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sunset week

lightning in sunset || Canon5D/EF17-40L@17 | 2s | f13 | ISO100 | Tripod

sunset week

sunset_1_bg_111602

it’s bad, really, really bad…


In January President Obama pressed for an $800 billion economic “stimulus” package to turn the economy around. Though the bill largely consisted of increased spending on traditional liberal priorities the President claimed that it would “create or save” 3.5 million jobs. The President’s economic advisors predicted that unemployment would rise to 9 percent by 2010 if Congress did not pass the stimulus bill, but that with the stimulus unemployment would stay below 8 percentage points. Continue reading…

because it’s bad….

Michael Ramirez wonders what it takes for the national media to focus on the biggest tax increase in American history, which is what the House passed last week.  Fortunately, the media’s massive focus on one particular story last week gives us an answer, although I’m not sure I ever want to see John Boehner try a moonwalk:

cliff

greatracelrprint2

Starbucks Frappucino

Starbucks Frappucino – make a cool and refreshing coffee drink at home.

Starbucks Frappucino – make a cool and refreshing coffee drink at home.

Our version of this recipe is for the Starbucks Frappucino that is sold in the bottle.  Buying this drink at the store will set you back about 2 dollars, you can make your own at home. This isn’t hard to make at all.

1/2 C. Strong Coffee – espresso if you can
2 C. Milk
1/4 – 1/3 C. Sugar
1 1/2 C. Ice

Combine all in a blender and blend well.

____________________________

Ingredients

  • 3/4 cup double-strength coffee, cold
  • 3 tablespoons granulated sugar
  • 1 cup low-fat milk
  • 2 cups ice
  • Caramel topping, 3 Tbs
  • Whipped Cream
  • Hersheys Chocolate Syrup 3 tbs


Directions

  1. Make double-strength coffee by brewing with twice the coffee required by your coffee maker: That should be 2 tablespoons of ground coffee per each cup of coffee. Chill before using.
  2. To make drink, combine all ingredients in a blender and blend on high speed until ice is crushed and drink is smooth. Pour into two 16-ounce glasses, and serve with a straw.
  3. CARAMEL Version:
  4. For this version, add 3 tablespoons of caramel topping to the original recipe and prepare as described. Top each glass with whipped cream and drizzle additional caramel over the whipped cream.
  5. MOCHA Version:
  6. For this version, add 3 tablespoons Hershey’s chocolate syrup to the original recipe and prepare as described. Top each glass with whipped cream, if desired.

sunset week

http://www.travelblog.org/Wallpaper/pix/sunset_wallpaper_brazil-1600x1200.jpg

negative rights vs positive rights

Why did the founders of our nation give us the Bill of Rights?

A MINORITY VIEW, BY WALTER WILLIAMS  RELEASE: WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 2009

Why a Bill of Rights?

Why did the founders of our nation give us the Bill of Rights? The answer is easy. They knew Congress could not be trusted with our God-given rights. Think about it. Why in the world would they have written the First Amendment prohibiting Congress from enacting any law that abridges freedom of speech and the press? The answer is that in the absence of such a limitation Congress would abridge free speech and free press. That same distrust of Congress explains the other amendments found in our Bill of Rights protecting rights such as our rights to property, fair trial and to bear arms. The Bill of Rights should serve as a constant reminder of the deep distrust that our founders had of government. They knew that some government was necessary but they rightfully saw government as the enemy of the people and they sought to limit government and provide us with protections.

After the 1787 Constitutional Convention, there were intense ratification debates about the proposed Constitution. Both James Madison and Alexander Hamilton expressed grave reservations about Thomas Jefferson’s, George Mason’s and others’ insistence that the Constitution be amended by the Bill of Rights. Those reservations weren’t the result of a lack of concern for liberty. To the contrary, they were concerned about the loss of liberties.

Alexander Hamilton expressed his reservation in Federalist Paper No. 84, “(B)ills of rights … are not only unnecessary in the proposed Constitution, but would even be dangerous.” Hamilton asks, “For why declare that things shall not be done (by Congress) which there is no power to do? Why, for instance, should it be said that the liberty of the press shall not be restrained, when no power is given (to Congress) by which restrictions may be imposed?” Hamilton’s argument was that Congress can only do what the Constitution specifically gave it authority to do. Powers not granted belong to the people and the states. Another way of examining Hamilton’s concern: Why have an amendment prohibiting Congress from infringing on our right to picnic on our back porch when the Constitution gives Congress no authority to infringe upon that right in the first place?

Alexander Hamilton added that a Bill of Rights would “contain various exceptions to powers not granted; and, on this very account, would afford a colorable pretext to claim more (powers) than were granted. … (it) would furnish, to men disposed to usurp, a plausible pretense for claiming that power.” Going back to our picnic example, those who would usurp our God-given liberties might enact a law banning our right to have a picnic. They’d justify their actions by claiming that nowhere in the Constitution is there a guaranteed right to have a picnic.

To mollify Alexander Hamilton’s and James Madison’s fears about how a Bill of Rights might be used as a pretext to infringe on human rights, the Ninth Amendment was added that reads: “The enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.” In essence, the Ninth Amendment says it’s impossible to list all of our God-given or natural rights. Just because a right is not listed doesn’t mean it can be infringed upon or disparaged by the U.S. Congress. The Tenth Amendment is a reinforcement of the Ninth saying, “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.” That means if a power is not delegated to Congress, it belongs to the states of the people.

The Ninth and Tenth Amendments mean absolutely nothing today as Americans have developed a level of naive trust for Congress, the White House and the U.S. Supreme Court that would have astonished the founders, a trust that will lead to our undoing as a great nation.

Walter E. Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University. To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.

“you can have anything you want, just not everything”

Fuel tax could be replaced with by-the-mile road tax…

Two videos against ObamaCare

The pushback against the nationalization of the health-care sector has begun in earnest. Today, I’ve received two videos opposing further government intervention in health care. The first comes from Patients First, the health-care effort from Americans for Prosperity, which takes a standard political-ad approach to ask whether Americans really trust politicians to make their medical-care decisions for them:

The second has been around for a week; the boss had it last Thursday. It’s worth a second look. The Independence Institute produced this snarkier-than-usual spot in an effort to entertain while instructing. Should Americans have to choose between obeying the law and managing their own health insurance?

(ht:hotair)

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