Conservative Thread: We cannot do everything at once, but we can do something at once

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Have y'all heard that the Capitol Visitors Center (in DC) is finally open?

MANY years late and nearly NINE TIMES OVER BUDGET!! at 621 MILLION!

Also, they (whoever built or designed it) made a "mistake" and chiseled in stone our nations motto. "E Pluribus Unum". Oooops. That's not it.

This thing is a joke. It's underground (so Harry Reid can't smell the tourists) and supposedly you can't even get into the rotunda any more. Wow.


December 2, 2008
Liberalized center is 'Capitol' crime
by Matthew Spalding, Ph.D.
As an expert in the U.S. Constitution and America's founding, I thought I had lost the ability to be shocked by politically correct distortions of our history. Then I visited the new Capitol Visitor Center.

The just-completed Visitor Center, which opens Dec. 2, is a 580,000-square-foot cavern dug at the foot of the U.S. Capitol at a cost of $621 million (almost nine times over budget).

The Capitol is a noble monument to American liberty. The neoclassical architecture is meant to be approached from afar. We are supposed to walk up vast flights of stairs to enter a magnificent rotunda, inspired to reflect on the grandeur of our self-governing republic.

Now the public will approach the Capitol underground and enter, mole-like, through the basement.

What Congress has arranged for the public to be taught before they get in is a scandal.

Designed to provide "an enhanced educational experience," the Visitor Center allows guests to make on-line reservations before spending time at two gift shops, enjoying a 530-seat restaurant, visiting any of 26 restrooms or watching an orientation film in one of two theaters, all in air-conditioned comfort.

The "educational" part is the Exhibition Hall, the theme of which is "E Pluribus Unum -- Out of Many, One." The etching in marble initially referred to that phrase as the nation's motto. Now, however, that etching is covered by a bad plaster job, because … well, "E Pluribus Unum" is not the nation's motto. Our actual motto, "In God We Trust," is notably absent, along with other references to faith.

Take how the exhibit treats the Northwest Ordinance, the 1787 document that signaled the beginning of America's westward expansion. It's selectively quoted to encourage education -- carefully shorn of its opening clause: "Religion, morality and knowledge, being necessary to good government and the happiness of mankind ..."

But what bothered me the most when I toured the Visitor Center at the request of Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) -- who raised a warning flag on this politically correct outrage -- is what it does to the Constitution.

I always thought (because it says so) that the Constitution was about the powers delegated to government by the people, who possess individual rights. Article I begins: "All legislative powers herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of the United States." A written agreement on the extent (and limits) of those powers is critical to a constitution that derives its "just powers from the consent of the governed," as the Declaration of Independence prescribes.

"If Congress can do whatever in their discretion can be done by money, and will promote the General Welfare," James Madison wrote, "the Government is no longer a limited one, possessing enumerated powers, but an indefinite one, subject to particular exceptions."

Wrong, Mr. Madison. The Constitution, according to the new Visitor Center, isn't a list of powers but "aspirations" that Congress is expected to define and realize. I guess those are like the rights the Supreme Court, in the 1960s, began discovering in "penumbras" and "emanations" of the Constitution.

What "aspirations," you ask? There are six:

Unity (as in "a more perfect Union" in the Preamble, which grants Congress no power).
Freedom (based on the First Amendment, which begins, by the way, with "Congress shall make no law ...").
Common Defense (from Article I, Section 8).
Knowledge (authority to promote public education, support arts and sciences, fund extensive research).
Exploration (to justify funding "curiosity and boldness." Both 4. and 5. come from a convoluted reading of the clause granting Congress the power to issue patents.)
General Welfare (found in Article I, Section 8's restriction of the taxing power, but taken here to mean "improving transportation, promoting agriculture and industry, protecting health and the environment, and seeking ways to solve social and economic problems").
See for yourself. The full text of the script and orientation film is online at heritage.org/leadershipforamerica/upload/CVC.pdf.

This exhibit is Congress' temple to liberals' "living Constitution," the eternal font of lawmakers' evolving mandate to achieve the nation's ideals. There are no fixed meanings in their version, only open-ended "aspirations." The Constitution is an empty vessel, to be adapted to the times, as required to bring change. It means nothing -- or anything.

Not surprisingly, the rest of the exhibit details the unfolding of liberal progress and the rise of modern administrative government. Everything is about movement away from America's sins (slavery, treatment of Indians, Vietnam) toward congressionally led enlightenment (direct election of senators, voting rights, the New Deal, Medicare).

The education experience concludes by quoting Sen. Robert La Follette, the great progressive reformer from Wisconsin: "America is not made. It's in the making."

According to this distorted view, we are a pluribus only until Congress makes us an unum--by remaking the Constitution in its own image.

Matthew Spalding, Ph.D., director of the B. Kenneth Simon Center for American Studies at The Heritage Foundation (heritage.org), is executive editor of "The Heritage Guide to the Constitution."

First moved Nov. 27 on the McClatchy-Tribune wire
 
Michelle67 said:
Deb....

That'd be too bad, I'd be so sad, I might get mad, I'd tell my dad. That'd be too bad....that'd be too bad.

Argh!! I'm sitting here at work catching up on this thread...and now I have "I love my lips" running through my head.......
 
and my favorite part -- On the day I got my tooth,I had to kiss my Great Aunt Ruth. She had a beard and it felt weird. :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl:
Coz' he loves his Cheeseburger with all his heart,
And there ain't nothing gonna tear you two-oo apart,
And if the world suddenly ran out of cheese,
He would get down on his hands and knees,
To see if someone accidenly dropped some cheese in the dirt,
Then he would wash it up for you,
Wipe it up for you,
Clean that dirty cheese up just for YOU!!!!!!

You are his Cheese-bur-GER!!
:rolleyes1
 
Thanks! BTW, I love your pug avatar and siggie! Pugs crack me up. They are so cute but yet they have attitude!

Thanks! They certainly have 'tude! :goodvibes

I love all dogs and cats. Blestmom's puppy is adorable! :cutie:



Yep, thats me! The picture's maybe a year and a half old, but it's one of my favorites.

Hello gorgeous!

So you think people are outraged at the thought of women using a gift card to have such things as a pap smear?? I wasn't getting that vibe from any of the posters. I did see comments about it being offensive as it pertained to abortions. If you can see how some people don't support abortions, then it shouldn't be much of a stretch for you to see how using a gift card for such a procedure would also be something that they wouldn't support.

Also, I know that your use of "you" was in general terms, but there are several on this thread who don't think abortion should be illegal, including me.


ITA!

What the whoozle?? :confused: Did I miss something? I just thought Rush had a cold or something. :confused3 Seriously, was it announced that he has had a drug relapse... or does this poster assume that all addicts are horrible and weak people who relapse constantly? :rolleyes:

My advice is that if you can't be nice maybe you should go spread poop on your own thread where people will enjoy it.


:sad2: I have a FM with a drug addiction and it is not funny :furious: You get to see exactly how 'funny' it is when it happens to one of your kids or FM's.


:rolleyes:
 

I think I might have to bust out my Veggie Tales tunes on the Ipod for the entire office to enjoy now...I'm overloaded already on the christmas music.

Is it sad that not only do I know all the Veggie Tales songs (better than my kids do) but that I also have them all on my Ipod? In my defense I do have adult musicians on there too but I'm just sayin....

Veggie Tales could kick Barney's butt anyday. Two things I never let my children watch-Barney and Teletubbies. Those "things" could scar a kid for life.
 
Mr Man--:lmao:

We don't do barney or tinkydinkylala or anything like that in this house. We do Disney, Veggietales, good wholesome entertainment that doesn't involve singing songs about ice cream or gumdrops falling from the sky. :upsidedow
 
Dang dog door. Who forgot to close it? I haven't even had my coffee yet.
 
/
Mr Man--:lmao:

We don't do barney or tinkydinkylala or anything like that in this house. We do Disney, Veggietales, good wholesome entertainment that doesn't involve singing songs about ice cream or gumdrops falling from the sky. :upsidedow

I'm with you! :thumbsup2

Our biggies right now are Thomas the Tank Engine for DS2 & Veggie Tales for DS8 (ok, SpongeBob is still pretty popular).

Disney movies are ever present.

We are on our 2nd month with no cable/Sat TV. It is going very well (although our DVD purchases easily take the place of the cost savings from getting rid of TV).

However, it is so worth it knowing that noone can ever watch MSNBC at my house. Ever. Again.

I will get TV back when someone can persuade me there is anything worth watching.

:)
 
Perhaps we can fix the door.

duct-tape-3m.jpg
staple.jpg
 
I'm with you! :thumbsup2

Our biggies right now are Thomas the Tank Engine for DS2 & Veggie Tales for DS8 (ok, SpongeBob is still pretty popular).

Disney movies are ever present.

We are on our 2nd month with no cable/Sat TV. It is going very well (although our DVD purchases easily take the place of the cost savings from getting rid of TV).

However, it is so worth it knowing that noone can ever watch MSNBC at my house. Ever. Again.

I will get TV back when someone can persuade me there is anything worth watching.

:)


Monday, January 19th, when Glenn Beck debuts on Fox News.
 
Jack update:

I picked up a little bed for him on Black Friday. It's so small, a loaf of bread won't fit length-wise in there...

DSCF4935-1.jpg

Is Jack a Chihuahua? He looks exactly like my sister's dog Butters. He's so cute!
 
It's a new day and I still want peppermint bark, but guess what? I can't go get it. I have two kids home from school sick today. I think this is another vast right wing conspiracy. You taunt me with pictures of tantalizing goodies that I must be denied!!!!! AHHHHHHHHHH!

When dh gets home, I am out that door. ;)
 
So you think people are outraged at the thought of women using a gift card to have such things as a pap smear?? I wasn't getting that vibe from any of the posters. I did see comments about it being offensive as it pertained to abortions. If you can see how some people don't support abortions, then it shouldn't be much of a stretch for you to see how using a gift card for such a procedure would also be something that they wouldn't support.

Also, I know that your use of "you" was in general terms, but there are several on this thread who don't think abortion should be illegal, including me.

*bold mine*

I didn't know, and I was curious. I should have remembered what happened to the cat!

I couldn't discern if it was a problem with Planned Parenthood, or if it was a problem with the fact that it could be used for an abortion, or if it was the fact that getting medical services was creepy. That is why I asked.

I know there are people who are against abortion, there are people who think it should be illegal. I was one of them, until a recent crisis of faith. I don't know where I stand now? Until there is better education, readily available birth control, support for the children born of unwanted pregnancies, repercussions for the man involved? There is no safety net in place for babies born to drug addicted, alcoholic, or unfit parents. I wish no one had abortions, I wish there was never a need, but until I see programs set up to take care of the problems of unwanted pregnancies, I don't want to make abortion illegal. (Well in my gut I do, but my conscience isn't with my gut anymore.)

And, I wasn't trying to start a pro/anti-abortion discussion in here, so I am very sorry for the tangent. It is tough to when you don't know where you stand anymore, I was a Conservative/Republican for so long, that the change in my thoughts on many of my beliefs has me bewildered. As my conscience doesn't align completely on either side, l will go back to lurking.

Thank you all again, it was very interesting hearing your thoughts. It gives me some food for thought.

ETA: Michelle67, I'm with you, I don't think they make a good gift for anyone! I can see circumstances where they might be good, but I'd rather take a person to the doctor and pay for it than give them a gift card for medical services! It does seem very much like the apple at Halloween, or the toothbrush in your stocking.
 
I don't even know where you'd get peppermint bark.

I'm guessing one of those specialty sweet stores at the mall. I had planned on hitting the mall today before I knew I'd have two sick kiddos on my hands. I will probably just go get the stuff to make it. I need to go grocery shopping anyway.
 
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