June 18, 2010

Current Reading Materials of The Good American Post Staff

We have a good list of reading materials for those interested in many of our current affairs here in The United States of America.  Enjoy!

Suggested Reading Material from The Good American Post Staff

Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand

Natural Capitalism by Paul Hawken, Amory Lovins, and L. Hunter Lovins

End the Fed by Ron Paul

Culture of Corrpution by Michelle Malkin

The Libertarian Reader by David Boaz

“Wherever they burn books they will also,
in the end, burn human beings.”
–  Heinrich Heine

June 13, 2010

Quintessential Quotes – President Garfield

“The truth will set you free, but first it will make you miserable.”

– President James A. Garfield

June 9, 2010

We Want YOUR Soldier Stories

Looking for families of soldiers to submit brief stories about their loved ones in the service.  We will feature them on our blog, as well as in the Quarter 3 National Good American Post (printed edition)!
Please email us at: goodamericanpost@gmail.com, and put in the subject line “Solider”.

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June 5, 2010

OPINION: RESTORING LIBERTY – LT. COL. Allen West

This is the most inspirational candidate I think that I have seen yet.  I urge you to take a look at this video and his website, this is the kind of leadership that we need to restore our republic and liberty.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VP2p91dvm6M&feature=fvst

http://allenwestforcongress.com/



– Tisha Casida

May 31, 2010

Food Rules by Michael Pollan: Rule #13 Eat Only Foods that will Eventually Rot

Have you ever seen the picture of the Happy Meal after one year of sitting on a shelf?  Well, it turns out that not too much had changed, in other words, most of that stuff in the food was NOT FOOD, but preservatives.

Food rotting or decomposing, because of bacteria or fungi, is a natural process – it is just the way our eco-systems work.  Food rotting is a sure sign that the food you have is natural, healthful, and WHOLE food, or food that is good for you.

So, when you go shopping, avoid the middle aisles, typically where “most of the immortal foodlike substances in the supermarket are found”(Pollan, 2009).

Pollan, M. (2009). Food Rules – An Eater’s Manual. New York, NY: Penguin Books.

May 28, 2010

What We Want – Part IX

By: Richard A. Correa Sr. SGT RIARNG, Retired

The current debate on Obamacare has led to the public, in the form of the TEA Parties, 9/12 ers and other interested citizens, to raise questions about how our legislative process works, and how it is supposed to work. We have seen the House of Representatives ‘create’ (notice I didn’t say ‘write’, which will be the topic of another offering) three bills which we assume morphed into the one passed by the house and the US Senate ‘create’ two bills that ‘merged’ into what the senate passed. The two bills are now undergoing the ‘reconciliation’ process, another process that is coming under intense scrutiny.

There are many problems with each of these bills, including the increase in existing taxes and the addition of new taxes that are contained in them. As many of these new taxes and tax increases are in the senate bill and not the house bill, the question ‘is this constitutional’ is being asked by many people.

Article I, Section 7 of the US Constitution states:

All Bills for raising Revenue shall originate in the House of Representatives; but the Senate may propose or concur with Amendments as on other Bills.

Some may conclude that this provision of the US Constitution has indeed been violated by the process followed by the senate. Others will point out that the senate has been doing this for as long as the constitution has been in existence.

The senate even has a name for the product of this process; it is called a ‘Vapor’ or ‘Ghost’ bill.

The supporting argument for following this process is that this allows the senate to create its’ own version of legislation on an important issue and it speeds up the legislative process so that needed laws can be passed ‘faster’. They further point out that he US Supreme Court has made a decision (Twin City Bank v. Nebeker, 167 U.S. 196, 202 (1897)) that says doing this is constitutional.

But does this meet the intention of the founders on how raising taxes should be done?

James Madison said in Federalist Number 58:

This power over the purse may, in fact, be regarded as the most complete and effectual weapon with which any Constitution can arm the immediate representatives of the people.1

It is obvious from this statement that James Madison, the father of the constitution, felt very strongly that keeping the power to raise taxes in the US House of Representatives was essential for the people to be able to control the taxation placed upon them and to control the spending the federal government does in their name. It can also be construed from this that this clause of the US Constitution clearly places responsibility for increases in taxation and spending on the heads of the members of the House of Representatives, the elected body with the shortest term in office, so the people can remove from office those that abuse this power as quickly as the law allows, and replace them with people that will be more responsible with the peoples money.

From the language of Article I, Section 7 of the US Constitution and the above one can draw the conclusion that the founders intent was that any bill that raises taxes should start in the House of Representatives and the US Senate must wait for the bill to be forwarded from the house to the senate before they can take any action on it, and those actions are limited to amending the bill from the house and they could not write their own bill on the issue. As there appears to be no further discussion of the topic in the Federalist papers, or the other writings of the founders’, one can say the topic was understood by all, and there was no disagreement on the subject.

As recently as 1990 it seems the US Supreme Court is also in agreement with the strict interpretation of this clause in the US Constitution. In the US Supreme Court decision in United States v. Munoz-Flores the court stated:

In the case of Bills for raising Revenue, § 7 [of the U.S. Constitution] requires that they originate in the House before they can be properly passed by the two Houses and presented to the President.  . . . The principle that the courts will strike down a law when Congress has passed it in violation of such a command has been well settled for almost two centuries.2

However, if you look back a little over 100 years before the United States v. Munoz-Flores the US Supreme Court appears to be schizophrenic on the subject. In the US Supreme Court decision in Twin City Bank v. Nebeker:

Revenue Bills are those that levy taxes in the strict sense of the word, and are not bills for other purposes which may incidentally create revenue.3

And this interpretation of the process is in fact the problem. From this interpretation the senate can come up with its’ own bills that raise taxes on the people with out restriction by making those tax increases ‘incidental’ to the purpose of the legislation. The fact that the senate has the longest term for elected officials under our federalist system exacerbates the problem. This is clearly a deliberate circumvention of the intended process when it comes to raising revenue and taxes and, though it does not violate the ‘letter’ of the law, it clearly violates the ‘spirit’ of the law.

Many will say the senate has always worked this way or it’s OK, or why would we want to change this now? We should force them to follow the process correctly because every successful attempt to circumvent the intended process in the constitution is how people usurp power from where it belongs and transfers that power to where it was never intended to be. It sets precedents that make it alright to not follow the supreme law of the land and validates the attitude that congress can do whatever it wants and it does not have to abide by the constitutionally set boundaries on the power they are allowed to exercise. In essence, allowing this to continue institutionalizes disobeying the law.

Some will say that to enforce this will inhibit the senates’ ability to; legislate that is completely false. The senate would still be able to add amendments to any legislation that originated in the house, adding or removing taxes as they see fit. But, enforcing this would make the process more ‘transparent’ and it would make it harder to hide the added taxes, which is always to the publics’ advantage.

So how would changing this benefit you? Whenever any legislation is being considered that raises revenue for the federal government, increases the rate of an existing tax or adding a new tax it will have to originate in the US House of Representatives and no ‘parallel’ bill on the same issue could be generated in the US Senate. As we TEA Partiers/9/12 ers are political animals, and are now in the habit of watching the shenanigans of the congress, we could all focus on what is happening in the house without having to be concerned with watching the senates’ activities at the same time. Support for or against the new revenue measures will be directed at our representatives, without having to direct any effort toward the senate, yet. This will increase the effectiveness of the pressure we place on the members of the house because they won’t be able to misdirect our attention to the senate.

Once the bill reaches the senate it will be easier to see who is trying to pick out pockets as the senate will be limited to amending the bill from the house, not creating their own bill. As amendments to a bill by their nature are smaller it will be harder to ‘hide’ new taxes and tax increases, as well as who made the amendment and who voted for these new taxes making senators more vulnerable for their actions.

So what do we want? We want the Congress of these United States to adhere to the spirit, as well as the letter, of Article I, section 7 of the US Constitution.

1 The Federalist No. 58, p. 359 (C. Rossiter ed. 1961)

2 Munoz-Flores, 495 U.S. at 398 (1990)

3 Twin City Bank v. Nebeker, 167 U.S. 196, 202 (1897)

May 24, 2010

Health Care = Eat Better to Start With

What an ingenious idea!  Instead of getting sick, let’s try and prevent sickness the best we can by eating good food.  That sounds both logical, probable, and just plain smart – as this could actually help our local economies.

Now, this doesn’t have to be a government-run program, this does not have to be mandated or subsidized by the government.  EATING LOCAL FOOD, growing your own food, and cooking your own meals (always better than most fast-foods) can be done BY YOU THE CONSUMER.  It is part of the free-market, and something that is our own choice.

If we make it while we still have time.

Here is a great article on Chef Jamie Oliver and what he is doing to show kids and their families how to eat better.

– Tisha Casida

May 23, 2010

Why The Good American Post Doesn’t Need Props

By: Tisha T. Casida

“The most damning problem with government ‘help’ is what we saw with the bailout of the U.S. auto industry: Help props up those who are producing things that customers do not want,” said News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch (December 8, 2009 at newsmax.com).   I could not agree more with this statement.  Help is not help when it comes at the expense of taxpayers and subsidizes companies or industries that are not performing.

It is simple.  The market bears what the market desires.  If newsprint is failing to deliver information to the consumer that the consumer is demanding, then newsprint will fail.  Yes, technology has impacted news and newsprint, but that is part of the market.  Deal with it.  Grow up.  And stop crying for help from the Nanny-State.

The Good American Post, is new to the market, and empowers consumers with information that supports local communities and builds local economies with positive and sustainable information.  It is being demanded.  It is what the market wants.  And it is exactly why we do not need the government to prop us up, and never will.

Reference: http://www.newsmax.com/insidecover/murdoch_newspapers_bail/2009/12/08/295819.html?s=al&promo_code=92E2-1

May 18, 2010

Sustainability Means FREEDOM!

Sustainability, Wealth, and Freedom all depend upon the written word and the spoken voice.  It was not too long ago that local systems were what made our economies and our communities incredibly strong.

Social and environmental costs have not been accounted for in the “99-Cent” mentality that has created a vicious cycle of economic downturns.

WE, the AMERICAN CONSUMER and CONSTITUENT are what make and/or break the economy.  It is up to us.  It is up to us to support local systems where our food and water come from.  It is up to us to support the local systems of community and governance.  IT IS UP TO US.

“I must do something” always solves more problems than “Something must be done.”  ~Author Unknown

May 4, 2010

Bill List – Keep Your Eye on Constitutional Rights!

Already in our national and local versions of The Good American Post, you will find contact information for your representatives at the local, state, and national level.

We want to take this one step further by have information on LEGISLATION that is at the state and national levels that may affect our Constitutional Rights.  Let’s all look at the issues and make sure that our representatives are aware of how we feel about them.  KNOW WHAT YOU ARE VOTING FOR and keep your representatives honest!

HR-2454, American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009

HR-3200, America’s Affordable Health Choices Act of 2009

HR-2749,  Food Safety Enhancement Act of 2009
– This one has already passed in the House!!!!

HR-875, Food Safety Modernization Act of 2009

HR-3458, Internet Freedom Preservation Act of 2009

HR- 45, Blair Holt’s Firearm Licensing and Record of Sale Act of 2009

Dietary Supplement Safety Act of 2010 – Could either remove natural vitamins from the marketplace, or make them regulated to the point where they would HAVE TO BE SOLD BY A PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANY.


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