Tag Archive | "president"
Posted on 21 April 2009. Tags: abuse of power, ACLU, alternative investments, American Civil Liberties Union, AmeriCorps, authoritarian, auto bailout, automakers, bailout, barack obama, Big Brother, bills, bisexual, bond auction, bond sales, bonds, budget deficit, buy apartment building, certification, Chrysler, condors, congress, control the Internet, credit markets, credit speads, Cybersecurity Act of 2009, debt, deflation, democrat, Detroit, dictatorship, eavesdropping, economy, Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act, expenditures, federal spending, fiscal policy, gay, General Motors, GM, government power, guide to investing, how does government effect markets, income properties, inflation, internet freedom, Investing, iron condor, IT professionals, Jane Harman, Jay Rockefeller, legislation, lesbian, liberals, license, market insurance, monetary policy, monitor, national security, National Security Agency, National Service, nationalization, NSA, obama, Obamanomics, Options, paid volunteers, petition, poker, policy, president, private sector, protect against inflation, protect portfolio, public schools, public sector, public service, Real Estate, regulate, Rob Viglione, Rounders, Savings, school computers, Senate, servitude, shut down, signed into law, slavery, Socialists, spot the sucker, stocks, Ted Kennedy, Tennessee, thugs, trading system, transcripts, transgender, Treasury, unemployment, Web, web sites, West Virginia, wip out life savings, wiretap
Sen. Rockefeller proposes bill that would give government sweeping powers to control, monitor, and regulate the Internet, ACLU demands public schools stop blocking gay web sites on public computers, Rep. Jane Harman calls incriminating NSA wiretap “abuse of power,” National Service legislation signed into law that will cost $6 billion over 5 years by hiring “paid volunteers,” government will need to issue $2.4 trillion in new Treasury securities in 2009 to meet budget shortfalls and bailout program requirements, and U.S. to give another $5.5 billion to automakers… Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire
Posted on 21 April 2009. Tags: authority over networks, Big Brother, Bill of Rights, business standards, certification, communications, compliance, congress, Constitution, Constitutional Republic, contact Congress, contact your representatives, contracts, control the Internet, critical infrastructure, cyber, Cybersecurity Act, Cybersecurity Act of 2009, democrat, digital data, domain names, executive authority, federal, find representative, find your Congressman, freedom, individual freedom, information security, information technology, internet, intrusion, IT licensing, IT professionals, Jay Rockefeller, liberty, license, National Institute of Standards and Technology, national security, NIST, power, president, privacy, regulate, restore the Republic, Rob Viglione, S.773, security, Senate, shut down the Internet, standards development, trade freedom for security, Web, West Virginia
Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) introduced a bill in the Senate on April 1st calling for sweeping powers for federal regulators to “secure cyber communications.” The Cybersecurity Act of 2009 (S.773) would give government authority over all networks considered part of the nation’s critical infrastructure.
The usual threats and scare tactics are used to justify giving Big Brother greater powers, including giving the President the power to shut down portions of the internet he deems a threat to national security, and access to vast amounts of digital data currently legally off limits.
Industry experts criticize the pervasive intrusion into private business standards and practices that would result from some of the finer points of the legislation, including a section that grants government exclusive licensing rights to IT professionals.
Here are the basics:
- National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) standards development and compliance.
- Licensing and certification of IT professionals.
- Regulation of domain name contracts.
- Executive authority to “shut down the Internet” when in interests of national security.
The bill is still in its infancy being referred to Committee, so now is the time to stop it! Take the time to write or call each of your Congressional representatives. You can look up your representatives’ name and contact information using this tool.
Here is a sample letter you can cut and paste to use as your own:
Details of the Cybersecurity Act of 2009 (S.773) have recently come to my attention. I am writing to voice my utter contempt for this proposed legislation and wish to document opposition to what I consider unacceptable expansion of federal authority into the cyber domain.
S.773 would give the federal government excessive power in regulating the Internet. The power to unilaterally shut down private networks, to garnish unprecedented digital data currently outside the realm of legal authority, and intrusion into commercial practices of professional certification are unacceptable.
Please take serious consideration in evaluating this measure. I urge you to support freedom of the Internet, individual privacy in digital information, and continue to let the private sector make certification and employment decisions without federal coercion.
We must actively fight the erosion of liberty and individual freedom, preserving the values that made this country great. Thank you for your time!
Take a moment to leave a comment below to voice your support for this movement!
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Watch Sen. Rockefeller discuss the bill below. It is not at all evident he truly understands what he’s talking about, yet this man wields power to control us all:

Posted in Politics
Posted on 02 April 2009. Tags: Alan Grayson, anti-capitalist, bailouts, barack obama, Britain, budget deficit, capitalism, corporate bonuses, death tax, democrat, Economics, empire, estate tax, executive pay, federal budget, financial crisis, financial regulations, financial regulators, fiscal policy, free enterprise, free trade, freedom, G20, George W. Bush, home prices, house, House of Representatives, housing, Hugo Chavez, Investing, liberty, London, money, president, president bush, President Obama, Real Estate, Rob Viglione, taxpayer money, Tim Geithner, Treasury Department, U.S. empire, UK, united kingdom, Venezuela, violence
Anti-Capitalist protests turn violent in London, Venezuela’s Chavez accuses U.S. of acting like an ‘empire’, House passes bill to allow corporate bonuses, Obama brings back the ‘death tax’, and U.K. home prices rise for first time since 2007… Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire
Posted on 21 March 2009. Tags: all men were created equal, america, Bill of Rights, capitalism, congress, Constitution, contract, Declaration of Independence, Economics, executive authority, federal, free enterprise, freedom, liberty, limitations on power, local government, politicians, Politics, populism, president, protection, Republic, rule of law, Sam Rothrock, sovereignty, states rights, U.S. constitution, united states, Washington D.C.
The question of whether or not some law or action being taken by U.S. political leaders is constitutional is always showing up in the news. Such coverage begs the question, why pay attention to a piece of paper written over two hundred years ago? What relevance does this document have to politics in the modern world? And how does it affect my life?
A Contract
The U.S. Constitution is a contract between citizens and their government. It divides government into three branches. Each branch has certain powers, but none of them have total power. This prevents too much power being concentrated into the hands of one or a few people (despite popular consensus, Hope, Peace, and Change require more than one man). Concentrated power leaves a nation of millions subject to the whims of one individual. The Constitution prevents such a situation.
Protection
The Constitution states clearly what the government cannot do. Nearly all of its amendments begin with the phrase Congress shall make no law
Similarly, it delegates many powers to the states. This gives each state the freedom (each having varying demographics) to make laws that suit its own needs. This increases personal freedom by giving individuals the ability to make their own laws locally, rather than submitting endlessly to politicians in Washington DC (which is not even a state).
One Line between Freedom and Tyranny
The Constitution is inviolable because it restrains government. Without such a document, we have to rely on politicians to restrain themselves. This is obviously a difficult task even with the authoritative help of the Constitution. It is imperative that we do not allow politicians to break this contract, even when claiming national crises, emergency, or necessity. If we allow the Constitution to be ignored, then there is no stopping the control the Federal government will take over our lives. The Declaration of Independence declares that all men were created equal; therefore, we cannot allow the few to rule over the many.
Posted in Politics
Posted on 17 March 2009. Tags: abuse, abuse of power, africa, aircraft manufacturer, Argentina, arms race, barack obama, Britain, budget director, censorship, Charles Grassley, China, Christina Kirchner, Cold War, colleges, communications, congress, control, costs, dictatorship, Dmitri Medvedev, down payment, Economics, European, F-22 fighter, factory, fair trade, federal stimulus, flow of information, France, fraud, free trade, global trade, globalization, government services, governor, growing bureaucracy, Health Care, health reform, insurance, Intel, Iowa, labor unions, large-scale rearming, Lockheed Martin, Mark Sanford, nationalize, NATO, nuclear forces, nuclear powers, omnibus spending bill, Overstock, pay off debt, Peter Orszag, Politics, president, President Obama, protectionism, public debt, public safety, public schools, reality check, reciprocal trade war, republican, Rob Viglione, Russia, sanctions, security council, Senator, signing statement, socialism, South Carolina, state debt, stimulus funds, tariffs, taxes on overseas income, trade war, union power, United Nations, united states, veto rights, waste, whistle-blowers, White House
Obama rejects Gov. Sanford’s plan to use stimulus money to pay down South Carolina debt, Russia planning ‘large-scale’ rearming, Obama’s health care plans will cost at least $1.5 trillion, companies fight back against Obama’s economic plans saying they are hurtful, Obama tries to overrule Congress and stifle whistle-blowing, Argentina moves to nationalize factory owned by Lockheed Martin, and big changes stirrup up at the U.N…just the latest in your Freedom Under Fire Report! Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire
Posted on 08 March 2009. Tags: Admiral Michael Mullen, Afghanistan, bailout program, bailouts, banking, bankruptcy, banks, banks to fail, barack obama, Bloomberg, Camden Fine, CEO, Chairman, Chapter 11, Chrysler, close them down, cocaine, community banks, congress, consequences of war on drugs, Department of Defense, DoD, drug cartels, drug prohibition, ecstasy, FDIC, federal agents, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, firearms, gang violence, General Motors, high-calibur handguns, homicides, if they're dead they ought to be buried, Independent Community Bankers of America, iraq, john mccain, Joint Chiefs of Staff, lawlessness, legalize drugs, Mexico, Minnesota, moderate elements of Taliban, outreach to Taliban, Palo Alto, perpetual war, police state, president, President Obama, reduce troop levels, renters, republicans, Richard Shelby, Rob Viglione, Sanfrancisco Bay Area, savers, semi-automatic rifles, Senate, Senator, subprime loans, Sunni militias, Taliban, taliban gang, taxpayers, TCF Financial Corp., violence, violence in Mexico, wall street, War on Drugs, William Cooper
GOP officials say banks and autos should fail, 12,000 troops to leave Iraq in 6 months, Obama ponders outreach to Taliban, U.S. ponders troops commitments to fight drug cartels in Mexico, 30 ‘Taliban Gang’ members arrested in Bay Area, banks that shunned bailout question why they’re paying for their competitors’ mistakes? Just the latest in your Freedom Under Fire Report! Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire
Posted on 24 February 2009. Tags: alternative energy, analyzing, bad economics, bailouts, banking, barack obama, biofuel, carbon cap-and-trade, carbon emissions, carbon off-sets, clean energy, decoposing, discriminatory taxation, dropping out of high school not an option, Economics, Education, electricity, electronic records, everyone must learn, executive compensation, fair and balanced tax code, financial system, forced lending, Health Care, inflation, mandatory education, money supply, nuclear, outsourcing restricted, political economy, politicizing lending, Politics, president, protectionism, punative taxation, Rob Viglione, socialism, solar, state of the union address, universal health care, vehicle efficiency standards, velocity of money, wind
President Obama is an incredible speaker. When on stage he resembles a preacher in a pulpit, often to similar affect. His speech before a joint session of the houses of Congress tonight is the perfect example of rubbish couched in eloquence. There were myriad pleas to humanity, citing one example after another of suffering to elicit emotion, but not much of what he proposed offers substantive solutions; rather, his Socialistic decrees will surely lead this country in the opposite direction. Here’s what I mean: Continue Reading
Posted in Economics, Politics
Posted on 21 February 2009. Tags: Al Sharpton, American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, Americans don't care about earmarks, Americans not paying taxes, Attorney General, barack obama, block opposition, budget deficit, Charles Schumer, chattering class, chimp cartoon, China, coal, congress, dictator, earmarks, elections, energy efficiency, Eric Holder, follows through on promise, freedom of speech, general electric, George Washington, Ghandi, go Green, government collapses, government waste, Green growth, Harris interactive poll, Hillary Clinton, House of Representatives, human rights, internet, Iran, Jim Clyburn, Latvia, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Mohammed Khatami, Obama more popular than Jesus, oil, poll, porky amendments, president, Presidential campaign, privacy, reform candidate, Rob Viglione, Senator, South Carolina, Spending, stimulus bill, tax cuts, Treasury, turbines, Web
Obama more popular that Jesus, follows through on tax cuts, Sen. Schumer chastises Americans for caring about earmarks, White House says it will cut deficit in half, of chimps and racism, decomposing the stimulus bill, Clinton tells Chinese to go Green, Latvia’s government collapses, and Iran blocks opposition on Web…just the latest in your Freedom Under Fire Report! Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire, Uncategorized