%

Miscellaneous 0.46%

Our Government-Wide Expenses include:

Water & Sewer 29.77%

Public Safety 26.12%

General Government 12.00%

Recreation & Parks 10.56%

Public Works 9.16%

Sanitation 7.98%

Economic Development 3.14%

Storm Water 1.09%

Debt Service Interest 0.18%

Most of the City revenue from the previous year is from growth in property taxes from new resident and from business licenses. Major expenditures include over $300,000 in planning and traffic studies and over $5,000,000 in benefits and insurance. Despite a 5% increase in water and sewer rates last year, only one city in South Carolina has lower rates than Aiken. We exceeded expenditures over budget in the Aiken Community Playhouse Fund ($5,099). Community Development Block Grant Fund ($57,008) and Local Accommodations Tax Fund ($59,671). In every other case, our budgeted amounts exceeded what we spent. The Aiken Corporation owes the city $2,670,035 for several loans in past years. Some of this money will be collected when property is sold and the Aiken Corporation has been making satisfactory progress in repaying loans. Overall, the City is handling your money well and in accordance with acceptable accounting standards. The City Manager recognized our current economic climate and will act accordingly in controlling expenses during the year.

CLOSURE OF UNOPENED PORTION OF COKER SPRINGS ROAD – The Hitchcock Woods Foundation in a friendly suit sued the City to close a portion of Coker Springs Road between Newberry Street and Laurens Street. Adjacent property owners have been notified.Since this section of roadway has never been opened in the past as a public roadway the ordinance is expected to pass first reading on Monday.

Posted by Dick Dewar

Update on SCOTUS Obama Citizenship Case

We understood that the case brought by Leo Donofrio against the N.J. Secretary of State to prove the eligibility of Barack Obama to be on the N.J. Electoral College slate was to be conferred on by the Supreme Court on Friday. However, as far as I can tell from reading the internet and Donofrio's own blog, it was not but may be Monday at 10:00. Donofrio's website can be found at http://naturalborncitizen.wordpress.com/. For anyone interested, he has researched the citizenship of all our past presidents, and reports on controversies about: James Buchanan, Andrew Johnson, Woodrow Wilson, Herbert Hoover and Chester Arthur. According to Donofrio, all but Arthur are proven to be "natural born citizens" and Chester Arthur was probably not.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Aiken Hospital Auxilary Seeks Memorial Gifts, Bequests or Endowments

                                             

The Washington Post seeks that elusive final victory

An excellent piece from Power Line


"The Washington Post seeks that elusive final victory


Posted: 03 Dec 2008 07:55 PM CST

As George W. Bush completes the last weeks of his presidency, the phrase "bloodied but unbowed" comes to mind. The MSM is delighted about the first part, of course, having done all it could to inflict that condition. But it still seems to rankle that Bush has not confessed to large-scale error. With the exception of a trip to "re-education camp," nothing Bush could do would delight his liberal detractors more than such a confession.

In the meantime, Dan Eggen of the Washington Post pretends the MSM has its confession in this piece obnoxiously titled "Reflecting on His Tenure, Bush Shows New Candor." Eggen contrasts the president's "new condor" with the old Bush who "once was unable to provide an example of a mistake he had made in office." (emphasis added). (I believe that Eggen is referring to a statement Bush made during a debate with John Kerry; which presidents have enumerated their mistakes in a presidential debate?). Eggen clearly wants to create the impression that Bush finally is confessing to mistakes he made in office.

But Eggen doesn't deliver the goods. He cites Bush's statement that when he ran for office in 2000, he didn't expect anticipate war, and was not prepared to be a war time president when he took office. But which politicians in 2000 were expecting a war, and who among the viable presidential candidates had experience in leading during war time? Here, in effect, Bush is regretting not being FDR, Harry Truman, Lyndon Johnson or Richard Nixon.

As to Bush's war time leadership, the best Eggen can offer is Bush's statement in an interview with ABC that he wishes "the intelligence had been different" on Iraq. Bush added that this intelligence failure is his "biggest regret." But Bush didn't collect the intelligence; he simply relied on the intelligence collected and analyzed by others. The fact that he wishes the intelligence community had served up better intel is not much of a mea culpa. I regret that the restaurant where I had lunch today didn't serve up a better meal, but I mostly blame the restaurant.

Finally, Eggen cites Bush's statement that he regrets not enacting comprehensive immigration reform and that the "tone in Washington" got worse not better during his administration. But regret that something happened (the tone got worse) or didn't happen (Congress wouldn't pass legislation) is not the same thing as regretting a mistake. I doubt Bush thinks there is anything he should have done but failed to do that would have enabled his vision of immigration reform to become law or that would have made Washington a harmonious city during the past eight years. I certainly don't think there is.

But though Eggen comes up empty, I have heard the president admit to mistakes in office. He has said (I don't recall where) that some of his tough talk ("bring it on") was a mistake. And he has said that although, he didn't have it put up, he shouldn't have stood near that "Mission Accomplished" banner.

Perhaps Dan Eggen regrets writing a bogus story when there was a genuine one that would have served him almost as well.

The left's obsession with extracting mea culpas from Republican presidents is longstanding. David Frost's interview with Richard Nixon is still considered a hot topic in some circles. The same obsession naturally does not apply to Democrats. Has the Washington Post ever fretted about whether Jimmy Carter was sufficiently contrite (or candid) about his failed policies towards Iran? Or whether Bill Clinton regrets giving al Qaeda a virtually free pass while disgracing himself and his office by having sex with an intern and then lying about it?

The bottom line on Bush is that he has cited a few mistakes, could no doubt cite a few more if he were so inclined, but has no obligation or good reason to do so.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Fred Thompson on Economics

The following arrived in my email this morning and is well worth your time.

"Republicans have been struggling to find their political bearings. The Democrats are about to embark on a Keynesian spending spree the likes of which we have never seen. How to respond? How can Republicans possibly oppose the political juggernaut coming their way? They could do much worse than to send this short film by Fred Thompson to every voter in America. As political theater, it is brilliant. As economic education, it is indispensable.

The film demonstrates that Thompson is head and shoulders above the current crop of party functionaries in the essential task of communicating and educating voters about our current predicament and the course which the Democrats are pursuing. As they contemplate their political predicament, the Republicans might think about finding Thompson some permanent role as Party Explainer"

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Victory in Georgia!

Saxby Chambliss wins! Thank goodness.
U.S. Senate Election Results
Candidate                                            Votes

Saxby Chambliss - R Incumbent          1,191,235 58%

Jim Martin -           D                            876,397 42%



Updated Dec-02-2008 11:02 PM 96% reporting (3190 of 3303 precincts)

Monday, December 1, 2008

Supreme Court to Review Obama Citizenship

While the mainstream media has been silent, the internet is on fire with news that this Friday, the U.S. Supreme Court will review whether Barack Obama is indeed constitutionally eligible to become the next president.
The justices will hold a conference on the question and consider the case for formal review. If four of the nine justices vote to hear the case, oral argument may be scheduled.
The case is brought by Leo C. Donofrio against the New Jersey secretary of state, and questions whether Obama is a "natural-born citizen" as required by the Constitution. In addition, there are multiple other suits working their way through the courts, in particular one by Philip Berg, a Pennsylvania attorney, and one by Alan Keyes who was a candidate for President in California.
It is important to note that the Electors of the states vote on December 15. At that time, if Barack Obama receives the majority of the electoral votes, he becomes the president elect. The schedule below is taken directly from the Supreme Court website.

No. 08A407

Title:
Leo C. Donofrio, Applicant
v.
Nina Mitchell Wells, New Jersey Secretary of State
Docketed:

Lower Ct:
Supreme Court of New Jersey

Case Nos.:
(AM-0153-08T2 at the New Jersey Appellate Division without a docket number)

~~~Date~~~
~~~~~~~Proceedings and Orders~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Nov 3 2008
Application (08A407) for stay pending the filing and disposition of a petition for a writ of certiorari, submitted to Justice Souter.
Nov 6 2008
Application (08A407) denied by Justice Souter.
Nov 14 2008
Application (08A407) refiled and submitted to Justice Thomas.
Nov 19 2008
DISTRIBUTED for Conference of December 5, 2008.
Nov 19 2008
Application (08A407) referred to the Court by Justice Thomas.


~~Name~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~Address~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~Phone~~~
Attorneys for Petitioner:


Leo C. Donofrio
P.O. Box 93


East Brunswick, NJ 08816

Party name: Leo C. Donofrio

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Hoping Obama surprises; ready, if not


ThiS interesting letter appeared in the Chronicle today. If you would like to comment and read the comments click Augusta Chronicle


Letter to the Editor Augusta Chronicle

Saturday, November 29, 200848 commentsPRINTShareEmail



Many conservative voters fear we are witnessing a stealth transition from the United States of America to the Union of Socialist States of America.

I am particularly angry about this because Mr. Obama did not campaign openly as a socialist. He was careful to sound moderate for the electorate, especially in the carefully choreographed TV infomercials that passed as presidential debates.

His comments to Joe the Plumber and the Rev. Rick Warren revealed far more about him than did any other forum. He knew if he campaigned as a socialist he would lose.

His past political alliances, public statements and sources of financing leave little doubt about his underlying political philosophy. That is why his ties to the Rev. Wright, Bill Ayers, and other America-hating radicals are so important.

There were enough people who understood the threat that even in a year that heavily favored Democrats, Obama won by only 6 points; 55 million Americans voted for John McCain.

The mantra from the left is that all Americans must now support Obama "since he is our president." I vehemently reject that viewpoint. I will not be intimidated into submission to Obama's policies just because he is the nation's elected leader; ask the German people where that road leads.

This does not mean I will actively seek to undermine his presidency. Unlike the ethically bankrupt national news media and the rest of the liberals who relentlessly undercut George Bush on virtually every policy decision over the past eight years, I will maintain a stance of loyal opposition. I love my country, and we desperately need solutions to festering problems.

I hope I am pleasantly surprised by the new administration. If Mr. Obama respects our Constitution, our shared values as Americans, and the capitalist model that made us a great nation, then he may win my support. If he attempts to impose a radical left-wing agenda on our nation, as I believe he will, I will be among the many millions who will work to make his a one-term presidency.



Jim Wilde


Evans





From the Saturday, November 29, 2008 edition of the Augusta Chronicle

Thursday, November 27, 2008

HAPPY THANKSGIVING

Today  Ed Giobbe and I were trying to remember what word  the Italians use for turkey. Ed speaks fluent Italian and I used to be reasonably competent but neither of us could recall the word. I did know that in Turkey the bird is called a hindi which of course means India.. I "googled" for an answer and found this interesting bit of information. So now we all know.

Happy Thanksgiving from Dick and Donna 


The Story of How the Unofficial Bird of the United States Got Named After a Middle Eastern Country


(by Giancarlo Casale)

How did the turkey get its name? This seemingly harmless question popped into my head one morning as I realized that the holidays were once again upon us. After all, I thought, there's nothing more American than a turkey. Their meat saved the pilgrims from starvation during their first winter in New England. Out of gratitude, if you can call it that, we eat them for Thanksgiving dinner, and again at Christmas, and gobble them up in sandwiches all year long. Every fourth grader can tell you that Benjamin Franklin was particularly fond of the wild turkey, and even campaigned to make it, and not the bald eagle, the national symbol. So how did such a creature end up taking its name from a medium sized country in the Middle East? Was it just a coincidence? I wondered.

The next day I mentioned my musings to my landlord, whose wife is from Brazil. "That's funny," he said, "In Portuguese the word for turkey is 'peru.' Same bird, different country." Hmm.

With my curiosity piqued, I decided to go straight to the source. That very afternoon I found myself a Turk and asked him how to say turkey in Turkish. "Turkey?" he said. "Well, we call turkeys 'hindi,' which means, you know, from India." India? This was getting weird. I spent the next few days finding out the word for turkey in as many languages as I could think of, and the more I found out, the weirder things got. In Arabic, for instance, the word for turkey is "Ethiopian bird," while in Greek it is "gallapoula" or "French girl." The Persians, meanwhile, call them "buchalamun" which means, appropriately enough, "chameleon."

In Italian, on the other hand, the word for turkey is "tacchino" which, my Italian relatives assured me, means nothing but the bird. "But," they added, "it reminds us of something else. In Italy we call corn, which as everybody knows comes from America, 'grano turco,' or 'Turkish grain.'" So here we were back to Turkey again! And as if things weren't already confusing enough, a further consultation with my Turkish informant revealed that the Turks call corn "misir" which is also their word for Egypt!

By this point, things were clearly getting out of hand. But I persevered nonetheless, and just as I was about to give up hope, a pattern finally seemed to emerge from this bewildering labyrinth. In French, it turns out, the word for turkey is "dinde," meaning "from India," just like in Turkish. The words in both German and Russian had similar meanings, so I was clearly on to something. The key, I reasoned, was to find out what turkeys are called in India, so I called up my high school friend's wife, who is from an old Bengali family, and popped her the question.

"Oh," she said, "We don't have turkeys in India. They come from America. Everybody knows that."

"Yes," I insisted, "but what do you call them?"

"Well, we don't have them!" she said. She wasn't being very helpful. Still, I persisted:

"Look, you must have a word for them. Say you were watching an American movie translated from English and the actors were all talking about turkeys. What would they say?" "Well...I suppose in that case they would just say the American word, 'turkey.' Like I said, we don't have them." So there I was, at a dead end. I began to realize only too late that I had unwittingly stumbled upon a problem whose solution lay far beyond the capacity of my own limited resources. Obviously I needed serious professional assistance. So the next morning I scheduled an appointment with Prof. Sinasi Tekin of Harvard University, a world-renowned philologist and expert on Turkic languages. If anyone could help me, I figured it would be Professor Tekin.

As I walked into his office on the following Tuesday, I knew I would not be disappointed. Prof. Tekin had a wizened, grandfatherly face, a white, bushy, knowledgeable beard, and was surrounded by stack upon stack of just the sort of hefty, authoritative books which were sure to contain a solution to my vexing Turkish mystery. I introduced myself, sat down, and eagerly awaited a dose of Prof. Tekin's erudition. "You see," he said, "In the Turkish countryside there is a kind of bird, which is called a chulluk. It looks like a turkey but it is much smaller, and its meat is very delicious. Long before the discovery of America, English merchants had already discovered the delicious chulluk, and began exporting it back to England, where it became very popular, and was known as a 'Turkey bird' or simply a 'turkey.' Then, when the English came to America, they mistook the birds here for chulluks, and so they began calling them 'turkey" also. But other peoples weren't so easily fooled. They knew that these new birds came from America, and so they called them things like 'India birds,' 'Peruvian birds,' or 'Ethiopian birds.' You see, 'India,' 'Peru' and 'Ethiopia' were all common names for the New World in the early centuries, both because people had a hazier understanding of geography, and because it took a while for the name 'America' to catch on.

"Anyway, since that time Americans have begun exporting their birds everywhere, and even in Turkey people have started eating them, and have forgotten all about their delicious chulluk. This is a shame, because chulluk meat is really much, much tastier."

Prof. Tekin seemed genuinely sad as he explained all this to me. I did my best to comfort him, and tried to express my regret at hearing of the unfairly cruel fate of the delicious chulluk. Deep down, however, I was ecstatic. I finally had a solution to this holiday problem, and knew I would be able once again to enjoy the main course of my traditional Thanksgiving dinner without reservation.

Now if I could just figure out why they call those little teeny dogs Chihuahuas....

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Media Mice

'A government big enough to give you everything you want,

is strong enough to take everything you have.'

~Thomas Jefferson~
It is said one picture is worth 1,000 words, but one cartoon, like this one, can be worth a million words!!!




Friday, November 21, 2008

Free Medical Clinic of Aiken County Opens its New Facility


The Free Medical Clinic of Aiken County has taken one of the biggest steps in the life and work of the clinic. A new facility has been purchased in the City of Aiken from which to operate. This new location will enable the clinic to fully realize its mission. The clinic will be able to expand the hours of operation, and extend the provision of service to both chronic and non emergency needs.

On Friday, November 21, 2008, at 10 am, there was a ceremony to publicly open the new facility. The opening of this facility fulfills a key strategic goal established for the clinic,

During the ceremony the name of the Free Medical Clinic of Aiken County was changed to the Community Medical Clinic of Aiken County. The distinction of the name change is to ensure that  present and future patients recognize the clinic as the Aiken Community's primary medical care provider for those who do not have the means necessary to employ other medical providers. Going forward, the Community Medical Clinic of Aiken County will strive to become part of the medical community in delivering to the needs of Aiken County citizens, and work in coordination with other medical providers.

The new facility is located at 244 Greeneville Street, two blocks behind Aiken Public Safety's facility,The phone number is (803) 226-0631.

Silver Bluff May Get Turn Lanes

In case you missed it the following report appeared in the Aiken Standard today. The wheels of government move slowly!


Silver Bluff may get turn lanes

http://www.aikenstandard.com/Local/1121ARTS

11/21/2008 12:54 AM

By HALEY HUGHES

Staff writer

A representative with the South Carolina Department of Transportation has unveiled plans that call for the addition of several turn lanes at key intersections along Silver Bluff Road in lieu of widening the thoroughfare to five lanes.

The improvements were approved unanimously by the South Carolina subcommittee of the Augusta Regional Transportation Study (ARTS) with a few provisions, laying to rest a prolonged debate which weighed the merits of widening the two-lane road versus adding turn lanes.

The state originally supported the widening - which would have transformed Silver Bluff Road from 0.4 miles west of Richardsons Lake Road to approximately 600 feet east of Indian Creek Trail from two lanes to five - but many in Aiken felt turn lanes were a better, less expensive alternative that would also damage fewer trees.

"This is far superior to the five-lane widening," said Gary Bunker, a member of Aiken County Council who was present at the meeting. "I think it's really good."

On top of approving the turn lanes, the subcommittee asked that SCDOT consider making lanes at least 24 to 39 inches wide with the exception of the turn lanes, not installing a traffic light at the entrance to Woodside Plantation, minimizing the taking of right-of-way, consider installing a left-turn lane at Savannah Drive and use curb and gutter.

"The plans are still conceptual," said Fred Cavanaugh, committee chairman and Aiken mayor. "There is still a lot of design work to do."

The plans will now be forwarded to ARTS for its consideration. Public meetings will also be held in the future to go over the turn lane plans.

BREAKOUT

Proposed turn lanes on Silver Bluff Road

Silver Bluff Road at Richardsons Lake Road (possibility of installing a traffic light at intersection)

Northbound on Silver Bluff: left- and right turn lane

- Southbound on Silver Bluff: dual left-turn lanes and a right turn lane

- On Richardson's Lake Road: left-turn lane

Silver Bluff at Woodside Plantation Drive (possibility of installing a traffic light at intersection)

- Northbound on Silver Bluff: right turn lane

- Southbound on Silver Bluff: left-turn lane

Silver Bluff at Hartwell Drive/Woodside Executive Court

- Northbound on Silver Bluff: left-turn lane

- Southbound on Silver Bluff: left-turn lane

Silver Bluff at Town Creek Road

- Northbound on Silver Bluff: left-turn lane

- Southbound on Silver Bluff: right turn lane

- On Town Creek Road: left-turn lane

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Sanford looking out for people of S.C.

The following letter from Aiken County Councilman Scott Singer was published in the Aiken Standard.

Sunday, November 16



Sanford looking out for people of S.C.

On Tuesday, Nov. 11, the Associated Press reported that Gov. Mark Sanford had asked the U.S. Treasury Secretary to investigate the largest, publicly-traded bank holding company headquartered in South Carolina and the parent of Carolina First Bank. In short, Gov. Sanford was concerned that its chief executive officer, Mack Whittle, had moved up his previously announced retirement so that his $18 million retirement package could be funded by bailout money. According to regulatory filings, the company has petitioned the federal government for up to $350 million.

As I read this article, I had two immediate reactions. The first was a sense of outrage. I for one do not want a single nickel of public funds (i.e., my taxes) going to a company that is about to pay its retiring CEO $18 million! The second was how thankful I am to have a governor who is willing to stand up and do what is right on behalf of the ordinary citizen rather than the entrenched special interests that dominate our state.

As the former chairman of the University of South Carolina's Board of Trustees and the state Chamber of Commerce, the CEO in question wields significant political influence. No doubt, the "politically safe" thing for our governor to do would have been to keep quiet and remain on the sidelines. One could rationalize that since the bailout money comes from federal dollars this isn't even a state issue. But Mark Sanford is not like most politicians. Mark Sanford is going to do what he believes is right. And most importantly, Mark Sanford will always look out for you.

For six years Governor Sanford has attempted to restructure our government in order to bring it into the 21st century and make it much more efficient and accountable to you the taxpayer. Unfortunately, South Carolina is a legislature-controlled state and despite paying lip service to the notion of restructuring, the leadership has not taken decisive action. The Legislature will reconvene in January. Now is the time to contact your Senate and House representatives and demand action.

Scott Singer

Governor Sanford Opposes Bailout

The following article appeared in the Wall Street Journal:

NOVEMBER 15, 2008

Don't Bail Out My State

South Carolina's governor says more debt isn't the answer.

By MARK SANFORD

I find myself in a lonely position. While many states and local governments are lining up for a bailout from Congress, I went to Washington recently to oppose such bailouts. I may be the only governor to do so.

But I suspect I'm not entirely alone, as there are a lot of taxpayers who aren't pleased with Christmas coming early for politicians. And I hope these taxpayers make their voices heard before Democrats load up the next bailout train for states with budget deficits.

Several questions led me to oppose bailing out the states. They are worth asking, even if you supported bailing out Wall Street.

Who bails out the "bail-outor"?

Washington is short on cash these days and will borrow every dime of the $150 billion to $300 billion for the "stimulus" bill now being worked on. Federal appetites may know no bounds. But the federal government's ability to borrow is not limitless. Already, our nation's unfunded liabilities total $52 trillion -- about $450,000 per household. There's something very strange about issuing debt to solve a problem caused by too much debt.

Do you now have to be a financial "bad boy" to win?

Community bankers tell me that they are now at a competitive disadvantage for being careful about who to lend to, because others that were less disciplined will get a federal bailout. This is also true for states. Those that have been fiscally responsible will pay for or lose out to the big spenders. California increased spending 95% over the past 10 years (federal spending went up 71% over the same period). To bail out California now seems unfair to fiscally prudent states.

Was the economist Herb Stein wrong when he said that if something cannot go on forever, it won't?

Medicaid grew 9.5% annually over the past 10 years. That's unsustainable. But if Congress opens the checkbook now, there will be no reform.

Isn't government intervention supposed to be the last resort and come only when it can make a difference?

In 2008 bailouts became the first resort. Over the past year the federal government has committed itself to $2.3 trillion (including the tax rebate "stimulus" checks of last February) to "improve" the economy. I don't see how another $150 billion now will make a difference in a global slowdown. We've already unloaded truckloads of sugar in a vain attempt to sweeten a lake. Tossing in a Twinkie will not make the difference.

However, there is something Congress can do: free states from federal mandates. South Carolina will spend about $425 million next year meeting federal unfunded mandates. The increase in the minimum wage alone will cost the state $2.6 million and meeting Homeland Security's REAL ID requirements will cost $8.9 million.

Based on what I saw in Washington, the bailout train is being loaded up. Taxpayers will have to speak up now to change its freight, tab or departure.

Mr. Sanford, a Republican, is the governor of South Carolina.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Election 2008: S.C. red starts to fade

From The State.com

Posted on Sunday, Nov. 16, 2008


Election 2008: S.C. red starts to fade


By WAYNE WASHINGTON

Barack Obama did not carry South Carolina in winning the presidency, but future Democratic nominees could find the Palmetto State to be much more fertile territory.

An analysis of voting patterns over the past eight years shows that Democrats have made big strides in a state that has been reliably Republican since Jimmy Carter last won it for the Democrats in 1976.

Those strides have not yet borne fruit for Democrats. Republicans still occupy the governor’s office and control both houses of the General Assembly. Republican presidential nominee John McCain also beat Obama here by a comfortable 9 percentage points.

Read More..  .

Monday, November 17, 2008

Worst President Ever?

An interesting perspective from Kyle Smith -New York Post


FAIL TO THE CHIEFS



BUSH WAS WORST PRESIDENT (EXCEPT FOR ALL THE OTHERS)



From bad to worse... Violation of civil liberties, war, criminal pardons, policy decisions that lead to economic problems? No problem!

Last updated: 5:31 pm

November 15, 2008

Posted: 12:59 pm

November 15, 2008

Farewell to George W. Bush. The. Worst. President. In. Modern. History.

Except for Nixon. That glowering paranoid freak sucker-punched the economy with his absurd price controls, secretly bombed Cambodia and led a gang of burgling henchmen who would later fill the federal prisons.

And Johnson. The most divisive event in modern American politics, it may surprise you to learn, is not the premature draping of a "Mission Accomplished" banner on an aircraft carrier or the decision to wiretap members of Al Qaeda's Friends and Family plan. It was the Vietnam War. It was a little matter of 60,000 fine Americans - many of them draftees, not volunteers - sent off to die for an irrelevant sliver of jungle on the shady pretext of a trumped-up, possibly fictitious attack in the Tonkin Gulf.

And Kennedy. LBJ sank into the quagmire that Kennedy stepped in. JFK wasn't kidding with that "Bear any burden, pay any price" nonsense, that "ask what you can do for your country" drivel. What he wanted you to do for your country was be drafted and go fight Communists wherever they lurked, even rice-paddy Communists in pajamas who would have posed no threat to this country unless they had figured out how to launch intercontinental ballistic spitballs. And how about botching the Bay of Pigs invasion, which led Cuba and the Soviets to buy an insurance policy in the form of a missile site that took this country the closest it has ever come to nuclear war?

And Carter. Four years of malaise. Inflation was running at levels last seen in Weimar Germany. Military morale sank to an all-time low as Carter allowed the armed forces to decay so badly that Delta Force commandos got nowhere near rescuing hostages being held by a bunch of jibbering religious freaks.

And Reagan. Let's not forget who presided over the only really agonizing recession since the Depression, the 1981-1982 one, in which the U.S. economy exhibited unemployment levels that can only be described as "Swedish." And let's not forget his whopper when he said he didn't know about the illegal Iran-Contra operation. Of course he knew.

And Truman. Small wonder he had an 22% approval rating when he was forced out of office instead of running for a second full term, after squandering 50,000 American lives who "died for a tie" in Korea.

And Clinton. A lying, venal, human petri dish of corruption, Clinton is to integrity what the frat house is to cleanliness. He swept up innocent people around him in his vortex of untruth and sold pardons to criminals for the hilariously pathetic purpose of adding to his own glory at his presidential library. Signing the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act that set investment banks free doesn't look so uncontroversial today, does it?

And FDR. The downturn of 1937 - in FDR's second term - was almost as bad as the original one. How could his stewardship of WWII have been much worse? What kind of president lets our trans-Pond cousins get bombed in their beds every night for months? And Roosevelt should have opened the doors to every Jewish refugee who asked for asylum. Instead he locked them out. And he was so unprepared for the Japanese attack military theorists had predicted for years that our sailors got bombed in their own beds from Hawaii to the Philippines. Later he imprisoned thousands of Americans for the crime of having Japanese ancestry. By setting up Social Security not as a charity for the poor but as a Ponzi scheme, he insured that the program would cripple the budget some day while millionaires collected their checks each month on the golf course. And long before any of this he unleashed perhaps the most deranged attack on the Constitution in presidential history when he proposed adding six new Justices to the Supreme Court because he didn't like the ones who were already on it.

Everything is the best/worst/funniest/most tragic/most brilliant thing ever, if you're a high school girl, the hero of "Memento" or a political commentator. Things look different if you extend your memory more than five minutes into the past. Maybe the problem is the lack of a buzzword for the scandal. Here's one: "Superlativegate."

http://www.kylesmithonline.com/

Friday, November 14, 2008

Aiken County GOP Enews

-------------------------------------------------------


Aiken County Republican Party eNews: 2008.11.14

-------------------------------------------------------



The following is from Chris Powers, Secretary of the

Aiken County Republican Party and Sponsor of the

Evans (GA) High School Teen Age Republicans:

Dear Aiken County Republican,

Saxby Chambliss is in a tough runoff against Democratic

challenger Jim Martin. We have a very short time to

turn out the vote before the December 2 runoff. With

the senate races in Minnesota and Alaska turning

against us, it is even more imperative that our friend

Saxby keeps his seat.

We will work all day Saturday, November 15 at the

Columbia County Republican Party headquarters located

at 4150 Washington Rd, Suite 8 in Evans, Georgia.

The headquarters are located across the street from

Club Car. Below is a schedule for Saturday:



9:00 a.m. Meet for Coffee & Doughnuts

9:30 a.m. Teams head out for neighborhood canvassing/

Phone banking

Noon - 12:30 - meet back at HQ for a hot dog cookout

UGA v Auburn game will be available between 12:30 - 3:30



1:30 p.m Phone banking

Sign party - (we have about 1,500 new signs coming in

that we need help putting together)



3-5 p.m. Phone banks

Neighborhood canvassing


Teams will be going door to door this Saturday and

every Saturday until the runoff. We will meet at

headquarters.


There will be phone banking daily. If you have any

free time available stop by the headquarters, someone

will be there all day with walking routes and calling

lists.


If you would like more information on how you can,

help contact Monty Philpot at (202)-744-0389 or

emontgomery503@gmail.com or call the headquarters

at 706-955-2012.


Thank you,


Chris Powers
Secretary, Aiken County Republican Party

Sponsor, Evans High School Teen Age Republicans

MESSAGE FROM GOP USA

MESSAGE FROM GOP USA


-- The following e-mail comes from one of our sponsoring advertisers. Through their support, GOPUSA can continue to bring you the best array of conservative news, information, commentary, and discussions.



"Fellow Conservative --
They're coming.
Right now, the liberal attack machine -- MoveOn.org, Big Labor and more -- is pouring millions of dollars into Georgia.

Why?
In 18 days, Georgians will head to the polls in our critical runoff elections.
And liberals want to hand Barack Obama a blank check.

With all that hangs in the balance ... liberal-activist Supreme Court justices, massive tax hikes on families and small businesses, a backbreaking 25% cut to our military, censorship of conservative talk radio and outrageous paybacks to Big Labor bosses ...

... We must stop them.

Please donate $36 today -- just $2 a day until the runoff elections -- to stop the liberals from getting one step closer to total control of our government.Please Donate

Time is of the essence so please help us today!

Thanks for your support,

Senator Saxby Chambliss

P.S. Your immediate contribution will mean the difference between us responding to nasty liberal attacks ads or allowing the Democrats to push their liberal message with no response. Please contribute $36 today to fight back.

Make a DonationPlease Donate Today

Paid for by the Chambliss Victory Committee, a joint fundraising committee established by Chambliss for Senate, the Georgia Republican Party, the National Republican Senatorial Committee, and the Republican National Committee.

Chambliss Victory Committee
425 2nd Street NE
Washington, DC 20002

Any portion of your contribution allocated to the Georgia Republican Party, National Republican Senatorial Committee, or the Republican National Committee will be used in that committee's sole discretion and is not earmarked to any particular candidate.

The first $2,300 from any single individual's contribution shall go to Chambliss for Senate. The next $10,000 from any single individual's contribution shall go to the Georgia Republican Party. The next $28,500 from any single individual's contribution shall go to the National Republican Senatorial Committee. The final $27,000 from any single individual's contribution shall go to the Republican National Committee.



All contributions permissible under the FECA but that would cause a contributor to exceed any applicable Federal contribution limit to a specific committee, shall be reallocated to the other Committee to the extent permitted by the FECA. Any contribution that would otherwise cause a contributor to exceed any applicable Federal contribution limit that is not permissible under the FECA shall be refunded to the contributor. Any contributor may designate his or her contribution to a specific participating Committee, to the extent permissible by the FECA. Any contributor may make his or her contribution payable directly to any of the participating Committees listed in the Preamble to this Notice. Any such designated contribution that causes the contributor to exceed the contribution limit to the designated participating Committee shall not be reallocated by Chambliss Victory Committee absent the prior written p er mission of the contributor as required by law.



Contributions to Chambliss Victory Committee are not deductible as charitable contributions for Federal income tax purposes. All funds received in response to this solicitation will be subject to federal contribution limits and prohibitions. Individuals should review their personal contribution histories to determine how this contribution may affect their federal individual biennial contribution limit for the 2007-2008 election cycle. Contributions from corporations, foreign nationals (without "green cards"), and federal contractors are prohibited. Federal law requires us to use our best efforts to collect and report the name, mailing address, occupation, and employer of each individual who contributes over $200 in an election cycle (for contributions to Chambliss for Senate) or $200 in a calendar year (for contributions to the Georgia Republican Party, the National Republican Senatorial Committ ee, or the Republican National Committee).

The Night We waved Goodbye to America

Peter Hitchens just did a did a great article, entitled The Night We waved Goodbye to America...Our Last best hope, and describing the deliberately stupid decision the major of the American voters just made. One thing about the Brits is that being over there often gives them a clearer view of us. This article is a good example of that.


Because Peter Hitchens is a Brit he is also a citizen living in a former superpower that is now well over the hill. Perhaps because of this he is perhaps more cognizant than most Americans that they have essentially made an unconscious decision to join Britain in her post WWII descent onto a terminal decline. Here is a taste:

"I really don't see how the Obama devotees can ever in future mock the Moonies, the Scientologists or people who claim to have been abducted in flying saucers. This is a cult like the one which grew up around Princess Diana, bereft of reason and hostile to facts.

[...]

Just look at his sermon by the shores of Lake Michigan. He really did talk about a 'new dawn', and a 'timeless creed' (which was 'yes, we can'). He proclaimed that 'change has come'. He revealed that, despite having edited the Harvard Law Review, he doesn't know what 'enormity' means. He reached depths of oratorical drivel never even plumbed by our own Mr Blair, burbling about putting our hands on the arc of history (or was it the ark of history?) and bending it once more toward the hope of a better day (Don't try this at home).

I am not making this up. No wonder that awful old hack Jesse Jackson sobbed as he watched. How he must wish he, too, could get away with this sort of stuff.

[...]

As I walked, I crossed another of Washington's secret frontiers. There had been a few white people blowing car horns and shouting, as the result became clear. But among the Mexicans, Salvadorans and the other Third World nationalities, there was something like ecstasy.

They grasped the real significance of this moment. They knew it meant that America had finally switched sides in a global cultural war. Forget the Cold War, or even the Iraq War. The United States, having for the most part a deeply conservative people, had until now just about stood out against many of the mistakes which have ruined so much of the rest of the world.

Suspicious of welfare addiction, feeble justice and high taxes, totally committed to preserving its own national sovereignty, unabashedly Christian in a world part secular and part Muslim, suspicious of the Great Global Warming panic, it was unique.

These strengths had been fading for some time, mainly due to poorly controlled mass immigration and to the march of political correctness. They had also been weakened by the failure of America's conservative party – the Republicans – to fight on the cultural and moral fronts.

They preferred to posture on the world stage. Scared of confronting Left-wing teachers and sexual revolutionaries at home, they could order soldiers to be brave on their behalf in far-off deserts. And now the US, like Britain before it, has begun the long slow descent into the Third World. How sad. Where now is our last best hope on Earth?"

There is more. Go read the whole sad thing.

Sunday, November 9, 2008

November 10, City Council Meeting

DOUGHERTY CONNECTOR ROAD TO WAL-MART – At the last City Council meeting on October 20 our City Manager advised that the contract to complete the long-awaited connector road between Dougherty Road and Wal-Mart has been awarded. The work should be completed in late 2009.

FINANCE DEPARTMENT DIRECTOR RETIREMENT – Anita Lilly, our award-winning Finance Department Director since September 3, 1985, has announced her retirement effective January 29, 2009. Anita has led her department to achieve Certificates of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting every year since 1992. Her accomplishments also include annual reports with no comments from our auditing firm. She has been instrumental in implementing our computer technology systems beginning in 1987. We wish Anita well as she completes her City service to enjoy her well-earned retirement.

COMPREHENSIVE PLAN REVIEW – Planning Commission Chairman Bill Reynolds has reported back on the Commission’s review of the Aiken Comprehensive Plan. Our plan was amended regarding the South and Southeast sections of the City in 2002 and 2003. Under state law, these plans are required to be reviewed every five years. The Planning Commission review revealed no need for any changes to this section of the Comprehensive Plan at this time. In the coming months, the Planning Commission anticipated making other recommendations to Council regarding open space areas, items required under the state Priority Investment Act and an update of certain socioeconomic information.

CITY PAVING SCHEDULE – Paving has now started in the Trail Ridge/Bellreive area and should be completed soon.

PRESERVE AMERICA GRANT – The City of Aiken is one of 44 cities across the country to receive a grant from the National Park Service under its Federal “Preserve America” Program. This $20,000 grant will be used toward our city’s continuing historic preservation efforts. The NPS considered 119 applications, so our selection is a welcome recognition of our local preservation efforts.

APPOINTMENTS TO BOARDS AND COMMISSIONS – I am pleased to announce the appointment of Pat Andringa to the Arts Commission. She replaces Mary Ellen Krippner who recently resigned. I want to thank Mary Ellen for her long service to the Arts Commission and with Pat well. Pat is no stranger to the Arts Community having been involved in one way or another for over twenty years. I sincerely appreciate people like Pat and Mary Ellen who are willing to serve their community.

I have also reappointed Pete Seaha to the Planning Commission. Pete has served admirably in his position and has proven to be a valuable asset to the Planning Commission.

ABANDONED VEHICLES – We will consider under first reading an ordinance to deal with abandoned vehicles. This program is similar to one found in Anderson that deals with inoperable vehicles. It involves the owners selling the vehicle to the City for $75. In turn, the City will take these vehicles to a recycling center. The program has been very successful in the City of Anderson during the past three years and has resulted in the removal of 220 vehicles through this buyout program. This is the kind of program which will improve the neighborhoods in our city.

HOUNDSLAKE GOLF COURSE - Many of you know that Houndslake Country Club has announced plans to close the Laurel golf course effective December 31, 2008. I have been working with Houndslake North volunteers to study the issue and report to residents on options available. We hope to soon disseminate information to materially help the 265 residents near the Laurel golf course make whatever decision is in their best interests. I expect the Aiken Standard to continue to cover this issue.

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Marine Corps Birthday


HAPPY BIRTHDAY MARINES
SEMPER FIDELIS!
Marine Corps Birthday- On November 10, 1775,  the United States Marine Corps was founded at Tuns Tavern in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. By tradition proud Marines all over the world celebrate this day. Last night the James L. Hammons Detachment of Aiken celebrated the 233rd Birthday of the United States Marines in high style. Enjoy the Hymn.





Friday, November 7, 2008

How to Block the Liberal Agenda

 The election is over and the democrats will be in charge. The following article quoted in part from Wall Street Journal gives  some reasons to hope that all is not lost.To read the entire story follow this link How to Block the Liberal Agenda

 

How to Block the Liberal Agenda


Washington, meet Barack Obama. Barack Obama, remeet the Republican senators who are now going to help define your presidency.
Democrats won big on Tuesday but not big enough. The voters' rebuke of the GOP was brutal, though not so cruel as to hand Mr. Obama and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid the 60 votes they needed to grease a sweeping agenda. The GOP still owns a filibuster, and that is as big a factor in this new "era" as is our president-elect.
Democrats, who now officially own 55 seats, are still salivating over that distant 60. But Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens is holding on, and Georgia's Saxby Chambliss is positioned to win a run-off. Norm Coleman in Minnesota is in for an ugly recount, but he starts with a lead. If Mr. Reid goes postal on the McCain-supporting Joe Lieberman, Republicans could also find themselves with occasional help from the liberated Connecticuter.