5/11/12

U.S. Senate Progs Make Mockery

Michael Walsh: The 17th Amendment Must Go!
Yesterday’s forced retirement of Senator Richard Lugar of “Indiana” should prove a bracing lesson in the use of the pike for didactic purposes. It’s also one of the best arguments for the repeal of the 17th amendment in a long time.

As I’ve said before, senators no longer represent their states to Washington, they represent Leviathan to the states, handing out either goodies or punishments as their whim and the political winds dictate. Their primary allegiance is not to the voters back “home” but to their cloakroom colleagues (hence the “bipartisanship” fetish that is particularly virulent in the Senate) on Capitol Hill, and to the Beltway parasites who feed off them.

In the name of “democracy,” the “progressive”-era amendment fundamentally upset the balance of state-fed power that had been built into the Constitution, tipping it inexorably in favor of Washington. Unmoored from state or region for a minimum of six years — and more likely, twelve or 18 — the senators now form a club without a purpose except for their own reelections. Far from enhancing democracy, the very nature of the office now mocks it.
(full story at nationalreview.com)

How Progs H8 Tradition

Critical Theorists even despise their own roots, immunities & privileges

Image:


(from thelookingspoon.com)

Pullman Palace, Ricardo Klement, Kim Philby

On this day: May 11
4,000 Pullman Palace Car Company workers go on a wildcat strike in Illinois (1894)

In Buenos Aires, Argentina, four Israeli Mossad agents capture fugitive National Socialist Workers' Party big Adolf Eichmann, living under the assumed name Ricardo Klement (1960)

The first contraceptive pill is made available on the market (1960)

b: Jim Jeffords (1934); d: Daniel De Leon (1914), Kim Philby (1988)


Get 'On this day' by RSS or via daily email.
Related Posts with Thumbnails