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Joe vs. Joe!

Sen. Barack Obama answers a question from plumber Joe Wurzelbacher in Holland, Ohio, on Oct. 12.
 
The Joe's in our news are anything but average.
On one hand you have Joe Wurzelbacher, or should I say... Samuel?
An overnight superstar who has brought on more fame than anyone would have thought!
Mr. Wurzelbacher was mentioned 26 times during the presidential debate on Wednesday night.
It has now come to the surface that Joe isn't a plumber at all.

Is 'Joe the Plumber' a plumber? That's debatable

HOLLAND, Ohio (AP) — Joe the Plumber's story sprang a few leaks Thursday. Turns out that the man who was held up by John McCain as the typical, hard-working American taxpayer isn't really a licensed plumber. And court documents show he owes nearly $1,200 in back taxes.
"Joe," whose name is Samuel J. Wurzelbacher, was cited repeatedly in Wednesday night's final presidential debate by McCain for questioning Barack Obama's tax policy.
Wurzelbacher instantly became a media celebrity, fielding calls during the debate and facing reporters outside his home near Toledo on Thursday morning for an impromptu nationally televised news conference.
The burly, bald man acknowledged he doesn't have a plumber's license, but said he didn't need one because he works for someone else at a company that does residential work.
But Wurzelbacher still would need to be a licensed apprentice or journeyman to work in Toledo, and he's not, said David Golis, manager and residential building official for the Toledo Division of Building Inspection.
State and local records show Wurzelbacher has no license, although his employer does. Golis said there are no records of inspectors citing Wurzelbacher for unlicensed work in Toledo.
And then there was the matter of his taxes.
Wurzelbacher owes the state of Ohio $1,182.98 in personal income tax, according to Lucas County Court of Common Pleas records.
In January 2007, Ohio's Department of Taxation filed a claim on his property until he pays the debt, according to the records. The lien remains active.
At the debate, McCain cited Wurzelbacher as an example of someone who wants to buy a plumbing business but would be hurt by Obama's tax plans.
Wurzelbacher, a self-described conservative, had spoken to Obama at a rally Sunday near his home and asked him whether his tax plan would keep him from buying the business that currently employs him, which earns more than $250,000 a year.
"Your new tax plan is going to tax me more, isn't it?" Wurzelbacher asked.
Obama said that under his proposal taxes on any revenue from $250,000 on down would stay the same, but that amounts above that level would be subject to a 39 percent tax, instead of the current 36 percent rate.
McCain said Obama's plan would stop entrepreneurs such as Wurzelbacher from investing in new small businesses and keep existing ones from growing.
The McCain campaign posted a Web ad featuring the exchange between Wurzelbacher and Obama.
During an afternoon taping of "Late Night with David Letterman," McCain said he had not yet spoken to Wurzelbacher, and apologized for the press attention he had received.
"Joe, if you're watching, I'm sorry," McCain said.
Wurzelbacher had to deal with a clog of two dozen reporters outside his home on a narrow street lined with ranch- and split-level homes Thursday morning. No detail about the divorced father of a 13-year-old boy was too small: Was he a registered voter? Did he have a plumbing license? Whom will he vote for?
Leaning against his black Dodge Durango SUV, Wurzelbacher at first was amused by it all, then overwhelmed and finally a little annoyed.
"I don't have a lot of pull. It's not like I'm Matt Damon," he said "I just hope I'm not making too much of a fool of myself."
He indicated he was a fan of the military and McCain but wouldn't say who will get his vote. He is registered as a Republican, the county elections board said, because he voted in the GOP primary in March.
Wurzelbacher said a McCain campaign official contacted him several days before the debate to ask him to appear with the candidate at a Toledo rally scheduled for Sunday.
He told reporters he's unsure if he'll attend, since he's now scheduled to be in New York for TV interviews.
On Thursday in New Hampshire, Obama said McCain was misleading voters by proposing tax plans that favor the rich while criticizing an Obama tax plan that would raise taxes only on people making more than $250,000 a year, just 5 percent of all taxpayers.
"He's trying to suggest that a plumber is the guy he's fighting for," Obama said. "How many plumbers you know that are making a quarter-million dollars a year?"
Wurzelbacher said he felt a bit overwhelmed by all the attention.
"I'm kind of like Britney Spears having a headache. Everybody wants to know about it," he joked.


biden
On the other hand, we have good old Joe Biden.
Not much has been said about him as of late, but he's been speaking every now and then.
I suppose you could say he has somewhat of a problem when speaking.
And of course, for normal people, that's no big deal!
But when you're running for Vice President, maybe it would be a good thing to speak well?
"Look, John’s last-minute economic plan does nothing to tackle the number-one job facing the middle class, and it happens to be, as Barack says, a three-letter word: jobs. J-O-B-S, jobs."



Nice Joe, nice.
And of course we all remember Joe asking Chuck Graham, who... can't walk... to stand up.

 
 
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What Pro-Life Means to Me.

There is only one choice - life.

What does pro-life mean to you? Grassfire.org is 100% pro-life, and I joined the organization as an intern expressly to champion their pro-life cause and encourage pro-life members to continue the fight against abortionists.

I live every day as a pro-life supporter. I was adopted at 5 months old, and I look at adoption as God’s very hand saving me from abandonment or worse, abortion. Pro-life is more than simply opposing abortion, it is a respect for the sanctity of all life, at all stages.

There must be something more.

In regards to abortion, we are not talking about “embryos” or “fetal tissue”, we are talking about human beings who have a beating heart and who exist just like me or you.

If we claim the title of “Pro-Lifer” then we must define those responsibilities and champion the definition that to be “Pro-Life” is to protect ife. We must do more.

On Monday, January 21, 2008, I considered myself staunchly pro-life. Passionate about the rights of the unborn and furious about this culture of death that began 35 years ago through the decision of Roe v Wade, I was determined to take a stand against our pro-abortion Congress.

Tuesday night, January 22, 2008 my outlook was turned upside down by the events of the day and forever changed by what I witnessed on the streets of our nation’s Capitol. This year, on the 35th anniversary of a decision that began an infant holocaust, something was different in Washington D.C. There was something more.

Attending the National Memorial for the Pre-born and their Mothers and Fathers was a powerful uniting of the leaders who are in the frontline of the pro-life movement. What we saw at this memorial encouraged our Grassfire Alliance team to storm the offices of our Senators and Representatives. We urged them to support pro-life legislation, and to suspend the $300 million that Planned Parenthood receives every year in taxpayer dollars.

But there was something more.

We marched past the buildings which house the most powerful leaders of our country, we marched past the White House and the leader of our nation, we marched alongside Americans from every state across the U.S. Age, color, race, creed, it didn’t matter. Together, we continued to march.

We marched - for every baby that would never take a first step.

As we approached the Supreme Court, cold steel fences barred us from coming closer, and police checkered the steps as if to say “This fence represents more than a physical separation, it represents a separation of what is sacred.”

I looked upon the face of a policewoman at the front of the steps, and I wondered if she was affected by the sight of more than 100,000 people fighting for the rights of the unborn. I prayed for this woman. I don’t know her story, I just know her role in this debate and I prayed that her eyes would be opened, and that her heart would be changed on this day.

Listening to the testimonies of women who had abortions was a powerful and moving experience. Many of them broke down in tears at regret from their actions, humbling themselves before thousands of people and pleading for change from our government.

I left the March for Life 2008 tired and overwhelmed, but there was still something more.

I left the march determined. I was determined to make a change, determined to start a spark that would ignite a nation for the rights of the unborn. I became determined to stop our government from electing a pro-abortion president.

A few presidential candidates currently pride themselves on championing women’s civil rights. However, abortion TAKES AWAY the civil rights of a woman. The numbness, the guilt, the depression that plagues women who have abortions proves that “pro-choice” is a lie.

Abortion is a choice - a choice of convenience.

Today, the only thing holding a decidedly pro-abortion Congress at bay is our Pro-Life President and his promise to protect the sanctity of life. This could change should a Pro-Abortion President reach the White House!

This year - above all others, it is critical that Pro-Lifer’s from across the nation vote to stand for the unborn, and reverse this blood culture that has devastated our nation for decades. We must vote for a Pro-Life Presidential Candidate!

We must unite with one voice for the 50 million unborn who were victims of this abortion holocaust. Our greatest resource - life - is being eroded by political leaders and pro-abortion supporters who choose convenience over existence. This year Pro-Lifers must answer the challenge “No Compromises, No Exceptions”.

To help Grassfire in it’s efforts to reverse the curse of Roe v. Wade, go here.

http://www.firesociety.com/article/21504/What-Pro-Life-Means-to-Me…/

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Christian Business Man Gunned Down.

BAGHDAD —  A Christian music store owner was shot to death in Mosul, Iraqi police said Monday — the latest in a series of killings that has caused thousands of members of the religious minority to flee the northern city.

Religious leaders have called for action to stop the apparent Sunni insurgent campaign against Christians. Government officials have responded by announcing new security measures and plans to send troop reinforcements to the area.

Gunmen stormed into the businessman’s store late Sunday in an eastern part of the city, killing him and wounding his teenage nephew, according to a police officer in the regional security operations center.

He spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to release the information.

The attack came as government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said the national security council had decided to form a committee to investigate the problem.

The government also would send additional Iraqi forces to the area to assure “the Christians of the government’s commitment to their security and protection,” he said.

Violence has continued in the area despite U.S.-Iraqi operations launched in May aimed at routing insurgents from Mosul, which the U.S. military at the time dubbed Al Qaeda in Iraq’s last urban stronghold.

Christian leaders also are lobbying parliament to pass a law setting aside a number of seats for them and other minorities in upcoming provincial elections, fearing they could be further marginalized in the predominantly Muslim country.

U.N. special representative Staffan de Mistura expressed concern “at the spike in violence that has targeted the Christian communities in recent days” and warned the attacks were seeking to “fuel tensions and exacerbate instability at a critical time.”

Islamic extremists have frequently targeted Christians since the 2003 U.S. invasion, forcing tens of thousands to flee the country. Attacks had tapered off amid a drastic decline in overall violence nationwide, but concerns are rising about the deaths this month in Mosul.

There were conflicting reports about the number of Christians who have fled the city.

The senior migration and displacement official in Mosul, Jawdat Ismaeel, said the latest figures show that 1,092 families have fled the city. The number could not be independently verified. Most have left for churches, monasteries and the homes of relatives in nearby Christian villages and towns.

But the U.N. envoy said just over 500 families were being assisted in the area, adding that many of the newly displaced Christians had previously fled to Mosul to escape violence in Baghdad.

Elsewhere in Iraq on Monday, Iraqi police and witnesses said clashes broke out briefly in Baghdad’s Shiite district of Sadr City after a roadside bomb targeted a U.S. patrol. The U.S. military did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

No serious casualties were reported. But the fighting reflected rising tensions amid U.S.-Iraqi negotiations over a security deal that would extend the presence of American forces in Iraq beyond the end of the year.

Separately, Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said the 4,100 British troops in southern Iraq are no longer necessary to provide security, although some might be needed for training and technical issues, a newspaper reported Monday.

“Definitely, the presence of this number of British soldiers is no longer necessary. We thank them for the role they have played, but I think that their stay is not necessary for maintaining security and control,” al-Maliki told The Times of London in an interview.

“There might be a need for their expertise in training and some technical issues, yes, but as a fighting force, I do not think it is necessary,” he said.

His comments were in line with an August report that most of Britain’s contingent in Iraq would be withdrawn over the next nine months, leaving only a few hundred soldiers there.

In July, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown promised a major troop withdrawal in the early months of 2009, but Britain’s military has said it’s premature to discuss specific figures.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,437122,00.html

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Alaska Glaciers Grew this Year!

Two hundred years of glacial shrinkage in Alaska, and then came the winter and summer of 2007-2008.

Unusually large amounts of winter snow were followed by unusually chill temperatures in June, July and August.

“In mid-June, I was surprised to see snow still at sea level in Prince William Sound,” said U.S. Geological Survey glaciologist Bruce Molnia. “On the Juneau Icefield, there was still 20 feet of new snow on the surface of the Taku Glacier in late July. At Bering Glacier, a landslide I am studying, located at about 1,500 feet elevation, did not become snow free until early August.

“In general, the weather this summer was the worst I have seen in at least 20 years.”

Never before in the history of a research project dating back to 1946 had the Juneau Icefield witnessed the kind of snow buildup that came this year. It was similar on a lot of other glaciers too.

“It’s been a long time on most glaciers where they’ve actually had positive mass balance,” Molnia said.

That’s the way a scientist says the glaciers got thicker in the middle. Read the complete story at adn.com

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Obama's Pro-Homosexual Advocacy.

The following are some examples of Obama’s pro-homosexual advocacy:

Despite repeatedly professing his belief in traditional marriage, Obama’s stated public policies invariably promote the Homosexual Lobby’s “gay marriage” agenda. In other words, he claims to support marriage while simultaneously undermining it

For example, Obama promises to completely repeal the federal Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) signed into law by fellow Democrat Bill Clinton. If DOMA were to be repealed, states could be forced to recognize out-of-state “same-sex marriages” against their will. (Hillary Rodham Clinton pledged to repeal only part of DOMA.

 Obama opposes the California marriage protection amendment (Prop 8), which would simply reinstate marriage as solely between a man and a woman – the very thing that the Illinois Senator SAYS he supports

Obama congratulated San Francisco Democratic homosexual activists on “getting married” – again showing his hypocrisy on marriage, and his old-politics habit of trying to appeal to both sides of this and other controversial issues at the same time

Obama pledged to homosexual activists to use the White House bully pulpit to advocate for homosexual adoption of children – thus creating the potentially absurd spectacle of a U.S. President using the moral authority, power and prestige of the office to push for placing children in same-sex households that are motherless or fatherless by design

 Obama distorts the Bible to justify his support of homosexuality and even used Jesus Christ’s Sermon on the Mount to support same-sex unions.

http://republicansforfamilyvalues.com/

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Christian Student Rights.

1. May a student use a pencil or notebook with a Christian slogan or Bible verse printed on it?
Forbidding use of such items would violate the rights of free speech and religious expression of public school children.

The school may only impose reasonable regulations for maintaining order in the classroom. Using a pencil or notebook with a Christian slogan cannot in any way materially or substantially detract from classroom order. Forbidding use of such items would be a violation of the Constitutional right allowing symbolic speech.

2. May a student wear a tee-shirt or button with a religious slogan, Bible verse, or anti-abortion message printed on it?
Christian students may display religious messages on clothing to the same extent as other students are permitted to display comparable messages.

Shirts with printed messages are forms of symbolic speech protected by the First Amendment. Courts have only allowed suppression of symbolic speech in public schools if it were lewd or obscene, Broussard v. Sch. Brd. of City of Norfolk (E.D. Va. 1992), or if the clothing had slogans advertising alcoholic beverages, McIntire v. Berel Sch., 804 F. Supp. 1415 (W.D. Okia. 1992).

3. May a student give out Gospel tracts or religious literature to his classmates?
Students may distribute religious tracts or literature to their schoolmates in the same manner as they would be permitted to distribute non-religious material. Schools may impose reasonable restrictions on the place and manner for distribution of all printed material, but religious literature may not be singled out for special restrictions or regulations. If the Boy Scouts or community sports team may distribute material promoting out-of-school programs, distribution of similar religious material must also be permitted.

First Amendment rights include the right to distribute Gospel tracts or other religious literature during non-instructional times. The standard that must be applied is: Does the activity materially or substantially disrupt school discipline?

The school must prove that such disruption actually occurs. ‘[U]ndifferentiated fear or apprehension of disturbance is not enough to overcome the right to freedom of expression.’ Tinker at 508. When a student peacefully distributes tracts or other religious literature on school grounds during non-instructional time there is nothing that ‘might reasonably [lead] school authorities to forecast substantial disruption of or material interference with school activities.’ Tinker at 514.

4. May a student witness to his classmates about Jesus or pray with other students on the school campus?
School officials may not prevent students from gathering for such activities before or after school, at lunch, or during other times when students are permitted to interact with other students. Students may pray together in informal settings and may discuss their religious views with each other, subject only to the same rules of order which apply to all other student conduct and speech. Students may attempt to persuade their peers about religious and political topics, including religion and abortion, so long as such speech does not constitute harassment aimed at a particular student or group of students.

Any restrictions imposed upon student interaction must be reasonable restrictions relating to the time, place, and manner of all student behaviors, not just religious behavior. During any time in which a student is free to discuss non-instructional topics, he is free to discuss religious topics, and such freedom of speech includes the freedom to witness or to pray.

5. May a student say grace before eating his lunch?
Freedom of speech includes the freedom to pray. Students may bow their heads to pray before tests.

6. May a student read the Bible during the school day?
Any time that students are allowed to read non-instructional books, Bible reading must be permitted. This would include the hours before and after school or during lunch. It would also include study halls or any free reading hours during class time when teachers permit students to read books of their choice.

7. May students organize Bible clubs in public schools?
Public secondary schools must allow Bible clubs the same privileges as any other school club. Meetings may include prayer, Bible reading, and worship. Bible clubs must also be allowed to promote their activities through school newspapers, public address systems, and bulletin boards on the same basis as other clubs. The school must provide a room and resources for the Bible clubs. The only difference the Court allowed between Bible clubs and other clubs is that the faculty sponsor may not control the Bible club. The faculty sponsor must merely ensure that the club follows school policies, since any official control by the faculty members of religious activities of the club could be an establishment of religion. The club must be student-led, and students may occasionally invite outside community religious leaders to speak.

8. May students write book reports or English themes or do oral assignments based on religious subjects?
Students may express their religious beliefs in homework, artwork, or any other written or oral assignment. Such home and classroom work must be judged by teachers using ordinary academic standards, and religious topics may not be discriminated against or singled out for special restrictions. This would include the right to present a religious topic in a show-and-tell exercise as well as in a book report or speech assignment to be delivered to the class. It would not be unconstitutional for a teacher to allow students to share their personal religious viewpoints in the classroom at appropriate times or in appropriate assignments. The teacher may constitutionally permit religious students to share their views if the views of all other students are also allowed.

9. May Christian students be excused from participation in activities they find objectionable?
If a particular lesson or activity would substantially burden a student’s free exercise of religion, and if the school cannot prove a compelling interest in requiring attendance, the school is legally required to excuse the student from that lesson or activity.

10. May student graduation speakers mention their Christian faith and/or read from the Bible?
If students such as valedictorians or salutatorians are allowed to compose their own speeches, the speeches may only be censored for lewd or obscene speech. A governmental body, such as a school, may not censor the speech of private individuals merely because that speech contains a religious perspective.

Courts have upheld the right of a majority of students to act on their own to incorporate prayer into the graduation exercises if it is student-led and the content is not controlled by school officials. Jones v. Clear Creek Ind. Sc. Dist., 977 F.2d 963 (5th Cir. 1992) (]ones II).

11. May baccalaureate services still be held?
Baccalaureate services may still be held if they are sponsored by a private group rather than by the school. These private baccalaureate services may be held in school facilities if those facilities are generally open to use by other private groups.

12. May public schools teach about religion?
While public schools may not directly provide religious instruction on the school campus, school officials have substantial discretion to dismiss students to participate in off-premises religious instruction provided that they do not encourage or discourage participation and do not penalize students who choose not to participate. Additionally, public schools may teach about religion, including material about the Bible and other religious material, the history of religion, comparative religion, Biblical literature, and the role of religion in American history and in the history of other countries.

While schools must express neutrality toward particular religions, teachers may also actively teach civil values and virtue, as well as the moral codes which hold communities together, even if these values are also those held by particular religious groups. Public schools may also teach about religious holidays, including their religious aspects. Schools may not, however, observe religious holidays except with respect to secular aspects of those holidays.

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Can We Support Troops and Not the Iraq War?

For many there is a dichotomy surrounding the question of supporting our troops while attempting to maintain a stance against the Iraq War. Someone near to you serving in Iraq will probably least understand the sentiment as their efforts to help stabilize Iraq while attempting to rid the country of the terrorist groups the war invited in is very hard to see. Many families and friends see the support of one being somehow connected to the support of the other. For them there is no split in the two, in order to support our troops one must stay strong in the support of winning in Iraq or the loss of life and limb has gone for not.

At SupportYourTroops.us there is a message board and videos from people across this land. There message is quite simply that of supporting the troops no matter what you may think of the war. A foundation is in place for anyone to share a thought with the troops far away and thanks to the Internet the troops can read and respond to these positive feelings of warmth and hope. There are many helpful links and overall the site has steered clear of the political debate regarding the war itself.

On the ‘Bring Them Home Now’ website there is a copy of ‘An Appeal for Redress from the War in Iraq’ which was sent by over 100 active duty troops to their Representatives and Senators stating their desires to remove all troops and bases from Iraq as, in their view, it is not working nor is it worth continued bloodshed. Again, this group of brave men and women are in Iraq now, serving and risking their life and no doubt support their fellow soldiers while not supporting the war.

Within the military community there are organizations that have come into being which share exactly the message, support the troops and not the war. Visiting the website for ‘Veterans Against the Iraq War’ there is a different way of stating this sentiment. “Support the Troops, Oppose the Policy” is their rallying cry. The statement of purpose for their organization has some interesting insights into their formulation of the stance against the war yet there is no doubt this group of veterans supports the troops.

Are these and others simply non-patriotic, are they merely cowards afraid to face the fact we have terrorists in our world who mean to wipe us off the map as a nation? Can we believe them to be pacifists or isolationists too naïve to understand the importance of the foreign policy which led to this encounter in Iraq? President Bush declared a straight-forward objective in launching the attack as being “to disarm Iraq of weapons of mass destruction, to end Saddam Hussein’s support for terrorism, and to free the Iraqi people.” That was some four and a half years ago. Now we must stay in Iraq since the Al Qaeda terrorists are there and we have to fight them on that front or we shall fight them on our own soil. The war on terror has expressed needs, the policy must be upheld, and we must keep up the fight in Iraq, right?

There was a clash during the South Carolina Republican Debate between Ron Paul and Rudy Giuliani which was started by the comments of Dr. Paul. In part he stated, “There’s a strong tradition of being anti-war in the Republican Party, it is the constitutional position, it is the advice of the founders to follow a non-interventionist foreign policy. Stay out of entangling alliances. Be friends with countries, negotiate and talk with them and trade with them.” He went on to explain even the CIA warns of blowbacks from an interventionist foreign policy and among the blowbacks was the attack on 9/11. Giuliani garnered loud applause when he countered, in part, “I would ask the Congressman to withdraw that comment and tell us he didn’t really mean that.” However, there is that word again, policy. Did he mean it, and what is it?

The Iraq War was started nearly a year and a half after the attacks yet clearly the foreign policy of intervention has been practiced in earnest for decades and the results seem consistent, war erupts, both civilian and military lives are lost, debt is piled high, and does anyone ever win? For retaliation against the terrorists who attacked the United States on 9/11 was the front in Iraq or was it in Afghanistan and perhaps Saudi Arabia?

Hussein and bin Laden, the mastermind of the cowardly attack which killed and forever wounded so many souls, did not even get along. The front of the war on terror was clearly not in Iraq at the time yet the foreign policy of intervention led us to toppling a hated dictator thereby opening up a new front, one that is now in Iraq. This policy decision reminds me of a dog trying to chase two rabbits, clearly a hunter knows the confusion and challenge in that and the hunt for bin Laden still goes on today, one rabbit who’s gotten away. He is a much safer man since we attacked Iraq and his terror and influence is still felt around the world.

What was that policy Dr. Paul mentioned in the debate, non-intervention? Is that a pacifist, isolationist approach to foreign policy, one that is more a coward’s course or a course someone would follow who denied a war on terror was a real threat? I believe I’ve heard that on TV, I believe I heard it right after the debates in fact. However, in researching the founders it can be said there was no desire to be passive, or was there a desire to be in isolation. There was a firm belief in a strong defense against any foreign aggression. The insights into the strength of a foreign policy based on the idea of non-intervention was perhaps no where better extolled than in George Washington’s farewell address, delivered in 1796.

“The great rule of conduct for us in regard to foreign nations is in extending our commercial relations, to have with them as little political connection as possible…. If we remain one people under an efficient government. the period is not far off when we may defy material injury from external annoyance; when we may take such an attitude as will cause the neutrality we may at any time resolve upon to be scrupulously respected; when belligerent nations, under the impossibility of making acquisitions upon us, will not lightly hazard the giving us provocation; when we may choose peace or war, as our interest, guided by justice, shall counsel.”

There was a desire to have ‘commercial relations’ or trade with the world. This is not the focus of an isolated nation. Read again the lines about remaining one people under an efficient government, think of the concept he is trying to get across with regards to the strength developed in neutrality. Then read carefully the words regarding belligerent nations and how they will not “lightly hazard the giving of provocation; when we may choose peace or war, as our interest, guided by justice, shall counsel.” This is from the outgoing Commander-in-Chief, General George Washington. It was a policy of non-intervention, not a policy of passive isolationism.

Many of those seeking to lead us today and many of those who have led us over the past several decades had me confused about this for a time. However, what this policy is all about is not provoking attacks, not preemptively striking nations and forcing our systems and beliefs on them, but one in which no external country will attack us without clear knowledge the price they will pay will be quite heavy. When there was a need to declare war it is clear these leaders would not shrink from that need yet it would be done guided by justice. I urge you to read the farewell address in its entirety as well as study the other founders with regard to this idea of a non-interventionist foreign policy. You may find what I found, the bad press is misplaced.

In pondering the meaning behind our present policies and the policies of our founders I have discussed it with many people. One theme I hear often is the policy of non-intervention, of neutrality, promoted by these men so many years ago is not applicable today. Somehow, their reason goes, technology and the shrinking distance between countries has changed all that. This is also what I hear from many of today’s leaders in explaining why we must have a military presence in over 68% of all countries on Earth. This is the reasoning for supporting Saddam, arming him, teaching him how to use weapons of mass destruction against Iran and then changing positions and toppling him for being a ruthless dictator. This is the reasoning behind removing the freely elected leader of Iran in 1953, placing our own choice in the leadership role and then being surprised when the Iranian government’s attitude toward us today is less than open and friendly.

We cannot say if the non-interventionist foreign policy urged by Washington would have greatly altered our world had it been followed these past 211 years. We cannot say since the interventionist foreign policy has been the predominant course our leaders have taken since the Wilson Administration. Modern political leaders, including our current leadership, have turned intervention into a preemptive fine art. When Ron Paul dared to utter the idea the policy may be flawed the misunderstanding of the true nature of what the policy was he attempted to explain allowed Giuliani and others to look superior and somehow more patriotic for they supported our troops and could puff up in pride that our policies had no connection, and gave no reasoning, for terrorist attacks against us. The audience and many around the country cheered, while a few decided to investigate the real idea behind the founders’ foreign policy of non-intervention. Giuliani may deny any connection between policy and attitude toward the United States but the connection is clear when studied, perhaps something he should do.

I support our troops, as a veteran who understands the nature of raising my hand and taking the oath of a soldier. We must defend them and honor them for they are defending us and fighting against an enemy in Iraq that does have terror in their hearts and hatred clearly set. However, it is time to plan for the careful and safe closing of the Iraq front, time to begin bringing them home and bringing home all those who are in foreign lands not due to any failure on their part but due to a failed foreign policy of intervention.

We have created a long enough history now to know interventionism leads to ongoing conflict, wars with no ending (as we have on the Korean Peninsula), death and destruction, and the burden of debt more in the heavy debt owed to the family and loved ones who will not see their beloved soldiers again and to those who will see their soldiers as they invest years and tears nursing the wounds of war.

We can support our troops and we can oppose the foreign policy of intervention. We can demand and receive leaders who will place us on a sounder path using the non-interventionist foreign policy from our founders’ days. We can develop a new history of strength and peace, one our great-grandchildren will study and be thankful for our wisdom. This we can do without cowardice, without being unpatriotic, in fact it may well be the most patriotic and brave thing we the people dare to do.

http://www.firesociety.com/article/18183/Can-We-Support-Troops-and-Not-the-Iraq-War-/

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