Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Balanced Budget Ammendment


The body of today's post was originally posted on www.biggovernment.com.   It makes great sense, and I highly recommend that you read it and take action.  We have probably gone too far to keep from falling over the edge, but a balanced budget is the best place to start getting our finances under control.


This is not Congress's money, it is ours.  We have had to cut back the budgets in our homes, and so now we must cut back the budget in our government.  It is not their money to spend.  It is ours, and we will no longer let the crooks in Washington blow through it like teenagers with Daddy's credit card!




A Balanced Budget Amendment…Before It’s Too Late!

by Timothy Mooney
This week, the US federal debt surpassed the $12 Trillion threshold.
concept of bankruptcy
Congress will vote in December to extend America’s indebtedness above $12,100,000,000,000, necessitated because our national debt grew last year by more than $1,400,000,000,000 and will grow this year by $1,400,000,000,000. According to the Obama White House estimates, the national debt will continue to grow by more than $1 trillion for the next nine years.  Except it won’t…because it can’t. There just isn’t $9 Trillion to borrow.
For years we’ve heard about the immorality of putting this debt on our grandkids. Forget the grandkids, our economy is at grave risk of collapse right now!
The dollar is in free-fall. The Ponzi scheme Congress calls Social Security is about to collapse. Foreigners are beginning to balk at loaning the US government more money. That grave economic turmoil our debt and deficit will cause in the future? It’s here now.
Beyond threatening our economic security, our national debt is imperiling our national independence. We now owe foreign entities $3.448 Trillion – 28.2% more than just 12 months ago!
Three of the five largest holders of US debt should cause you sleepless nights. We owe China the most, $797 billion  — 38.9% more than we did just 12 months ago. We owe Oil Exporting Countries $189.2 billion – 11.5% more than just 12 months ago. And we owe Caribbean Banking Centers (thought to hold billions in narco-terrorist money) $180.2 billion – 35.5% more than just 12 months ago. Japan and the United Kingdom round out the top five foreign debt holders, with our debt to the UK increasing an astonishing 173% in just the last 12 months.
Can we really expect China to increase its lending to the US by nearly 40% next year, and each of the next nine years? Even if it wanted to, the UK doesn’t have the cash to increase its lending to the US by another 173% next year.
Any one of these debt holders could put the US economy in collapse overnight by selling or even just threatening to sell off their US debt holdings.
We owe them…they own us! Clearly, our national independence is in grave risk.
The Federal government also owes Social Security and Medicare $4.5 Trillion. With the economic downturn, Social Security doled out more money than it took from employees’ paychecks for the first time this year. By 2016 – just seven years from now – according to the Social Security Trustees report, Social Security will move from surplus to permanent deficit as the baby boomers retire.
(That “lock-box” presidential candidates like to talk about has never existed. The Social Security ponzi scheme makes Bernie Madoff look like a wayward kid shoplifting a pack of gum.)
If we do not balance the budget by the time Social Security moves to permanent deficit in 2016, we almost assuredly will not without a cataclysmic economic crisis.
What’s the solution? A balanced budget constitutional amendment.
History has shown Congress simply won’t act responsibly unless the voters force them to balance the budget. With great voter pressure, Congress came within 1 Senate vote of passage of the balanced budget amendment in 1996 – and the Congress passed balanced budgets each of the next four years.
When support for the balanced budget amendment waned, Congress spent like crazy.
A balanced budget amendment is the only cure to a Congress unwilling to control spending. In fact, Germany passed the BBA just last year.
That’s why we launch this week DeficitFree.com – a national push for a Balanced Budget Amendment by July 4, 2013, and a balanced Federal budget by July 4, 2016. These would be the two best birthday gifts we could give our country!
Our first and immediate goal is to bring together 5 million Balanced Budget Amendment supporters by July 4, 2010, with a minimum of 5,000 from each Congressional district. You can join the movement atwww.DeficitFree.com. This non-partisan movement is being launched by some of America’s most successful grassroots activists – not Washington DC politicians.
We need 5 million voters to work together to ensure the Balanced Budget Amendment becomes the most prominent issue in the 2010 Congressional races and in the 2012 Presidential contest.
If we don’t, it won’t be our grandkids who will suffer the economic collapse of our country and our loss of national independence.
It will be us!


Bookmark and Share

The Second American Revolution





Bookmark and Share

Monday, November 23, 2009

Why I am a Christian

I posted this on another blog and then decided to post it here.  The whole point of the post is common sense.  If you don't believe in it, fine.  I really don't care.  Common sense dictates that I should NOT care what you do, what you believe, or how you worship (if at all).  I just want to let people know that common sense can lead you to religion, if it is done correctly.


If you are interested in reading more about Common Sense Christianity, check out http://moderatechristianrants.blogspot.com


_________________________________________________________


I am a Christian. If you are, have you ever stopped to wonder WHY you are a Christian?  Other than the fact that this is how you were raised?  And I know, you say it's because of being able to get into Heaven, Jesus died for our sins, etc., but have you ever REALLY thought about it?

The reason that I ask is because I have.  I have gone beyond the stories of the Bible and the lessons they try to teach us at church, and TRULY contemplated it.  I even went so far as to question the existence of God. And you now what I came up with?  A way to explain to people why you believe what you do, why you have faith in something/ someone that you can't see and that won't reveal himself.

This is the explanation that you SHOULD be giving to the people who question your faith:

There are only a few things about religion that we know for certain; that atheists, etc. will agree with us on.  The relevant ones for this post are that there either is or is not a God, and that there either is or is not a Heaven.  This leaves us with 4 options:

1.) We believe in God and there is a God
2.) We believe in God and there is no God
3.) We do not believe in God and there is no God
4.) We do not believe in God and there is a God

Option 1 (Believe; God) - this gets us into Heaven.  This outcome is GOOD.
Option 2 (Believe; no God)  - means that we do not go to Heaven, but also no Hell.  So while it is not good it is not bad either, so for this argument that equals GOOD.
Option 3 (No Belief; no God) - gives the same outcome as option 2.  Not good, but not bad, so technically GOOD.
Option 4 (No Belief; there is a God) - this sends you to Hell.  So obviously, the outcome here is BAD.

So, what does all of this mean?
This means that by believing in God you have a 100% chance of a good outcome.  (2 GOODS)
By not believing in God, you only have a 50% chance of a good outcome.  (1 GOOD, 1 BAD)

I don't know about you, but to me a sure thing is a sure thing.  If someone told you you had a 100% chance of meeting the person of your dreams tonight, don't you think you would go with them to the bar?  If someone promised you that you had a 100% chance of winning the lottery, would you forget to buy a ticket?  I sure wouldn't.

So next time that someone questions your faith, answer with this.  No one that asks those types of questions wants you to preach to them, and they might actually listen to you if you answer them with reason instead of sounding like a religious extremist (that is how they view all of us, not just the true nut-cases).

Wouldn't it be nice to know that you actually got through to someone?  Who knows, you might even convert a hardcore non-believer by using their own methods against them!


Bookmark and Share

Sunday, November 22, 2009

A Few Quick Common Sense Questions

  • Is it okay to have a blog about common sense, but fall for every item advertised on an infomercial?
  • Why didn't Noah slap those two mosquitoes?
  • Why do we drive on a parkway, and park on a driveway?
  • Why can't politicians realize that we won't vote them out of office if they just do what we sent them to Washington to do?
  • You can't destroy energy, and everything is made of energy.  Does this mean that our thoughts will live on after we are dead?  Is this considered an afterlife?


Bookmark and Share