I came across this article and found it disturbing. Who were these subjects studied for this research? Were they only black Republicans? Because as we're told so often after all, Repubs are the bigots and racists.
Or perhaps, as we saw in the last post, Dan and feo will offer some lame reasoning that suggests these blacks are incapable of seeing whites as anything other than adversaries, and thus are justified for maintaining "the code".
One thing's for sure. We will never attain true racial harmony. It's just not possible. Far too many people are hung up on skin color and ethnicity. If studies like this one yield this type of understanding, what hope can we have? I had no idea that black people felt this way about other blacks who are too friendly with white people, especially given how we are told only white people can be racist.
I have to admit, that I did not access the actual study itself. It required a subscription or cost for the single study, neither of which I feel like purchasing. And the Examiner indicates two numbers that seem to conflict, regarding how many people were studied. I'm guessing the bigger number relates to the total amount of subjects, and the lesser number refers to the total number of blacks, or black who have the issue.
As anyone who has visited this blog knows, I don't give much credence to studies with a sampling of so few. But just the idea that ANYONE would alter their perception of one of their race simply for developing a real relationship with someone of another race demonstrates a real problem in that "anyone". I know we often see films of white racists acting that way, but that's film and often those films are made by liberals who lack a clue. And I have always had a real problem believing that the races are so different that we couldn't find examples of any attitude as common in one race as any other. This study lends validity to that belief, except that it shows an attitude more prevalent among blacks.
It ain't a good attitude for any race. Especially the human one.
Sunday, March 23, 2014
Friday, March 07, 2014
WARNING!!! IRONY ALERT!!!
What kind of person votes for idiots like this? How info free do people have to be to still believe this is the type of person that would best represent them? Is it any wonder race relations in this country is so bad? Is it any wonder why there is such division between the left and right when Dems so easily stoop so low? How does this buffoon back up such a characterization of his opponents? Shame on anyone who would cast a vote for this idiot.
Thursday, March 06, 2014
Term Limits: Bad Idea
Former US Congressman Joe Walsh talks about it often. Glenn Beck is a proponent. Illinois gubernatorial hopeful, Bruce Rauner
inundates us with radio commercials with it as its main theme. Many agree with these men about it. What is it?
Term limits.
It is often brought up that a founding father, Jefferson I
believe, though it doesn’t really matter, expressed a vision of citizen
politicians going to serve in the Congress for a term and then go home to live
under the laws they helped craft. This
little bit of trivia is spoken of as if term limits was an intent of the
founders. I don’t know. I don’t think so, as there is nothing
mentioning being forced out of office, while the desire to serve, and the
public’s desire to see a politician’s service continue, might exist.
And that’s all that really matters, isn’t it? That is, the public’s right to choose its
representatives is exactly what it means, under our form of government, to be
self-governed.
I found http://restartcongress.org/revolution/arguments-for-term-limits/">a site
that seeks to justify the call
for term limits. It begins with several
points put forth to argue for term limits, and follows up with objections to
term limits, each with reasons the objections supposedly don’t work.
Right from the start, we can see that the arguments in favor
do not ring true. That is to say, that
the problems term limits are thought to correct are not truly corrected. Look at the first:
”With term limits in place, Congress will be more
responsible toward their constituents because they will soon be constituents
themselves. They will have to live under the laws they have created while in
office.”
There is no one in Congress who isn’t already supposed to be
living under the laws they have created.
If they are not doing so now, how will term limits change that? I’m not certain, but aren’t they still
citizens while also legislators? Are
they somehow exempt while they are legislators from the laws they create? If so, I have to admit that I was totally
unaware that politicians are above the law.
If not, then we, as voters, should be paying attention and voting out
those who think they are. Let’s look at
another:
”Members of Congress will have less time in office
to develop financially beneficial commitments to lobbyists and other special
interest groups, thereby undermining the threat of lobbyists being a primary
influence on legislation.”
No member of Congress should be beholden to anyone but their
constituents, the people they were sent to Congress to represent. No lobbyist should have undue influence on
our representatives and cannot have that influence without the representative
granting that power to the lobbyist. If
a member of Congress is acting based upon lobbyist influence, it should only be
on the merits of the lobbyist’s proposals, assuming the proposals are in the
best interests of the people the Congressman represents. The point above assumes lobbyist influence is
always a negative for the people a Congressman represents. But not all lobbyists are crooked or
nefarious. A lobbyist merely represents
a group with shared interests and sometimes those interests are of benefit to
all the Congressman represents. The
question is whether or not the lobbyist represents an interest of general
benefit to the people on the one side, and that the Congressman will not act
without his constituency being properly served by the proposal of the
lobbyist. Should a Congressman be found
to legislate in a manner that serves the lobbyist (and the people he
represents) at the cost of the Congressman’s constituents, the people should
vote him out, if not have him prosecuted.
Term limits will not prevent self-serving Congressman from allowing
themselves to be unduly influenced by lobbyists who do not have the people’s
best interest in mind.
In every case of the arguments in favor of term limits, the
better remedy is a concerned electorate.
Term limits will not stop any of the concerns it hopes to mitigate from
happening.
At this point, I want to look at how this site deals with
objections to term limits by using one example.
First the objection:
”Term limits are not necessary
because members of Congress must be regularly re-elected. If they are not doing
a good job in office, we can simply vote for someone else.”
The response to this
objection suggests that money is the key reason incumbents win
re-election. It is not. The problem is still the voters. If an incumbent is not performing and still
wins re-election, as did Barack Obama, it is because of an electorate that will
not stay informed about how a politician is doing his job. Voter ignorance and apathy is the most
important reason why all the ills term limits are meant to address exist in the
first place. Very little will change by
merely limiting the number of terms anyone can serve in a given office. When a bum is termed out, the same ignorant
group of people will vote for the next bum the party puts forth to replace
him. That is to say, if the majority of
voters vote Democrat, for example, they won’t necessarily vote for the
Republican next time around no matter how crooked the first guy was found to
be. They’ll just assume the next
Democrat will not be that crooked and vote Democrat again. Term limits solve nothing. Only an engaged and informed electorate can
do that.
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