Tuesday, May 31, 2005

Will The Real French Please Step Forward?

On my way to work this morning I was listening to a French citizen discuss why they voted "no" with regards to the EU constitution.

Apparently, the real reason was two fold

1) Jacque Chirac - The average French person has lost confidence in Chirac. He's apparently done nothing to control the flood of middle eastern immigrants, who come there for the extremely generous welfare programs. In fact, the sentiment is that Chirac is doing everything he can to appease the middle eastern immigrants.

As it ends up, the average French are not anti-American. In fact, they would be ecstatic to see a stable middle east that could keep its own people.

Why does the American media portray France as being staunchly anti-American? Is there a grand conspiracy? NO. Fear and angst sells newspapers and commercials. For Americans to hear that a major ally doesn't like us, raises extreme angst and fear. How many times have I heard "Those disloyal French bastards...after everything we did for them!"

Well, it isn't true. The French aren't against us. Some don't like us, but our media needs to sell us stuff to stay in business, so they tell us that France hates America. Easy soundbite, sells newspapers, magazines, commecials, and creates all sorts of fodder for airtime that would otherwise be filled with celebrity love triangles.



2) Borders, language and culture. The French are being threatened with massive immigration, and the EU constitution was only going to make matters worse.

Friday, May 27, 2005

AIDS Drugs: Silly Bill Clinton At It Again

In a talk regarding universal access to AIDS drugs, Bill Clinton once again decided to put the US second.

:Digression:
We already know Bill Clinton doesn't give a good god damn about women, in spite of getting a free pass for being the most public sexual predetor we've ever seen. The fact that Hillary Clinton does nothing about Bill Clintons sexual forays speaks highly of Hillary Clinton's self esteem and ability to stand up for what's right. For you Pro-Hillary Clinton types: this is sarcasm.
:End Digression:

The US is the largest funder of the worldwide fight against AIDS. This is undisputed. However, as part of it's anti-AIDS spending, the US purchases all anti-AIDS drugs from US companies, the ones who invented the drugs.

Bill Clinton decries the policy of purchasing from US companies. If the US were to purchase generic versions of the drugs from, say, Indian companies, more drugs could be purchased.

Is Bill Clinton high? I guess that needs no confirmation. The US companies invented the AIDS drugs. Many US companies competed to come up with a drug based solution to fight AIDS. Most failed, and the few who succeeded spent untold resources in inventing, testing, and getting these drugs past the FDA so they could actually be used. US businesses spent untold $1,000,000,000,000's (that's trillions) of dollars to make drugs that could fight AIDS.

Now, our former president Bill Clinton wants to take all that effort, and spend US dollars to buy anti AIDS drugs from companies that knocked off the work of the US companies. These knock off companies have nothing to lose - they just get the US drugs, reverse engineer them and voila - a highly tested, FDA approved, very effective AIDS drug at a minor fraction of the cost.

Looks like nothing's changed for Bill Clinton - he screwed us as our leader, and he continues to screw us as a leader in the UN. Somehow, this all seems so fitting.

On another note - AIDS is a terrible disease. A good friend of mine, Dan Covey (Dan's AIDS Quilt entry brings back a lot!), who changed my life died from it, and I continue to miss him. I'm well aware of its devastating effect, not only upon the victim, but those around them as well. This is not to somehow justifiy what I say above, but instead to show that I'm aware of both sides of the issue.

IMHO it boils down to this - we either agree that we sacrafice everything for the individual for a near term solution and forego giving motivation to create and innovate, or agree that a long term solution needs to be sought and be willing to sacrafice individuals along the way, and avoid sacraficing on larger issues.

I wouldn't want to go through watching another friend die of AIDS, but then again, I don't want Americans (or their companies) to lose their motivation to create and innovate, because we'll need that creativity when the next deadly disease comes along.

Thursday, May 26, 2005

Sad: Amnesty International Reduced To Just Another Media Bomb Thrower

The Amnesty International ("AI") 2005 Report was issued yesterday, and not surprisingly it's full of derisive anti-US allegations. The US Media eats this stuff up, just like it did the Isikoff Newsweek article.

Yes, allegations.

They state no facts to back up their accusations, not unlike most of the media. Their pulication is a "report" after all, so it should contain something more substantive than "The US is Bad!", shouldn't it? Instead, it reads more like a long winded newspaper article that has limited time to capture your attention, shock you, and let you go.

The wierdo in me wants to cry out "Liberal/Socialist/Communist Conspiracy!" However, that would assume AI (and the US media for that matter) had a lofty political agenda. That would be giving them too much credit, IMHO.

No, AI, like the media, needs to report issues that sell - Shock/upset/piss-off your viewer and you've got their attention, and they're on your side. Once they're on your side, they'll support you, 99.999% of the time by sending money. Once in a blue moon someone will want to volunteer, but when that someone tries to volunteer, they're told to send money.

I'll come out and say it: AI issued the report in this for purely for money. AI needs money, just like, and for the same reasons that, media outlets need money. Basis for this statement is Occam's Razor - either one needs to prove up some political agenda and a driving force behind it (very complex and difficult) or simply point out that AI wants money.

They'll probably use the money to help people out and run their business, but they want money none the less.

I guess expecting them to do it in a more ethical manner is asking for too much. Besides, they already see the formula that works in the media, so why not copy a succesfull business model?

Wednesday, May 25, 2005

Where's The Outrage: Deaths In Iraq vs. Bogus Newsweek Article

A moron from Newsweek, Michael Isikofff, writes a bogus article about the desecration of a Koran, and the Middle East erupts in riots. Isikoff later admits that the article was incorrect. Isikoff has not been punished or held at all accountable for the deaths he caused by publishing his bogus article.

Around the same time Newsweek publishes Isikoff's article, the media reports that over 600 Iraqi muslims have been killed by Islamic terrorists in Iraq. Silence. School children blown to bits; funeral processions (for other victims of terrorists in Iraq) bombed; markets, malls, shopping centers bombed.

Why is America instantly the the big bad bully, catching outrage and "Holier Than Thou" indignation from the world, all based upon a bogus article, while there's no condemnation of the terrorists (or for that matter, sympathy for Iraqis) in Iraq for actual murders?

Tuesday, May 24, 2005

Judicial Nominations: No Party Wins, So They Probably Did The Right Thing

Well, it's official. Some of Bush's judicial nominees will go up for a vote.

Neither the Republicans nor the Democrats are happy with what happened, so my guess is that the correct thing was ultimately done.

What's sad is this:

Confirmation is done by a simple majority vote, so the Republicans get their way once a nominee makes it to the Senate. This is for shit - one side now gets their way with little possibility for a real middle of the road judge even having a chance (not that the Democrats would have selected a real middle of the road judge). I understand why this will happen, as this is human nature, but I still don't like it.

The Democrats blocked the nominations for years by filibuster, simply not allowing a vote to take place. This too is for shit. Using a procedural device as a way to block progress just wastes everyone's time and pisses people off. However, I understand why they did it, and would probably do the same thing in their shoes. I do have to wonder, how long were they planning on keeping this up? Until a Democrat became president?

Some Day We'll See Some Relevant News

With all the important things going on today, it seems to be too much to ask to get a news source that actually reports news that's relevant. Relevant to a society at large.

What is relevant - an issue that has bearing upon society at large.

Something BESIDES shock value; something besides pity; something besides envy.

I want a consistent news source that gives me relevant news.

Eample Relevant issues of today:

Valuation of Chinese Yuan versus the US Dollar (a main factor in the trade imbalance with China that affects us all), Illegal Immigration, Social Security reform, taxes, how is the government spending our money, how the government legislates morality, etc., etc., etc.

What are not relevant issues:

Anything that happens on American Idol (or any other reality show, sitcom, movie, unless used as a pulpit to affect legislation or an election), any alleged crime uncovered or its related trial (don't get me wrong - I'm not heartless - my heart drops when I hear about egregious crimes, that crimes occur is a bad thing, but they only impact a very limited number of people, usually the victims and their immediate family; however legislation on how to reduce crime is relevant)(exception: attacks against the US as a nation), anything that happens to a celebrity/that a celebrity does (unless it's aimed at affecting legislation or an election). You get the general idea - stuff that's interesting/shocking to hear, but is otherwise not relevant.

Friday, May 20, 2005

Moral Relativism vs. Religion

While researching something I wanted to write about, I came across a Christian website decrying "Moral Relativism". Their basic argument being, if there is no God, there is no morality.

From Craig Biddle's "Loving Life: The Morality of Self Interest and the Facts That Support It":

"If there is no God, anything goes." This popular claim is an eloquent distillation of a deep-rooted false alternative wreaking havoc on human life and happiness. The adage compresses into a few words the age-old debate over whether morality is a matter of "divine commandments" or "human sentiments." Whatever their disagreements, both sides of this argument accept the idea that your basic moral choice is to be guided either by faith or by feelings. In other words, both sides agree that your choice is: religion or subjectivism. But if you want to live and enjoy life, neither of these will do. Neither religion nor subjectivism provides proper guidance for human action; each calls for human sacrifice and leads to human suffering--both physical and spiritual. To see why, we will look first at the theoretical essence of each of these doctrines; then we will turn to the practical consequences--historical and personal--of accepting them.

Let us begin with religion.

Religion holds that there is a God who demands your faith and obedience. He is said to be an all-powerful, all-knowing, all-good being who is the creator of the universe, the source of all truth, and the maker of moral law. Religion's basic moral tenet is: Don't place your self, your personal values, your own interests, your will, above those of God. Rather, you should live to glorify Him, to obey His commands, to fulfill His higher purpose. To do otherwise--to act on behalf of your own selfish concerns as if your life were an end in itself--is to "sin." As the religious scholar Reverend John Stott declares: "God's order is that we put him first, others next, self last. Sin is the reversal of the order."[1]

According to religion, being moral consists not in pursuing your own interests, but in self-sacrificially serving God. Theologian and rabbi Abraham Heschel expresses this tenet as follows: "The essence and greatness of man do not lie in his ability to please his ego, to satisfy his needs, but rather in his ability to stand above his ego, to ignore his own needs; to sacrifice his own interests for the sake of the holy."[2]

Now, you might argue that to ignore your own needs and sacrifice your own interests is contrary to the requirements of your life and happiness. But according to religion, that is no ground for complaint, because, as theologian Walter Kaiser puts it: "God has the right to require human sacrifice."[3]

Disturbed by such an assertion, you might ask: What about God's love for man? If God loves us, why would he call for us to sacrifice? To which Dr. Stott answers: "Self-sacrifice is what the Bible means by ‘love.'"[4]

Taking yet another angle, you might argue that self-sacrifice leads to suffering. But this fact is no ground for complaint either, because, according to the Bible, Adam disobeyed God by eating some forbidden fruit; therefore, you and I and all of Adam's descendents deserve to suffer.[5] As Saint Augustine put it: "We are suffering the just retribution of the omnipotent God. It is because it was to Him that we [by way of Adam] refused our obedience and our service that our body, which used to be obedient, now troubles us by its insubordination."[6]

The "insubordination" to which Augustine refers has to do with the aversion many people have to ignoring their own needs and sacrificing their own interests. After all, self-sacrifice can be extremely painful, both physically and spiritually. It can even be fatal. But, according to religion, if God tells a person to do something, the person is morally obligated to do it--regardless of the difficulties or consequences involved.

For a biblical example of what such obedience can mean in practice, consider the case of Abraham and Isaac. According to the story, God told Abraham: "Take your son, your only son Isaac, whom you love, and go to the land of Moriah, and sacrifice him there as a burnt offering."[7] Needless to say, it would be very painful for a man to kill his son, whom he loves. Nevertheless, because Abraham was faithfully committed to obeying the will of God, he set out to do just that.

Was Abraham's choice moral? Should he have done it? Would you do it? What do religionists say about this? According to Saint Augustine: "The obedience of Abraham is rightly regarded as magnificent precisely because the killing of his son was a command so difficult to obey…."[8]

Magnificent?

As shocking as Augustine's position may be, it is the only stance a dedicated religionist can take on the issue, because the only alternative is to challenge the alleged authority of God, and that is the cardinal religious no-no. "Above all," writes the devoutly religious René Descartes, reminding us of the applicable tenet, "we ought to submit to the Divine authority rather than to our own judgment even though the light of reason may seem to us to suggest, with the utmost clearness and evidence, something opposite."[9]

According to religion, God's will, however objectionable, is by definition good; and human judgment to the contrary, however rational, is by definition bad. The "real distinction between right and wrong," explains Bishop Robert Mortimer, "is independent of what we happen to think. It is rooted in the nature and will of God."

When a man's conscience tells him that a thing is right, which is in fact what God wills, his conscience is true and its judgment correct; when a man's conscience tells him a thing is right which is, in fact, contrary to God's will, his conscience is false and telling him a lie.[10]

Thus, if God wills that a man should kill his son, then, regardless of what the man thinks, he should do it.

But, you might ask, isn't human sacrifice wrong on principle? Not according to religion. As Dr. Kaiser reminds us, the religious point of view is precisely that "human sacrifice cannot be condemned on principle. The truth is that God owns all life and has a right to give or take it as he wills. To reject on all grounds God's legitimate right to ask for life under any conditions would be to remove his sovereignty and question his justice…."[11] Bishop Mortimer elaborates the religious position as follows:

[God] has an absolute claim on our obedience. We do not exist in our own right, but only as His creatures, who ought therefore to do and be what He desires. We do not possess anything in the world, absolutely, not even our own bodies; we hold things in trust for God, who created them, and are bound, therefore, to use them only as He intends that they should be used.[12]

In short, the basic moral tenet of religion is that obedience to God must be absolute--calls for human sacrifice and all. Granted, religion does not call for everyone to murder his child. But it does call for everyone to sacrifice his judgment and interests for the sake of an alleged God; and in order to uphold this tenet consistently, a person must be willing to do just that. If he claims to accept the moral tenets of religion but fails to uphold them consistently, then, on his own terms, he is guilty of "sin"--and on anyone's terms, he is guilty of hypocrisy (the consequences of which we will get to shortly).

Given the sacrificial nature of religion, it is not surprising that many people reject it and embrace its alleged opposite: subjectivism. But if human sacrifice is the problem, subjectivism is no solution.

Read more here.

[1] John R.W. Stott, Basic Christianity (London: InterVarsity Press, 1971), p. 78.
[2] Abraham Heschel, God in Search of Man, A Philosophy of Judaism (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1983), p. 117.
[3] Walter C. Kaiser Jr. et al., Hard Sayings of the Bible (Illinois: InterVarsity Press, 1996), p. 127.
[4] Stott, Basic Christianity, p. 79.
[5] See Genesis, 2­--3.
[6] Saint Augustine, City of God, trans. Gerald G. Walsh et al. (New York: Doubleday, 1958), p. 314.
[7] Genesis, 22:2.
[8] Augustine, City of God, p. 313, emphasis added.
[9] The Philosophical Works of Descartes, trans. Elizabeth S. Haldane and G.R.T. Ross (London: Cambridge University Press, 1973), Vol. I, p. 253.
[10] Robert C. Mortimer, Christian Ethics (London: Hutchinson's University Library, 1950), p. 8.
[11] Kaiser, Hard Sayings of the Bible, p. 126.
[12] Mortimer, Christian Ethics, pp. 7--8.

Starwars Episode 3

So, I went and saw Episode 3.

My Dad and I went to see Episode 4 together back in the 1970's, and because he passed away a couple of years ago, I sure missed him at the release of the final part of the story. *sigh*

My commentary today is in relation to a segment on Bill O'Reilley. Someone alleged that Lucas had made anti-Bush political overtones, and O'Reilley said no, there weren't. Bill was right.

The movie is a good story, but has nothing to do with today's administration.

If there's any political leaning message, it IMHO is this: the more you get away from principle based living and rational thought, the further attenuated you are not from reality.

The radicals on the left and right are guilty of this, and both are just as rabid about their beliefs, their unwillingness to consider anything else but their beliefs, and their quest for power.

To come to center, you necessarily consider both sides, left and right, and arrive at realistic conclusions.

Wednesday, May 18, 2005

The Chinese Really Think We're Stupid; Maybe We Are

As you may be aware, there's currently pressure being put on the Communist Chinese Government to cause it's currency to be valued like every other major currency, based upon economic factors within China, factors dealing with its politics, trade, etc. etc.

At the moment, the Chinese Yuan has its value pegged to the US dollar, at a rate of 8.28 Yuan to one US dollar. The Yuan will not fluctuate...this is a hard exchange rate that will not change.

The effect is that US made goods are expensive in China, while Chinese goods are cheap in the US. Because of the valuation of the Yuan vs. the Dollar, unchanged at 8.28:1, this situation will not change in the near future. Needless to say, as the Euro is valued higher than the US Dollar, European products are even more expensive within China, and Chinese products are even cheaper in Europe.

The Chinese, of course, say this is only fair. They get to set their own currency valuation policy as a sovereign state.

The arguments raised by the Communist Chinese Govermnet are absurd.

They claim that they're being subjected to a "double standard" because the US and the EU spouse "free trade" and by forcing the Yuan to be valued like any other currency this is somehow anti-free trade. Does anyone buy this other than the Communist Chinese Government?

They claim that the US should get its house in order before blaming others for its problems, citing that the US is upset over the trade deficit with China. Of course, anyone with half a brain can point out that it's the currency policy of the Communist Chinese Government that is a major factor in the trade deficit with China. US made products are expensive in China, while Chinese made products are cheap in the US.

Am I missing something?

Sadly, many Chinese, especially Chinese in power, are all about face. If the Communist Chinese Goverment were to give in and fairly value their currency, it would lose face. This, in conjunction to the extreme trade advantage they enjoy due to their currency valuation, is even more reason to resist a fair valuation of their currency.

Moreover, as a totalitarian state, Communist China is not accustomed to competition or criticism. Should anyone within China critisize what's going on, they can be imprisoned or otherwise done away with. Being critisized by the EU and the US, and being told to play fair or else, is a position they are not at all comfortable with.

The Communist Chinese Government is not at all unlike a child in their "Terrible Two's" - they've had their way up to now, and now it's time to understand that everyone else doesn't simply exist for their enjoyment.

What's even sadder, is that no one in the US or the EU will stand up to the the Communist Chinese leadership. The US has big words, as does the EU. In the end, the Communist Chinese will say a little here, do a little there, and NOTHING will change for at least another ten years.

In the US, this issue is barely making any ripples, in spite of the fact that the ramifications are enourmous. The media, as usual, is doing a great job of covering up important issues that affect us all while focusing us on crap:

Let's see what the headlines are (snapshot taken early AM on 5/18/05):

FoxNews: Rating Worthless
Debate of a Judicial Nominee in the Senate - somewhat affects us all; Assassination in Bagdad - has little to no effect on us other than making us upset; "person of interest" sought in the kidnapping of two children - has no effect on us, only upon people who are close to those kids.

CNN: Rating Completely Worthless
Starwars "Revenge of the Sith" opens tonight.

ABC News: Worthless
Predicting the next volcano eruption; a malfunctioned grenade thrown in the general vicinity of George Bushy; "Person of Interest" as above; fight over judicial nominees

MSNBC: Worthless
Judicial nominee fight; Star Wars; CBS drops 60 minutes; Toyota Recall.

Worthless is better than completely worthless, and was given only becuase the judicial nominees have some effect upon us all. All other headline issues are noise, having no effect on us all.

The media is ignoring real issues because
a) they have an agenda; or
b) they have to sell product and we're all just getting what we ask for.

According to Occams Razor, it has to be b.

Maybe the media isn't as controlled by the left as I originally thought. It's more controlled by our shallowness as a society.

Tuesday, May 17, 2005

Someday Someone Will Wake Up On Illegal Immigration

Get this - the US borders are porous, no one can argue that. Anyone who wants can get in.

However, should your name appear on a "no fly" list, the US government will not allow the flight you are on to land at the flight's destination/. Not only that, but after being diverted, you will be detained and questioned by the FBI and your bags will be searched.

Bureaucratic Common Sense continues to boggle the mind:


WASHINGTON, May 17 (Xinhuanet) -- US authorities ordered a passenger plane flying from Italy to Boston on Tuesday to be diverted to an airport in the northeastern state of Maine, after the name of a passenger was found to match one on a US no-fly list.

  The jet flight of Alitalia, which was heading from Milan to Boston, was diverted to the Bangor International Airport, where the passenger and his luggage was removed from the plane, news reports said.

The plane stayed at the airport for about one hour before it took off for Boston in the afternoon.

FBI agents questioned the passenger and determined the man was not a suspected terrorist. The nationality of the passenger was not known immediately.

Last week, an Air France flight from Paris to Boston was also diverted to Bangor because one passenger aboard was found to have a name and birth date that matched those of a person in the US government's no-fly list. The passenger was later found to be a different person and had no connection to terrorism.

Citing The Wrong Mass Murder

Just a thought - whenever people talk about mass exterminations, they usually cite the Jewish Holocaust of World War II. If memory serves, 8 million people were murdered during the Holocaust.

Why doesn't anyone cite "Uncle Joe" Stalin's extermination of his own people, Mau Tse-Tung's extermination of his own people, or Paul Pot's extermination of his own people? In each case, the number of dead exceeded the number of people killed in the Holocaust of WWII.

Maybe it's some how politically incorrect to cite Communist mass murderers? Who knows.

My guess is that the WWII generation had the Holocaust on their mind when they wrote the history books.

Monday, May 16, 2005

Illegal Immigration: The Audacity Of Vincente Fox

It's not enough that Mexico sends it's poor to the United States illegally and that tthe US takes them. It's not enough that the Citizens of the United States house, clothe, feed them, give them jobs, a retirement package (Social Security), access to the best healthcare in the world, all for free, funded by the taxation of the United States Citizen.

It's not enough that the United States Tax Payer is forced, unwillingly, to bear these costs, to the detriment of their communities and families. School closures throughout California, hospital closings, because of the $10 Billion dollar shortfall in the California State budget, caused by illegal immigrants.

It's not enough that Mexican gangs are now requiring the formation of special FBI task forces just to monitor their activities.

Now, Vincente Fox, president of Mexico, argues that the latest US toughening of immigration policy of a load of crap, basically stating that Americans are lazy, so you should let poor Mexicans come up through the borders to take up the slack.

In Vincente Fox' latest tirade, however, he really screwed up, because he said the Mexicans are willing to do jobs that " not even blacks want to do there in the United States".

Well...now he's gone off and pissed off the Blacks. Maybe now something will be done to secure the borders? How much longer do citizens have to act before the US Government acts?

With all this desire by the Republicans to expand the powers of the Federal Government, maybe they should focus of ensuring the Federal Government carries out it's Constitutional Duties (see Constitution, Article 1, Section 8, and other Sections) before giving it powers that the Constitution doesn't allow for, and that the Founders never envisioned it having.

The latest attemtion to illegal immigration at the souther border of the United States is making a very modest start at addressing illegal immigration. Sadly, it's only the issue de jour, and will likely go away once some moronic celebrity gets a divorce.

Friday, May 13, 2005

The Rewriting of World War II History

This is one of the saddest things I've read in a while, right up there with the accounts from "The Gulag Archipelago"


Remembering World War II
Revisionists get it wrong
by Victor Davis Hanson

As the world commemorated the 60th anniversary of the end of the European Theater of World War II, revisionism was the norm. In the last few years, new books and articles have argued for a complete rethinking of the war. The only consistent theme in this various second-guessing was a diminution of the American contribution and suspicion of our very motives.

Indeed, most recent op-eds commemorating V-E day either blamed the United States for Hamburg or for the Soviet domination of Eastern Europe, or for our supposed failure to credit the Russians for their sacrifices.

It is true that the Russians paid a horrendous price. Perhaps two out of every three soldiers of the Wehrmacht fell on the Eastern Front. We in the West must always remember that such a tragic sacrifice allowed Hitler to be defeated with far less American British, Canadian, and Australian dead.

That being said, the Anglo-Americans waged a global war well beyond the capability of the Soviet Union. They invaded North Africa, took Sicily, and landed in Italy, in addition to fighting a massive land war in central Europe. We had fewer casualties than did the Russians because we fought more wisely, were better equipped, and were not surprised to the same degree by a treacherous former ally that we had supplied.

The Soviets invaded the defeated Japanese only in the last days of the war; the Anglo-Americans alone took on two fronts simultaneously. Submarine warfare, attacking the Japanese and German surface fleets, conducting strategic bombing over Berlin and Tokyo, and sending tons of supplies to Allied forces — all this was beyond the capability of the Red Army. More important, Stalin had been an ally of Hitler until the Nazi invasion of 1941, and had unleashed the Red Army to destroy the freedom of Finland and to carve up Poland.

Do we ever read these days that when the Luftwaffe bombed Britain, Russia was sending the Nazis fuel and iron ore? When Germany invaded Russia, however, Britain sent food and supplies.

Yes, World War II started to free Eastern Europe from fascist totalitarianism, and ended up ensuring that it would be enslaved by Soviet totalitarianism. But Roosevelt and Churchill were faced with an inescapable reality in 1945 that to keep the Russians out of Eastern Europe they would have had to restart the war against their former ally that possessed it — a conflict that might well have gone nuclear in two or three years. The latter had been in great part armed and supplied for four years by their own taxpaying democratic citizenries. The Red Army was near home in Eastern Europe; the American 3rd Army was 5,000 miles from the United States.

Of course, we bombed German civilian centers. But in a total war when 10,000 a day were being gassed in the death camps, and Nazi armies in the Balkans, Russia, and Western Europe were routinely murdering thousands a week and engaged in breakneck efforts to create ballistic missiles, sophisticated jets, and worse weapons, there were very few options in stopping such a monstrous regime. This was an age, remember, before computer guidance, GPS targeting systems, and laser-guided bombs.

When the lumbering and often unescorted bombers started out against Europe and Japan, the Axis infrastructure of death — rails, highways, communications, warehouses, and decentralized production — was intact. When the bombers finished their horrific work, the economies of both Axis powers were near ruin. Armies that were systematically murdering millions of innocents in forgotten places like Yugoslavia, Poland, the Philippines, Korea, and China were running out of fuel, ammunition, and food.

Revisionism holds a strange attraction for the winners of World War II. American textbooks discuss World War II as if a Patton, Le May, or Nimitz did not exist, as if the war was essentially the Japanese internment and Hiroshima. That blinkered and politically correct focus explains why so many Americans under 30 are simply ignorant about the nature and course of World War II itself. Similarly, the British have monthly debates on the immorality of their bombing Hamburg and Dresden.

In dire contrast, even the post-Soviet Russian government will not speak of the Stalin-Hitler non-aggression pact, the absorption of the Baltic states, the murder of millions of German citizens in April through June 1945 in Eastern Europe, and the mass execution of Polish officers. If we were to listen to the Chinese, World War II was about the gallant work of Mao’s partisans, who in fact used the war to gain power, and then went on to kill 50 million of their own citizens — about the same number lost in all of World War II. Japan likewise has never come to terms with the millions of Asian civilians its armies butchered or its systematic brutality waged against American POWs.

The truth is that the supposedly biased West discusses the contribution of others far more than our former enemies — or Russian and Chinese allies — credit the British or Americans.

The German novelist Gunter Grass — who served in the Wehrmacht — recently lectured in the New York Times about postwar “power blocs,” in terms that suggested the Soviets and the Americans had been morally equivalent. German problems of reunification, he tells us, were mostly due to a capitalist West, not a Communist East that caused them.

Grass advances the odd idea that Germany was not liberated from American hegemony (“unconditional subservience”) until Mr. Schroeder’s recent anti-Bush campaign distanced the Germans from the United States. To read this ahistorical sophistry of Grass is to forget recent European and Russian complicity in arming Saddam, their forging of sweetheart oil deals with the Baathist dictatorship, and the disturbing German anti-Semitic rhetoric that followed Schroeder’s antics. Unmentioned are the billions of American dollars and years of vigilance that kept the Red Army out of Western Germany, or the paradox that the United States is ready to leave Germany on a moment’s notice — which might explain the efforts of the Schroeder government to keep our troops there.

There is a pattern here. Western elites — the beneficiaries of 60 years of peace and prosperity achieved by the sacrifices to defeat fascism and Communism — are unhappy in their late middle age, and show little gratitude for, or any idea about, what gave them such latitude. If they cannot find perfection in history, they see no good at all. So leisured American academics tell us that Iwo Jima was unnecessary, if not a racist campaign, that Hiroshima had little military value but instead was a strategic ploy to impress Stalin, and that the GI was racist, undisciplined, and reliant only on money and material largess.

There are two disturbing things about the current revisionism that transcend the human need to question orthodoxy. The first is the sheer hypocrisy of it all. Whatever mistakes and lapses committed by the Allies, they pale in comparison to the savagery of the Axis or the Communists. Post-facto critics never tell us what they would have done instead — lay off the German cities and send more ground troops into a pristine Third Reich; don’t bomb, but invade, an untouched Japan in 1946; keep out of WWII entirely; or in its aftermath invade the Soviet Union?

Lost also is any sense of small gratitude. A West German intellectual like Grass does not inform us that he was always free to migrate to East Germany to live in socialist splendor rather than remain unhappy in capitalist “subservience” in an American-protected West Germany — or that some readers of the New York Times who opposed Hitler might not enjoy lectures about their moral failings from someone who once fought for him. Such revisionists never ask whether they could have written so freely in the Third Reich, Tojo’s Japan, Mussolini’s Italy, Soviet Russia, Communist Eastern Europe — or today in such egalitarian utopias as China, Cuba, or Venezuela.

Second, revisionism requires knowledge of orthodoxy. One cannot dismiss Iwo Jima as an unnecessary sideshow or allege that Dresden was simple blood rage until one understands the tactical and strategic dilemmas of the age — the hope that wounded and lost B-29s might be saved by emergency fields on Iwo, or that the Russians wanted immediate help from the Allied air command to take the pressure off the eastern front in February 1945.

But again, most Americans never learned the standard narrative of War II — only what was wrong about it. Whereas it is salutary that an American 17-year-old knows something of the Japanese relocation ordered by liberals such as Earl Warren and FDR, or of the creation and the dropping of the atomic bomb by successive Democratic administrations, they might wish to examine what went on in Nanking, Baatan, Wake Island, Guadalcanal, Manila, or Manchuria — atrocities that their sensitive teachers are probably clueless about as well.

After all, this was a week in which thousands of the once-enslaved Dutch in Maastricht were protesting the visit of a president of the nation that once liberated their fathers, while thousands of neo-Nazis were back in the streets of Berlin. A Swedish EU official recently blamed the Second World War on "nationalistic pride and greed, and…international rivalry for wealth and power" — the new mantra that Hitler was merely confused or perhaps had some “issues” with his neighbors. Perhaps her own opportunistic nation that once profited (“greed”?) from the Third Reich itself was not somehow complicit in fueling the Holocaust.

How odd that Swedes and Spaniards who were either neutrals or pro-Nazi during World War II now so often lecture the United States not just about present morality but about the World War II past as well.

If there were any justice in the world, we would have the ability to transport our most severe critics across time and space to plop them down on Omaha Beach or put them in an overloaded B-29 taking off from Tinian, with the crew on amphetamines to keep awake for their 15-hour mission over Tokyo.

But alas, we cannot. Instead, the beneficiaries of those who sacrificed now ankle-bite their dead betters. Even more strangely, they have somehow convinced us that in their politically-correct hindsight, they could have done much better in World War II.

Yet from every indication of their own behavior over the last 30 years, we suspect that the generation who came of age in the 1960s would have not just have done far worse but failed entirely.

Wednesday, May 11, 2005

The Latest On Illegal Immigration: More Good News From Our Moronic Politicians

Amnesty For Illegals: US To Pay Medical Bills For Illegal Immigrants

That'll show 'em we mean business!

God damn...our politicians just don't get it, do they.

In Arizona, the movement to make English the state language came to an end.

Hillary Clinton Critical Of Illegal Immigration?

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA H'oh MAN that's funny!

Yesterday Hillary Clinton gave a speech during which she roundly critisized the state of the US borders, North and South. She claimed that US security was at risk because nothing has been done to secure either border.

I have to commend her for breaking out Bill Clinton's "Triangulation" strategy, where she will purport to support causes that she has no intention on doing anything about, all in the name of garnering votes.

Why is Hillary Clinton's new found "concern" a farce? One of the Democratic Party's largest funders is the Open Society Institute.

I don't suppose Hillary Clinton had anything bad to say about the pseudo amnesty recently granted by the Federal Government. The Federal Government will now reimburse hospitals for their care of illegal immigrants. Of course, the hospitals aren't allowed to ask about the immigration status of anyone.

One Billion of YOUR tax dollars hard at work, funding health care for people who aren't even supposed to be here.

Hillary? Any comment? Bush, any comment? *SILENCE*

Blog Writing

I'm finding that writing a blog on a regular basis is akin to working one's way up through Maslow's (Thanks Anonymous Poster For The Correction From Mavlov!!) Heirarchy. Once a need is met, you're ready for the next.

We all have things on our mind that consume our cycles, and in my case it's opining about society and political issues.

Although writing about any of these doesn't solve the issue, they do seem to bring closure at least in my mind in that I've expressed my views. Once expressed, there's not necessarily closure, however, in writing these things down I'm forced to really consider what's going on, do some research and be honest with myself.

Once expressed, it's interesting how I can easily consider additional topics to write about. Now I'm at the point where there are so many things, I don't know where to start.

Tuesday, May 10, 2005

What Really Scares Me About The Left

[Disclaimer: Although I'll be talking mostly about the more radical side of the left, I think the concepts apply equally to the more radical right. However, since the left for the most part controls the media and thus has a very accessible forum from which to espouse their views, I'll be focusing my efforts on the left.]

The most recent book that's found its way to my nightstand is The Gulag Archipelago by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. The book describes Soviet Russia, mostly under Stalin, and more specifically, the arrest, imprisonment and treatment of prisoners in the Soviet Gulag system, from 1918 to 1956. At it's high point, the Gulags housed 25% of the Soviet population!

I'm still fairly early in the book, probably around page 85. He dedicates a section of the book to describing the "Blue Caps" - these were the enforcement arm of the Communist machine. Their word was law. If they thought you should be imprisoned, for any reason, you were imprisoned. Although Blue Caps were chosen just as any other civil servant position was chosen, with appropriate rank, they were *always* the highest ranking person in any gathering simply because of their power.

The author summed up the actions of the Blue Caps in how they justified their actions, namely with ideology. An ideology, according to the author is a set of values/beliefs that justify actions that otherwise an individual could not rationally justify. An ideology is something that would heap praise upon an individual for carrying out actions that otherwise would be considered criminal, immoral, or otherwise completely out of bounds.

Now, not all ideologies are like this. Some certainly follow socially accepted norms.

You can see how much an ideology is willing to bend codes of normal behavior by watching them in action.

This is where the Left gets scary.

During the last two presedential elections we saw the Left stoop to new lows, and I'm of the opinion we haven't seen the bottom yet. Far from it.

Lefties are willing to accept whatever anyone of prominence says against anything that's not the Left as sufficient reason to sway their opinion, on just about everything.

For example:

1) Farenheit 911 - Michael Moore admits that it's a fictional work with most things taken out of context. However, it's the picture he portrays of the Right and because he's a Figure of Prominence (FOP) the Left finds sufficient weight to sway their opinion.

In contrast, the book by the Swift Boat Veterans is based upon first hand accounts and interviews of men who served with Kerry. Even though the Swifties have ultimately been proven to have told the factual truth in their book, the Left ignores, no, chastises them because they're not of the Left.

2) The FOP's of the Left continually decry Bush as being stupid. It's a proven fact that Bush's IQ is higher than Kerry's. Lefties all chant the mantra, without question, that Bush is stupid.

3) In the past, Lefties have been for broadening of Federal powers, as Lefty FOP's have told them this is the way to go. Today, those same FOPs say that Federal power should be limited and more rights should be reserved to the States. The Lefties now chant the State's Rights mantra, and don't question.

4) Lefties believe that there should be no border with Mexico, that Mexicans have the right to come over here and live, in spite of what the evidence shows. Increased crime, the destruction of state and local budgets to support illegals. In California alone, illegals are costing the State $10,000,000 per year. Strangely, the California budget shortfall for the current fiscal year is, you guessed it, $10,000,000. Now...I've met a few Lefties who aren't fans of illegal immigration, and actively campaign against it. However, I've met many Lefties who think I'm a racist simply because I want immigrants to follow the law.

The bottom line - Lefties are easily swayed, and they feel completely justified in their positions, even when those positions fly in the face of fact and/or common sense. This is the effect of a hook, line and sinker buy in of the ideology of the left.

To date, we already know they feel completely justified in treasonous activities, such as funding and giving technology to enemies of the US, aiding and abetting terrorists in the name of racial equality, destruction of the family in the name of gender equality, using the media to influence our youth in any way they feel is correct, using the media to pummel any opposition to their positions - any critique of a Left FOP or concept (entitlements as rights, illegal immigration, social engineering via the courts and system of laws, to name a few) - regardless of the truth of the critique. They will simply tolerate no critisism.

What else would they do if they had the power? Would I be in trouble for writing this blog?

The problem is, the only difference I see between today's radical left and the Soviet powerstructure of the early 1900's is one of degrees. Today's left does not control the government, but it has plainly stated that we haven't seen anything yet in terms of doing whatever it takes to gain that control.

Look at Hillary Clinton trying to remake her image. After years of being a lunatic on many issues and basically promolgating outright socialism, she's recently tried to appear more in the center. And we're expected to forget what she's done in the past? Are we as a people really that shallow? Does the leadership of the Left really think that, and if so, why? Hillary is simply trying to deceive everyone into thinking she's a moderate, when we know the opposite is true.

If they're willing to sink to any depth to gain power, to what depths will they sink to once they get it?

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn survived imprisonment and torture by a government who knew few limits. He explicitly warns of of ideologies that justify what would otherwise be un-justifiable by rational people.

Frankly, I'm worried about what's to come. The left will get more radical, and in response the right will become more radical. At some point will we have either a Stalin or a Hitler (and come to think of it, what's the difference)? Hopefully I won't be around to find out.

Real Life Caught Up Fast

My original intent with this blog was to write fairly regularly..I certainly have plenty on my mind to write. Well, real life has caught up.

Out of 3 people in my group at work, 2 are out until August, and I'm covering for them.

Friday, May 06, 2005

One Of Ford's Creations: Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund

MALDEF's website: http://www.maldef.org

From DiscoverTheNetworks:

  • The most influential Hispanic advocacy group in the United States
  • A creation of the Ford Foundation, from which is has received more than $25 million
  • Advocates open borders, free college tuition for illegal immigrants, lowered educational standards to accommodate Hispanics, and voting rights for criminals
  • Named as a key member of the Open Borders Lobby in the pamphlet The Open Borders Lobby and the Nation's Security After 9/11, written by William Hawkins and Erin Anderson
  • "California is going to be a Hispanic state, and anyone who doesn't like it should leave. They should go back to Europe" -- Co-founder Mario Obledo He really did say this
  • MALDEF opposes the Real ID act, which will require individuals to prove citizenship before obtaining a drivers license, as stated on their website [this bullet added by blog author]

The Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund (MALDEF) is the most influential Hispanic advocacy group in the United States. Founded in 1968 with a $2.2 million "seed grant" from the Ford Foundation, MALDEF remains, to this day, Ford's largest Hispanic policy recipient. Because it is not a membership organization, MALDEF does not depend upon private contributions from constituents of the communities it claims to represent. Composed of a 35-member board of directors and a staff of 75 employees (including 22 attorneys), it receives most of its funding from a few corporations and large foundations - most notably the Ford Foundation, which, for more than three decades, has been America's leading benefactor to organizations promoting unrestricted immigration. By the turn of the twenty-first century, Ford had given more than $25 million to MALDEF over the years. Just between 1996 and 1998, MALDEF received more than $9 million in combined grants from the Ford Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the Carnegie Corporation. It has also received generous funding from the
Ahmanson Foundation; the AT&T Foundation; the Joyce Foundation; the John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation; the Open Society Institute; the David and Lucile Packard Foundation; and the Verizon Foundation.

From its inception, MALDEF's avowed purpose was "to assist Hispanics (legal or otherwise) in using legal means to secure their rights"; "to foster sound public policies, laws and programs to safeguard the civil rights of . . . Latinos living in the United States, and to empower the Latino community to fully participate in our society." But in 1998, MALDEF co-founder Mario Obledo bluntly articulated a much more radical agenda: "California is going to be a Hispanic state, and anyone who doesn't like it should leave. They should go back to Europe."

MALDEF is the ideological kindred spirit of the National Lawyers Guild, promoting free college tuition for illegal immigrants, lowered educational standards to accommodate Hispanics, and the right of criminals to vote in American elections. Advocating open borders, MALDEF's position is that all aliens, legal and illegal, should be entitled to all the rights and privileges afforded to U.S. citizens. Trumpeting the value of immigrants who currently reside in the U.S. in violation of immigration law, MALDEF states that America's "failed immigration policy . . . has resulted in a complete lack of legal recognition of millions of immigrants who are the backbone of the U.S. economy." "[E]veryone is aware," declares MALDEF, "that there are over 4 million undocumented Mexicans living and working here in the U.S., providing our services, construction, agricultural and other industries with essential labor, by doing the jobs that U.S. citizens and residents do not want." MALDEF has exhorted Congress "to consider legalization of the 8-9 million undocumented persons living and working here in the U.S."

In October 1994, the U.S. initiated Operation Gatekeeper, a program intended to restore some integrity to a portion of the California-Mexico border, across which countless thousands of illegal aliens streamed each year. Condemning this program for callously "diverting" illegal border-crossers "from California to the harsh and dangerous Arizona desert," MALDEF charged that Americans opposing unrestricted immigration were motivated largely by "racism and xenophobia."

MALDEF opposes English-only laws, and has taken a stand against allowing state and local police to enforce immigration laws - on the grounds that "it's very, very bad for public safety" because "if immigrants are afraid that they may get deported, they don't report crimes."

M
ALDEF endorsed the 2002 Market Workers Justice Campaign of the activist coalition Communities in Solidarity with Immigrant Workers. This campaign called for increased wages and benefits for Korean and Latino immigrant workers, including those living illegally in the United States.

MALDEF was a signatory - along with more than 120 other leftwing organizations - to a 2000 campaign to increase the minimum wage. MALDEF also co-signed a March 17, 2003 letter exhorting members of the U.S. Congress "to oppose the Domestic Security Enhancement Act" (a.k.a. Patriot Act II), which was then under consideration. These signatories stated that the new legislation "fail[ed] to respect our time-honored liberties," and "contain[ed] a multitude of new and sweeping law enforcement and intelligence gathering powers . . . that would severely dilute, if not undermine, many basic constitutional rights." In addition, MALDEF has given its organizational endorsement to the Community Resolution to Protect Civil Liberties campaign, a project of the California-based Coalition for Civil Liberties (CCL). The CLL tries to influence city councils to pass resolutions creating Civil Liberties Safe Zones; that is, to be non-compliant with the provisions of the Patriot Act.

Moreover, MALDEF
endorsed the Civil Liberties Restoration Act (CLRA) of 2004, which was introduced by Democratic Senators Ted Kennedy, Patrick Leahy, Russell Feingold, Richard Durbin, and Jon Corzine, and Democratic Representatives Howard Berman and William Delahunt. The CLRA was designed to roll back, in the name of protecting civil liberties, vital national-security policies that had been adopted after the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

Thursday, May 05, 2005

The Ford Foundation: You'd Think They Were On Our Side.

Nothing defines a country like its borders. When those bordetrs become ignored and amorphous, what is, or is not, the country becomes undefined. Who are people of that country and what do they stand for? This all starts to go away when you have undefined borders.

This is the situation we face in the US today. The left wing proclaims that everyone deserves a chance to get ahead, and so borders are a violation of some "right" (read: entitlement), while the right wants a source of inexpensive labor. The only people who think open borders and illegal immigration are wrong are the ordinary US citizens, who have been sold down the river by theire representatives.

There are hundreds of groups involved in the open borders movement, and they've been damaging our ability to protect our borders since before 9/11, and to them 9/11 is no reason to slow down.

The main underwriter of the open borders movement is the Ford Foundation. At $11B strong, the Ford Foundation took the Mexican Americal Legal Defense Fund, poured $30M into it, moved offices to Washington DC, overhauled its political agenda, and turned it into one of the most radical opponents to any sort of rational border control and sane immigration policy.

Prior to Ford's influence on the open borders movement, the most prominent Hispanic organization was the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), who supported English as the common national language and assimilation as a US citizen was the goal. Membership in LULAC was limited to American Citizens, and it's code stated "Respect your citizenship; honor your country, maintain its traditions in the minds of your children; incorporated yourself in the culture and civilization."

Today, as a result in part of the huge financial investment Ford has made in the immigration lobby, no major Hispanic civil rights organization subscribes to these views. In fact, we see that the opposite is true. These groups now stand for resistance to gaining citizenship; disregard for the laws of the US; maintenance of the traditions of Mexico, and teaching their kids that these are acceptable. They expect the US culture and civilization to accomodate them, instead of the other way around.

No other country in the world has as lax border control as the US. The European countries that consider us barbarians for our quasi-conservative views also have very strict border policy. If you're in their country illegally, you get arrested and deported.

The Ford foundation has integrated with more extreme elements of the left, including members of the Communist Party. One of that groups most notable mouthpieces in the US is the National Lawyers Guild, a face in radical left wing ideology that strongly advocates for open borders, and other policies that attempt to remove any trace of what it means to be a country or a cogent American People. One of their most prominent members attorney Lynne Stewart, is under federal indictment for aiding and abetting the terrorist activities of Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman, the leader of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing attempt.

The Ford Foundations stated mission:

The Ford Foundation is a resource for innovative people and institutions worldwide. Our goals are to:

  • Strengthen democratic values,
  • Reduce poverty and injustice,
  • Promote international cooperation and
  • Advance human achievement
has little to do with anything they state, and in fact, it's arguable that they put their money into causes which are in direct opposition to their stated mission. Promotion of disregard of the law, setting aside of the will of the People are antithetical to the goals that Ford espouses to promote.

Henry and Edsel Ford would roll over in their graves if they knew what their foundation was up to.

Tuesday, May 03, 2005

Taxing Success

Why not raise taxes on the rich, they can afford it, after all. This is a sentiment I typically hear when I discuss making the payment of income tax equal for all on a percentage basis. Why should someone making $320,000 per year (Person R) pay 35% income tax while someone making $35,000 (Person N) pays 16%? The $320K/year person pays $112000 while the $35K/year person pays $5494.

Is simply saying Person R "can afford it" enough justification to make that person pay? If so, why? You don't think Person R would do something with their money that might otherwise be more useful to society than giving it to the government (by which I mean the Federal Government)? Person R wants to make more money, so he/she will invest it in some way which will in turn create jobs and/or opportunity for others, whether Person R starts a business, invests in stocks or commodities, or purchases real estate. Person R wants to grow the pie. Admittedly, it is his/her own desire for more that's fueling the investment, but, without such investment society suffers.

What does the government do with tax income? It engages in some useful activities, but ffor the most part is consumed by beauracracy and giving money to programs that few agree with, and are not condoned by the Constitution as an activity in which the government should be invovled.

Is it Person R's moral obligation to pay more to society? Arguably, Person R uses very few resources (police, entitlements, social services, medical) that he/she doesn't pay for out of his/her own pocket. Person R pays for everything with regards to investing activities, and indeed pays tax multiple times on the same money.

To say Person R is somehow more obligated than Person N to society is simply a statement reflecting the politics of envy and social relativism. In this regard, the income tax is the codification of morality. You make more therefore you must give more.

All of this amounts to a drag on success. Most of today's "rich" are self made in one form or another, whether it's through getting an education and advancing at work, building a business, or creating technology. Once these people become successful, instead of rewarding them, they're told "we're happy you've done something well, now give us more, you owe it to us."

Huh? The "rich" pay 95% of all income taxes, and don't use most of the governmental programs they pay for via taxes. Someday we'll learn. Europe is starting to learn, but we're not nearly as deep in the hole as they are. Someday, Atlas will shrug, and we'll all wonder where the drive to create, innovate and shine went, just like the Europeans.

Sunday, May 01, 2005

Why Did Clinton Really Win Those Elections?

Yes...Clinton did indeed win two elections. But unlike recent Democrat candidates he was smart enough to have an opposition candidate that could siphon off votes from his Republican rival, in the form of H. Ross Perot. Were it not for Perot, Bill Clinton may not have been elected in 1992, and would have had a far more difficult time in 1996.

The demographic that voted for Perot were middle class moderates that tended to vote Repuclican, and they voted for him in droves in 1992, outpacing votes for Clinton and Bush in the same demographics. In 1992, Perot received 18.9% of the total vote.

At the end of the 1992 election, Clinton received 43.0%, Bush Sr. 37.4%, and Perot 18.9%. Had Perot not even ran, I think that Clinton might have lost to Bush Sr.

(web research) ... (/web research)

I did some research into this, using data from the sites I put in above. I can't conclusively state that Clinton would have lost. I think the election would have been one of those nail biters similar to 2000 and 2004.

Here are my notes:

(notes)

Clinton Pop. Vote: 44,909,326 (43.0%)

Bush Pop. Vote: 39,103,882 (37.4%)

Delta: 5805444

Perot Pop. Vote: 19,741,657 (18.9%)

Total Popular Vote: 103754865

Perot Breakdown:
Liberal 3948331
Conservative 5330247
Moderate 10463078
Breaking down Perot moderates along "all voter" lines:
20% of moderates are liberal: 2092617
30% of moderates are conservative: 3138923

Perot liberals and conservatives given to Clinton and Bush (P1):
Extracting only liberal and conservatives who voted for Perot, and giving them to the liberal and conservative candidate:

P1 Clinton 48857657
P1 Bush 44434129

P1 Delta 4423528

Perot moderates given to Clinton and Bush, breaking them along US wide political demographics (P2):

Extracting moderate voters who voted for Perot, breaking them politically along the same lines as the public at large in 1992 - 20% liberal, 30% conservative:

20% of moderates are liberal: 2092617
30% of moderates are conservative: 3138923

P2 Clinton 47001943
P2 Bush 42242805
P2 Delta 4759138

Breaking all Perot voters between Clinton and Bush (P3):

P3 Clinton 50950274 49% pop vote
P3 Bush 47573052 46% pop vote
P3 Delta 3377222

Of those who voted for Perot:
20% voted liberal
27% voted conservative
53% voted moderate

of all voters (in 1992):
20% are liberal
49% are moderate
30% are conservative

(/notes)

Key: A closer look needs to be taken at the demographics of moderates in 1992 and 1996. Is there data, that, if push comes to shove, show what % would vote liberal, what % would vote conservative?

[Aside: based upon previous posts, modern liberals aren't Liberal, modern conservatives aren't Conservative]

In a few cases, I think there are states that tipped for Clinton that otherwise could have gone to Bush or Dole, but for the influence of Perot. Could this have changed the outcome of either election? At this point I'm not so sure it would have.