Showing posts with label quotation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quotation. Show all posts

Friday, June 12, 2009

Up & Down vs. Left & Right

Here's an interesting quote from Ronald Reagan:

You and I are told we must choose between a left or right, but I suggest there is no such thing as a left or right. There is only an up or down. Up to man's age-old dream-the maximum of individual freedom consistent with order or down to the ant heap of totalitarianism. Regardless of their sincerity, their humanitarian motives, those who would sacrifice freedom for security have embarked on this downward path. Plutarch warned, "The real destroyer of the liberties of the people is he who spreads among them bounties, donations and benefits."

Hat tip

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Quote of the Day 2

"The key factor to being a successful Canadian Liberal is that you must have no short term memory at all!"

Lorne Gunter, talking with Roy Green, May 27, 2009

Sunday, March 22, 2009

CBC Consistently Replacing Truth with Opinion

Dennis Prager has an interesting expression: "First tell the truth, then share your opinion."

I firmly believe that failure to adhere to this simple premise is the root cause of many of our problems today.

Case in point: This morning I listened for awhile to the CBC's Sunday Edition radio program, featuring Obama's Canadian shill, Michael Enright. A greater embarrassment to the once proud profession of journalism there has never been. He interviewed at length a professor from the University of Syracuse. This fellow had some interesting things to say but so much of it could have been pulled from the chorus sheets of the Radical Left Daily Kos hatesite.

Among other things, he stated that the average American's real income is much less than it was 30 years ago. Is that true? I don't intuitively believe it. But the CBC, being the CBC, there was no alternate viewpoint to challenge anything this fellow said.

So if you're a regular CBC listener/viewer and rarely/never partake in any alternative viewpoints then much of the foundation of your worldview is built upon very skewed opinions, not truth. In times past the betrayal of truth with opinion was called "effective propaganda". It often precluded the occurrence of very bad things.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Dennis Miller Quotation

"The North Koreans bluffed Jimmy Carter like he was an Amish kid playing poker on Metallica's tour bus!"

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Conservative Fun House - Episode #35

For the first time ever I watched the vidcast from Texas live. They even dealt with a few of my questions.

There was lots of great stuff but the most brilliant quote of all was when Damon Rexroad said, "When you take away a person's need to provide for themselves, you take away their humanity." I believe this to be the greatest issue of our times between conservatives and liberals. Furthermore, if conservatives lose this debate then America is doomed. That's not an opinion per say but just economic reality.

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Renewed Wisdom for the Modern Age

" If we can prevent the government from wasting the labours of the
people under the pretense of taking care of them, they must
become happy."

Thomas Jefferson, 1802

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Michael Ignatieff Quotation

From Page 30 of The Needs of Strangers (2001) :

Kings in the fullness of their power do not have to speak the language of need. Theirs can be the pure and unjustified language of desire: 'Do it, for it is my wish.' Kings do not have to justify their desires. The most inconsequential of their whims has the force of a command.

Monday, December 08, 2008

Pertinent Quotation

"Democracy becomes a government of bullies tempered by editors."
Ralph Waldo Emerson

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Quote of the Day

"Barack Obama wants to change America by modeling it after Washington, DC. We believe in America and don't want to fundamentally change it like he does. We want to focus our changes where the real problem lies, in Washington itself!"

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Mark Twain Quotations

If you don't read the newspaper you are uninformed, if you do read the newspaper you are misinformed.


Suppose you were an idiot.
And suppose you were a member of Congress . . .
But then I repeat myself.


No man's life, liberty, or property is safe while the legislature is in session.


The only difference between a tax man and a taxidermist is that the taxidermist leaves the skin.


There is no distinctly Native American criminal class . . . save Congress.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Thoughts about the AIG Takeover

“We are privatizing profits and socializing losses. The AIG takeover is the latest example of this and the wrong direction for America.”

Michele Bachmann

Republican Congresswoman

6th District of Minnesota

Monday, September 15, 2008

Obama Compulsive Disorder

The hallowed NBC brand of old is now devolved into MSNBC's Matthews-Olbermann embarrassment. The once revered Atlantic Monthly now hosts blogger Andrew Sullivan trafficking in rumors that Gov. Palin's daughter really delivered her Down Syndrome child, and then hires an unhinged photographer (best known previously for making children cry to make political statements) who brags post facto that she tried to subvert her own cover photos of McCain, before posting creepy photo-shopped out-takes of him on her website. To read a NY Times columnist is to be told ad nauseam that Gov. Palin is a bumpkin hockey mom. Whether an US magazine cover picture of Palin, or the Washington Post's recycling old stories about Cindy McCain, the result is always the same: a concerted effort to ensure an Obama election.

The university crowd weighs in with op-eds warning us about white rural culture and the toxic landscapes that raised Sarah Palin, or why she is a counterfeit woman who piggybacked on the heroic work of pro-abortion pioneers. Every day another Hollywood dimwit—a Matt Damon, Lindsay Lohan, or Chevy Chase—attacks Palin or McCain in a fashion as crude as it is half-educated and incoherent.

Is it that hard to see, then, why McCain is dead-even or ahead—even when the incumbent Republican brand is suffering by association to war, economic uncertainty, and now financial meltdown?

There is a growing public anger at the petty amateurish biases of those who claim they are sophisticated and subtle; and it is not just that they sympathize with a smeared Palin, but are angry that the media thinks they are so stupid not to catch on. The odder thing still is that the media obsession has turned into some sort of compulsive disorder—they know that they are way out of bounds; know that they are hurting their own candidate Obama— and they know that they simply can't and won't quit now.

Victor Davis Hanson

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Wisdom from Joe Biden

Americans just want to have "a sleepover with people they like," said Democratic vice-presidential nominee Sen. Joe Biden today.

Full story here.

Monday, September 08, 2008

Interesting Quotes

"[Sarah Palin is] the object of the cultural disdain of a left that loves the working class in theory, but is mystified or offended by its lifestyle and conservative values in reality. If there’s ever been an exemplar of the rural America that, in Barack Obama’s telling, ‘bitterly’ clings to its guns and religion, it’s Sarah Palin. It’s her misfortune to be a pioneer with the wrong ideology. So much bile was directed at Clarence Thomas because he was the ‘wrong’ kind of black man. Pro-life, pro-gun and a down-the-line, if populist, conservative, Palin is a traitor to her gender and thus encounters the sort of fury always directed at apostates... A lot of Palin-hatred is couched in terms of her lack of experience. Fair enough, but there’s a tone of contemptuous dismissiveness about the experience that she does have—fueled no doubt by her career in ‘fly-over country’ so remote no one really flies over it. The Obama campaign is loath to admit that she’s governor of Alaska, pretending instead she’s still mayor of tiny Wasilla, and the outraged commentary in the press makes it sound like the vice presidency is an office of such import that it would be better if the newcomer were at the top of the ticket and the wizened pro at the bottom—just like the Democrats.” — Rich Lowry


“Unlike Barack Obama, who thought so highly of himself that he wrote two autobiographies before he accomplished anything, Mrs. Palin has raised a family, run a business, managed a city and governed a state. She took on corrupt members of her own party, toppled a sitting Republican governor and said ‘no’ to Alaska’s infamous ‘Bridge to Nowhere.’ She is pro-life, pro-family, pro-Second Amendment and pro-free enterprise. She is the governor of America’s most natural resource-rich state and is an advocate of oil drilling in ANWR. (Perhaps she can talk some sense into McCain on that issue) Oh, and she has an 80 percent approval rating among Alaskans.” — Doug Patton

Friday, September 05, 2008

Interesting Quotation

Last night I watched John McCain's speech. It was alright but he's clearly nowhere near as powerful an orator as Barack Obama or Sarah Palin. His personal story toward the end was pretty moving though.

I've since heard a lot of analysis about the speech, both pro and con. The most striking comment was this one:

"Whether you vote for McCain or not, if you were not moved by his sincerity then you are incapable of actually listening to someone you differ with."

It made me think back to when Free Speech became front & center here in Canada in early June. What became very apparent was that you only believe in free speech if you're willing to demand that someone you completely disagree with must have the right to openly express their views. Of course this excludes anything that incites violence, etc. But what became very clear was that many Canadians don't actually support free speech whatsoever. This both shocked and saddened me. It was also a vivid wake-up call of what, indirectly, 40 years of Trudeau inspired socialism has done to many Canadians.

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Quote of the Day

The 3 most important words every woman wants to hear from a man:

"I'll buy that!"

Big George Webley
BBC Radio London Host
August 25, 2008

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Quote of the Day

"I wasn't smart enough to become an engineer. That's why I went to law school."

Jed Babbin, July 17, 2008

Wednesday, July 09, 2008

Relationship Math

Good relationships are about addition.

Great relationships are about multiplication.

Bad relationships are about subtraction.


Sadly, there seems to be way too much of the latter going on these days.

Saturday, May 31, 2008

Quote of the Day

"The reason all Canadian newspapers are so bland is that there's a high price the publishers have to pay to print anything controversial."

Mark Steyn, interviewed on the Michael Coren Show

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

"Never trust anyone who begins a sentence with:
'Here's what I think God meant by that' "

Bill Hicks, Comedian - 1961 - 1994