Bush / Cheney 1984

Submitted by Bill St. Clair on Tue, 22 Nov 2005 13:00:00 GMT
Seen on a bumper sticker: [clairefiles]
BUSH
CHENEY
1984
 * * * * 

From The Federalist:

"One of the best models of good government is the Umpire Model. Government is here not to play the game of life for us, nor coach us on how to play best. It's here to help us play the game peaceably by deciding a few tough calls. It adjudicates conflicts. Of course, the model isn't perfect. Today's government does way too much coaching and managing as well as actual playing...and even cutting the grass on the field; government's not just for umpires any more." -- Paul Jacob

# Douglas Herman at Strike the Root - Worst President Ever? You Might Be Surprised - Bushnev has company. Lots of it. [root]

A president who starts no wars, sends no troops, drops no bombs, raises no taxes, expands no government, spends no fortunes, steals no elections, curtails less liberties while allowing freedom a free reign, would qualify as among the best. Have we ever had ONE of those?

Footnote: How dangerous was it to threaten the Federal Reserve bankers? To get elected, Wilson secretly sided with a cabal of international bankers to form the Federal Reserve in 1913. When JFK announced he would rescind the privileges of the Federal Reserve in 1963, and return the monetary system to the US Treasury, JFK was shot out of office a few months later. Some historians believe there was a connection.

# Tom Rose at LewRockwell.com - Police State! Coming? Or Already Here? - long article. Interesting reasoning by "experienced civilian and military pilots" as to why the planes that flew into the World Trade Center towers must have been flown by remote control. [ron]

# NRA-ILA Fact Sheets - Fully-Automatic Firearms - an outline of the National Firearms Act (NFA), which added a $200 transfer tax for machine guns, U.S. v Miller, which affirmed that the Second Amendment guarantees civilian ownership of military weapons, the Gun Control Act of 1968 (GCA), the Hughes Amendment to the Firearms Owners Protection Act (FOPA), which prohibited civilian ownership of any machine guns manufactured after May 19, 1968, U.S. v Rock Island Armory, which invalidated the registration requirement of the GCA in the 10th Circuit, and a word about semi-automatic firearms. I found the following quote especially interesting: [ml]

In 1986, to reaffirm Congress`s intent in passing the GCA and prevent improper law enforcement by BATF, Congress approved the Firearms Owners` Protection Act (FOPA).7 Near the end of debate on the measure, late at night with most members of the House of Representatives absent, Rep. William Hughes (D-N.J.) introduced an amendment related to fully-automatic firearms. Despite an apparent defeat of the amendment by voice vote, Rep. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.), at the time presiding over the proceedings, declared the amendment approved. Hughes and Rangel were longtime "gun control" supporters.

BATF interpreted the amendment as a prohibition on the civilian possession of any fully-automatic firearm manufactured after May 19, 1986. The effect of the interpretation has been to "freeze" the number of privately owned fully-automatic firearms at roughly 150,000, an exact figure being unavailable due to privacy protection requirements that apply to tax-based laws such as the National Firearms Act. The crime-fighting utility of the 1986 "freeze" was questionable, since no legal, civilian-owned fully-automatic firearm had been used to commit a violent crime. BATF`s director at the time, Stephen Higgins, had testified before Congress in 1986 that the misuse of legally-owned fully-automatic firearms was "so minimal as not to be considered a law enforcement problem."

Add comment Edit post Add post