I agree with Inia's post on all of the issues that lie within the IRS, as well as several other government agencies. The Internal Revenue Service, of all people, should be the ones that are compliant the most out of all U.S. citizens. How can they expect for the "average Joe" that works maybe a full time job, has a mortgage to pay and family to raise as well as plan for a decent retirement keep up one hundred percent of his or her taxes whenever their own employees do not do such. Especially with the employees that have discipline issues. There is no logical reasoning as to why anyone with back taxes that works at the IRS or for any government agency for that matter, get any type of annual compensation bonus. The employees that have discipline issues are definitely being mislead by being awarded with such merits and/or awards. It sounds like to me that whoever is in charge of these employees is not competent to effectively do their job or else the employees with such discipline issues would not be getting awarded with such bonuses.
A similar situation has occurred with an EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) employee that was caught watching anywhere from two to six hours of porn since 2010 while on company time on a company computer. What happened to this individual you ask? Well he still has his job and is still getting paid. This employee pretty much got a slap on the wrist, if that. The immediate supervisors of this employee personally told members of Congress that they are not doing anything about this issue. This employee is getting paid 120K dollars a year and receiving performance awards, yes I said PERFORMANCE awards. Don't you just love how our government is leading by such a superior example.
Friday, May 9, 2014
Friday, April 11, 2014
Response - Judge Russia Not...Unless You Want to be Judged, Western World
I have to agree to disagree to Political Nonsense The Ukraine is a sovereign country and has been since 1991. You don't just invade a sovereign country and take it over, or even get it "annexed" into your country, especially if that country has not committed any type of military action toward you or your allies. If the people of Crimea really wanted to be a part of Russia then they need to move onto Russia soil.
You are right in respect to Obama and the majority of the U.S. citizens not knowing the culture of eastern Europeans, however that does not play a large role into this when there are INTERNATIONAL LAWS, in which the "laws" have been "understood" or "recognized," by other countries abroad. We do not have to understand their way of thinking, nor do they have to understand ours. As long as we respect one another and have "agreed" on these "International laws," it should be well understood that you do not take action as Putin has.
As much as I disagree with Obama on a LOT of things he says, I do agree with him about Putin being upset about the fall of the Soviet Union. Putin wants it back, and always has. If anyone is stirring up Cold War anxieties it is Russia, not the U.S. We were not the ones to invade a country with tens of thousands of armed military personal, take control of Airports and Military bases, and then ask the people, "Hey, what country do you want to live in?" It does not work like that w/out resistance from other countries, especially the U.S. as we have been established as a "World Leader" since the end of WWI. If the U.S. did not get involved with this at all, then that would be ridiculous at best, and I am 100% against Unnecessary military action. If the U.S. "let it be" as you previously stated, any/all countries at that, then who the hell is going to stop Putin when he sees (which he already has w/Crimea) that not a single country is going to do anything about it. What if he gets to England and starts a war with them along the same lines as they did with Crimea. Is the U.S. just supposed to set here a twiddle our thumbs while one of our main allies are getting killed over this guy with a war rage? Its international checks and balances. However you look at this situation, Putin has committed an act of war on the Ukraine.
The U.S. did not "take over' or "annex" Libya, we took military intervention to aid anti-Gaddafi rebels with air strikes against the Libyan Army. Also, according to a 2012 poll conducted by Gallup, 54% of Libyans approve of U.S. leadership, compared to only 22% and 19% respective approval for China and Russia's, and 75% of Libyans say they approved of NATO's military intervention in the civil war.
Afghanistan, really? September 11, 2001. Thousands of American murdered at home, from terrorists abroad. Al-Queda. Osama Bin Laden. Taliban. Enough said.
Im not suggesting here that borders are "set in stone" and can not be moved, however, it needs to be done as civil as possible. The last thing that Russia is doing is acting in a civil manner. Putin currently has tens of thousands of troops on the borders of eastern Ukraine, he obviously is not done yet after seeing what other countries have NOT done about him taking over Crimea by breaking international law in doing so. If he does not stop what he is doing, then it will bring on a much larger issue in the very near future. Sanctions are always just the beginning.
You are right in respect to Obama and the majority of the U.S. citizens not knowing the culture of eastern Europeans, however that does not play a large role into this when there are INTERNATIONAL LAWS, in which the "laws" have been "understood" or "recognized," by other countries abroad. We do not have to understand their way of thinking, nor do they have to understand ours. As long as we respect one another and have "agreed" on these "International laws," it should be well understood that you do not take action as Putin has.
As much as I disagree with Obama on a LOT of things he says, I do agree with him about Putin being upset about the fall of the Soviet Union. Putin wants it back, and always has. If anyone is stirring up Cold War anxieties it is Russia, not the U.S. We were not the ones to invade a country with tens of thousands of armed military personal, take control of Airports and Military bases, and then ask the people, "Hey, what country do you want to live in?" It does not work like that w/out resistance from other countries, especially the U.S. as we have been established as a "World Leader" since the end of WWI. If the U.S. did not get involved with this at all, then that would be ridiculous at best, and I am 100% against Unnecessary military action. If the U.S. "let it be" as you previously stated, any/all countries at that, then who the hell is going to stop Putin when he sees (which he already has w/Crimea) that not a single country is going to do anything about it. What if he gets to England and starts a war with them along the same lines as they did with Crimea. Is the U.S. just supposed to set here a twiddle our thumbs while one of our main allies are getting killed over this guy with a war rage? Its international checks and balances. However you look at this situation, Putin has committed an act of war on the Ukraine.
The U.S. did not "take over' or "annex" Libya, we took military intervention to aid anti-Gaddafi rebels with air strikes against the Libyan Army. Also, according to a 2012 poll conducted by Gallup, 54% of Libyans approve of U.S. leadership, compared to only 22% and 19% respective approval for China and Russia's, and 75% of Libyans say they approved of NATO's military intervention in the civil war.
Afghanistan, really? September 11, 2001. Thousands of American murdered at home, from terrorists abroad. Al-Queda. Osama Bin Laden. Taliban. Enough said.
Im not suggesting here that borders are "set in stone" and can not be moved, however, it needs to be done as civil as possible. The last thing that Russia is doing is acting in a civil manner. Putin currently has tens of thousands of troops on the borders of eastern Ukraine, he obviously is not done yet after seeing what other countries have NOT done about him taking over Crimea by breaking international law in doing so. If he does not stop what he is doing, then it will bring on a much larger issue in the very near future. Sanctions are always just the beginning.
Friday, March 28, 2014
Land of the Fake Red Lines, and the Home of the Empty Threats
It
seems that the President of the United States has had an issue keeping his word
on, well, pretty much every damn thing he says.
From his signature Healthcare law to military action.
We
have all heard the famous line with his healthcare law “If you like your plan,
you can keep it,” he said the same thing about our doctors too. Here is a video with President Obama stating
so, Keep
Your Plan. Years later in 2014 he
admits in an interview with WebMD that some people will have to change plans
and/or doctors in a manner to save money.
Here is a video with President Obama admitting people will have to
change doctors, Change
Doctors.
This
is just showing the beginning of his lie spectrum. Now I am going to get into what is really
hurting our Country’s reputation.
When
Syrian
President Bashar Assad spoke of the use of chemical weapons on his own people,
President Obama stated that if he did so, it would cross a “red line for us”
and might trigger a U.S. military response. You can review a timeline of the
Syrian controversy here Red
Line Timeline. As we have all seen,
nothing was done militarily by the United States even after Assad had used
chemical weapons on his citizens, including women and children.
President Obama has said so many
things that he has not come thru on, issues that involved both foreign and
domestic people. The President not
following through on the Syrian President as he said he would even after a
verified chemical attack, show great weakness in his leadership and on the
United States as a country. The world
laughs at the U.S. now, we do not have any respect left for us.
President Putin of Russia has
realized how meaningless that President Obama’s red lines, warnings, and
threats of military action are. Whenever
Putin invaded Crimea, it was a test to see if anyone in the world would do
anything about it. Other than a few
sanctions and frozen assets, nothing has been done. Putin is not worried about either of these
and Russia is self-efficient enough to support itself for a good while.
There are currently tens of thousands
of Russian troops bordering eastern Ukraine, and I am betting that Putin will
move into eastern Ukraine and take it over as he did Crimea. Putin has an end
game in his mind and is definitely not worried about any type of military
intervention from the U.S. It looks like
to me that Putin is going after his Soviet Union and rebuilding the Russian
empire.
The United States is a world power
and a world leader; at least we used to be.
We grew an empire in the late 19th to early 20th
century, and with that empire came an understood respect. Most people and countries did not like and
respect us because we were nice. Respect
comes from fear and understanding boundaries.
Several countries found that out the hard way. Today, countries are
calling our leaders’ bluff and wiping out what respect we have left. If this keeps happening, it won’t take long
for a country to try our limits and move in on us. According to history, a World War is about
due.
The moral of this blog is that our
country is not being lead by a strong leader.
We are becoming the person that no one believes anything that they say
because they never do as they say that they would. We have fought hard for what we have, and
loved ones have did while doing so. It
has also taken hundreds of years to get to where we are. When people see that red, white, and blue flying
high in the sky, they should get a feeling of a strong, bold, and uniform country
that will do whatever necessary to protect its land and citizens.
Friday, March 7, 2014
Obama and Foreign Policy
On March 7th, 2014,
Reihan Salam wrote an article in National Review Online titled “The
Agenda.” In speaking to the American
citizens, Salam asks if the Crimea crisis has anything to do with President
Obama.
While the author reviews some of
President Obama’s interactions with foreign altercations within the last
decade, he claims that Obama does not hold his ground very strongly, nor does
the President portray clear, solid, and confident decisions when it comes to
foreign affairs. The author writes, “Though
the president came out in favor of an armed intervention after (contested)
allegations of the Assad regime’s use of chemical weapons against
opposition forces, he seemed ambivalent about the idea, and he abandoned it
relatively quickly.”
Salam also leans toward the idea
that Obama is an antiwar politician, despite what Obama says in the following. “In a 2002 address,
Obama argued that to oppose the Iraq War was not to be “anti-war” as such,
but rather to be opposed to “a dumb war …
a rash war.” More of the
authors evidence of Obama being an antiwar politician includes the facts that
the President opposed the Iraq War, was eager to free the United Stated from
its involvement in the new Iraqi state, being keen to place a firm time limit
on the presence of United States military forces in Afghanistan, he has been
willing to negotiate directly with the Iranian government without actively
consulting United States allies in the Arabian Gulf, as well as supporting an
armed intervention during the Libya crisis only after the French and British
had already intervened.
Obama is more concentrated on
domestic issue rather than foreign policy, and indeed we have plenty of
domestic issues at hand. I’m not
suggesting that this is a bad thing, however, if foreign nations become
unstable and do not balance themselves out in a timely manner, it will effect
other nations and U.S. allies as well, in turn, directly effecting the United
States, and if a world power (United States) does not act as a world leader,
someone will step up to the plate and down we move on the hierarchy.
One can only hope for peace
among all nations for so long, if there are no positive changes then the leader
must regulate accordingly.
I do believe that the Crimea crisis
involves the President’s foreign policy and the United States as a whole,
especially with Russia, at a minimum, breaking international laws. I agree with attempting to defuse the
situation diplomatically before utilizing military force as we have up to this
point, however, it looks like Vladimir Putin has a different end game in mind.
I agree with the author on the
account of Obama not holding his ground very strongly, or portraying
clear, solid, and confident decisions when it comes to foreign affairs. I find the author to be credible, he used
factual statements when talking on theses points, and when mentioning anything
of speculation on his part, he states it so.
Thursday, February 20, 2014
Now thats Micro Segmentation.......straight from our elected officials.
On February 10, 2014, The Wall Street Journal released an Op-Ed
by Ajit Pai about how the government is attempting to push the Federal
Communications Commission into newsrooms across America. Ajit Pai is a
commissioner for the FCC, therefore I would say his statements on this topic
are pretty credible, and is telling the readers of America what is about to
come and adding his opinion to the situation. The FCC (which is a
government agency), controls the airwaves, and they are attempting to survey
what citizens "need to know," then regulate what can be aired on both
television and radio to ensure that the citizens are ONLY getting the media
that THEY believe is critical for us to see and/or hear.
"The FCC says
the study is merely an objective fact-finding mission. The results will inform
a report that the FCC must submit to Congress every three years on eliminating
barriers to entry for entrepreneurs and small businesses in the communications
industry." (The Wall Street Journal)
Business competition is just that, plain and simple, competition. If one executive looks at the media from a different angle than the other guy trying to get into the business, then that is probably why the other guy is still trying. This concept could be placed on any number of businesses because that is how business operates.
Business competition is just that, plain and simple, competition. If one executive looks at the media from a different angle than the other guy trying to get into the business, then that is probably why the other guy is still trying. This concept could be placed on any number of businesses because that is how business operates.
However, if this is really an honest
statement from the FCC, then what does interviewing station owners, news anchors, and
directors about their "news philosophy," and how which stories are
chosen to be covered on the air have to do with blocking the pathway to
the communications industry for small businesses? This
statement sounds like a very poor excuse for attempting to place a
virtual Government-parental-control on the nations televisions and radio
stations.
Mr. Pai is making an argument against the FCC
stating that he does not believe that the Federal Government should be
governing what citizens should watch. I have to proudly agree with him on
this. If I want to watch a news story about something that happened
almost years ago on September 11, 2012 because I believe that it is still
relevant, then I should be able to do so. If the FCC had anything to do
with it, that story, along with many others, would not see the light of day or the dark of night under
the current administration.
This is a very important issue. If this measure is enacted, all of our lives will be directly affected by it. Some of the issues that we really care about would essentially be blocked by the government, or in this case, big brother.
This is a very important issue. If this measure is enacted, all of our lives will be directly affected by it. Some of the issues that we really care about would essentially be blocked by the government, or in this case, big brother.
There is a 1st Amendment to the United States
Constitution that used to mean something and be respected, two of those rights
are freedom of speech and freedom of press. That should cover the legal end of
this debate, the other, personally, I do not need and will not have anyone
telling me what I NEED to know and what I don't. This is The United
States of America. This should not even be given time on the House floor.
Thursday, February 6, 2014
It's A Bird, It's A Plane, Wait.......Is It The NSA?
On January 24, 2014, Fox News released an article about the
Pentagon planning to deploy two large blimp like aircraft around ten thousand feet
above Washington, D.C. These are the
same aircraft that have been used by the U.S. military in the Middle East as
well as along the United States and Mexico border for surveillance purposes. These aircraft are equipped with military
grade, high altitude surveillance systems that can detect low flying objects,
such as missiles or drones, up to 340 miles away. The Pentagon’s reasoning for placing them
above the U.S. Capital is strictly for security purposes in the event that any enemy
missile or aircraft begin to approach the capital. These aircraft have the ability to carry
powerful surveillance systems capable of tracking people and vehicles up to 140
miles away. The U.S. Army did not rule
out the idea of mounting these camera systems on the aircraft.
Would this bother you if the government placed these same
aircraft above our city? Would you feel
that the government would be violating your 4th amendment right,
especially after not ruling out the option of placing the surveillance system
that is capable of tracking people when this is supposed to be used for “flying
objects?”
Some things such as this article do not get noticed to a lot
of the public and might go unnoticed for some time. One of the main reasons for that is that modern
American citizens are not politically engaged enough to see such articles, much
less any political topic.
I believe that this is a very important topic because it is
leaning on, if not crossing, Americans 4th amendment right. We are in a time where we have the ability to
track and record information such as phone calls, text messages, emails, and
much more electronically through today’s technology. The NSA (National Security Agency) claims
that all attempts to monitor and record such data have been used solely for
national security purposes such as against terror attacks. I love America and I happily pay my taxes and
want to live in a safe place. With that
being said, some privacy will have to be given to the government in order for
them to do their jobs. It is risk versus
reward. However, I do believe that there
have been plenty of sketchy scenarios regarding the NSA and other government
bodies with regards to their “national security” card they like to play so
often. If the government is going to go
down this road, which it may need to in order to protect our land, then they
need to get some sort of technology law in place with regards to the 4th
amendment. As of right now, they are
stomping all over it, not only with the blimp style aircraft, but with plenty
of other operations that they have ongoing as we type our blogs.
4th
Amendment - The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses,
papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be
violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by
Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and
the persons or things to be seized.
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