Ernst, as quoted by HuffPo:
“I have a beautiful little Smith & Wesson, 9 millimeter, and it goes
with me virtually everywhere,” Ernst said during a speech at the NRA’s
Iowa Firearms Coalition Second Amendment Rally in Searsboro, Iowa, as
flagged by The Huffington Post on Thursday. “But I do believe in the
right to carry, and I believe in the right to defend myself and my
family — whether it’s from an intruder, or whether it’s from the
government, should they decide that my rights are no longer important.” --at Grim's Hall
Well, that's only half of it. As Grim points out:
...if I were going to articulate it, I'd not focus as she does on a right to defend. The right -- the one the Founders asserted -- is not limited to defense from the government's depredations. It is a right "to alter or to abolish it,
and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such
principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem
most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness."
The Party (actually Parties) of Gummint really, really, really despise that Declaration stuff.
The Law by Frederic Bastiat.
ReplyDeleteMassive Tax Burden: 40 Million Government Worker Parasites NOT INCLUDING The Lazy Corrupt Criminal Pensioner Thieves Financially Raping You In/During Their Elitist Statist Self-Engineered Animal Farm Retirement FraudPlans.
ReplyDeleteWritten by Gary North on April 06, 2012
The $2,474,520 Home Of Lois Lerner: Life As A Parasitic Government Employee
ReplyDeleteThe Battle Of Wisconsin: A Third Position Anarchist Class Analysis
ReplyDeleteExcerpt(s):
"...Wisconsin state workers and teachers enjoy the most generous benefits of state employees anywhere in America. According to the MacIver Institute, the average teacher in the Milwaukee public schools earns $100,000 a year—$56,000 in pay, $44,000 in benefits—and enjoys job security...
...
One of the big sources of outrage over the present battle in Wisconsin involves the role of the teachers’ unions...
...many regard public school teachers and administrators as pampered and over-indulged petty bureaucrats who are provided with levels of income and benefits far greater than that justified by their actual level of skills, training, competence, or productivity, and far greater than that of people who work harder in more productive professions.
No doubt many of the people reading this share my own low opinion of the public school systems, regarding them as prisons-lite whose primary purpose is the dissemination of the state’s legitimating ideology of either political correctness or old-fashioned jingoism, or some combination of the two,...
...
What are the grievances of the public workers in Wisconsin? Essentially, the state wants public workers to increase their “contributions” to their pension programs and health premiums while reducing though not entirely eliminating the right of collective bargaining for public sector employees.
...
So what exactly had (Governor Scott) Walker proposed that had people stomping hysterically around downtown Madison as if the Ludlow Massacre had just occurred? In order to put a dent in a proposed $3.6-billion budget deficit—which smirking TV she-male Rachel Maddow had falsely reported as a looming budget surplus—the mercilessly brutal despot proposed that government workers contribute 5.8% toward their pension plans and 12.6% toward their healthcare. He also proposed confining their collective-bargaining rights to wages rather than benefits.
That’s it?
Yes. That’s it. That’s all it took to have them wailing like infants.
...
Accusations that this is all about “class war” are severely misguided, because the class war is over and the ruling class won without firing a shot. They shipped all the jobs overseas and allowed at least a dozen million illegal workers to invade the country in order to Babelize and Balkanize the lower orders, ensuring that private-sector workers are never able to act collectively. As it stands, union membership is under seven percent in the private sector, while it’s close to 40 percent among government employees…
…It’s hard to empathize with the “suffering” of people who have it better than you do...
...For these workers to groan about their condition is roughly as rude as walking into a roomful of cancer patients and whining that you stubbed your toe.
I can’t remember the last time I saw a government worker working hard. So when I see these teachers complain, I’m reminded they work about 200 days a year while I work 300. I’m reminded that they’re bitching about having to pay twelve percent toward their health insurance while I pay 100 percent. They may think they’re suffering “labor pains,” but to me they’re just a pain in the ass..."