Want a Quick Overview on “Catastrophic Man-Made Global Warming”?

I strongly recommend you watch the 50-minute film produced by Warren Meyer, the proprietor of Coyote Blog and Climate Skeptic. (Of course Warren can be ignored by the Catastrophic Man-Made Global Warming faithful – he once worked for Exxon, and admits it!)

Warren offers multiple options for viewing his video. I just downloaded and watched the Windows Media version.

Compare the information in his video to this 30-second “Public Dis-Service” commercial designed to frighten our children:

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QU7BO35n47I&hl=en&w=425&h=355]

I am now thoroughly convinced that “Catastrophic Man-Made Global Warming” is nothing more or less than the latest incarnation of Rachael Carlson’s “Silent Spring” and Paul Erlich’s “Population Bomb” – another excuse to politicize all aspects of life, and to frighten the population into giving unlimited power to government officials in order to “save us from ourselves.”

As Richard Thripp at the YouTube site commented on the “Tick, Tick” video:

Together we can obliterate self-sovereignty!

That is the plan. And that is the Quote of the Day.

NEWSFLASH: GLOBAL WARMING AFFECTS EARTH’S ORBIT!

If an actor tells us, it must be true!

Japanese actor Ken Watanabe, who is currently doing the voice-over work for the Japanese TV version of the Planet Earth series, relates the following in a Japan Times interview:

The project that brings (Watanabe) back from hibernation is the BBC nature series “Planet Earth” (titled “Earth” in Japan) by documentary maker Alastair Fothergill, the creative force behind the huge worldwide hit “Deep Blue.” A filmic plea to rescue the planet from environmental destruction, “Earth” opens with a haunting shot of that polar bear coming out of hibernation and searching for footing on melting ice.

Watanabe, who narrates the movie’s Japanese version, recalls what he saw when he spent a month in the Arctic filming on a different project, before he got the call from the producers of “Earth.”

“The first dawn after winter up there is supposed to be mid-February, but the sun appeared to rise two weeks earlier. When I asked the locals about it, they said there have been huge changes here in the last few years.

Yes, the orbit of Earth has been SHIFTED BY GLOBAL WARMING!

You heard it here first, folks.

The Other Side of the Global Warming Debate.
(Yes, there is one.)

Al Fin has three videos up you really ought to watch if you’re interested in the question, and not convinced that the “Anthropomorphic Global Warming” skeptics are all paid off by by Big Oil.

The videos run not quite three hours in total. The first is a Canadian Broadcasting Corporation documentary entitled Doomsday Called Off. The second is the UK’s Channel 4 documentary The Great Global Warming Swindle, and the third is a CNN production by Glenn Beck, Exposed: The Climate of Fear.

Well worth your time.

Oh, and no commercials!

You Can Almost Taste His Eager Anticipation

Tim Blair posts today on the topic of “Peak Oil” – a subject near and dear to the heart of at least one of my regular readers. Tim quotes the New York Times (!) pooh-poohing the idea that oil production has peaked or will very soon:

“Within the last decade, technology advances have made it possible to unlock more oil from old fields, and, at the same time, higher oil prices have made it economical for companies to go after reserves that are harder to reach. With plenty of oil still left in familiar locations, forecasts that the world’s reserves are drying out have given way to predictions that more oil can be found than ever before …

“‘It’s the fifth time to my count that we’ve gone through a period when it seemed the end of oil was near and people were talking about the exhaustion of resources,’ said Daniel Yergin, the chairman of Cambridge Energy and author of a Pulitzer Prize-winning history of oil, who cited similar concerns in the 1880s, after both world wars and in the 1970s. ‘Back then we were going to fly off the oil mountain. Instead we had a boom and oil went to $10 instead of $100.'”

But, as Tim notes, “Incredibly, abundance denialists simply won’t accept the oil consensus.”

Like this guy I found in the Tucson Weekly guest editorial slot for last week. You have to read this:

Expect the beginning of the end of Tucson as we know it to arrive next year

By GUY MCPHERSON

For a writer, there are few experiences more thrilling than words that generate action. I was therefore elated when the group Sustainable Tucson grew from my column about the impending Tucson apocalypse (Guest Commentary, April 27, 2006).

Lest you think low gas prices are cause for apathy, I’m calling for more action.

Considerable evidence indicates we passed the world oil peak near the end of 2005. Oil supply follows a bell-shaped curve, so we have been easing down for slightly more than a year.

Now that we’ve burned the inexpensive half of our planetary endowment of oil, we need to prepare ourselves to fall off the oil-supply cliff. This will occur in 2008. The economic, societal and political implications are profound, and discussion of them is curiously lacking from the mainstream media.

I thought these gloom-n-doomers had learned better than to pick dates – especially dates within their forseeable lifetimes – for the sky to come crashing down. After all, Paul Ehrlich predicted in 1968 that by the 70’s or 80’s hundreds of millions of people would inevitably starve to death because we simply wouldn’t be able to grow or distribute enough food to feed them.

Uh, Paul? It’s 2007. No mass famine.

Of course, Mr. McPherson is just a little ahead of the latest curve, since there are a bunch of people running around with their hair on fire, shouting that “we have ten years to save the planet!”

Hey! If McPherson is right, “Peak Oil” will shut down entire economies of every nation around the world! And in 2008!

Whoopee! We’re all saved!

Well, not all of us:

A series of recessions triggered by the high price of gasoline will be followed, within a decade, by a depression that will make the Great Depression seem like the good old days.

We will not recover from this depression before runaway greenhouse effects doom our species to extinction.

Apparently not any of us…

At the very least, we can expect oil prices to exceed $400 per barrel within a decade. At those oil prices, you can kiss goodbye the days of happy motoring, the use of fossil fuels to deliver water and air conditioning to Tucson, and the U.S. dollar.

Mr. McPherson, I’ll make a bet with you. If by 2018 oil is $400 a barrel, I’ll pay you $1,000. But if it’s under $150, you owe me $100,000. Deal?

In light of this knowledge, and the cheerful demeanor with which I pass it along, people often ask my advice as they plan for life without fossil fuels. (All energy sources are derivatives of oil, so expensive oil signals the end of our ability to extract and deliver coal, natural gas and uranium, and seriously impedes our ability to manufacture wind turbines and solar panels.)

“In light of this knowledge – the guy’s Cassandra! But pay attention to the rest of this:

In an attempt to further the much-needed discussion about the looming post-carbon era, I offer the following Tucson-centric perspective.

This country’s ever-expanding economy since World War II, coupled with a profound sense of denial, suggests that relatively few people are prepared for the post-carbon era. As a result, you can expect increasing civil unrest in the decade ahead. The rule of law is likely to give way to anarchy. Local heroes are desperately needed.

Do not expect corporations or elected officials to bail us out. Rather, the collapse of the economy will render them meaningless. The federal government, and then the state government, will join Wal-Mart in simply fading away from your life. We will need plenty of local heroes to step into the breach. If you are honest, compassionate and interested in serving others, this city needs you.

In the very near future, you can expect to see a much smaller population than currently resides in Tucson. If you are committed to remaining in Tucson–and if you don’t own a horse, you won’t have much choice in five years or so–your task is a daunting one. You will have to secure your water supply by harvesting water. You will need enough water to grow your own food, too: $400 oil spells the end of Safeway and Trader Joe’s, and disruptions in the delivery of food, water and electricity to the Old Pueblo will begin next year. Bombing Iran will exacerbate these problems, but I’d rather not think about that.

As an enlightened citizen, you’ll be forced to live in two worlds. You’ll work and play in your “normal” life, saving money for a rainy day and supporting those you love. But in the back of your mind, you’ll know about the new world ahead, and you’ll be planning to be part of a smaller community that lives close to the earth. You’ll be learning how to harvest rainwater, grow your own food and live with far fewer resources.

As you plan for your own personal post-carbon future, please advocate for the city’s nascent efforts in sustainability. Implore city leaders to prepare for the days, less than a decade from now, when we have no fuel for private automobiles, no food-delivery system for the 3,000-mile Caesar salad on which we have come to depend and no water pumped across the desert to feed our insatiable desires.

This guy is looking forward to the End Times – something I thought only Fundamentalist Christians got accused of. I think he’s watched the “Mad Max” movies too many times. “Local heroes”? Does he have a leather suit, a knee brace, and a sawed-off in his closet?

I wonder if he’s stockpiled any arms and ammo?

Nah, probably not. He’ll be depending on other people to be the “local heroes.” His kind always do.

Now, the worst part of this whole thing?

Guy McPherson is a professor of natural resources at the University of Arizona and author of many books, including Killing the Natives: Has the American Dream Become a Nightmare? and Letters to a Young Academic.

The only people who can consistently function outside reality are the insane in asylums and tenured professors in theirs. It would be funny if only this guy wasn’t teaching our kids.

How did we grow a generation of people in which such a large percentage hate their own civilization? Can anyone answer that?

Edited to add:

Commenter “M. Smith in Phoenix, AZ” inquired:

Please tell me you saw the OTHER “Guest Commentary” that he wrote in April of last year? If not, scroll to the bottom of the Tucson Weekly page and his other article is the last link. The money paragraphs are 2, 3 and 10.

This guy needs to be dragged out into the desert and left to fend for himself, just to see how in touch he really is with his local eco-system.

I hadn’t, but at his urging I read the piece in question.

My comment in reply:

I see he’s moved up his timetable.

And I notice that he’s still living in Tucson.

I guess tenure is more important to him than surviving “The Greatest Depression.”

Or he really doesn’t believe his own bullshit.

Three guesses as to what my take on that is, and the first two don’t count.

Darkness: The New Enlightenment.

James Lileks writes another spot-on essay. His Newhouse column for today, Another Empty Symbolic Gesture is eminently quotable, but I’ll give you just a little bit, and a visual aid:

There’s also a curious form of self-loathing involved in the lights-off movement, a revolutionary’s hatred of the old order’s glories. Once the bright lights of a city stood as a sign of civilization, a candle that cast out the night and brought the boon of Prometheus to every humble shack; now darkness is a sign of enlightenment. The sensitive soul who feels the planet’s ceaseless shrieks in all his various chakras is supposed to feel relief when the lights go off, as if darkness is aloe on a burn.

Why, look at those satellite photos of North Korea at night. State control of energy usage, no industry, no cars, no messy pointless “freedom” to hurt our one and only Mother. Seen from above, it’s utterly dark.

They’re years ahead of the rest of us.

Go. Read.

Edited to add:

I can’t explain exactly why, but I was perusing movie critic Roger Ebert’s web page and found his list of “Four Star Movies from 2006”. Among his list? An Inconvenient Truth. Interest piqued, I read the review. The last line is the kicker:

I did a funny thing when I came home after seeing “An Inconvenient Truth.” I went around the house turning off the lights.

I think Billy Beck’s use of the term “Endarkenment” has taken on a whole new and literal meaning.

Global Bullshit.

Now that the UN has proclaimed the debate over Global Cooling Warming Climate Change to be ended, I got the urge to write one of my typically long and heavily link-filled pieces on the topic. Somebody beat me to it. Read J. R. Dunn’s A Necessary Apocalypse at The American Thinker if you have not already done so. A teaser:

That environmentalism is in fact a pseudo-religion goes without saying. Like all such, it possesses every element of contemporary legitimate belief. It has a deity, in this case the goddess Gaia, the personification of the living Earth, (first envisioned by James Lovelock, whom we can slot in as high priest). It has its holy books, most changing with the seasons, and most, as is true of the Bible with many convinced Christians, utterly unread. It has its saints, its prophets, its commandments, religious rituals (be sure to recycle that bottle), a large gallery of sins, mortal and otherwise, and an even larger horde of devils. (Let me pause here to sharpen a horn.)

Another item that a pseudo-religion must have is an apocalypse – and that’s what global warming is all about.

Once you’ve read that, sit back and enjoy Penn & Teller’s Showtime episode of Bullshit! on the topic of environmentalism.

Let me quote from one of the people interviewed for the piece: Patrick Moore, a founding member and former President of Greenpeace:

The environmental movement was basically hijacked by political and social activists who came in and very cleverly learned how to use green rhetoric, or green language, to cloak agendas that actually had more to do with anti-corporatism, anti-globalization, anti-business, and very little to do with science or ecology. And that’s when I left. (The Greenpeace organization.)

I realized that the movement I had started was being taken over by politicoes, basically, and that they were using it for fundrasing purposes.

Most of the environmental movement is composed of white, upper-middle class people who are, I think incorrectly, telling people in the rest of the world what to do, where people don’t live in nice houses and don’t have good drinking water and good health standards. I think the environmental movement is basically elitist.

Nobody’s going to listen to you if you say the world is not gonna come to an end, but if you say the world is coming to an end you get headlines. And so sensationalism, especially when it’s combined with misinformation, leads to a situation where people send gobs of money to these groups for campaigns that are actually totally misguided.

The campaign against forestry is a classic case of absolutely and totally misleading the general public. It’s true that we are losing forests in the tropics of this world, but it’s not because of logging companies, it’s because of poor people – millions of them, who are trying to make a living and grow some food for their families. The fact is, in North America, there is still as much forest as there was a hundred years ago. And the reason there’s so much forest is because we use so much wood. Because we cut trees down to make our houses, But the environmental groups have got people thinking that when you go into a lumberyard and buy wood, you’re causing the forest to be destroyed, when in fact what you’re doing is ordering new trees to be planted. It is something we have to do in order to feed and house the six billion people on this earth.

And it drives me even further crazy to have them say they’re against globalization when their main tools of trade are cell phones and the internet. It just makes no sense at all to be against science and technology, and then to use science and technology, whether its jet planes to get to international environmental meetings, or cell phones or laptop computers. You’re part of globalization. So how can you be against it?

I can’t add much to that, though in a future post I will attempt to.

“The time has come,” the Walrus said,

“To talk of many things:
Of votes –and chads –and democracy–
Of Republics –and of kings–
And why the earth is getting hot–
And when will pigs have wings.”

(With abject apologies to Lewis Carroll.)

Last week I had a couple of posts on the reaction of the moonbat wing of the Democratic Party to the California recall election – specifically those people who post to Democraticunderground.com. Those posts are here and here, with the second being by far the most egregious example. And I warned you at the end of “Not with a Bang, but a Whimper?” that I might have more to say on the topic. This post is it.

Now, I’ve ranted about Democrat hypocrisy like this before. In fact, in that essay written back during Election 2000 (long before I started this blog) I essentially wrote a companion piece to “janekat’s” DU post, which – for my own amusement – I present part of in counterpoint to her comments:

Janekat:

What we MUST realize in order to win – Americans are stupid and uninformed

This is very important because in order to win we must understand the way the average American thinks. I’m afraid WE have nothing in common with them.

I came to the two following conclusions when I saw the large number of people who voted for Bush back in 2000.

#1 – I would dare to assume that most of us here are in the upper 1%-20% of the population intelligence-wise. We must come to the realization that the majority of the population is in the lower 80% to 99% percent of the bell-curve. WE are not the norm.

Me:

An Uncomfortable Conclusion

With the continuing legal maneuvers in the Florida election debacle, I have been forced to a conclusion that I may have been unconsciously fending off. The Democratic party thinks we’re stupid. Not “amiable uncle Joe” stupid, but DANGEROUSLY stupid. Lead-by-the-hand-no-sharp-objects-don’t-put-that-in-your-mouth stupid. And they don’t think that just Republicans and independents are stupid, no no! They think ANYBODY not in the Democratic power elite is, by definition, a drooling idiot. A muttering moron. Pinheads barely capable of dressing ourselves.

Take, for example, the position under which the Gore election machine petitioned for a recount – that only supporters of the Democratic candidate for President lacked the skills necessary to vote properly, and that through a manual recount those erroneously marked ballots could be “properly” counted in Mr. Gore’s favor. They did this in open court and on national television, and with a straight face.

So, it is with some regret that I can no longer hold that uncomfortable conclusion at bay:

They’re right. We are.

It would appear that “janekat” has what it takes to be a member of the DNC elite. And she’s absolutely one of Thomas Sowell’s “Anointed.” I have not yet had a chance to read Mr. Sowell’s book The Vision of the Anointed: Self-Congratulation as a Basis for Social Policy, but I have read the text of his speech on the subject, and it rings wholly true. This part of the speech particularly so:

Just as economic issues are often seen as being about “the rich” and “the poor,” various statistical disparities between social groups are often attributed to the moral failings of “society,” just as innumerable dangers that are allowed to exist show society’s blindness or callousness.

Whatever the issue, it tends to be seen within this framework — this vision of the anointed– and to take on the aura of a moral crusade. “Intellectuals cannot operate at room temperature,” as Eric Hoffer put it. They cannot simply say that policy A is preferred to policy B for the following reasons and with the following evidence. To do that would be to lay their reasons and evidence alongside the reasons and evidence of those who disagree with them, so that others can weigh the one against the other. To argue in this way, on the same moral plane and under the same impartial rules of logic and evidence applying to both sides would be a violation of the whole vision in which the anointed see themselves. Their role is not to put themselves on the same plane as other people. The very words and phrases they use reveal the loftier plane on which they see themselves. From this loftier plane they are to raise our “consciousness,” make us “aware” and hope that we will “grow.” Those who nevertheless continue to disagree with them must then be shown to be not merely in error but in sin.

And let them without sin cast the first stones, as it were.

But here’s the question I have had, as succinctly put by Sowell:

How do the anointed manage to survive – and, indeed, flourish – after being wrong so often?

And he answers it:

Much as animals and plants survive in nature– by being in environments favorable to their strengths and not very severe on their weaknesses. The strengths of the anointed are verbal strengths and mental nimbleness, combined with whatever academic credentials may help sustain their sense of intellectual and moral superiority. There are environments in which that is sufficient and other environments in which that counts for virtually nothing. The anointed can be found concentrated in the former kinds of environments, rather than the latter, just as fish are found in the sea and not on mountaintops, just as it is just the reverse with eagles.

The academic world, for example, is a sort of natural habitat or wild-life refuge for ideas that cannot stand the test of empirical results– except for those fields in which there are decisive tests, such as science, mathematics, engineering, medicine– and athletics. In all these fields, in their differing ways, there comes a time when you must either put up or shut up. It should not be surprising that all of these fields are notable exceptions to the complete domination of the left on campuses across the country.

Where they are free to brainwash the young, some of whom become the primary and secondary educators of our children. And make no mistake – the world of the NEA is, too, a cloistered academic one where there is no decisive testing of empirical results. To the education system, how a child feels has become more important that what (s)he learns. Rand’s Comprachicos have spread greatly since the 50’s. They exist in politics as well – for “verbal strengths and mental nimbleness” are the hallmark of the successful politician, are they not? And how often do politicians actually debate “Policy A” vs. “Policy Bon the merits, rather than on the intent? Even in closed-door sessions away from the cameras? As the link above shows, the ranks of editorial cartoonists are rife with The Anointed as well, and they are but the most visible indicator of The Anointed dominating the media.

Nowhere has this jarring disconnect from reality in favor of lofty “higher ends” been more pronounced than with the gun control fight. That prominence has been due to, as Sowell put it, a lack of conclusive tests for empirical results. The fight over “Affirmative Action,” the fight over “Welfare reform,” the fight over taxes, all of those fights and more have not produced clear, unassailable empirical evidence of success or failure.

But “gun control” has. And presented with that evidence, the only thing The Anointed can respond with are reports like this one that states that the research in to whether gun control laws are or aren’t effective is inconclusive, and more research is needed. But here’s the incontrovertible, conclusive proof that, at least in part, “gun control” doesn’t make the public safer – concealed-carry. In every state where “shall-issue” concealed-carry legislation has been promoted, the gun control groups predict “blood in the streets,” “Dodge City shootouts,” carnage and mayhem and death, Oh My! And it never happens – anywhere. The “gun control” of keeping guns out of the hands of the law-abiding has been conclusively proven ineffective at making us safer.

Faced with that incontrivertible empirical evidence, the best argument The Anointed can come up with is that it can’t be conclusively proven that guns in the hands of the citizens make things safer, but what it demonstrates unquestionably is that more guns doesn’t equal more crime – yet they don’t abandon their mantra. Regardless of the empirical evidence they totally ignore the absence of the dire consequences they always predict, and in each new state the emotional argument is repeated, rather than debated on its merits as it should be. Again – “gun control” up to and including outright bans has not made England safer. They’ve simply disarmed the law-abiding, but pointing this out to The Anointed doesn’t phase them.

However, that is only an aside to the larger problem I discussed earlier. Gun control is my particular hobby-horse because, to me, it encompasses the most explicit and outrageous attack on individual liberty that The Anointed pursue – a deliberate, undisguised, and direct attack on the integrity of the Constitution of the United States. It is that document that stands in the way of their quest to give us what they feel we deserve – good and hard – and it is that document that we, the masses, are tasked to protect and defend.

Because if we don’t do it, no one will. Certainly not our elected officials without our torches and pitchforks behind ’em.

My earlier piece “Not with a Bang…” decried what I saw as a defeatist attitude among more than just the two examples I gave. The question I asked there may have been answered: Have we reached a “critical mass” where The Anointed have sway over enough of the population to get them to yeild our rights for The Anointed’s “higher purpose”? After the California recall election, the answer appears to be “not quite yet.” California – that bastion of the liberal Anointed (and make no mistake, there is a small conservative Anointed as well – and to the horror of both,) elected a man considered to be wholly unsuitable to be Governor of the 7th largest economy in the world. A man who was not one of The Anointed. A man who may not be controlled by The Anointed (but seeing as he married into one of the Brahmin families of the Anointed, that remains to be seen.) Worse, a man popular with the hoi polloi – which, in a democracy gives him power that The Anointed seldom receive. Worse still, the recall election demonstrates that the electorate can still be motivated to turn out in volume – and that cannot be good for The Anointed who see them as “not very bright” – ignorant, easily lead rubes who are the willingly-manipulated pawns of the forces of sinful self-interest.

Still, it’s not all good news. As the joke goes “I want to vote for the best candidate, but he never runs!” – and the system is set up to ensure that he doesn’t. If the recall election proves nothing else, it shows that the entrenched powers will stop at nothing short of actual assassination to retain power, so if you want to run for office it indicates something other than a desire simply to do a good job. I’ve said for quite a while that anyone actually willing to run for office ought to be immediately disqualified. Arnold’s election proves, actually it only reaffirms, that popular recognition is the only way to elected office other than through the political party machinery, and John and Jane Q. Citizen don’t have a chance of running through those machines without coming out mangled beyond recognition.

(Let me say that I hope Arnold does a good job as Governor, but I will not be surprised if he is thwarted at every turn by his legislature, or if he turns out like Jesse Ventura to be not up to the job on philosophical grounds.)

Here’s the situation as I see it:

The The Anointed control the halls of higher education with the possible exception of the schools of engineering and the hard sciences (which are populated more and more by foreign students rather than domestic ones, as our population produces fewer and fewer students willing and capable of competing.) The Anointed have a firm grip on primary and secondary education in this country, and are only threatened by home-schooling (not an option for most families) and school vouchers (which they oppose vehemently.) Controlling these is actually more important than controlling higher education – it’s easier to indoctrinate the young before they learn to think, as Ayn Rand explained so graphically in “The Comprachicos,” or as illustrated in the present by this post. At any rate, both home-schooling and vouchers are, I think, too little, too late.

The Anointed occupy positions of power in the media, and are less and less concerned about the obvious exercise of that power in attempting to influence the “people of average or lower intelligence.” Even when the manipulation fails as it did in California, there is no hue and cry over it. Yes, the conservatives have talk radio, and conservative print media exists, and Fox News for TV, but overwhelmingly the Anointed run the newsrooms in TV and print. Listening recently to the Hugh Hewitt radio show a caller commented that, during the news breaks on his local station, the news being reported was in diametric opposition to what what Hewitt was reporting. Reuters and the AP represent the news-reporting bodies of most small radio outlets. As more and more children process through the school system and have children of their own, the less likely they are to understand, less be swayed by, the relatively minor influence of conservative media that preaches pretty much only to the faithful.

The Anointed occupy seats in the legislatures and benches of the judiciary, though not yet in numbers large enough to completely control policy. While there they are active in the pursuit of increasing their numbers, however, and thwarting attempts to increase the number of conservatives – see the Democrat opposition to judicial nominees who “believe in anything.” Possibly the most blatant example after that is the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals – also of California – of whom fellow blogger Phelps recently wrote:

The discouragment comes from realising that I have no expectation of the application of law from the 9th circuit. None. The 9th is so activist, so interventionist, and so partisain(sic) that it is a mockery of what the Judicial branch is supposed to represent. They are supposed to be the brake on the engine of government. Instead, the 9th has ventured so far into judicial activism that they are not slowing the engine, but instead speeding it along.

He is not alone in that assessment.

I have written that liberals and conservatives are both necessary to the proper functioning of a healthy society, and I truly believe that. But there’s a caveat: The liberals have to play by the same rules. They cannot abandon logic and reason for “higher purposes” and “greater callings.” They must recognize that their reality has to be the same one the rest of us live in, and right now that doesn’t appear to be the case. Bill Whittle, for instance, longs for the day when the Democrats return to “the party claimed by Jefferson and Truman, and many millions of other decent, patriotic Americans, people of integrity with whom it is a pleasure – sometimes an honor – to disagree.” They certainly aren’t that today, and to be honest, neither is the Republican party. In the world of politics, things have gotten to the point illustrated in this Sacramento Bee article:

“What is a little disconcerting for the French is an American president who seems to be principled,” said Jean Duchesne, an English literature professor at Condorcet College in Paris. “The idea that politics should be based on principles is unimaginable because principles lead to ideology, and ideology is dangerous.”

But we who are politically engaged are all ideologues. The difference is in our ideologies. Maximum freedom for the individual, or maximum conformance to the ideals of the Anointed?

I’ve also written that I believe we sit at a crossroads in history – where, through the easy availability of disparate opinion and vast amounts of information, we can, as a minority, influence our political futures far beyond our mere numbers. Besides the resignation I illustrated in “Not With a Bang…”, there is a great deal of frustrated anger out there in the Jacksonian community, and the internet lets the frustrated communicate – and organize – in ways never before possible. Again, the gun control issue is foremost in this, as the gun control Anointed have commented at length on our ability to quickly and effectively organize and resist their efforts. Perhaps Missouri’s concealed-carry legislation, over a decade in the making and requiring the overturning of a governor’s veto, best exemplifies this. However, I don’t think this window of opportunity is going to be open long. We must seize it, soon, or resign ourselves to one of two uncomfortable futures: Losing with a whimper, or eventually being forced to take arms and risk losing with a bang.

Discussion of this would also be appreciated, because I’m pretty much out of ideas.