Bunker Mulligan "Let us endeavor so to live that when we come to die even the undertaker will be sorry." ~Mark Twain

December 14, 2004

Homespun Symposium V

Filed under: Society-Culture — Bunker @ 11:41 am

Racial reconciliation will only be complete when Jesse Jackson and his ilk are gone from the national scene.

In the 1960s, there were many people, a majority, who wanted an end to the Jim Crow environment kept alive in such Democratic strongholds as the Deep South and the industrialized cities in the north–Boston, Chicago, Detroit. Look at old films of Dr. King’s marches and rallies and within the sea of dark faces you will see many white ones. I was too young to get involved in such things myself. And, to be honest, there was never anything like that in my neighborhood anyway. Relationships between whites and blacks in most places were probably better then than they are now.

Martin’s death–murder–was a shock. It affected me even more than the murder of either of the Kennedy boys. I couldn’t grasp how anyone could be filled with that kind of hatred.

In King’s place, we saw the rise of people without his vision, and it is a loss we still feel today. Those new “leaders” had a different agenda, and it had little to do with equality.

But who are their followers? Those are the ones restricting any kind of reconciliation. Those who believe the doom and gloom, those who see racism at every turn. Even when it isn’t there. I sincerely know nobody who is a racist. There may be someone who keeps it hidden, or it is simply latent. But nobody I know, of any skin color, views someone of any other skin color as something less.

I know many demanding people. Those who expect a certain standard can be accused of anything convenient if it suits a person found lacking in ability to meet those standards. But that isn’t racism. It involves setting a standard and living up to it—striving to exceed it. Some are simply too lazy. As a boss, I’ve been accused of racism on occasion, but I’ve always had another subordinate who knew me well and was the same race as the accuser. That accusation didn’t last long. So I understand how some feel they can turn their own failings into a perceived failing of someone else.

And that is what needs to change. That is the attitude projected by the Jesse Jacksons of the world. And it is something preached to young people. If you fail, it isn’t your fault. That isn’t simply a race issue. It is a cultural issue telling our kids they should do well, but if they fail it isn’t their fault. Must not make them feel bad about themselves. In the case of race, Jackson and others simply give one group another excuse.

Racism is not a group problem. It, like most other cultural issues, is based in individuals. There will always be individuals with a distorted sense of values. They will be racist. But that does not make the population in general racist. And it is not something that can be legislated. When all people look at others individually rather than as a member of some group, there will be no reconciliation required.

Individuals. Individuals. We are all Individuals! Quit looking at someone else as a member of some group.

December 8, 2004

What do we do now?

Filed under: Society-Culture — Bunker @ 6:04 pm

From the files of the “Be careful what you ask for” department:

On January 1, 2005, gays/lesbians (and many straight unmarried couples) must be married in order to keep their partners’ health benefits.

Several leading employers in Massachusetts are eliminating their benefits packages which had been extended to homosexual couples. Because these benefits weren’t provided to unmarried heterosexual couples living together, they felt it would be discriminatory to continue providing them to unmarried homosexual couples.

There are now, according to FoxNews, several groups arguing that it is unfair because the decision to marry is harder for homosexuals.

December 3, 2004

Fly-over Country

Filed under: Society-Culture — Bunker @ 11:19 am

How could I, a Native Texan, have missed this blog entry? Fortunately, Sarah saw it and now you can, too.

Vinod lives in Frisco–California, not Texas. But he obviously spent some of his youth, at least during high school, in Houston. He has an interesting take on my (our) home state:

I’ve always noted that Texans have a curious mix of intellectualism, anti-intellectualism, classical, and romantic. It’s a state where for every Truck driver who barely speaks English, there’s one who can engage in serious discussion of how rent control has destroyed Yankee cities and why it will never happen in Texas (an actual conversation I’ve had…).

The near absolute faith in individual freedom and personal responsibility produce a healthy skepticism for many intellectual fashions du jour (often portrayed as originating from the badlands of the Northeast or California; or even worse, their intellectual parents in Europe). One would have to imagine that the lifespan of a of an overly loud Chomsky-ite at the Texas A&M campus would be nasty, brutish, and short.

My brilliant son-in-law, Bogey, is an intellectual hairy New-Yorker (at least that’s how I always introduce him). But he is quick to say he got to Texas as fast as he could. I think much of that is with tongue firmly in cheek. They live in Austin and seem to be very happy about their location. He’s also a phenomenal guitarist, and far better on mandolin than I ever could be on guitar after some forty years of trying. He epitomizes exactly what Vinod is talking about. Bogey can play head-banger, Dylan, or bluegrass–your choice. He’s also a techno-geek. And he’s not out of place anywhere in Austin. In fact, the people of Texas are all pretty diverse, and he fits right in.

My favorite Texas-ism — every can of Lone Star beer is brandished with the motto “the National beer of Texas.” I also recall reading that Texas is the most popular place cited in Music (due in no small part to the sheer volume of country music out there).

I prefer Shiner Bock, myself. I’m not much of one for clear beer.

For those of you who think you understand those of us in the Red States, take a look at what Vinod had to say about Texans. I’m sure the folks in the rest of fly-over country feel their homes are similar, and people there have the same kind of diversity and values.

Almost.

November 30, 2004

Homespun Symposium III

Filed under: Government,Society-Culture — Bunker @ 4:12 pm

I see no greater threat to the United States than that which boils within our own border: creative interpretation of our Constitution.

I know most of you have read, many times, about how I fear our Constitution is being made irrelevant by those with an agenda and a sypathetic judiciary. The reason it troubles me so is that our Constitution has stood for longer than any other in history, and has served as the fulcrum for more changes than any other nation has experienced. This country has evolved from an agrarian society with limited manufacturing isolated in a small area to an industrialized economic powerhouse that still holds strong enough agrarian roots that we can feed ourselves easily, with more than enough to take care of dozens of other nations who can’t.

The men who wrote, debated, rewrote, and ratified this document had a wonderful understanding of human weakness, and built into the rules of government the ability to weaken any populist pressure to increase the interference of the government in our personal lives. At the same time, the document told our government, in no uncertain terms, precisely what it was allowed to do, and gave it leeway only in how to accomplish those things. It is that leeway which politicians have used to expand the authority of the federal government, and which judges have turned to advantage. We have reached the point where judges evaluate our Constitution using as example laws in other countries–countries which have never matched the US in any measure.

People speak of a “slippery slope” when discussing pieces of legislation or court rulings. I think the better metaphor is a cookie. Rather than having our society slide from its position to something less agreeable (depending on which group advocates or opposes), our society and government are weakened regardless of direction by the incessant change, even if just small nibbles from the cookie. Nibbles add up. Whether the Left takes a piece from the Right or vice versa, is irrelevant. A piece is missing.

This does not mean change is bad. Change, in my experience, is usually good. But in society, the method of achieving it determines its value more than anything else. Madison and the rest understood that. They made change difficult. They made it difficult so that any change would require a national referendum, not a simple majority. As they understood, and the French Revolution validated, controlled change is the only way to establish and maintain a unified government that serves the citizens rather than controls them. A simple majority, made up of a few vocal advocates and their sometimes bewildered followers, should not set the tone for our government. Momentum can be a very bad thing when a small group on a personal mission builds on success. It can get out of control, and guillotines get erected.

Those who regard the Constitution as a living document are correct–it is. But not in they way they want it to be. Their thought is that it is open to interpretation as befits new circumstances. The Founders saw it as a living document in that it can be changed–and it has been, many times–to better suit the environment of our nation as it grew.

An Amendment requires a two-thirds majority in both houses of Congress to make the grade. Pretty stiff. But once it leaves DC, it needs the support of three-fourths of the state legislatures. That means neither “Jesusland” nor “Coastal Elites” can make policy to suit themselves. The cookie doesn’t crumble with change by Amendment, but is strengthened by the unity required to make it happen.

We must all remember that there are 300 million of us, each with some issue that interests us. When we join a group, whether it be a union, the NRA, or NAMBLA, we add our voice to that group’s agenda, whether we agree with all the issues that group advocates or not. And each issue has the potential to erode individual liberty because for every issue, there are those for and against.

If you happen to be the “against”, your liberty is weakened by frivolous change to satisfy the “for.”

To counter this we must get back to the amendment process for issue of import, and change in the function of government. Although I oppose an amendment to define marriage, it may be good for it to be brought forth for discussion and debate on its merits. As with the Equal Rights Amendment, it may die in statehouses, but cause society to look within and make changes.

And that, my friends, will strengthen, not weaken us.

November 29, 2004

Oops

Filed under: Government,Society-Culture — Bunker @ 11:13 am

Neal Boortz is a supporter of legalizing not only “medical marijuana,” but eliminating the drug laws completely. Today, at a time when the US Supreme Court is hearing arguments for and against, Boortz was in full bloom on the issue–until one caller came along to deflate him completely.

Boortz had listened to several callers tell the tale of how great marijuana was in helping one of their loved ones deal with pain. Everyone was patting themselves on the back for how tolerant they were. Then, one man skillfully walked Boortz along the primrose path. “My concern is where will this end? Is it okay for a minor to use it?” and his questions came on along that vein. Boortz was adamant that the slippery slope the man described would never go so far as he suggested. Then the man asked, “What if my grandmother, dying of cancer, wanted to smoke cigarettes in the hospital because that made her feel better?”

Uh oh…

Boortz: “Uh, well, cigarettes are a health hazard.”

Boortz, the libertarian, would begrudge a dying woman a cigarette, but would be quite pleased if she smoked one made from marijuana.

November 27, 2004

The Failure of Government

Filed under: Government,Society-Culture — Bunker @ 5:27 pm

There are far too many restaurants these days which don’t have enough seating. It pains me and causes me a great deal of mental anguish any time I go out for a meal and must wait until some inconsiderate slob decides he’s through sitting at the table impressing his party with words of wisdom. The time has come for action, but I’m not sure which route to take to eliminate this danger to mental health.

On one hand, it would be a huge improvement if restaurants simply expanded and installed more seating. The other option would be to restrict the time any group would be allowed to occupy a table. I think, perhaps, this second option is easier to implement.

What is a restaurant for, anyway? Their purpose is to serve food to hungry people. Anything other than that is beyond their mandate, and should be severely restricted by law. After all, not only is the mental health of those required to wait at risk, but their physical health as well at places without an indoor waiting area large enough to accomodate the overflow. Most folks don’t carry an umbrella to restaurants.

And people are just too stupid to deal with this on their own. I can’t even guess at the number of folks I see standing outside waiting for a table at restaurants all over town on Friday and Saturday nights. The government must get involved.

This is the attitude of people who want government to ban smoking in places like bars and restaurants. There is a movement here in my city for this very thing, and Lady Debby sees the same thing in Maine.

What right does a government have to interfere with a private business operation? The standard reply is that workers must endure second-hand smoke. So, “workplace safety” trumps all. No discussion allowed on whether those workers have any employment options.

Basically, there are two groups who advocate such restrictions: Those who think all smoking must be banned, and those who don’t want to smell smoke during a meal. The second group want to eat at their favorite places, but won’t use economic clout to change things. If you like a restaurant but they allow smoking, don’t go there. And tell the owner why you will never return. His attitude would soon change when his profits drop.

But, what if nobody else cares? What if I’m the only one to ever complain? And I really like their sushi! There isn’t any better here in town. I’d have to deprive myself of something I really like! Far better to deprive someone else.

I’ve smoked cigars for many years, but I don’t smoke indoors. It’s rude. So is using the government to force someone else to do your bidding.

You have choices. Make them yourself and don’t expect government to make them for you. You might not like the ones they make.

November 26, 2004

Religion of Peace and Tolerance

Filed under: International,Society-Culture — Bunker @ 1:36 pm

Francis has some interesting thoughts on the hostility toward the US:

Islam is a shackler par excellence; always and everywhere, it demands utter and unquestioning submission enforced by the power of the State.

What are we to think when they tell us they simply hate our policies, not our freedoms?

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