Sat 13 June 2009 10:31 PM
Great Experiment
"Among them [members of the Association Againts the Prohibition Amendment who had originally supported the Anti-Salloon League and Prohibition] was Hentry Bourne Joy, the retired president of Packard Motor. Joy had donated to the ASL and favored the Eighteenth Amendment. But in the mid-1920s, horrified by the lawlessness rampant in the region near his home in northern Michigan, he threw his weight, and his money, behind the AAPA. So did the three Du Pont brothers, Pierre, Irenee, and Lammot. Irenee was particularly vocal about the evils associated with Prohibition: He was shocked by the amount of money earned by bootleggers, money that was not taxed and so did not contribute to the national treasury or the nation's well-being. He was appalled, too, by the extent to which a taste for hard liquor had taken hold among young people. Pierre support the AAPA for different reasons: He was outraged that private property in the form of breweries and distillaries had been shut down, and through no fault of the owners. He also abhorred the intrusion of federal power into private lives, a clear violation, he believed, of the treasured American concept of states' rights. All of it--the amendment itself, the shoddy and usually corrupt enforcement, and the increase in crime and invasions of privacy--constituted 'an outrage to American institutions'.
These ideas resonated with a nation weary of arguing, weary of crime, and by the time the Wickersham report appeared, already weary of an economic disaster that had barely begun. As the depression deepened, more critics called for repeal in the name of taxation. They reminded Americans that for decades, brewers, distillers, and vintners had paid heavy taxes, monies that had dried up when the Eighteenth became law. Bring alcohol back, and jobs, paychecks, and tax revenues would return, too."
We know the ultimate result. Americans came to their senses and repealed the 18th, and yet the same situation adheres to this day for an array of other intoxicating substances including marijuana and our sitting President claims legalization of these drugs is not a good way to raise tax revenue at a time when the Federal government is handing out billion dollar stacks like lollipops. I take this as evidence that as much better as Obama is than that unfortunate non-Abortion G. W. Bush and as happy as I am that I voted for him, our president, being a Democrat (one of the two parties controlling the power establishment) is not and cannot be an agent for real change in the Federal government.
These ideas resonated with a nation weary of arguing, weary of crime, and by the time the Wickersham report appeared, already weary of an economic disaster that had barely begun. As the depression deepened, more critics called for repeal in the name of taxation. They reminded Americans that for decades, brewers, distillers, and vintners had paid heavy taxes, monies that had dried up when the Eighteenth became law. Bring alcohol back, and jobs, paychecks, and tax revenues would return, too."
We know the ultimate result. Americans came to their senses and repealed the 18th, and yet the same situation adheres to this day for an array of other intoxicating substances including marijuana and our sitting President claims legalization of these drugs is not a good way to raise tax revenue at a time when the Federal government is handing out billion dollar stacks like lollipops. I take this as evidence that as much better as Obama is than that unfortunate non-Abortion G. W. Bush and as happy as I am that I voted for him, our president, being a Democrat (one of the two parties controlling the power establishment) is not and cannot be an agent for real change in the Federal government.
Thu 11 June 2009 4:34 PM
Pussy
The policy on atheists in my boys' Cub Scout pack is "don't ask, don't tell" because if you are "vocal" about being an atheist then the BSA will track you down and kick you out. So, I've recently received some friend requests on Facebook from people who I've through the pack. Today, I pussied out and removed "Atheist" from my profile to avoid any potential problems because apparently my service to the pack as a leader and my devotion to working with my boys on their Cub Scout badges and taking them to over 80% of the events this year isn't what matters. What matters is whether I have an imaginary friend or not.
I hate the LDS Church and their perverted agenda to turn the BSA into an organization that discriminates and I hate myself for compromising my principles to appease that one lone asshole out there that may see Atheist on my profile and cause trouble for me and my sons.
I hate the LDS Church and their perverted agenda to turn the BSA into an organization that discriminates and I hate myself for compromising my principles to appease that one lone asshole out there that may see Atheist on my profile and cause trouble for me and my sons.
Thu 4 June 2009 5:31 PM
Gmail Tips
This is something that has bugged me. If you have labels with spaces in the name, the obvious search (such as label:my label or label:"my label") fails to return any messages.
You have to replace the spaces in your label name with dashes/hyphens. So label:my-label will return messages labeled "My Label".
You have to replace the spaces in your label name with dashes/hyphens. So label:my-label will return messages labeled "My Label".