Friday, September 26, 2008

Weary

That's how I feel about the election. That's how I feel about watching the news. That's how I feel about talking to anyone about it.

I'm going to vote. I'll be voting for McCain. I'll be doing what I can to help get him elected here in Colorado. But I am tired of watching polls. I am tired of watching the news. I'm tired of arguing about people with why McCain should win.

To a certain point, I am resigned to whatever happens. This is Obama's election to lose. He should win. We have an unpopular President, an unstable economy, and people just want something different. However, the polls are close, but the only poll that matters is the one on November 4th. So I am not going to worry about them until them.

As far as the economy, all I can do is just take care of my own matters and do my best to be employed, to manage my finances, and provide for my family.

I'm just going to worry about what I can control and thrive regardless of the world situation.

That's it, I'm out.

Monday, September 01, 2008

That Makes Sense

Part of the left-wing blogosphere's claim that Sarah Palin faked her pregnancy was based on her daughter missing school and people at the school saying the daughter was pregnant. It turns out that she (the daughter) is pregnant. It also appears that this was known by the McCain team and that it didn't matter. Obama has come out and told everyone that families are off limits. That's a good move for him and I don't think the pregnancy will have a big negative effect on the campaign.

On the subject of families off limits, I think that kids are definitely off limits. Spouses too, unless they make political statements about the other side, then they are fair game. Endorsing your spouse and talking about them as a spouse - off limits. Attacking your opponents - game on.

Sunday, August 31, 2008

The Next Email You Will Get From Your Liberal Friends

Will be about Sarah Palin not being the mother of her son, Trig. The Kossacks are already circulating claims that the baby is the son of her 16 year-old daughter, Bristol. In interviews with People Magazine and USA Today, Palin discusses finding out that Trig had Downs Syndrome and how she prepared herself for it. In both stories, she talks about her doctor giving her the news and in one story, she talks about the amniocenteses used to diagnose the baby. So this should be a relatively easy story to debunk - give access to the test results and to the doctor.

This will also be a relatively easy thing for the McCain campaign to fumble by saying these results and conversations are covered by patient confidentiality, which will make it look like they are hiding something.

If this is an issue, just get it over now, deal with it and select someone else. If it is not an issue, save it, let the pressure build up, let the Obama campaign embrace it, and in October, release the results, show that the kid is hers and then hammer away on the left wing nutjobs who started the rumor and the Obama campaign that ran with it.

Eat This Ahmadinejad!!!

Friday, August 29, 2008

WOW! Color Me Impressed

McCain picks Sarah Palin as his VP. Not many people saw that coming, but in a game where your goal is to be the leader of the free world, sometimes you gotta throw it deep. I watched her speech and can't find a lot wrong (the glass ceiling comment was brilliant - give that speech writer a raise). I like the pick and she makes a good first impression. Hopefully, the vetting process was thorough. The Hillary forums are all abuzz. Lots of people thanking John McCain. 67 days to the election and this one just became more historic that it was last night.

Monday, August 25, 2008

Protest Blogging

Before last week, I pretty much expected to avoid any contact with the DNC. However, I realized last week that my office in the Tech Center is right across the street from many hotels where the delegates may be staying. Then I heard that the protesters were planning to block the delegates from leaving the hotels. All of a sudden, I thought, "Maybe I can get some good footage of riot police and tear gas." I brought my camera and video camera to work hoping to see something you don't see everyday. Of course, this morning, when I got to work, nothing. No protests, no riot police, no tear gas. Based on the numbers from the protesters downtown this weekend, I guess I should have known that this will be no Chicago '68. Even the people in my office that live north of downtown and had to drive past the "Secure area" said that traffic was lighted than normal this morning. We'll see how the week progresses, but it looks to be a fairly tame start to the DNC.

Friday, August 22, 2008

Just priceless

The One

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Another Reason to Elect John McCain

Court rejects death penalty for raping children

"In a 5-4 vote, the court said the Louisiana law allowing the death penalty to be imposed in such cases violates the Constitution's ban on cruel and unusual punishment.

"The death penalty is not a proportional punishment for the rape of a child," Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote in his majority opinion. His four liberal colleagues joined him, while the four more conservative justices dissented."


Not sure most parents would agree with the court on this one. Note that liberal justices (the ones Obama would likely appoint) were the majority and the conservative justices (the ones McCain has stated he would appoint) were the minority.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

My Favorite Campaign Ad (so far)

One of my wife's friends made this video. He was a Hillary supporter and says he's voting for McCain now. This is one of the best campaign ads I've ever seen and the McCain campaign should pick this up and use it:

Hugh and Me

I met Hugh Hewitt last weekend at the T.A.P.S. dinner and concert. Here's the pic (I'm the one on the left) :

Been A Long Time

Since I blogged. There's too many reasons to cite why I haven't been posting, but instead of going through them, I think I'll just start again.

Thursday, July 26, 2007

The Victory Caucus

The Victory Caucus has been re-launched. I've added the link of the right. If you really want to know what is going on in the Iraq and the War on Terror, check it out!

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Talent Shortage

In one of my posts from February, I predicted that Baby Boomers aren't going to be retiring any time soon. In my current job, I work with a lot of people who are fretting over the coming talent shortage because of the retirement of the older generation. I think that there is a demographic problem in terms of too many older workers and not enough younger workers to backfill, but I don't think that it will be as drastic as the current forecast, which is based on the outdated concept that people retire when they hit 65.

The reason I think this is that most Baby Boomers haven't saved enough for retirement and the government-backed social security system won't give them enough cash each month to support their current lifestyles. Sure, they may change jobs or work part-time, but the talent drain will be mitigated by a shifting view of talent management which deploys older workers into roles they can fill. This may take these roles from younger workers, but they will be re-deployed into the roles that the older workers can't do.

The point of this post is that I opened up the newspaper this morning and there was a story backing up what I predicted: Most boomers not ready to retire.

"...A new Rose Community Foundation study of Denver metro-area residents ranging from 55 to 65 years old suggests that Klein's services will remain in demand. Of the 1,021 people surveyed, only 39 percent plan to retire, with most planning to work either part or full time.

Inadequate retirement savings, stagnating pension benefits and cuts in retirement health benefits will make it necessary for some of them to continue working. Others want to stay active, working in a flexible environment that leaves them time for travel, attending classes and leisure activities. Some want to start their own businesses....

...But the study found that many employers are not recruiting or hiring people in this age group. "Ageism reigns fiercely," the study said..."

The company's that find a place for boomers will be the ones that are able to overcome any talent shortages that might be looming.

Monday, June 25, 2007

Virtual Congress

I've recently decided that the 535 individuals that make up the Congress are collectively the most incompetent group of people on the planet. Most Americans agree with me on this one. I bet I could pick 535 people off the street and find more competence in them as a collective group.

Note that I am not talking about individual incompetence. I believe there are many intelligent, competent members of congress, but as a group, they are useless.

I think a lot of it comes from being in Washington, D.C. Spending all your time with colleagues who are continually congratulating themselves on being Masters of their Universe and with aides who tell you exactly what you want to hear. I've never worked in D.C. so I am only imaging what sort of things must go on in order to cultivate such a group of incompetents.

So I was thinking that Congress should no longer meet in D.C. They should meet virtually, from their home offices in their home states. Instead of having lunches with lobbyists, they can have lunches with constituents everyday before they go to vote on bills. Yeah, the lobbyists will still have access to them, but at least they will have to fan out across the country to get access. The media will have to fan out as well, but it's much more likely that the local paper will be willing to write the story of the local congressman having lunch with the national lobbyist.

Apparently, I am not the first to come up with this idea. I Googled "Virtual Congress" and got this result: Virtual Congress’ Would Weaken Deliberative Process. The Dirksen Congressional Center thinks that this would keep congressmen and women from building the relationships necessary to pass bills.

"Congress could not and should not be at the cutting edge of technology application. The fact that technology can be used for various applications certainly doesn’t mean that it should. That corporate boards may permit meetings or voting via video conference, or that college students may take classes over the Internet, does not mean that these same technologies can be translated into use by Congress — a far different entity in structure, purpose and importance to the very foundation of our form of governance.

As an organization, Congress functions in large part because of the regular and personal interactions among Members as they work to build consensus on issues ranging from procedural matters to the budget and appropriations legislation. This structure varies widely from the military and corporate arenas where action below is taken based on orders from above. In these environments technology is easily applied as an effective method of communication, information sharing, and command and control. In Congress, however, the loss of real, person-to-person interaction among Members, with all its involved emotions that cannot be reproduced via technology, no matter the clarity of the speakerphone or the resolution of the video display, would hit at the very heart of the institution and threaten its very ability to function as a body — the very opposite of what proponents of a “virtual Congress” would argue.

One recent procedural change in the House of Representatives provides an excellent example of the importance and value of personal relationships among Members. Over the past few sessions of Congress, the House has formalized the practice of “rolling votes,” where following debate on a piece of legislation, the actual vote on it is delayed. At a later time, a series of back-to-back votes are held on it and similarly “rolled” items.

Although on its face this practice would seem to weaken the legislative process by divorcing the vote on a bill from floor debate on the item, in reality it serves to provide Members with large amounts of time together on the floor to discuss matters, bargain on issues and build consensus. The practice has been widely praised by Members for providing the “quality time” needed to help develop personal relationships with their colleagues."

So according to these guys, congressmen need "quality time" with each other to get things done. I think they need quality time with their constituents. Building close relationships with each other only serves to draw them away from serving the interests of those who elected them.

Don't tell me that the technology cannot allow these guys to collaborate. Of course, we'd need much more tech savvy congressmen (maybe a litmus test, "Do you know what the "e" in "email" stands for"), but it seems that we could do it.

After all, didn't a U.S. Senator invent the internet?



The Future of Vice

Michael Yon's latest dispatch demonstrates the kind of world we would live in if Al Qaeda was able to spread Sharia Law.

"On the evening of the 24th I spoke with a local Iraqi official, Colonel Faik, who said the Muftis would order the severance of the two fingers used to hold a cigarette for any Iraqis caught smoking. Other reports, from here in Diyala and also in Anbar, allege that smokers are murdered by AQI. Most Iraqis smoke and this particular prohibition appeared to have earned the ire of many locals. After an American unit cleared an apartment complex on the 23rd, LTC Smiley, the battalion commander, reported that residents didn’t ask for food and water, but cigarettes. In other parts of Baqubah, people have been celebrating the routing of AQI by lighting up and smoking cigarettes.

Other AQI edicts included beatings for men who refused to grow beards, and corporal punishments for obscene sexual suggestiveness, defined by such “loose” behavior as carrying tomatoes and cucumbers in the same bag. These fatwas were not eagerly embraced by most Iraqis, and the taint traveled back to the Muftis who sat in supreme judgment. Locals, who are increasingly helpful in pointing out and celebrating the downfall of AQI here, said that during the initial Arrowhead Ripper attack the morning of the 19th, AQI murdered five men. Townsend’s men found the buried corpses behind an AQI prison, exactly where they’d been told to look for the group grave. Locals also directed Townsend’s men to a torture house. Peering through a window, American soldiers saw knives, swords, bindings and drills. AQI is well-known for its macabre eagerness to drill into kneecaps, elbows, ribs, skulls, and other parts of victims."

No smoking or they cut your fingers off. Kind of makes the prohibition of smoking in restaurants look like child's play. Also, you can't carry a cucumber and 2 tomatoes in the same shopping bag because of its sexual suggestiveness. Can you imagine the carnage Al Qaeda would have pursued had they seen something like this at PrideFest?

That's what I don't get. The same people who criticize the U.S. when it is trying to stop the tyranny that is propagating this type of oppression are the exact people that will be systematically killed should Al Qaeda and its fanatics be allowed to live. As Mark Steyn points out in America Alone, if the Islamists take over the world, those of us who are conservatives will pretty much just grow our beards and have a few more wives, but the groups of people backing liberal causes will be the first ones persecuted. The liberal voices speaking out on the war should be the ones decrying the enemy's brutality and oppression.

Of course, we can't imagine Islamists taking over the world. Just like we couldn't imagine 2 airplanes flying into the WTC on September 10th.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Supporting The War

If you can't tell by reading my posts, I support the Iraq War, the troops, and all the reasons we went to war. I support staying until we win and leaving Iraq a better place than it was under Saddam.

However, I often feel a little hypocritical because I am not in the military. The other day, I was listening to Dennis Prager and a caller asked this exact question: How can I say I support the war if I am not in the military?

The answer exhibited Dennis's moral clarity. He said (paraphrased, of course), "Do you support putting out fires? Are you a firefighter? It's possible to support a cause without being a direct fighter for the cause."

It's the same for policemen. I support the law and the enforcement of it by police officers, but that doesn't mean I have to be a police officer.

It did get me thinking. This war is not in jeopardy of being lost in Baghdad. It is in jeopardy of being lost in Washington, D.C. The way I can support the cause is to make more people aware of the mission and the importance of finishing the job.

That's how I copntribute to victory in the Iraq War.

Where I Have Been Blogging

I've started another blog called Employee Engagement and Retention. It's on a topic that is the focus of my current job. I actually really enjoy my job and get to try to help my company help its employees enjoy their jobs.

That's why I haven't been posting here as much lately.

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Our Incredible Soldiers

I've written before about Michael Yon and the work he is doing in Iraq. Here's a link to a recent post about 1 American soldier and the actions he took to save many lives. It's not a story about heroism in the face of enemy fire; rather, it is a story about quick thinking and incredible savvy during the detainment of a corrupt leader in Anbar.

I'd just like to ask John Kerry: "Does this soldier seem uneducated to you?"

Friday, May 25, 2007

Why We Are Still Fighting This War

I recently finished reading Thomas P.M. Barnett's The Pentagon's New Map

It was a great explanation of the current political, military, and economic forces at work in the world today and why we need to continue to exercise our military muscles in places like Afghanistan and Iraq.

One of the main premises of the book is that there is a Core of countries we will never fight a war with, and there is a Gap in which regions of the world are disconnected from the rest of us. It is in this Gap that most of the violence and terror in the world is grown. In the Gap, a small group of people seek to control the rest of the population through fear, intimidation, and keeping them disconnected.

Today, I saw a great example of who these thugs are and how they try to keep the Gap disconnected from the world. The Al-Qaeda torture manual found in Iraq really illustrates the enemy in the GWOT and why they need to be defeated. If we don't have the courage to fight, what you see in these pictures will be more than just drawings in a book.

Fred's Franks in the Boston Globe

For regular readers, you'll remember that my brohter-in-law sells hot dogs off the highway in Massachusetts. The Boston Globe recently did an article on him for their food section.

He saw a 50% increase in sales the day after the article ran.

You've gotta love the free advertising.

He was also on a regional show called The Phantom Gourmet. I've never seen the show, but they did a list of the top hot dog stands in New England. While he didn't make the list, he was featured as an up and comer and definitely worth the visit.