Tuesday, February 12, 2013


12 February 2013 –
Odds ‘n Ends
1.       I think President Obama’s State of the Principality—oops—I mean his State of the Union Address today will forecast his radical, progressive path:  increased government intrusion in every aspect of individual, family, and local community life; class distinction and antagonistic rivalry; income redistribution in the name of “social justice”; attacks on traditional Christian values and virtues such as marriage and the sanctity of life in the name of “equality” and “respect”; and, a complete disregard for the prudent, fiscal principles of restrained spending and balanced budgets.  He has another three and one-half years to create a principality completely subservient to his whims.  He will tell us today how he plans to do so.  Only 1,438 days left in his reign. 
 2.       The Pope is resigning from his office on 28 February.  He cites his ill health and his inability to function in his office.  Benedict the XVI, eighty-five years old, was not in robust health when he was elected Pope upon the death of John Paul II in 2005.  There seems to be nothing other than ill-health that prompted this historic decision.  After all, Popes rarely resign.  Benedict XVI is the first Pope to resign since Gregory XII stepped down in 1415, 598 years ago.  Importantly, Gregory XII resigned as part of a political deal struck to resolve the dynastic struggles within the ruling families of Europe and whom they would follow, the Popes who had ruled for nearly a hundred years under French domination from Avignon and their newly elected successors—now branded as anti-Popes by the church in Rome—or the Pope elected in Rome.  Such gritty drama does not exist today.  But, since the media must have to have something to roil about, today’s questions are the obvious:  Will Benedict XVI's successor be Italian, South American, or African?  Each possible choice has its own support, depending on what internal Catholic Church issue is mentioned.  I am leaning toward a Latin Pope: José XXIV.  The internal discussions have begun among the Cardinals and their staffs.  This time, however, they have less time to prepare.  The traditional spectacle to elect a new Pope, august and marvelous to watch, does not have to wait for a funeral and a proper period of mourning.  It could begin immediately after 28 February.  Finally, perhaps the new Pope’s agenda will continue to be outshone by the legacy of the resigned Pope.  In 1294, Celestine V, a monk and hermit who was finally elected Pope in 1294, after nearly two years of deliberations, resigned five months later and became a hermit again until he died in 1296.  His reputation was such that in 1313, a mere seventeen years after his death, he was canonized a saint.  Perhaps, Benedict XVI will be soon looked upon as a man who did what was ultimately the best thing for the Catholic church and will be considered immediately for canonization.  Until then, the spectacle will continue. 
 3.       I read a great synopsis of events in the House of Representatives yesterday, as written by Jake Sherman, writer for POLITICO,
“In fact, the House hasn't passed a single measure this Congress that either raises or cuts revenue (my underlining). But the no-new-tax-bills strategy also has another effect: It will stop the Senate from raising revenue as part of any plan to replace the sequester. Since all revenue bills need to originate in the House, the strategy will effectively halt Senate Democrats from raising revenue in a deal to blunt the sequester. If the Senate passes a bill to increase taxes on millionaires as part of a sequester replacement plan, for example, the House cannot take up the legislation." 
Good for the House!  I can only hope that the House will continue to show such courage as the sequester date approaches. The Obama administration and Democrats in the Senate will increase their obfuscatory rhetoric, with the mainstream media’s support, to force a deal to raise taxes and to retain bloated spending.  Midst all the hoopla, we must continue to focus on one fact that every financial advisor in the world knows by heart:  Fiscal crises that result from constantly spending more than you got, and the mountains of debt that you incur from such profligacy, have little to do with revenues—aka taxes—and everything to do with spending—aka runaway entitlements, overly-generous benefits, insider giveaways to political cronies, and a defense department that is more concerned with the politically-correct, social reengineering of its members than it is with creating a strategy to meet modern and future threats and then building a concomitant force to accomplish that strategy.  Raising taxes will only give more money to spendthrift ideologues and sacred cow-herders in government to waste on bloated, vote-buying programs and do little to protect or improve the lives of either the 47% or the 53% of America.  If it takes forced sequestration to force the Senate to pass legitimate budgets and to be held accountable for them, then so be it.  Hold the line, Speaker Boehner.  Hold the line. 

No comments:

Post a Comment