Friday, October 31, 2008

In the end we will beg for a coup

As we look forward to Sen. Joe Biden's guarantee that the election of the untested Barack Obama would inevitably result in a global crisis where our enemies take measure of the man by confronting him and America with a challenge we should remember General Tommy Franks who said another serious terrorist attack on the United States would "begin to unravel the fabric of our Constitution." Franks said that under such circumstances, "the Constitution could be scrapped in favor of a military form of government."  
 
With the Patriot Act it will not be difficult for the military to do precisely that. 
 
Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall looked into the future and said, "History teaches that grave threats to liberty often come in times of urgency, when constitutional rights seem too extravagant to endure. The World War II relocation cases, and the Red Scare and McCarthy–era internal subversion cases are only the most extreme reminders that when we allow fundamental freedoms to be sacrificed in the name of real or perceived exigency, we invariably come to regret it."
 
Remember Benjamin Franklin!!! "Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both."
 
As John W. Whitehead wrote, much like animals in a zoo, many Americans have come to believe that the zookeeper is friendly. The greatest threat to our freedoms is not lurking outside our borders in the guise of foreign terrorists or some purported country in an "axis of evil." The real menace comes from within. The enemy is us---our government of wolves and we the sheep. And there is a lesson here. "Rome did not fall because her armies weakened," writes author Salman Rushdie, "but because Romans forgot what being a Roman meant.
 
If America falls, it will be largely because many Americans have forgotten what it means to be American. Since our country's inception, American has been synonymous with the concept that there are certain individual rights and freedoms that no one, not even government agents, can violate. The foundational idea that individuals have an inherent right to "Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness" served as a springboard for the Bill of Rights as they were appended to the Constitution.
 
Absolute rights so precious that no government can violate them? What revolutionary thinking! And yet the early American colonists believed these particular principles were not only worth fighting for, they were worth dying for.
 
Apathy, I can take it or leave it..
 


Regards,
John Jenkins
865-803-8179 cell
Gatlinburg, TN
Email: jrjenki@yahoo.com 

Fibonacci: It's as easy as 1,2,3.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

The Only Way Out of this Mess

Society had better find a way to deal with the billionaires such as the Walton family who feed off the poor and those locked into poverty only because those billionaires manipulate the system to keep them there. Unethical, dishonest and immoral politicians collaborate with unethical, dishonest, and immoral business leaders and that has to stop or the next war will be within our borders.
 
Most CEOs receive hundreds of thousands and millions of dollars not because they earn it but because they conspire with the King Maker boards of directors they created. You scratch mine and I will scratch your syndrome.
 
Politicians as well as business leaders must be held accountable when they participate in activities that threaten the security of the United States much like the current screwup... 


Regards,
John Jenkins
865-803-8179 cell
Gatlinburg, TN
Email: jrjenki@yahoo.com 

Fibonacci: It's as easy as 1,2,3.

We Are Not What We Set Out to Be

"As nightfall does not come all at once, neither does oppression. In both instances, there is a twilight when everything remains seemingly unchanged. And it is in such twilight that we all must be most aware of change in the air---however slight---lest we become unwitting victims of the darkness."

William O. Douglas, U. S. Supreme Court Justice

Heads must roll and butts go to prison, real prison for very long times.

"We the people of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America."
 
There have always been Social classes in the United States. In the Colonies there were Nobility, Gentry, Middle class, Lower Middle class, and Slave class. In modern America we had Upper class, Middle class and Lower class. With the rise in the number of millionaires and billionaires Upper class subdivided into Upper class – Old Money, Upper class – New Money and we are now moving towards super-rich (1%) and sub-rich (99%).
 
Anyone who speaks of inequality in America is branded a "Marxist." But it doesn't take a Marxist real or alleged, to see that America is being polarized between the super-rich few and sub-rich everyone else. Since 1979, the share of pretax income going to the top 1 percent of American households has risen by 7 percent to 16 percent and at the same time, the share of income going to the bottom 80 percent has fallen 7 percent.
 
One financial journalist thinks "as long as the middle class is still trudging along and the poor are not starving flamboyantly in the streets, what does it matter if the super-rich are absorbing an ever-larger share of national income?"
 
In that view whether professional athletes get 100 times or 200 times what I earn is irrelevant.  
 
The professional athlete example hides the reality that a great deal of the wealth at the top is built on the low-wage labor of the poor.
 
A lot of today's wealth is being made in the financial industry by means mysterious to the average American and does not appear to involve much labor; we are all paying the price via the "bailout."
 
The super-rich bid up the price of goods that ordinary people also need --- housing for example. The urban poor are being moved into overcrowded suburban ranch houses, while billionaire's horse farms displace the rural poor and middle class. The rich can pay tuition's of $40,000 and up making college education increasingly a privilege of the upper classes.
 
The concentration of wealth at the top is routinely used to tilt the political process in favor of the wealthy.
 
Those who threaten the security of our country whether by acts of terror or war, by criminal acts or acts of greed must be held accountable.  Deregulation of financial companies only works if those in control are honest, ethical, and moral which has proven to not be the case.
 
Heads must roll and butts must go to prison, real prison for very long times.
 
 
 


Regards,
John Jenkins
865-803-8179 cell
Gatlinburg, TN
Email: jrjenki@yahoo.com 

Fibonacci: It's as easy as 1,2,3.

Greg Oden

No one will win a championship with Greg Oden as their big man. Trail Blazers gambled and lost, big time. Those who had seen him play could have told them not to waste a draft. At Ohio State when the pressure was on and the team needed him on the floor he was on the bench with a foot boo-boo. Bad feet will keep him on the bench..... When the pressure is on and the tough have to get going he folds like a cheap cardtable. Trade him if you can and move on...

Regards,
John Jenkins
865-803-8179 cell
Gatlinburg, TN
Email: jrjenki@yahoo.com 

Fibonacci: It's as easy as 1,2,3.

Piece of The Pie

Nice picture to go along with the receipt...

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Like it or not, there is no better choice than Coach Fulmer

If it was not for a couple of mistakes at the wrong time UT could have 2 victories to their schedule giving them 5/3 overall and a 2/3 SEC.
 
Fans would be upset with the SEC record but the threat of being not eligible for a bowl would not be so ominous.
 
Coach Fulmer usually has boring, dull teams who find a way to win more than they find a way to lose, except for this season. Or their opponents find a way to lose at UT's benefit.
 
As enthusiastic as UT fans are they have to recognize Tennessee is not a football powerhouse at the high school level. Why should a player choose UT over Georgia, or Florida, or Alabama, or LSU or South Carolina? A new coach will not change that. UT is a woman's basketball school not football.
 
It would be wise to stick with Coach Fulmer if for no other reason than there is no better choice. Neither he nor his coaches should receive a raise or bonus.
 
Apparently Coach Fulmer had valid reasons for recruiting who he did for the quarterback position and they may have been good high school players. There is a big difference between high school and college. UT did not win a national championship during the Payton Manning years but they did with T. Martin. Who is the better quarterback? Who is successful in the NFL?
 
To recognize the UT fans no UT game should be on PFV, ever.
 


Regards,
John Jenkins
865-803-8179 cell
Gatlinburg, TN
Email: jrjenki@yahoo.com 

Fibonacci: It's as easy as 1,2,3.

Letter to The Wall Street Journal Congress Must Change or Be Changed

I have a simple but pessimistic philosophy but it makes situations like this one understandable: Politicians are unethical, dishonest, and immoral. They take care of themselves first, those who give them money second, and last if it is convenient, those who voted for them.   
 
To paraphrase Obama's preacher, a politician says what politicians have to say.
 
One other point, when a politician accuses another politician of doing something dishonest, immoral or unethical, the accuser does the same thing and maybe worse.
 
Look only at what a politician does.
 
Senator Stevens proves the rule "absolute power corrupts absolutely"  but he is not alone.
 
While he personifies arrogance and bad judgment it takes more than Stevens to explain Congress's abysmally low approval rating (14% in a Gallup Poll this summer) as well as the perception the public has that once politicians go to Washington they join an elite that believes the rules don't apply to them.
 
Senator Stevens may be a very likable man. He may be more intelligent than the average but as we know as with Bill Clinton being likable and intelligent does not transfer to ethics, honesty, morality, character. 
 
Members of congress voted themselves a better retirement, and better health care than the people who elected them. How did they do that? They did it because they could. Stevens and his fellow senators and house members have assigned to themselves perks most of their constituents can only dream of. They really do live beyond the rules and they make the rules.
 
Members of congress stonewall investigations and protect their fellow members. They do that: because they expect their fellow members to protect them. Protect them from whom: their constituents, the people who trust them, who voted for them. Congress needs to look at West Point, Annapolis, the Air Force Academy and many universities and develop an honor code that has teeth.    
 
Congress is a fraternity or a union and seniority means privileges and power. That must be stopped. Assignments should be for no longer than one year with no member permitted to serve more than one time and on no more than one committee during a congressional term. Members of congress do not vote the way their constituents prefer, they do not even vote their conscience, they vote the way their leaders tell them to vote.  When they must choose between their party leaders and their constituents they choose their party leaders. Like a herd of water buffalo they circle to protect the vulnerable from public scrutiny. That is they circle to protect the criminal from the media and the law.
 
Congress must cancel their retirement package and their health care plans and live under the same rules the rest of us live under, maybe then they will understand.
 
Power does not make character power allows individuals to display character. That there are so many members of Congress violating basic morals, ethics, and honesty and the fact that the rest protect them and that members of congress such as Biden, McCain, and Obama can run for another job and at the same time be paid for not doing the job to which they were elected, that they can vote 'present' when a 'yes' or 'no' is required, is evidence congress is corrupt and must change or be changed.
 
Martin Luther King said something about good people who do nothing. Good people doing nothing means they are no longer good people
 
 

Monday, October 27, 2008

Diary of an unborn child

A bit speculative but a reasonable point.....
October 5:        Today my life began.  My parents do not know it yet; I am as small as a seed of an apple, but it is I already.  And I am to be a girl.  I shall have blond hair and blue eyes.  Just about everything is settled though, even the fact that I shall love flowers.
October 10:      Some say that I am not a real person yet, that only my mother exists.  But I am a real person, just as a small crumb of bread is truly bread.  My mother is,  and I am.
October 2:      My mouth is just beginning to open now.  Just think, in a year or so I shall be laughing, and later talking.  I know what my first word will be:  MaMa.
October  25:     My heart began to beat today all by itself.  From now on it shall gently beat for the rest of my life without ever stopping to rest!  And after many years it will tire.  It will stop, and then I shall die.
November 2:    I am growing a bit every day.  My arms and legs are beginning to take shape.  But I have to wait a long time yet before those little legs will raise me to my mother's arms, before these little arms will be able to gather flowers and embrace my father.
November 12:  Tiny fingers are beginning to form on my hands.  Funny how small they are!   I'll be able to stroke my mother's hair with them.
November 20:   It wasn't until today that the doctor told Mom that I am living here under her heart.  Oh, how happy she must be!  Are you happy, Mom?
November 25:   My mom and dad are probably thinking about a name for me.  But they don't even know that I am a girl.  I want to be called Kathy.  I am getting so big already.
December 10:   My hair is growing.  It is smooth and bright and shiny.  I wonder what kind of hair Mom has.
December 13:   I am just about able to see.  It is dark around me.  When Mom brings me into the world it will be full of sunshine and flowers.  But what I want more than anything is to see my mom.  How do you look, Mom?
December 24:   I wonder if Mom hears the whispering of my heart?  Some children come into the world a little sick.  But my heart is strong and healthy.  It beats so evenly:  tup-tup, tup-tup.  You'll have a healthy little daughter, Mom!
December  28:   Today my mom killed me!
 
"If thou kill, thou art become a transgressor of the law"  James 2:11.
 
Via Church Bulletin, Jacksonville Church of Christ , Jacksonville, AL  36265


Regards,
John Jenkins
865-803-8179 cell
Gatlinburg, TN
Email: jrjenki@yahoo.com 

Fibonacci: It's as easy as 1,2,3.

The Age of Prosperity Is Over

 
Financial panics, if left alone, rarely cause much damage to the real economy, output, employment or production. Asset values fall sharply and wipe out those who borrowed and lent too much, thereby redistributing wealth from the foolish to the prudent. This process is the topic of Nassim Nicholas Taleb's book "Fooled by Randomness."
 
When markets are free, asset values are supposed to go up and down, and competition opens up opportunities for profits and losses. Profits and stock appreciation are not rights, but rewards for insight mixed with a willingness to take risk. People who buy homes and the banks who give them mortgages are no different, in principle, than investors in the stock market, commodity speculators or shop owners. Good decisions should be rewarded and bad decisions should be punished. The market does just that with its profits and losses.
 
No one likes to see people lose their homes when housing prices fall and they can't afford to pay their mortgages; nor does any one of us enjoy watching banks go belly-up for making subprime loans without enough equity. But the taxpayers had nothing to do with either side of the mortgage transaction. If the house's value had appreciated, believe you me the overleveraged homeowner and the overly aggressive bank would never have shared their gain with taxpayers. Housing price declines and their consequences are signals to the market to stop building so many houses, pure and simple.
 
But here's the rub. Now enter the government and the prospects of a kinder and gentler economy. To alleviate the obvious hardships to both homeowners and banks, the government commits to buy mortgages and inject capital into banks, which on the face of it seems like a very nice thing to do. But unfortunately in this world there is no tooth fairy. And the government doesn't create anything; it just redistributes. Whenever the government bails someone out of trouble, they always put someone into trouble, plus of course a toll for the troll. Every $100 billion in bailout requires at least $130 billion in taxes, where the $30 billion extra is the cost of getting government involved.
 
If you don't believe me, just watch how Congress and Barney Frank run the banks. If you thought they did a bad job running the post office, Amtrak, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the military, just wait till you see what they'll do with Wall Street.
 
Some 14 months ago, the projected deficit for the 2008 fiscal year was about 0.6% of GDP. With the $170 billion stimulus package last March, the add-ons to housing and agriculture bills, and the slowdown in tax receipts, the deficit for 2008 actually came in at 3.2% of GDP, with the 2009 deficit projected at 3.8% of GDP. And this is just the beginning.
 
The net national debt in 2001 was at a 20-year low of about 35% of GDP, and today it stands at 50% of GDP. But this 50% number makes no allowance for anything resulting from the over $5.2 trillion guarantee of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac assets, or the $700 billion Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP). Nor does the 50% number include any of the asset swaps done by the Federal Reserve when they bailed out Bear Stearns, AIG and others.
 
But the government isn't finished. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid -- and yes, even Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke -- are preparing for a new $300 billion stimulus package in the next Congress. Each of these actions separately increases the tax burden on the economy and does nothing to encourage economic growth. Giving more money to people when they fail and taking more money away from people when they work doesn't increase work. And the stock market knows it.
 
The stock market is forward looking, reflecting the current value of future expected after-tax profits. An improving economy carries with it the prospects of enhanced profitability as well as higher employment, higher wages, more productivity and more output. Just look at the era beginning with President Reagan's tax cuts, Paul Volcker's sound money, and all the other pro-growth, supply-side policies.
 
Bill Clinton and Alan Greenspan added their efforts to strengthen what had begun under President Reagan. President Clinton signed into law welfare reform, so people actually have to look for a job before being eligible for welfare. He ended the "retirement test" for Social Security benefits (a huge tax cut for elderly workers), pushed the North American Free Trade Agreement through Congress against his union supporters and many of his own party members, signed the largest capital gains tax cut ever (which exempted owner-occupied homes from capital gains taxes), and finally reduced government spending as a share of GDP by an amazing three percentage points (more than the next four best presidents combined). The stock market loved
Mr. Clinton as it had loved Reagan, and for good reasons.
 
The stock market is obviously no fan of second-term George W. Bush, Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, Ben Bernanke, Barack Obama or John McCain, and again for good reasons.
 
These issues aren't Republican or Democrat, left or right, liberal or conservative. They are simply economics, and wish as you might, bad economics will sink any economy no matter how much they believe this time things are different. They aren't.
 
I was on the White House staff as George Shultz's economist in the Office of Management and Budget when Richard Nixon imposed wage and price controls, the dollar was taken off gold, import surcharges were implemented, and other similar measures were enacted from a panicked decision made in August of 1971 at Camp David.
 
I witnessed, like everyone else, the consequences of another panicked decision to cover up the Watergate break-in. I saw up close and personal Presidents Gerald Ford and George H.W. Bush succumb to panicked decisions to raise taxes, as well as Jimmy Carter's emergency energy plan, which included wellhead price controls, excess profits taxes on oil companies, and gasoline price controls at the pump.
 
The consequences of these actions were disastrous. Just look at the stock market from the post-Kennedy high in early 1966 to the pre-Reagan low in August of 1982. The average annual real return for U.S. assets compounded annually was -6% per year for 16 years. That, ladies and gentlemen, is a bear market. And it is something that you may well experience again. Yikes!
Then we have this administration's panicked Sarbanes-Oxley legislation, and of course the deer-in-the-headlights Mr. Bernanke in his bungling of monetary policy.
 
There are many more examples, but none hold a candle to what's happening right now. Twenty-five years down the line, what this administration and Congress have done will be viewed in much the same light as what Herbert Hoover did in the years 1929 through 1932. Whenever people make decisions when they are panicked, the consequences are rarely pretty. We are now witnessing the end of prosperity.
 
Mr. Laffer is chairman of Laffer Associates and co-author of "The End of Prosperity: How Higher Taxes Will Doom the Economy -- If We Let it Happen," just out by Threshold.
 


Regards,
John Jenkins
865-803-8179 cell
Gatlinburg, TN
Email: jrjenki@yahoo.com 

Fibonacci: It's as easy as 1,2,3.

Abortion, a Constitutional Right?

On Monday, January 22, 1973, the United States Supreme Court ruled, in a 7-to-2 vote, that abortion would be legalized and made available on demand throughout America. Such abortions could be performed up to and including the ninth month, with the doctor's permission, if the physical or mental health of the prospective mother was deemed "at risk."
 
The Supreme Court has decided abortion is a Constitutional right. Like this one or not we had better hope the Legislative branch cannot pass laws taking away rights "guaranteed" to us by our Constitution.
 


Regards,
John Jenkins
865-803-8179 cell
Gatlinburg, TN
Email: jrjenki@yahoo.com 

Fibonacci: It's as easy as 1,2,3.

Saturday, October 25, 2008

NBC Tanking for Obama

Regardless of how the election goes NBC has lost its reputation as a News network. It has been obvious NBC is in the tank for Barack Obama. There have always been newspapers who endorsed candidates but I do not remember a network considering themselves a serious source of news endorsing candidates. While presenting itself as neutral, NBC has shown it is truly dishonest, unethical, and immoral and cannot be trusted. If,  as in the old days, the anchor determines the news stories to be covered Brian Williams has led NBC into irrelevance. Anchors are supposed to be pretty, male or female, and develop a long distance relationship with the viewers. That is not the case anymore. Anchors are news readers nothing more and nothing less.

Regards,
John Jenkins
865-803-8179 cell
Gatlinburg, TN
Email: jrjenki@yahoo.com 

Fibonacci: It's as easy as 1,2,3.

Congress Must Change

To Senators Corker and Alexander:
 
In the October 24th USA Today in the "Today's debate: Congressional ethics" found on page 10A the author mentions that Senator Stevens and Representative Mahoney personify arrogance and bad judgment. In the article the author writes about Congress's abysmally low approval rating (14% in a Gallup Poll this summer) and gives Stevens and Mahoney as the reason the perception the public has is that once politicians go to Washington they join an elite that believes the rules don't apply to them.
 
The author mentions "In truth, most members of Congress are dedicated public servants who work long hours and play by the rules"; "there is no shortage of members who justify the stereotype."
 
I disagree. I believe most members of Congress are dedicated to no-one but themselves, and that they do believe the rules do not apply to them, including you and here are my reasons.
 
As you know, we have never met, I do not know you. You may be a very likable man you may be more intelligent than the average but as we know as with Bill Clinton being likable and intelligent does not transfer to ethics, honesty, morality, character. 
 
As members of congress you have voted yourselves a better retirement, and better health care than your constituents, the people who elected you. How did you do that? You did it because you could. You and your fellow senators and house members have assigned to yourselves perks most of your constituents can only dream of. You truly live beyond the rules.
 
As members of congress you stonewall investigations and protect your fellow members. You do that: because you expect your fellow members to protect you. Protect you from whom: your constituents, the people who trust you, who voted for you. Congress needs to look at West Point, Annapolis, the Air Force Academy and many universities and develop an honor code that has teeth.    
 
Congress is a fraternity or a union and seniority means privileges and power. That must be stopped. Assignments should be for no longer than one year with no member permitted to serve more than one time during a congressional term. Members of congress do not vote the way their constituents prefer, they do not even vote their conscience, they vote the way their leaders tell them to vote.  When they must choose between their party leaders and their constituents they choose their party leaders. Like a herd of water buffalo they circle to protect the vulnerable from public scrutiny. That is they circle to protect the criminal from the media and the law.
 
I encourage congress to cancel their retirement package and cancel their health care plans and live under the same rules the rest of us live under, maybe then you will understand.
 
Power does not make character power allows individuals to display character. That there are so many of your fellow members violating basic morals, ethics, and honesty and the fact that the rest protect them and that members of congress such as Obama, Biden, McCain can run for another job and at the same time be paid for not doing the job to which they were elected, that you can vote 'present' when a 'yes' or 'no' is required, is evidence congress is corrupt and must change or be changed.
 
Martin Luther King said something about good people who do nothing. Good people doing nothing means they are no longer good people.


Regards,
John Jenkins
865-803-8179 cell
Gatlinburg, TN
Email: jrjenki@yahoo.com 

Fibonacci: It's as easy as 1,2,3.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Letter to Senator Alexander and Senator Corker

We're stuck in a war with no plan for winning and no plan for leaving. We're running the biggest deficit in the history of the country. We're losing the manufacturing edge to Asia, and our once-great Companies are all moving offshore. We're getting slaughtered by health care costs. Gas prices are skyrocketing, and nobody in power has a coherent energy policy. Our schools are the worst in the world. Our borders are like sieves. The middle class is being squeezed every which way.

We didn't elect you to sit on your ass and do nothing and remain silent while our democracy is being hijacked and our greatness is being replaced with mediocrity.

Are the Senate and House full of morons? Who has a better idea for homeland security than making us take off our shoes in airports and throw away our shampoo? We've spent billions of dollars building a huge new bureaucracy, and all we know how to do is react to things that have already happened. Apparently you do not!

Who is thinking creatively about how we can restore our competitive edge in manufacturing. Apparently you are not!

Who can articulate a plan for paying down the debt, or solving the energy crisis, or managing the health care problem? Apparently you cannot!

DO SOMETHING!!! Or give up your seat to someone who will.

I will appreciate a response outlining what you personally are doing to address these issues.

John Jenkins
425 Patterson Lane
Gatlinburg, TN 37738
865-430-4427 home
865-803-8179 mobile
jrjenki@yahoo.com email

Monday, October 20, 2008

Go Home Joe!

Advice for Joe the Plumber, get out of site, the media will destroy you. Ego is driving Joe on to his political demise. So Joe, go home, fast. Next will be a book deal. Go home before you are embarrassed.

Regards,
John Jenkins
865-803-8179 cell
Gatlinburg, TN
Email: jrjenki@yahoo.com 

Fibonacci: It's as easy as 1,2,3.

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Friday, October 17, 2008

Issues worth voting for

Considering all of the issues it amazes me that anyone would vote for or against a candidate based on the candidate's views on such limited topics as abortion or homosexual rights neither of which either candidate can control.

Roe v Wade isn't what allowed abortion; abortions were already being done against the law. The courts just conformed to the social and moral changes that had already taken place in society. It is up to parents in the way we raise our children and the example we give to bring about changes to our culture toward greater respect for life.

Christians lost the battle over Gay Rights long ago due to their acceptance of adultery, fornication, co-habitation, intolerance of birth-control measures etc. When Christians watch 'R' and 'X' movies they are endorsing the activities in the movie. If it is acceptable for Christians to observe heterosexuals engaged in all types of sexual activities real or simulated, why shouldn't homosexuals enjoy the same privileges? Heterosexuals recognize Common Law marriages so why not homosexual commitments and the associated legal privileges?


Regards,
John Jenkins
865-803-8179 cell
Gatlinburg, TN
Email: jrjenki@yahoo.com 

Fibonacci: It's as easy as 1,2,3.

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Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
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Thursday, October 16, 2008

War With Iran is Not Realistic

Iran is unconquerable making war against Iran an unrealistic option. The United States does not have enough soldiers to invade Iran, let alone occupy and hold it. And even if the United States could occupy Iran it could not defeat it. A war with Iran would destroy the economy of the United States.
 
The United States proved during the war of rebellion against Great Britain that a small, poorly trained, poorly armed, dedicated army fighting at home could defeat the best trained and best armed military. It happened again in Viet Nam, is happening now in Iraq and will happen in Iran.
The United States is too big, too well armed, to engage in wars with smaller countries.  Is a billion dollar weapon worth risking being destroyed by a $60,000 rocket?
 
The United States cannot sustain many losses. The citizens of the United States will not tolerate overwhelming numbers of casualties or even a constant stream of casualties.  While the United States could send its Marines to Iran, even move into Tehran, but what would it do with it? A car bomb here, a truck bomb there, a suicide bomber over there and the United States would be losing hundreds of soldiers a week, similar to Viet Nam. How would two or three airplane loads of bodies be received?
 
The United States could destroy Iran and never be able to defeat it.
 
The United States can be defeated in a war of attrition. In a full scale war Iran might lose ten millions soldiers where as the United States is not willing to lose one million soldiers. Constant casualties and the financial costs would be too much for the citizens of the United States to accept.
 
The United States thinks short term 6 months, 12 months, 60 months, Iran thinks in terms of 20 years, 30 years, and 50 years. Our military wants to serve and come home. Iran's soldiers expect to die. Without victory Iran's military has no reason to return home in fact they have no home to which to return.
 
One of the issues is the United States has no military leaders with imagination and vision. Much like in the Civil War where military leaders maintained the Napoleonic strategy in face of modern weapons, the generals had no alternative plans, no alternative thinking. Modern day Generals have no alternative thinking.
 
Iran may not be able to defeat the United States Navy but it does not have to do that. Remember October, 2000 when the USS Cole was crippled by a small boat with a bomb.  The Commander of the Cole had such limited vision he could not conceive of someone wanting to attack a vessel of the United States' Navy in a foreign port. He should have been thrown out of the Navy for incompetence for permitting anyone to get that close to the Cole.
 
Our Navy has recently discovered that small, fast, agile boats swarming the ships of the Navy could defeat the technically sophisticated weapons of the United States.
 
In January 2008, five small boats challenged a convoy of three ships of the United States Navy convoy in the Strait of Hormuz.  The boats went directly towards the ships confusing our military leaders. Imagine that: a number of small boats working in unison attacking a navy vessel, who would have thought? Five small boats moving at high speeds, from multiple directions, was a possibility our military planners had not considered, it had not occurred to them. The sheer numbers overloaded the ability, mentally and electronically. That these "new" tactics could seriously challenge the dominance of the United States Navy had not occurred to the Brain Trust of the United States military. The banding together of many small fighters to defeat a powerful, imminent threat is a tactic used by ants, hyenas, lions, wolves, wild dogs, but not to our leadership.
 


Regards,
John Jenkins
865-803-8179 cell
Gatlinburg, TN
Email: jrjenki@yahoo.com 

Fibonacci: It's as easy as 1,2,3.

Monday, October 13, 2008

New Super Powers, if not militarily, influencially

Since 1953 when the CIA, under the direction of President Dwight David Eisenhower, removed a legally elected Prime Minister and replaced him with a despotic dictator, something funny happened. Iran became a super power at least in the Middle East. Yes, those same crazies who forced our man, the Shah, to run for his life: those crazies who held our citizens prisoner for 445 days or so, those crazies who could not defeat the Iraqi despotic dictator and his crazies. They are now a super power to be dealt with. The United States must see Iran differently than we saw them in the past. They are no longer a bunch of cleric lead radicals they have to be seen as equals and possibly our superiors, at least in the Middle East। In their part of the world their military leaders have better strategies than ours do.

In our weakened condition, financially, militarily, and diplomatically the United States must see the world as it is not how it was. That includes changing the way we see Iran and our former enemy / ally / super rich antagonist, Russia।

The United States must understand the way things are and act accordingly and maybe, just maybe we can earn back our seat at the table of world events।

McCain, Obama does not matter। What can either do to harm our country more than George W Bush has already done and what can be more terrifying than Nancy Pelosi third in line to be President?

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Major League Championship Series

As the National League has the National League Championship Series, (NLCS) and the American League has the American League Championship Series (ALCS), Major League Baseball must have the Major League Championship Series (MLCS). MLB cannot consider their championship series as the World Series because MLB does not include teams from around the world.
The Little League World Series is truly worldwide and the United States wins.
Nothing worse than a powerhouse that is no longer a powerhouse refusing to recognize they are second rate, world wide… MLB is not the class it was..


Regards,
John Jenkins

865-803-8179 cell
Gatlinburg, TN
Email: jrjenki@yahoo.com

Website: http://www.greenbriersolutions.com/
Blog: http://littlepigeon.blogspot.com/

Fibonacci: It's as easy as 1,2,3.

Ann Coulter

HumanEventsOnline:
 
Are you sure you are a conservative group? When Ann Coulter said she would not vote for McCain claiming he was not conservative she showed herself to not be a Conservative but a complainer. Like him or hate he McCain is more a Conservative than Obama and McCain would give Conservatives a better shot at Supreme Court judges.
 
To not vote for McCain would be a vote for Obama, I am quite disappointed in Ms Coulter. By the way Ronald Reagan was not a Conservative, government was bigger when he left than it was when he arrived. Neither Bush was or is a Conservative. Bush 41 was put on the Reagan ticket to balance what was mistakenly considered Reagan's conservatism. Bush 43 has destroyed this country financially and militarily. So when you consider Reagan, Bush, and Coulter conservatives you cause some of us to wonder where you really stand. 


Regards,
John Jenkins
865-803-8179 cell
Gatlinburg, TN
Email: jrjenki@yahoo.com 

Fibonacci: It's as easy as 1,2,3.

Candidates' Relgion

If you would like to provide a service verify the religion of each of the candidates. Where have each attended services for the past four months?

Regards,
John Jenkins
865-803-8179 cell
Gatlinburg, TN
Email: jrjenki@yahoo.com 

Fibonacci: It's as easy as 1,2,3.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

74 miles short..

Hi, The Internet makes things available regular media does not. I don't remember hearing about this speech even from O'reilly. The MEDIA did NOT tell us about this speech in Congress!


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MlfmvwxxgHM




Regards,
John Jenkins
865-803-8179 cell
Gatlinburg, TN
Email: jrjenki@yahoo.com 

Fibonacci: It's as easy as 1,2,3.

Friday, October 10, 2008

What does the Department of Energy Do?

What was the reason for developing the Department of Energy during the Carter administration?
 
The Department of Energy was instituted to lessen our dependence on foreign oil. The 2008 budget is $24.2 billion a year, with 16,000 federal employees and approximately 100,000 contract employees.
 
What do they do?
 


Regards,
John Jenkins
865-803-8179 cell
Gatlinburg, TN
Email: jrjenki@yahoo.com 

Fibonacci: It's as easy as 1,2,3.

Thursday, October 09, 2008

Deja Vu all over again

I'm reading a book by Allen Greenspan and he talks about events that led to the so-called Asian contagion, a series of financial crises that began with the collapse of the Thai baht (unit of currency) and Malaysian ringgit (unit of currency) in the summer of 1997 and grew into a threat to the world economy. Almost immediately, Thailand and Malaysia plunged into recession. The economies of Hong Kong, the Philippines, and Singapore were all hit hard. In Indonesia the rupiah (unit of currency) imploded, the stock market collapsed and the ensuing economic disarray led to food riots, widespread misery, and eventually the fall of President Suharto.
 
As it did during Mexico's crisis two years before the International Monetary Fund moved in with financial support. Alan Greenspan got involved when a senior official at the Bank of Japan called to warn that South Korea would be the next to go. The official used the term "the dam is bursting" to explain that Japanese banks had lost confidence in Korea and were about to stop renewing tens of billions of dollars in loans.
 
The various countries not calling in their loans, the International Monetary Fund making loans etc rescued the troubled economies. There are a lot more in the book but one thing Greenspan wrote I thought you might find interesting.
 
Alan Greenspan mentions:
 
There was always the chance that a rescue this large would set a bad precedent: how many more times would investors pour money into willing but shaky economies, figuring that if they got into big enough trouble, the IMF would bail them out? This was a version of what the insurance industry calls the "moral hazard" of protecting individuals from risk. The bigger the safety net, the theory goes, the greater the recklessness with which people, businesses, or governments will tend to behave.
 
Sound familiar?  Profits are privatized and losses are nationalized.


Regards,
John Jenkins
865-803-8179 cell
Gatlinburg, TN
Email: jrjenki@yahoo.com 

Fibonacci: It's as easy as 1,2,3.