Thursday, February 18, 2010

First Meeting of the Young Patriots of Gilmer County

My speech to about one hundred patriotic TEA Partiers in Ellijay's 1st Baptist Fellowship Hall:


I'm here because I think there is a huge question facing all of us right now, and especially young people: who do we want to depend on? Do we want to look to a large federal government for sustenance and ideology, or do we want to bring decisions back to the state and local level, which is where individuals can collaborate with their neighbors? It is important to remember that along with federal programs designed to "fix" financial problems and "help out" those struggling in this economy come federal regulations and ideology that are tied to the funding,

Why are we so willing to be dependent? I am 24. My generation, and especially those just younger than me, have never known life without video games, internet, cell phones, and other forms of instant gratification. Rapid advances in technology affect our daily life from commerce to entertainment, and the pace of life has just changed. I see my peers ...and myself... more absorbed in text messages containing small talk than in any other single activity. We can't help but talk about our phones and gadgets, fashion, cars, tanning beds, friends' love lives, and other fleeting distractions.

Rather than contemplating the inherent immorality of the redistribution of wealth via our tax system , many just feel grateful for and expectant of their instant tax refunds and tax credits for their new babies. How nice is that the IRS let them have their money back! And what a healthy result...I even recently had a coworker ask if I wanted to have a baby for the tax credit.

Many young people expect the world to be handed to them, like their parents have handed them everything. I'm not completely blaming parents' choices on this matter...parents have historically wanted to do the most they could for their children, and it is only recently that luxury debt spending has allowed them to do so at such a grotesque level. I'm the only one of my friends who paid my own car insurance through high school. Most of my peers had their Spring Breaks, trips to the tanning salon, manicures, cars, prom, everything, paid for.

And after working in a suburban day care center for three years, I came to understand even more the liberal, anything goes parenting that is raising a generation of takers. That horrid term is from recent article by John Stossel (1) that asks if we want "a culture of takers or makers?" He fears that we want a Mommy State to take of us, and draws a picture of our society in light of Hayek's 1944 bestselling book The Road to Serfdom, which says that governments can't plan economies without planning people's lives. He says "If government relieves us of the responsibility of living by bailing us out, character will atrophy. The welfare state, however good its intentions of creating material equality, can't help but make us dependent."

If this generation understood what their willingness to accept dependency meant, I think they would be entirely against it. And hopefully, we as Young Patriots can show this to our peers. Because with financial dependency comes ideological dependency. We are a generation of free thinkers who cherish individuality and our ability to express ourselves through any means that defines the type of culture we subscribe to. We want to choose our clothing, music, art, diet, job choice, or lack thereof, and level of education. I don't think we realize how bound we will eventually be to a centrally-determined level of acceptibility for these forms of expression, if we accept financial dependency.

I have been privileged with a unique perspective on my generation, because I always ride the cultural fence. I am a musician, artist, and environmentalist with conservative and libertarian ideas. So my friends in the world of music, and especially my progressive friends during my three years at Stanford University, have been at times literally outraged with my political views. "How can I be so cold-hearted?" is the general question...or "How could you not support the poor disadvantaged...fill in race or class here...But I'm not cold hearted, and neither are fiscal conservatives at large...in fact I'm sure that we all agree the world could be a much better place if more of us independently and voluntarily went out to help our communities.

My response to my caring young peers is "why should compassion be legislated?" and even better "has legislating compassion ever worked?" If there is one form of outreach that I could envision for the Young Patriots of Gilmer County, it is to show young people that we can have a better world for everyone without the help of an alienated, controlling federal government.

We have been taught in school to be respectful of our self-esteem and others' feelings, and never to offend either. In elementary school, our guidance counselor had a puppet, Harmony the Beaver, who talked to us about self-esteem and its importance above all else. At the level of higher education, this mindset breeds censorship regardless of politics. Administrations want students to live in a pain-free world, where anything embarrassing,offensive, teasing, or mocking is silenced. The February issue of Reason magazine has a great article by Greg Lukianoff (2) about college censorship. He says free speech codes "systematically miseducate kids to believe that free speech goes only as far as the most sensitive person in the room can handle." He lists multiple examples of existent speech codes in colleges and university and residential programs meant to foster "sensitivity," despite the fact that since 2003, the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education has presented 13 legal challenges against college speech codes and all 13 were deemed unconstitutional.

And this illusion of our pain-free, non-offensive world is a brilliant pre-cursor to the government control that we see growing in our lives. The word "narrative" is one which I expected to fill our texts and assignments in literature and history classes at Stanford, where cultural acceptance or worship is forced. But the current administration, with the help of the instant internet, has brought narratives to the forefront of the political world, as if we are all in one big reality TV show. Obama encourages citizens to go on the White House website and tell their personal health care stories to influence Congress. Matt Welch of Reason magazine calls this "governing by anecdote rather than philosophy." In a March article (3), he says "Individual stories create emotional connections that move people in a place where traditional political chatter does not...and the anecdotal approach also allows politicians to pretend that their aims, in contrast to those of their opponents, are based on pure sweet empathy rather than cold, unfeeling ideology."

Anyway, that's enough about the psychology of today's youth, and how we have been won over by the Mommy State. I think we all agree that it's time to keep our emotions in our hearts and personal lives where they belong, and to restore logic and morality to our laws. As Young Patriots of Gilmer County, I am confident that we will be a dynamic part of the change that needs to happen this year on a local level. On a practical level, we will help local candidates who share our patriotic views. And on a broader level, my hope is that we can help teach other young people to be creative, free-thinking makers, instead of settling for being the dependent takers they're expected to be.

(1) Stossel, John. JFS Productions, Inc. Reason via creators.com, February 2010: http://reason.com/archives/2010/02/11/hurtling-down-the-road-to-serf
(2)Lukianoff, Greg. "P.C. Never Died." Reason, January 2010: http://reason.com/archives/2010/01/11/pc-never-died
(3)Welch, Matt. "Inside Obama's Hologram." Reason, March 2010: http://reason.com/archives/2010/02/10/inside-obamas-hologram

Sunday, February 14, 2010

$100,000 in passport fees stolen in Dawson County, GA

via AJC

My mom believes that these women who were caught stealing in Dawson County very well may have been the same women who collected my payment for fines involved with non-moving, paperwork related violations about a year ago. As I paid the $660 fee to reinstate my license, she made sure they knew she'd never spend money in Dawson County again.

Another gem of a government employee is Jenny Belafi, who arrested me that horrible evening for said paperwork violations. She's a real go-getter, as evidenced by her essay, "An Intern's Experience."

"I could not get enough inmates brought to the jail to keep me happy, I kept telling the deputies that stopped by to go arrest some people so that I could practice booking them in."

Wow.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

On being thankful for the revival of my freedom loving side.

I have recently become re-involved in our country's future, after yet another brief stint of working 80 hour weeks only to find that the fruits of my labor - my fiat currency - continues to be slowly stolen in various manners by devices of power hungry maniacs as they manipulate the dumb masses into being taken care of.

My frustration led me to befriend local TEA Party organizers while serving them Italian food less than a month ago. After we had met for lunch and shared passionate and similar ideas, Joyce Barrett of the TEA Party of Gilmer County asked me to help rouse more support among young people in North Georgia to speak out against the federal government's overhaul of our futures.

Our solution was to bring together the Young Patriots of Gilmer County with the help of the TEA Party. The first meeting will be held after the monthly meeting of the TEA Party of Gilmer county: Tuesday, Feb. 16th from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. in Ellijay's First Baptist Church Fellowship Hall (Ellijay, GA) Local journalist Whitney Crouch of the Ellijay Times-Courier published an article about our meeting, and I've done everything else I can to get the word out. So we're very excited, and hope that you join us!

So on to the thanks: Thank you to the local TEA Party supporters who have led me back into activism.

And through them, I learned of a gentleman who has become a special inspiration to many people across the country: Matthew Perdie of perdiefilms, who is currently in Texas on a walk from New York to California to protest massive federal government spending. Check out this particularly eloquent explanation from his pilot episode of the youtube movies of his trip:


"If our country adopts a large socialistic government, we are looking at the destruction of capitalism in the very country that created it. If we can't uphold the freedom-based economic system that our country invented, why would we expect other countries to? We might be dealing with a global collapse of capitalism. I can't let that happen. As long as there is something I can do, I won't stop."

In an episode about Charleston, S.C., I found inspiration in the words of a young fellow in the Service. He tells his version of "Scotland's Economic History" to Matthew in the street.


At one point in time one out of every three ships in the world on the seas was built in Glasgow shipyard. So it was all based on maritime...industry, and it was the most productive maritime city on the face of the planet. It was the second city of the empire, effectively.

After WWII and the government began socializing the industry, basically all of that kind of went down the drain. The government couldn't run the industry as well as the...private sector had. And they began having to provide more and more services as a result of having nationalized the industry. And soon all the industry just shut down completely because it was redundant. There was no need for it. Everything that they were doing was obsolete, so...

Right now you've got about four or five generations that were raised on social welfare, and as a result the lifestyle of those people and their general wellbeing is abyssmal. The average life expentancy in the slums of Glasgow for males in some places is 56 years old, which is worse than the bad parts of Baghdad. It's lower than most third world countries.

And the chance of you getting out of that poverty and actually succeeding is so much harder, because Socialism basically traps them in to this cycle of...get your welfare check, get your rent paid for, get your food stamps, and then what do they do with their money? They either take it out and use it to buy drugs, alcohol, tobacco, or they spend it on things that they don't need because that's kind of what the media tells them they need. so it...kind of turns everybody there into robots, in a sense. And there is no good that has come of it, as far as I can see. The worst thing that Scotland's done to itself is socialized.


Sound familiar? More proof to me that educated youth lurks everywhere. And there are all different kinds of expertise.

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