On Conservatives widening their scope

Posted by: Rudy Carrera  //  Category: Guest Contributors, Rudolph Carrera

On my inaugural post, I thought I’d make a brief introduction of myself before touching on my subject in this post.

My name is Rudy, and I’m a Conservative.  No, this shouldn’t read as a script from an AA Meeting!  I came to Conservatism in my early twenties after getting out of school utterly disgusted with the blatant indoctrination I had to endure (and briefly fell for) in my youth.  I fell into the influence of everyone from William F. Buckley, Jr. to Pat Buchanan, from Barry Goldwater to Taki Theodoracopulos. That being said, I find it safe to say that I don’t fit the “bow-tie” cornball Conservative image. I still wear a leather jacket, wear lots of black, have a set of combat boots, listen to free jazz, experimental music and indie genres of all sorts. I’m also a practicing Orthodox Christian in pretty good standing at every church I’ve attended in my travels. I make friends pretty easily with liberals, learning that like isn’t all about politics. That last point is what I wanted to concentrate on.

Liberals make themselves look foolish when they discuss politics, as most of the time it sounds like it was regurgitated from a relic posing as an educator more comfortable in babbling on their blinkered view of politics than taking seriously the necessity of balance in education. This is not to say that no good-meaning and wise liberals don’t exist. They do. It is up to you to seek them out.

These otherwise good people, proud of what they’ve been exposed to but rarely understand, makes them feel superior to we, the unlearned, unwashed (well, they should talk), uncultured masses who believe in such superstitions as Christianity and Judaism or Islam (and yes, there are quite a few Muslims who will side with us if you let them). I have a simple suggestion to my dear friends on the right: learn their culture!

There are a lot of people who are like me. There are Conservatives who listen to alternative music, who go out to bars, and though surely “the scene” frowns on it, they go to Church or Synagogue. They read Beat authors, they watch surreal foreign films, they do graphic art, appreciate international cuisine, whatever.

For the older Conservatives, I request you understand and be patient with our differences. It would do you well to learn about counter-culture. For the younger ones, however, it is IMPERATIVE that you broaden your horizons, if for no other reason than to find fertile ground in which to bring fresh blood into a good political grounding. Do it with tact. Do it with class. Just do it!

Why – First In A Series

Posted by: Pete Socks  //  Category: Pete Socks

I have been reading a lot of material lately and have formulated some basic tenants that I wish to share with you. No one is powerless, we all have a right and responsibility to voice our opinions and promote strong conservative candidates. Candidates who will do what is in the best interest of our country and not the better interests of the political cronies that prop them up. Candidates who understand and appreciate what the Founding Fathers established and wish to maintain it rather than manipulate it for the good of a few.

I do not believe in what this current administration and Congress prescribe for our country.
I do not believe in their stance on abortion.
I do not believe in their Marxist views on redistribution of wealth.
I do not believe as they do that America is an arrogant nation and should take a backseat to others.
I do not believe in Radical Islam and that Israel is our enemy and they should give up their land.
I do not believe we should sit down at the negotiating table with terroristic states and treat them as our equals.
I do not believe in class warfare initiated by raising taxes on those making $150,000 or more.
I do not believe in government run healthcare that in a cloak and dagger fashion funds abortions and covers illegal aliens (see yesterdays post).

These are reasons I write. These are the reasons I support strong conservatives. These are the reasons I will not lay down and sit idly by while things are manipulated under our noses. In future posts I will expand upon each of these points.

October 7th Edition Of YGC Radio: SE Cupp Interview

Posted by: YoungGunConservative  //  Category: Podcasts

In this episode we talked with Fox News Contributor, SE Cupp about health care, Presidential czars and more. Enjoy!

 
icon for podpress  October 7th Episode: SE Cupp [112:52m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

October 5th Edition Of YGC Radio: Congressman Thaddeus McCotter Interview

Posted by: YoungGunConservative  //  Category: Podcasts

In this episode, we chatted about the Obama Olympic Flop, and also interviewed Congressman Thaddeus McCotter (R-MI). Enjoy!

 
icon for podpress  October 5th Episode [120:36m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Young People Don’t Need Unions If They Want To Succeed In Work & Life

Posted by: YoungGunConservative  //  Category: Blog Entries, Guest Contributors

Recently, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette ran a joint Letter to the Editor from two union leaders who repeatedly touched on socialist items under the guise of the American work force. The letter was entitled, “Young People Need Unions. They’ve Not Been Told What Collective Action Can Accomplish.”

The piece, compiled by Michael Fedor and Jennifer Jannon, touted on shockingly anti-American principles. Let’s get started with the diagnosis:

“Young workers are among those hardest hit by the economic recession and the group least likely to have health insurance. We are shockingly likely to be living with our parents because we can’t afford to pay rent — let alone a mortgage. A recent study done by the AFL-CIO and Working America found 34 percent of workers under the age of 35 still living with parents, a number that jumped to 52 percent for those making less than $30,000 per year.”

First off, how is this different than just about any other generation? Nearly 20 years ago, when I was starting out after graduating college, I lived with my fiance. We had a plan to live together, pooled our money together, and survive day-by-day. We rented a small apartment. Then a larger one. Then an even larger one. Then half a house. Then we worked enough to buy a house. I was 30 when we closed the deal. From what I understand, that was my parents’ plan slightly more than 20 years before that. And so on.

Secondly, if a young worker makes $30,000 a year, count yourself lucky. As someone in your early 20’s, college graduate or not, you most likely don’t have the work resume to make that kind of scratch. The same was correct 20 years ago. In fact, my goal was to make more money every year. Through hard work, that basically happened. To toss a blind “$30,000” at someone in their late teens or early 20’s is fiscal bankruptcy. Who pays these wild prices? The consumer. Any consumer.

Back to the manic assertions of Fedor and Jannon: “Young workers know that the answers to their struggles won’t necessarily come from employers. Just 41 percent said they strongly trusted their employer to treat them fairly. Young adults, in other words, need the benefits of union membership more than anyone.
That’s why, as young adults in the labor movement, we were pleased by the focus on young workers at the recent AFL-CIO convention in Pittsburgh.”


They say that “just 41 percent…” I wonder if my grandfather, working in coal mines 60 years ago, had a higher “satisfaction” rate for his managers. Yes, he was a proud member of the United Mine Workers Association back in the day. Did “Pap” have top-of-the-line accommodations all the while working in an industry that defined the need for early unions? Seeing that the biggest thing he did in my lifetime was add a second trailer onto the decades-old one I remember from my earliest days. Family, not contractors, built the wonderful hallway between the two residences.

It’s clear that Fedor and Jannon are aiming for the lowest-common-denominator: soft-mushy-minds of the disenfranchised who aren’t ambitious, hard-working, principled employees. Instead, they are cobbling archaic ideals into empty ideas that—as a vantage point—somehow got the least-qualified Presidential candidate in the history of the union the top spot in the land.

More from Fedor and Jannon: “The need to involve younger workers wasn’t just given lip service. This convention saw the election of the first woman and the youngest AFL-CIO secretary-treasurer ever, Liz Shuler, 39. A powerful new voice in the labor movement, she told the convention, ‘It’s not that today’s young people don’t like unions; it’s just that they really don’t know about us.’
How true. In school, most of us weren’t taught that America’s working people, united in unions, fought to win weekends off, the 40-hour work week, the minimum wage and safe workplaces. Nor were we taught that union members now earn 30 percent more and are 52 percent more likely to have employer-provided health insurance than nonunion workers. Or that for women and people of color, the best guarantee of equal pay for equal work is a union contract.”

Only a moron wouldn’t use a relatively-minor office to showcase a a “young” leader. That being said, Shuler, 39, isn’t young enough to be touted as youthful. Richard Trumka, 60, the new union president, seemed like an old man 30 years ago when he was yielding a relatively-heavy thuggish persona in the coal mining industry. Add to that the fact that he was an attorney and his creepiness was off the charts.
And by the way, when Trumka was “standing up to management” in 1979 in Western Pennsylvania, the coal mining industry was crippled throughout the region as a result. Mines closed, jobs were lost. Families were ruined. Forever.

It’s beyond easy to call rallies for unionization asinine. Here’s perhaps the coup de‘ gras: “These omissions have done our generation a disservice by obscuring the power of collective action. Instead, we’ve been taught that progress comes from above and that our success should be measured by what we alone accomplish.”

Again: “that our success should be measured by what we alone accomplish.” Economies are created, lives are enriched by “what we alone accomplish.” There were reports that the lunatics at theAFL-CIO convention booed a picture of Ronald Reagan. Reagan, who as president, railed against large governments, all the while extolling the virtues of the individual. Unionizing, just to save the least-productive worker for the highest hourly-rate possible, is extreme madness and way-of-life destroying. We won’t even talk about the freedoms of working without “union representation.” The next union member I meet who is proudly ambitious at work will be the first.

The twosome continue: “Even for those of our generation who want to join unions, it’s difficult to do so. Decades of union-busting have left many too afraid to risk their jobs with an attempt to unionize; workers are fired in one-third of unionization attempts. Passage of real labor law reform would go a long way toward ensuring that all workers have the freedom to join a union.”

In many areas of labor, unionizing is simply unfeasible. Only a few years ago, I enjoyed a part-time job in which fellow workers were eager to hear from a union organizer. I attended the meetings and heard altruistic, but unreasonable pay demands from co-workers. Those discussions continued after my time there was over. Within the blink of an eye, many of those jobs were eliminated. Guess what? They were not necessary jobs and management reacted accordingly.

Let’s conclude Fedor and Jannon’s argument: “Beyond that, young workers face unique challenges. As employers hire more temporary, part-time and contract employees, we feel stuck — and ever more isolated.
That’s why the renewed commitment from the AFL-CIO to help younger workers find their voices is so exciting. Every day Working America, the community-organizing affiliate of the AFL-CIO, talks to people who don’t have unions in their workplaces but want to be heard on issues like health care and job security. We know that the passion for change is out there, waiting to be tapped.
To do that, the AFL-CIO is joining partner unions and organizations to engage our generation, awaken the best in us and involve us in the movement that built this nation — and that will rebuild it better than ever.”

Not once is an argument for success or excellence forwarded in this naive, insulated diatribe. Success and excellence can only be forged with the freedom, hard-work and determination that is gleefully placed on the back-burner of this argument.
Unionizing for the sake of unionizing destroys jobs. That much is fact. Simple economics proves that unions cannot operate fast-food restaurants.

The average burger flipper or mop person is a kid just starting out, a part-timer looking for supplemental income or a retiree looking for something to do. The aggressive worker at the corner fast-food joint is in the management program. There isn’t a custodian in America who should earn $25 an hour to push a broom, yet unions prod for that type of wage.
Entrepreneurship has and will always run this country. They are the risk takers who will employ workers at a fair market value.

Unions did at one time assure menial laborers weren’t being killed on the job. Antique unions made sure workers got paid over time and had time off. Today, unions push for Sundays off, all the while members routinely stay away from the church services “unions” seemingly wanted to protect.
America was built on ingenuity and personal accomplishments. Not the selfishness of a few. There’s a genuine reason why union membership is on the wane in big numbers. Collective action slows growth to an excessive crawl.

Tom Leturgey

Pittsburgh Gazette

The American Wage Slave

Posted by: jengels  //  Category: Blog Entries, Jacob Engels

In the early development of America, Thomas Jefferson realized the finite resources of the country could only provide endless bounty if the resources were carefully husbanded by a decentralized group of farmers that were free to innovate and motivated by their private property ownership interests. As the 19th century progressed, however, it was impossible to ignore the shift from Jefferson’s yeoman farmer to the increasingly centralized and urban manufacturing economy dotted not by independent self-governing farmers but by urban renters and wage laborers in an increasingly centralized economy.

For decades, the American industrial base has provided a continually improved quality of life and has driven economic progress throughout the world, but it has also led to a loss of an independent and freedom loving spirit that is at the core of the success of America and the advancement of liberty.

Commentators ranging from Karl Marx to Andrew Jackson have criticized wage earning in the industrial age for leaving individual laborers to bargain for wages against increasingly powerful industrial concerns to the mass of the population losing individual economic ownership and the ability to be self-governing.

These arguments have been to some degree set aside during the many decades that industrialization provided economic growth, but it is reemerging as the growth and cost of government at all levels is consuming an ever larger share of wages.

As the American wage earner is now required to compete globally in an economy crushed by the cost of government, American wage earners struggle to maintain their jobs while facing the reality that even if they are employed their wages are largely consumed by taxes and government imposed expenses that do not contribute to their economic well-being. In short they are increasingly becoming wage slaves employed for the sake of paying the government rather than being free people working for their individual material wellbeing.

Americans have repeatedly proven their ability to compete when freed from the heavy hand of government intrusion; the need for the spirit of American liberty to re-emerge is essential if Americans are going to overcome the economic problems created by Washington’s preference for commanding and controlling the direction of the economy.

Congress and the Obama administration have demonstrated their desire for large portions of the American economy to be brought under control of the federal government. Private financial institutions have been taken over, auto companies have been nationalized, the government is intent upon controlling healthcare and bailouts for failing media companies and numerous other schemes for the government to control a larger and larger share of the economy have been proposed.

The intent of this article is to begin a conversation about moving beyond government solutions to economic problems to how individual Americans might restore their God given liberty and continue pursuing economic progress. Without such a shift, most Americans can count on the cost of government rendering them wage slaves incapable of self-governance.