.comment-link {margin-left:.6em;}

QuestionItNow - Voices

Monday, September 25, 2006

How Did We Get Here?

9/2/05 Subject: How Did We Get Here? Submitted by: Susan J

How did we get here?

The conservative coalition has been working on their program in a very quiet, non-violent, non-provocative way. Now they have elected a president to represent their views.

If you don't like that, you should learn from them and do the same, only better.

Over 20 years ago, the conservatives decided that bombing abortion clinics was counterproductive. Electing officials and judges that would close the clinics became the new goal.

Over the past 20 years the conservatives have acquired ever-increasing levels of responsibility. They took control one little piece at a time. Always smiling...always shaking your hand.

If you disagree with their message, you can confront them head on, or you can work against them from the grass roots on up. Vote and get your friends to vote. Run for office and get your friends elected to office. Get your message heard by others. Speak at luncheons for Rotary, Kiwanis, chamber of commerce, local church, synagogue, mosque, etc. Get others to speak your message.

Do what you can, however little that might seem. Tell others. Create the buzz that gets others going.

The longest journey proceeds one step at a time.

You could be the first step in your family / neighborhood / town / township / county / state...


QuestionItNow Blogs

Thursday, September 21, 2006

"Another Year Over"

QuestionItNow - Voices is now one year old. Over the course of this year, we have covered many issues that affect or will affect the lives liberty and pursuit of happiness of everyday Americans.

As we found our voice, we ventured into other blogging communities. Early on we ventured into Conyers Blog and Harry Reid's blog and found an interesting cross-section of ideas and opinions, often spiced with insult laden partisan banter.

Recently I found something different, a community of Bloggers called Bring It On! I found this site just before th4thth of July while conducting a Google search of "we the people". I highly recommend all bloggers visit and/or contribute to this site.

During this year, we have heard voices of reason, voices of passion, voices of respect, voices of hostility, voices in agreement, and voices in opposition. Throughout this year we have expressed our opinions firmly, while attempting to keep an open mind. On ocassion, we have found areas of agreement with those whom we typically disagree. Unlike many blogs, no one has been banned from this blog. In addition, no human comments have been censored or deleted.

In reviewing the past year's posts, I selected a few to highlight. Of course I have some personal favorites. Therefore, I felt the best way to determine which posts to feature was to rank them by the number of comments they generated.

OhioDem1's posts have stimulated the most discussions. It has been very interesting to witness and join in this mostly respectful dialogue between Americans who passionately disagree about many things. In my humble opinion, our elected officials and talk-show hosts could learn a few things from these conversations. OD1'’s posts include:

Conservatism = Radicalism originally posted on 7/13/06 received thirty-eight comments, plus four at BringItOn! . These forty-two comments were by far the most of any QuestionItNow post this past year. This post demonstrated how definitions are often distorted and manipulated as a propaganda technique.

The President Has Failed America posted on 5/7/06 generated twenty-four comments, with nine more at Bring It On! for thirty-three total comments. This post got people talking.

Seperation of Church and State? appeared on 8/9/06. Twenty-five comments followed.

Entitlement Mentality is an interesting play on perceptions and pre-conceived notions that was posted on 5/17/06. OhioDem1 argues effectively that American/multinational corporations suffer from an "entitlement mentality." This dialogue included twenty-five comments.

Propaganda vs. Rights of Man was a 4th of July post that appeared on 7/7/06, stimulating ten comments, plus seven more at Bring It On!

Lying with Statistics is a rather cerebral piece from 7/31/06 that garnered sixteen responses. Both of these posts dealt with various techniciques those in power use to strengthen their positions.

In my opinion, the white paper HOW TO SELL A WAR was OhioDem1'’s crowning achievement and one of the high points of the year. It is an historical perspective of how propaganda has been used to sell wars from WWI up to the present day. This document will get even more widespread viewing in the year to come, based upon recent developments between Iran and the USA and the renewed saber-rattling directed towards Syria. This analysis is something all Americans should read, regardless of their political persuasion.

Recently, Steve from IL was invited to share his own unique perspectives in a Point-Counter-Point format. He has accepted and his first post The Thing That Should Not Be on 9/9/06 stimulated nine comments here and sixteen at Bring It On! for an impressive debut total of twenty-five responses. I am very interested to see what he has in store over the coming months.

My posts have been more varied, and take a somewhat unique perspective on events, observations, and personal philosophies. Its my version of "All Things Considered".

Learn to Question posted on 6/30/06 generated sixteen comments plus eight under the title Sheeple for a total of twenty-four.

Obscenity in Ann Arbor was based upon something I witnessed at the Ann Arbor Art Fair while walking with my family. It posted on 7/23/06. This often heated discussion included fifteens comments, plus five at Bring It On!

Remembering Katrina'’s Victims appeared on 12/8/05. It is one of several Katrina posts that appeared here and at QuestionItNow – Will America Lead? It provoked fifteen comments.

Can You Live On $5.15/hr? was posted on 1/19/06, generating fifteen comments here. However, Jazzer reposted this on her two-post blog america is heading where? This little blog has haunted me since I first read it. I wonder what has happened to this woman who describes herself as "... just a mom that has a lot of compassion for the world and how we are treating it. I love life but i really want to cry when i see all the hate and greed that consumes so much of our daily life and it is starting to become a natural state of being in our everyday lives."

On behalf of the QuestionItNow team, I thank all who have visited and all who have posted comments at Voices. We look forward to continuing to share our perspectives and conducting respectful dialogue with those who have thoughts and ideas about issues that affect or will affect the lives, liberty, and pursuit of happiness of everyday Americans.

QuestionItNow Blogs

Saturday, September 16, 2006

"The Measure of a Country's Greatness..."

9/11, Afghanistan, Iraq, Katrina, crisis after crisis... These are trying times for America. Will we emerge stronger or give into fear and division?

How will history remember this time?

How will we measure up?

Where are the leaders who will lead America back to greatness?

"The measure of a country's greatness is its ability to retain compassion in a time of crisis."

- Thurgood Marshall, United States Supreme Court Justice

QuestionItNow

Sunday, September 10, 2006

Point-Counter-Point

Steve from IL is someone who usually comments from the other end of the political spectrum from me. He is an individual who posts in a far more intelligent and usually less belligerent tone than most Bush apologists. He has also been banned from more than one "progressive" blog that I am aware of. Over the last few months, he has taken up quite a bit of space commenting on topics unrelated to my team’s original posts. Therefore, I offered him a forum to air his thoughts in order to allow others from across the political spectrum to debate him in an open and unfiltered manner. Steve has taken me up on this offer.

QuestionItNow Blogs

Saturday, September 09, 2006

The Thing That Should Not Be

Allow me to introduce myself. As can be seen, my name is Steve, and I've lived my entire life in the suburbs of Chicago. As a frequent pain in the a** commenter on QuestionItNow who enjoys a rousing and (usually) respectful debate, I have been invited by REB 84 to be a contributor and I want to thank him for the opportunity to provide a counterpoint. For quite awhile on other blogs, most notably the one for Michigan Democratic Rep. John Conyers (until I was banned), REB, Ohiodem1 (OD1), and I would go on about this and that, and I found that our debates were usually very good and very informative, and usually quite respectful (although I can be a hothead and prone to snarkiness). I am very much a conservative (but not someone who would be considered a member of the "Religious Right") and, as such, do have different views on many political items that are issues today. Most of those are on my own blog, Scipio the Metalcon. But, I appreciate and thank REB for the opportunity here.

Now that the mutual hogwash is over (just kidding), there are some real problems that do exist, some of which are challenges to the United States Constitution, specifically the First Amendment:
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
In recent days, it has come out that an ABC docu-drama, titled Path to 9/11, has drawn the ire of congressional Democrats, as well as former President Bill Clinton and past members of his administration. Now, 9/11 was a definitive moment in many of our lives (I was vacationing with my girlfriend, now wife, in Virginia Beach when the attacks occurred), and America came together in a great way. But with the war in Iraq, plus many other foreign policy challenges that come across in the news, the old partisanship that infected much of the prior three administrations has come to the fore. Even some influential people began their assault on Bush when he and the Congress ordered the military into Afghanistan, saying that using the military in this fashion wasn't the appropriate response (it most assuredly was, in my opinion; OD1 has expressed this to me as well). It has even come down to who is to blame for not protecting the American people from the 9/11 attacks themselves, and this is just ridiculous. In previous debates with OD1 on this, I have asserted that 9/11 didn't occur in a vacuum of time that began on January 20, 2001, George Bush's first inauguration. The problems that led to the government's failure have been shown to have begun long before that day, earlier than even January 20, 1993, the inauguration of Bill Clinton.

Did Bush and his administration make mistakes? You bet, and there's no denying it. A few things should be mentioned:
  • Bush spent much of the period before 9/11 on domestic policy, not foreign policy.
  • His administration relied a lot on former Clinton appointees, notably Richard Clarke and George Tenet, and others. This, after the bitter battle over who won the 2000 election.
  • Bush did not seem to take seriously enough some of the intelligence reports indicating a potential attack on the US.
  • Bush left many of the Clinton-era policies and procedures regarding national security in place (especially in relation to Tenet).
It was also confirmed by the 9/11 Commission that the CIA itself was an agency with a long history of continuing problems that plagued many administrations.

With that said, one must reasonably assume that these problems were not created solely by the Bush administration. Much of it did occur during Clinton's tenure in the White House, and were brought out by the 9/11 Commission Report. When looking at Clinton's record regarding terrorist attacks against Americans, it was pitiful. In response to bin Laden's declaration of war against the United States (through a fatwa) wasn't enough to induce Clinton to reply with any kind strong diplomacy or force, a characterization of his entire administration. And even though the 9/11 Commission said as such, it has been seen by all sides of the political spectrum to have been a chance at political sniping and whitewashing the roles of those in both administrations, instead of doing what it should have done, which was to improve the federal government's intelligence capabilities and response to emergencies.

What has all of this accusatory finger-pointing done? Nothing. The problems that kept the federal government from stopping the 9/11 attacks came about due to the usual problems we see with government; change doesn't occur until there is a tragedy. The analogy of the implementation of a stop light comes to mind. Dangerous intersections don't usually get a stop light until somebody gets killed. Governments at all levels should do better about a lot of things, but they don't.

And yet, it has come to pass that not only is Bush almost completely blamed for not protecting America on 9/11, there are those who believe Bush or someone in his administration actually caused it. This has now reached Democratic candidates for Congress in the form of Dr. Bob Bowen, running for office in Florida's 15th District (he won the Democratic primary this past Tuesday). Did this kind of event occur during FDR's administration after Pearl Harbor? In some respects it did, but the bipartisanship of the government and the unity of the country looked beyond this idiocy and proceeded to the business at hand, World War II.

So, now it comes to the Path to 9/11 ABC docu-drama. Advertised as based on the 9/11 Commission report, it has put in some questionable scenes that has past and present Democratic politicians riled up. A notorious example is one where Sandy Berger, Clinton's National Security Advisor, cancelled an assasination of bin Laden just as the CIA was to perform the hit. Based on documentation, it didn't happen this way (it is believed that Tenet actually did this). Yet, compressing years of various actions into a five-hour TV show (after all, this is what it is) gave the producers what they thought was creative license. I can understand why this would upset Berger and the others, and the producers have said they would edit some of these scenes out of what will be broadcasted. But individuals like Berger really don't have much to crow about; it has come out that Berger was very much involved in not pursuing bin Laden, even if not in the way depicted. And along with his infamous theft of documents from the National Archives, just prior to his appearance at the 9/11 Commission hearings, Berger has no standing and no credibility in his complaint.

As a result, senior Democrats in Congress (including the aforementioned John Conyers, and the Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid) are trying to get ABC to not broadcast Path to 9/11. While this is not unusual (many Republicans had done the same with regards to CBS's The Reagans, which Viacom pulled from CBS and aired on Showtime), Reid has threatened ABC with imposing retribution using the Communications Act of 1934, something that many (including myself) believe is an overt act of censorship, a complete violation of the First Amendment. The claim is that the free license of ABC to use the public airwaves for broadcasting requires that anything historical or newsworthy in nature is required to stick to what some say is the absolute truth is ridiculous since this is a docu-drama, not a documentary, and that is key. If what Reid says is true, then I would argue that much of what has been said on the network news (and CNN, and MSNBC) regarding the Plame kerfuffle should also be a cause to revoke the licenses of these broadcast entities. It would also mean that movies like JFK and Fahrenheit 9/11 could never, ever be shown on network TV, as their content is questionable (Moore's film) or just outright wrong (JFK). Even if one looks at Braveheart, there's enough there to make a historian wince with the fabrication of the many events in the examination of William Wallace's life. Again, dramatic license was used in a movie, not a documentary.

This is a dangerous road being taken by Democrats. It's one thing to lash out at a network for showing a controversial TV show; it's another to use the threat of political power to come down on them. But that seems to be the nature of debate today. To me, the quality of the criticism of this President has been set so low as to be stifling to free speech. I would say that the Republican impeachment of Bill Clinton started this ball rolling, and I didn't support it then (you'll have to take my word; I wasn't a blogger then). But, I will be happy to add to the ridiculousness of the debate quality if the next President is a Democrat, provided there still is free speech left in this country for ordinary Americans, and not only to those protected by the ACLU (neo-Nazis, Klansman, and the child molesters of NAMBLA).

QuestionItNow