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This is Topic: Opinions and Editorials
Following are the News Items published under this Topic.


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Mr.Miller Responds.
Posted by Renfield on Wednesday, September 15, 2004 - 10:50 AM 7442 Reads
Opinions and Editorials OpinionJournal.com ran a September 13th editorial by Mr. Zell Miller. Mr. Miller addresses his critics who were unimpressed by his speech at the Republican National Convention.

BY ZELL MILLER Monday, September 13, 2004 12:01 a.m. EDT

My critics in the national media are working overtime trying to paint me as an angry nut who got the facts all wrong in my speech to the Republican National Convention. Since there's not enough time to challenge all of these critics to a duel, let me set the record straight here and now.

First, the anger. A lot has been said about my angry demeanor. I've made enough speeches to know that you're supposed to connect with the audience by telling a joke or a humorous anecdote or some amusing tale. It's a tried-and-true formula that I've used for most of my life. But this was not a normal speech in a normal time.





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Farewell, Mr. Reagan
Posted by Renfield on Monday, June 07, 2004 - 05:34 PM 7710 Reads
Opinions and Editorials Dear friends,

On this day, we said good-bye to one of our greatest Presidents. I admit I'm a bit younger than most of you, so my recollection of him in office is limited to smaller things like jellybeans, his forcefulness in response to foreign threats, and his warmth to whomever he was speaking. I also remember September 1985, when I was fortunate enough to hold hands with his wife Nancy as we marched the old Capitol grounds, I wearing my green "Just Say No" t-shirt for the occasion.

As I try and put the passing of Mr. Reagan (the second President serving in my lifetime that I was aware of in any real sense, and the first one I knew enough about to know I liked him) into perspective, I find myself reading over his old speeches.

I can find none that resonate with me more than the speech he gave on California and the Problem of Government Growth, delivered on January 5, 1967.

" To a number of us, this is a first and hence a solemn and momentous occasion, and yet, on the broad page of state and national history, what is taking place here is almost commonplace routine. We are participating in the orderly transfer of administrative authority by direction of the people. And this is the simple magic which makes a commonplace routine a near miracle to many of the world's inhabitants: the continuing fact that the people, by democratic process, can delegate this power, yet retain custody of it.

---- READ ON ----



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Opinions on the French Ban of Religious Symbols
Posted by Renfield on Wednesday, February 18, 2004 - 02:49 PM 10329 Reads
Opinions and Editorials I was recently asked
I'm sure your(sic) aware of the proposed ban on all religious symbols in France. I'm genuinely interested in your opinion on it.

But first, some background on the topic:

On 11 December, a Commission to reflect the application of the principle of laicité appointed by President Jacques Chirac, published its conclusions on secularism in France. The commission recommended, among others, to draft a law on laicism and to include in it a provision stating "clothing and signs manifesting some religious or political adhesion are forbidden in schools. Forbidden religious clothing and signs are conspicuous signs such as big crosses, veils or skullcaps." Medals, small crosses, David's star, Fatimah's hands or small Korans are not considered signs manifesting religious affiliation. President Chirac endorsed the proposals of the commission in his speech of 17 December.

The recommendation of the commission to ban headscarves and other religious symbols from schools triggered prompt opposition from three French Christian Churches -- the Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox Churches -- as well as from the Muslim and Jewish communities. Strict separation of the state and religions has been pronounced state policy in France since 1905.

Read more for my opinion on the matter!



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How do you try Saddam Hussein?
Posted by Renfield on Wednesday, December 17, 2003 - 02:46 PM 6469 Reads
Opinions and Editorials Now that the US has captured and secured former President of Iraq Saddam Hussein, the question remains, how to try him for his crimes.

Many proposals have been put forth by opinionated folks: let the US try him, let the Iraqi Governing Council try him, let the Hague or ICC try him, or simply lock him up with Noriega. More than a few people have simply suggested killing him.

But that last one won't happen- it's not how people of honor act, and despite what some folks will suggest, America will act with honor in this.

So, the opinion I want to put forth is one that hasn't gotten a lot of publicity to date: it is, follow the historical examples.

In this case, there are two such examples. One, Nuremburg. The other? Eichmann, 1961.

Nuremburg:

Nuremburg Case Law for how the trial was conducted.Courtesy of CourtTV.

Eichmann:

Notes on the Eichmann charges, and composition of the Judges, Prosecution, and Defense. Courtesy of PBS.



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Coders as Artists
Posted by Renfield on Thursday, October 30, 2003 - 01:56 PM 6353 Reads
Opinions and Editorials There are a few characteristics of management that came out of the dot-com bubble. They have their value, but they also can be the downfall of any organization larger than one person. They are:

  1. Avoidance of hierarchy.
  2. Avoidance of design documents.
  3. Having input on many topics, while neglecting the main responsibility.
  4. Read on to see what I say about these and where the downfall lays.



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Ashcroft wants to extend the powers of PATRIOT
Posted by Renfield on Friday, June 06, 2003 - 03:01 PM 6257 Reads
Opinions and Editorials Mr. Ashcroft is beginning to rumble about a new bill that will grant him even more powers than PATRIOT. This is not a surprise, despite his overwhelming success at gathering support for the original bill.

A friend of mine had this to say:
Mark my words, though, this is the second prong of the three pronged initiative:

prong one: control all three branches of the government

prong two: quell with extreme prejudice the rights of citizens to protest by removing their access to due process, paving the road for political prisoners, like there used to be in South Africa. Sure, now its "suspected" terrorists, but how long until its anyone who disagrees with the administration? without access to legal counsel, the outside world and being held indefinitely and executed without trial, the US will have the ability to "disappear" citizens who are vocally antiadministration, and there won't be any way to prevent it since it will all be done in secret, with no protections.

prong three: rubber stamp the middle east, and then the world, in the US image. with prongs one and two in place, prong three will proceed without interference.

I know I'm extrapolating a bit, but you have to admit, everything is heading in this direction.


My response is thus:

slow down, cowboy.

Let's not make up conspiracy theories.

Let's go on what we've seen, what we think it violates, and what we want reversed.

We've seen that lawyer-client communications, once thought inviolable, is now monitored by the Feds.

We've seen that citizens in America, in non-military situations, have been labelled enemy combatants and stripped of their rights.

We've seen that our Government would prefer to lock people up indefinitely rather than adjudicate innocence or guilt, in a country where the very foundation of our system is that everyone is innocent until proven guilty.

We've seen that in a country where we would rather let a guilty man go free than imprison an innocent, our Government has given in to fear, and would rather lock up anyone that scares them.

Certainly, on this last point, there are plenty of people, citizens and government alike, that will say,

"But we have to, to avoid another catastrophe!" - The truth is, no we don't. We have to accept that another incident can happen, and that we value freedom and justice more. That one person wrongly detained for longer than 48 hours, and one innocent person imprisoned while guilty people go free, is so repugnant to us, that the current law cannot stand.

For either the law falls, or American justice and Freedom fall. Take your pick, there is no in-between, no balance- Freedom and justice are what make American ideals worth having.

Patrick Henry heard the chains of tyranny rattling- do you?

Mike Hawash does- ( http://freemikehawash.org ) Mike is an Intel employee, who is charged with the Federal Crime of Guilt By Association. Mike's lucky- he at least has been charged. I began this post by asking Lerk to slow down, and back away from the conspiracy theories. I realize that someone else may well ask me to do the same- but I'm going on what we've seen and can document within our country, and not predicting the future.

Let's undo the damage we've seen done before we go off half-cocked on future assaults on the Freedom that makes America great.



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Ashcroft believes he is defending civil liberties - wha?
Posted by Renfield on Friday, March 07, 2003 - 10:54 AM 6241 Reads
Opinions and Editorials In this Washington Times story, Mr. Ashcroft believes that he is defending civil liberties through his actions towards greater security.


I respectfully hold a different perspective on results that his actions have borne out, and the direction I perceive he's headed in.


Freedom, Liberty, the reason that being an American is such a wondrous thing, cannot be preserved by depriving the American people of it.

Now, I concede that public assembly and protest has taken place in recent months, and whether or not I agree with those protests, I agree with their right to hold them- and they haven't been deprived of that right to assemble and speak. Good.

I do have a bone to pick with citizens held incommunicado without legal counsel, or with legal counsel in the absence of priveliged communications. Spying on a citizen and his lawyer is wrong.

Abuse of wiretap law is wrong. And it has happened.

Two federal judges have dealt a potentially crippling blow to a nationwide Internet child pornography crackdown, saying the FBI recklessly misled judges to get search warrants that were used in making more than 100 arrests.

Constitutional safeguards cannot be relaxed just because "the crimes are repugnant," said U.S. District Judge Denny Chin in New York as he dismissed evidence obtained against one defendant.



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Are Politicians Doomed to Repeat History?
Posted by matt7267 on Friday, March 08, 2002 - 10:58 AM 1488 Reads
Opinions and Editorials Are Politicians Doomed to Repeat History?

A recent report on CNN stated that, in the last century, over 170 million people worldwide were killed by their own government. And liberal politicians want to take the citizens’ guns away?

Political power, as Mao said, comes from the end of a gun.




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Bush Misses the Mark in State of the Union Address
Posted by matt7267 on Friday, March 08, 2002 - 10:11 AM 4860 Reads
Opinions and Editorials Just as I was beginning to be thankful that I voted for George Bush in 2000, thereby ending the Clinton regime, the president decided to use his State of the Union address to add 39 new government (read taxpayer funded) programs to this year’s federal budget. This illustrates perfectly the Libertarians’ notion that the two parties in Washington are really one party, the party of big government.



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Other Stories

· So if it isn't desperation, what is it? (Sep 19, 2004)
· Dispensing with the "root cause, desperation" (Sep 19, 2004)
· Mr.Miller Responds. (Sep 15, 2004)
· Whither the Moderate Muslim? (Sep 08, 2004)
· RNC speeches online (Sep 08, 2004)
· Farewell, Mr. Reagan (Jun 07, 2004)
· Opinions on the French Ban of Religious Symbols (Feb 18, 2004)
· EU funding terror in a proxy war against the US? (Dec 26, 2003)
· Rules of Statesmanship and Warfare (Dec 17, 2003)
· Hussein, Al-Qaeda, and Palestinian Terror (Dec 17, 2003)

Poll

What one issue concerns you most?

· Education
· Rezoning / Assimilation into City Limits
· Government Spending
· Environment
· Healthcare
· Financial Security
· Other (please comment below)

[ Results | Polls ]


Votes: 71
Comments: 196


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Past Articles

Wednesday, December 17
·How do you try Saddam Hussein? (28)
Thursday, October 30
·Coders as Artists (26)
Saturday, June 14
·Alaska Passes Anti-Patriot Act Resolution; Second State to Oppose Feds (46)
·RLC-NC Has Success at State GOP Convention (35)
·Alarmed Republicans, Conservatives Swell ACLU Ranks (44)
Friday, June 06
·Ashcroft wants to extend the powers of PATRIOT (35)
Thursday, June 05
·US out of U.N. - for gun rights! - Ron Paul protects Liberty again (28)
Friday, March 07
·Ashcroft believes he is defending civil liberties - wha? (22)
·What the Internet Really Is. (478)
Wednesday, February 19
·DOT wants to commit surveillance and be exempt from Privacy Act (27)
 Older Articles

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· All Topics (Jun 14, 2003)
· campaign (Aug 05, 2002)
· economics (Jul 04, 2002)
· freespeech (Mar 07, 2003)
· libertyboard (Jun 10, 2002)
· news (Jun 14, 2003)
· op-ed (Sep 15, 2004)
· privacy (Feb 19, 2003)
· war (Sep 19, 2004)
· warondrugs (Aug 03, 2002)
· worldevents (Sep 08, 2004)


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