Young Americans for Liberty – Ole Miss Chapter

Same Constitution ~ New Revolution

Posts Tagged ‘obama

Culpable Either Way

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Attorney General Eric Holder is sticking to his guns, not the ones he didn’t know were being smuggled into Mexico, about his ignorance of the existence of Operation Fast and Furious.  A two year operation run by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives that allowed, and often facilitated, the purchase of two thousand firearms in the U.S. which were then smuggled into Mexico to bolster the Mexican drug cartels.  The operation’s purpose was to be able to track the smuggled weapons back to senior members of Mexican drug cartels and hold them responsible for gun smuggling, but the operation was a flop and only a few petty gun runners were arrested.

The ATF is an agency that is responsible to Holder’s Justice Department, and the claimed unawareness of Holder in regard to the two year gun running operation is suspect.  OFF firearms were found at over 170 violent crime scenes in Mexico and were used in the murder of 150 Mexicans and one U.S. border agent.  Congressional and Senate Republicans are claiming that Holder was not only fully aware of the operation, but he received five memos from the ATF detailing the status of the operation.  Thus Holder was either incompetent and unaware of a massive gun smuggling operation conducted by his own agency, or was completely aware of the operation’s existence and is now lying to the entire nation.  Either way Holder, the ATF, and possibly more people within the Administration are culpable for the crimes hence committed, and the furtherance of outcries from the Administration against either Pakistan or Iran for smuggling weapons into Afghanistan and Iraq seems quite ludicrous given the propensity of our own government to export death into a neighboring country.

Tyler Brown is a graduate student in History from Poplar Bluff, Missouri.  He is a member of the Ole Miss Chapter of Young Americans for Liberty and a contributor to UMFreedom.com.

 

Written by tdbrown3s

October 6, 2011 at 1:16 pm

Hypocrisy and Trade

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As is common throughout history, when economic woes beset a people and policy makers are aloof to reality, it becomes pertinent to blame the foreigner for the ills of a self-inflicted wound. Such is the case today in the United States with a public debt surging past 16

19th century political cartoon charging Chinese labor with unemploying American labor. Found at notfrisco.com.

trillion dollars, 1.5 trillion dollar yearly deficits, QE1, QE2, Operation Twist, and financial/environmental regulations that are equivalent to committing economic suicide. It concomitantly becomes apparent to federal policy makers to perfect the foul Keynesian economic soup with a dash of trade war hypocrisy.

As of late the artificial devaluation of the Chinese yuan has become the scapegoat of the brainiacs in Washington. They argue that renminbi is devalued by at least 30%, and this devaluation is driving the Chinese export machine as a form of protectionism. This development is also to blame for our rather lopsided balance-of-trade. George Mason’s Dr. Walter E. Williams illuminates the latter charge far better than I, here.

So who are these leaders of the charge against China’s unfair advantage.  Why it’s the American version of Cobden and Bright, Senators Charles Schumer and Sherrod Brown, both of whom have been harsh critics of unfair price manipulation.  Except when it has to do with domestic tires, or steel.  So senators like Schumer and Brown aren’t necessarily opposed to artificial price levels, just those that benefit foreigners at our expense; however, they are in favor of tariffs that benefit select American producers at the expense of all American consumers.

Tyler Brown is a graduate student in History from Poplar Bluff, Missouri.  He is a member of the Ole Miss Chapter of Young Americans for Liberty and a contributor to UMFreedom.com.

Written by tdbrown3s

October 3, 2011 at 8:23 pm

“Seinfeld” Free Market Economics

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Jerry examines a his less-than-desirable 'doo in "The Barber."

It’s not a very good time to be a free market right now. Everyone blames you for their lost jobs, their foreclosed homes, and corporate exploitation. Although this blame is misplaced, most people are fearful of the free market and don’t take the time to learn and understand that the free hand of the market benefits the consumer. The theory is simple: good products/services thrive, bad ones fail, and consumers are left with the cream of the crop.

Here’s a site with an interesting look at the economics of the popular sitcom, “Seinfeld.”

The Barber: (Competition) Jerry gets a bad haircut but refuses to change barbers because he is loyal. Eventually, he is convinced to leave his barber of 12 years for the barber’s nephew. Bad quality doesn’t persist in the marketplace; it is competed away. Perhaps the answer to bad haircuts is not more regulation, but more competition.

At last, A free market example to which everyone can relate! There’s lots of other interesting economic concepts presented here using Seinfeld. Since the show is a comedy, many of the examples are not only humorous, but memorable and can be useful in understanding free market principles.

This should come in handy during the inevitable fight over the Barbers Bailout of 2011.

(via kottke.org)

James Robertson currently attends the University of Mississippi, where he plans to receive degrees in Political Science and English. He is the President of the Ole Miss Chapter of Young Americans for Liberty.

Written by YAL

November 12, 2010 at 11:48 am

More Tyranny From the Golden Child

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Glenn Greenwald reports that Obama has authorized the murder of a US citizen.  Civil liberties, trial by jury, rule of law?  Who needs them.   Tyranny greater than Bush offered?  Yes, we can.

Read Greenwald’s disturbing article here.

Written by mrjrebel

April 7, 2010 at 2:58 pm

Healthcare Summit Undermines Constitutional Structure

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By: James Robertson

President Obama’s summit on health care reform today marks an unprecedented move by the administration to offer Republicans a final say on proposed health care legislation before it is inevitably forced through a divided Congress. While Obama claims that the summit represents a move by Democrats to “reach out” to Republican opposition and allow them to reconcile their differences with the reforms, the meeting more obviously represents a last-ditch effort on the part of the administration to ensure that their top domestic priority doesn’t die on Capitol Hill. Such a failure would undoubtedly cripple the public’s faith in the current administration and significantly reduce its ability to govern. Of greater importance, though, is not the success of health care reform for the sake of this administration, but the success (or failure) of this summit for the sake of policymaking in the American republic.

            The founders established democracy in the America by vesting the main legislative power in a national congress. The bicameral design of the U.S. Congress evolved to ensure equal representation of individuals and states in the policymaking process. Today, the Congress finds itself plagued with a mountain of debt and deeply divided along partisan lines, seemingly incapable of addressing public concerns or accomplishing much of anything at all. While not advertised as such, Obama’s summit represents an executive effort to counter the legislature’s ineptitude by removing the policy discussion from the halls of Congress itself to an executive suite in the Blair House, right across the way from the Oval Office.

            This summit carries with it the message of hope that pervaded Obama’s campaign for the presidency; a sentiment that has been called into question recently due to the stalling of health care reform. The President clearly seeks to portray the message that, although the legislature as a whole has proven itself unable to deal with the issue, he is willing to take matters into his own hands and force Congressional leaders from both parties to hammer out a proposal, compromised or otherwise. While this move might appear noble and altruistic on the President’s part, its inherent disregard of Constitutional structure poses some dangerous implications for the future of democracy in America.

            The U.S. Constitution establishes Congress in Article 1, then moves on to lay out Executive powers in Article 2. This order was not coincidental. The Founders recognized the danger of an over-powerful executive and, for that reason, gave the Executive few explicit duties and left policymaking to Congress. In Constitutional debates, James Madison was quick to note the dangers of a ruling majority. The presidential veto, the bill of rights, and the senate filibuster rule are just a few safeguards that protect Americans from the tyranny of a malevolent majority. Moving policymaking outside of the Congress and into the realm of the executive ignores this structure, bypassing these protections and perilously endangering liberty.

            Many will note that Presidents have long involved themselves in the formulation of American policies. The increasing use of Presidential signing statements most clearly reflects a Presidential attempt at policymaking. These informal declarations have become the President’s way of directing, or in some cases limiting, Congress’ actions. Also, legislators judge Presidential proposals on different merits due to their possible political ramifications. However, removing debate on an issue from the floor of the Congress itself and into an executive conference room adjacent to the White House lawn not only symbolizes more executive interference, but very clearly increases Executive influence over the crafting of domestic policies.

            This problem, like most facing America today, could easily be resolved by simply obeying the Constitution. Failure to recognize and abide by Constitutional guidelines led Congress to subsidize and socialize American industries while sustaining a Cold War-era empirical foreign presence, both of which contributed to the current debt of astronomical proportions. Exceeding their Constitutional boundaries allowed Congress to act in ways that immediately benefited many Americans and bought them some good will in the short run. Ultimately, though, by ignoring their Constitutional mandate, Congress damaged this brilliant structure of American government and led us to the broken system we have today. The answer to this problem lies not in an Executive takeover of the legislature, but rather in a return to the rule of law and a government that acts within the limited structure set forth by the Constitution.

Obama’s First 100 Blunders (In Office)

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As we near the first anniversary of President Obama’s inaugeration, it’s an appropriate time to consider his performance in office.  Here’s a list of 100 “lies, blunders, gaffes, and abuses of liberty” from the Humble Libertarian blog:

1. Promising to “publish all non-emergency legislation to the website for five days… before the President signs it,” then breaking that promise over and over again.

2. Despite promising to keep lobbyists out of his administration, Obama has broken his word again and again (making 17 exceptions to this promise in his first two weeks).

3. Obama promised to eliminate income taxation for seniors making less than $50,000 a year. He has broken this promise despite numerous opportunities to keep it, including the economic stimulus package and his administration’s first budget proposal.

4. The President also boasted during his campaign that “During 2009 and 2010, existing businesses will receive a $3,000 refundable tax credit for each additional full-time employee hired,” and has failed to keep his word.

Read the other 96 here.

By Bonnie Kristian

Written by jdhead

January 8, 2010 at 1:36 pm

Obama’s Afghanistan Mentality

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Written by jdhead

October 23, 2009 at 2:33 pm

Posted in Foreign Policy

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Iraq Exit Strategy

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Written by jdhead

October 21, 2009 at 2:06 pm

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Democrats are Not Immune from Ignorance

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Over the last few years I have become very acquainted with politics. I formed my views during the Bush presidency, and they have remained rather stable since then. I disagreed with just about everything George Bush did as president. I disagreed with his economic policies, his foreign policies, and his huge power grab for the executive. However, upon voicing my opinions I was referred to by republicans as un-American and unpatriotic. I felt this sort of ignorant name-calling was unique to the neoconservative side of the American political system. However, recent events have proven me wrong. Read the rest of this entry »

Written by jdhead

October 4, 2009 at 9:13 pm

Are You A Racist? Take the Test…

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Many of you saw the letter to the editor in the Daily Mississippian early this week.  It was in response to Justin Head’s article about Obama’s pro-war foriegn policy.  In short, the article called Justin a racist for criticizing Obama.  At first I could not figure out how this guy could come to the conclusion that Justin was a racist…then I saw this.  It all makes sense now.

racist!

Written by WrigleyvilleReb

October 1, 2009 at 8:25 am

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