More Opinion by The Springboard
Bringing back American manufacturing is critical to American society in more ways than just economic ones. In order for America to succeed it needs the ability to make things, not only for the stability and good jobs it provides, but for national security as well.
Tuesday, April 30, 2024
They're Stepping Up the Campaign, But Not Stepping Up the Game
Friday, April 26, 2024
I'm Sucking At YouTube, But Who Cares?
Thursday, April 25, 2024
Questioning 2020 is Not About Trump, It's About America
I told him that I sided with the opinion that there was strong reason to suggest that the 2020 election may have been stolen, although I did not assert that I had made that conclusion and firmly believed it. "Strongly suspect," and "firmly believe," are very different positions.
"But you support Trump," he said. "That's why you think that way."
I told him that idea could work both ways. "You support Biden, and that's why you think it couldn't have happened."
The reality is that my suspicions do not, in fact, come from my support of Donald Trump. Rather they come from another place entirely. My love of country and my deeply seated patriotism. That's a very hard pill to swallow for most Americans who aren't at all on Trump's side because, of course, the media has portrayed anyone in the MAGA cause as looney toons who are active in a cult-like mentality.
While there is always going to be a fringe faction in any political party or group, it rarely makes up the whole. But it certainly gets the most attention and somehow tends to be the main focus.
Trump supporters are, by and large, simply a group of conservatives who support a leader whose values and ideas align with theirs. It doesn't make them looney. It simply makes them active participants in the political discourse who happen to have an opinion that differs from those on the left.
By their definition, that MAGA is a cult, you could say the same thing about those on the left who support Biden.
I told him, "As an American above all else, I simply want to have faith in our electoral process. I think any American should ask questions and not simply accept things because their side won."
Not only is the thought that because I support Trump, that I deny the 2020 result, it's because I am supposed to be bitter that my guy lost. Except, I have never been bitter before, and usually I can find a good reason to at least understand why my guy lost and have talked about it ad infinitum on here.
John McCain and Mitt Romney, for example, were terrible candidates who ran horrible campaigns. That's why they lost to Obama. Whether or not I agreed that the American people made the right decision, I had no reason to question that the voice of the American people was nonetheless heard.
That, above all else, should have a very big bearing on why I feel the way I do now. In other words, becoming a Trump supporter in no way made me suddenly change my overall viewpoints or how I feel about America.
I have no interest in seeing America compromised just to see a guy in office who happens to be the guy I support. We have a process. The candidates campaign, and the voters decide. It's that simple. And most of the time, it generally works out.
Obama, for example, took us down a wrong path. But was he the worst thing to ever happen to America? I will leave that open for debate, but I think we can mostly agree that the system, at least, seemed to be working and when it came down to Hillary Clinton vs. Donald Trump the right choice was made.
The American people did not want to continue down Obama's path with Hillary Clinton carrying on with his "vision for America" by proxy. Despite all the accusations to suggest otherwise, all of which were proved to be false, he was duly elected and won the election fair and square.
The point of this post is not to rehash all of the reasons why I think the election may have been stolen in 2020. The point is to make it clear that what I strongly suspect has nothing at all to do with my support of Donald Trump and has everything to do with my support of country.
I simply want to know the truth because there are enough valid questions, in my view, that we need to at least be interested in seeking out the answers for. And I think it should be a concern for every American regardless of who won or lost.
Elections matter. They always have. Elections do have consequences, and there are enough examples in history that serve as glaring examples. But the worst consequence is to have someone in office who isn't supposed to be there. To have someone who may have been selected rather than elected.
That's dangerous. It's a serious threat to our democratic republic. If we ever arrive at a point when we truly, as a people, no longer question what our government does just because "our guy" won, that's really the end of America.
We can't trust our government, and we can't trust the media. So, what's left? It's up to We the People. We need to be interested in ensuring that even if the wrong choice is made to lead us, that it was our choice to make the wrong one.
I am not sure if I was able to change the person's mind in our conversation. But if nothing else I was at least able to explain why I feel the way I do, and why I think it is important to be cynical.
It's not about winning elections in so much as it is about preserving this great nation and making sure that our government remains one that is by, for and of the People. When our founding fathers set this country up, that was a core value, that the American people would be the ultimate curator of accountability against it.
We cannot be that if the only word we accept is theirs.
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Wednesday, April 24, 2024
Have You Ever Eaten a Tuck's Pad?
When it comes to food, most of the time when you see a picture presented of something you order or buy, you know there's going to be at least some sense of glorification, and what winds up on your plate will not exactly resemble what was advertised.
But it's still usually relatively close. It's still relatively good. You can still relatively accept it for what it really is.
That was proven to be far from the case when I decided on a Banquet homestyle gravy and sliced white meat turkey meal as a quick dinner.
I swear, that Banquet gravy and sliced white meat turkey meal got more laughs than the funniest comedian to ever grace the stage at the Improv could ever hope for. Not that our meal was the joke of the century, but it sure packed one hell of a punch line to our plates.
Granted, it's not like I was expecting something gourmet. It's a frozen meal, of course, and just like when you order a steak at Denny's, you're not looking for something 5-star when it arrives. But what I was expecting were at the very least, 12 slices of decently portioned turkey.
From the picture, you'd have expected that there would have been nice sized pieces to serve up. Instead, you literally had to fish out the slices in a lake of gravy. In fact, of the supposed 26 ounces shown on the package, I am certain it was about 20 ounces of gravy and 6 ounces of actual meat, although I cannot verify that since I did not actually weigh the slices.
As for the actual size of the slices themselves? I am not kidding at all when I say that they were only slightly larger than a Tuck's pad.
I mean, in the box's picture, you'd think you were going to get a heaping plate of at least something remotely worth eating. It is not an exaggeration at all to suggest that the plate they used was, in fact, a tea saucer.
The box stated, "Enlarged to show quality." What did they use? The Hubble space telescope?
Sure, the box is going to be the thing that makes the sale in the first place just like the title, cover and back cover blurb on a novel will put a book on your reading list. But if the goods delivered don't match the sales pitch, it doesn't mean someone will buy it again—or read the book over again thinking maybe you just missed the point the first time around.
Embellishment is one thing, such as that juicy, well-crafted hamburger on the menu looks like that you know will never be served to you. But where's the line between embellishment and outright false advertising? Because, at least when it comes to this Banquet offering, that's clearly what it is.
Either way, the bottom line for me is that it matters enough to me that I won't be buying this product again. And Banquet ought to be ashamed of themselves on this one.
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Monday, April 22, 2024
Using the Rule of 5 When Buying Things
All too often, part of the problem is a lack of forward thinking, or the, "I want it now," mentality. What can especially get us into trouble is relying too heavily on credit, and not thinking about what the real cost of things are when they are financed.
We all know about the value of compound interest on assets. But compound interest applied to liabilities can devastate us.
For a lot of people who carry large amounts of debt, they tend to think of their debts as manageable so long as they can make the payments. The reality is that if you cannot afford to pay the debts off tomorrow immediately, you cannot afford to carry the debt.
If debt is used responsibly, it can be a useful tool with some additional rules applied. For example, if the cost of the interest on any loan is less than the amount of interest you are earning on cash in savings or investments, the debt is "affordable." If the cost of the interest on the debt is greater than the amount of interest you are earning on any cash or investments, it is better to use the cash instead of incurring the debt.
The rule, however, creates a caveat. But it is one that works to your advantage.
The Rule of 5 is a very simple concept, and one that can be applied, and even probably should be applied to nearly every purchase you make, with some exceptions—such as real estate, for example.
The idea is to accumulate money before you spend it rather than to simply earn it and then spend it as it comes in. You may see a pair of shoes you want, for example and think, "I have $50 right now to buy them, and so therefore I can afford them."
The reality is that you cannot actually afford them. Even if you have the cash right now in your hands to buy them.
Applying the Rule of 5 means that before you can rightfully claim to be able to afford that pair of shoes, you need to have at least $250 of available cash on hand that is expendable—in other words, not tied to any other commitments.
It makes you stop and think about your money before you hand over your hard-earned cash. It's posing a very simple question. "Can I afford to buy 5 pairs of these shoes?" If the answer is no, you wait until you can before you actually make the purchase.
Not only does it avoid spending money today, but it also forces you to save additional money and to think about your reward for having the money differently. Instead of having nothing left after your purchase, you have the joy of knowing that you have $200 left. On top of that, you can now apply that to other future things you may want to buy.
Although the Rule of 5 can seem impractical when it comes to certain purchases, I think it is essential. It gives us a peak into what we are actually doing to set ourselves back financially. Something we rarely pay attention to, which ultimately gets us into all sorts of financial problems.
"Can I afford this car?" you might ask. "Can I buy 5 of them?" is the better question. Even if you decide to take on a loan, it doesn't mean you can afford it.
"But if I want a reliable car, and I have to pay at least $30,000 for one that is reliable, who has $150,000 lying around to justify it?"
The answer is, "Most people don't have that kind of money lying around because they have never considered the Rule of 5 in regard to anything else. Especially when it comes to the small things."
We are all well aware of the age-old adage that good things come to those who wait. It is rarely applied to reality when it comes to most people. Even if you applied the Rule of 5 on a smaller scale, the rule could still work.
For example, say you can afford a car payment that is $600 a month. You aren't going to be able to afford $3,000 a month. But you can afford $120 a month. So, when you decide to buy a car, you find one that will only cost you one-fifth of the payment you can make.
How about considering applying this rule in your favor? You effectively make the $600 payment after you buy the car and have a payment of $120, but instead of paying $600 each month to a loan originator, you pay $480 to yourself and put it into savings or investments.
If the loan term is for 5-years, at the end of that term you'd have effectively saved $28,800 which can be applied to whatever future assessment of a vehicle you can afford would be. It is either used as a hefty down payment on something, or it is reapplied to the rule of 5 and divided into a 5th over the course of another 60 months giving you an additional $96 of monthly spending power, meaning now you can afford a payment of $216 per month when added to the $120 per month you could reasonably afford to pay before based on the Rule of 5.
Of course, applying this rule does not mean that what you are ultimately trying to do is to be able to necessarily buy more things. It simply means that if something happens tomorrow that negates your ability to afford things in the longer term, you are able to at least cover everything in the short term.
If you suddenly lose your job, you can still pay for what you have, and if you have applied the rule appropriately to everything you buy over time, you probably have something to fall back on as well to cover the necessary day to day expenses until you can find a replacement job.
The idea is to simply think about your money in terms of its intrinsic value and apply that value in order to get the most out of your money over the long haul.
There is nothing more comforting than knowing that if your income fell to zero tomorrow, you could still afford to pay off every single debt you have five times before you've actually run out of money. More importantly, the Rule of 5 forces you to think about your money more carefully before you pull out your wallet.
| "If you are digging a hole, it is best to bring a ladder with you along with your shovel, because ultimately you are going to want to have a way to climb back up to the surface." |
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Monday, April 15, 2024
No More Speaker Fiascos, Please
Saturday, April 13, 2024
Will the Real Joe Biden on Abortion Please Stand Up
But there's a giant flaw in their stated positions, and not that politicians on both sides of the aisle aren't prone to a little vote pandering and being a bit disingenuous, but I think some voters siding with Joe Biden at least on the issue of abortion should have more questions than answers.
Because at least if abortion happens to be a key issue swaying a decision to vote one way or the other, trying to understand the root position, or what it probably is, is a pretty important thing to add to the equation, if you ask me.
President Joe Biden never supported Roe v. Wade and was always against abortion, even in the case of rape or incest.
That's important to point out, I think, regardless of where he says he stands on the issue now. Or where he said he stood on the issue from day one of his presidency. Because it's more important to understand how much "fight" will be in defending the issue if a voter gives him another four years in office to do it.
The issue of abortion for Joe Biden is effectively a pander. It's a way to solicit a vote. Because if there's one thing he knows, it's that most people won't bother to check his record and the media isn't going to report on it.
If they do, they will do it very quietly on page 952 of course.
When it comes to Roe v. Wade itself, it wasn't long after the Supreme Court issued its decision in 1973 that Joe Biden stated he disagreed with it, going on to say, "Abortion is always a tragedy." He generally stayed with that position all the way until a few months before he ran for president in 2020.
Some have chosen to suggest that Biden has simply "reckoned with his Catholic faith," and is now acting on the "greater good," but that does not at all comport with what his stance has been all along. And is this generally a position that you suddenly change your mind about? Especially when your position is deeply rooted in your faith?
In 2006, even before he became the vice president, he said in a televised interview, "I do not view abortion as a choice or a right." That's a stark contrast to what he says his position is now, even taking an opportunity during his final State of the Union speech to scold the Justices, and told them directly, "Women are not without electoral or political power."
His stance now wants to be seen as direct and firm, and both he and Kamala Harris have been pounding the podium at speech after speech saying they will stand strongly for "women's reproductive health," a term they like to use instead of abortion, by the way.
Joe Biden has also always been against any federal funding for abortion, specifically having been a longtime supporter of the Hyde Amendment which banned federal funding for abortions even in the cases of rape or incest. That was his position entirely until he hit the campaign trail in 2019.
It is important to know these things if this is an issue topmost on anyone's radar when it comes to their choice in 2024. Because you have to examine why the position changed only prior to an election campaign in 2020?
Any issue that is important to a voter is a reason to cast a vote for a candidate if you think that candidate is going to fight hard for your cause. But you have to reason that the personal conviction of the candidate is as strong as his word.
Will he be strongly and firmly engaged in fighting for your cause if he gets a second term, or is he just saying that to get a second term now that the decision on Roe v. Wade is set in stone? Just like he said he was for your cause to get his first term?
In other words, his position on abortion was very clear. He was against it. And the only reason he ever said he was okay with it and would fight for it was because that's what he knew voters wanted to hear. It gave him a marked contrast with Trump's position and his message, at least in appearance.
He wanted to win over a faction of voters and so he decided to say one thing other than what he probably would have said if he had stated his position from the heart rather than to appease a base.
The question is not about what Joe Biden's position appears to be now. The question is whether or not you believe him. Because if abortion is a key issue for anyone undecided, and you think Biden's got your back, you might want to reassess that. He doesn't want to have your back. He wants to have your backing.
If he wins in 2024, you can bet the abortion issue will become ancient history, and he'll just forge ahead with the real agenda to push progressive, liberal ideology on things like climate change and DEI.
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Friday, April 12, 2024
Are They Conspiracies or Simply Truth Being Hidden for Power?
Thursday, April 11, 2024
When it Comes to the Economy, The Democrats Did That
Saturday, April 6, 2024
I'm Going to Call You Bruce
Friday, April 5, 2024
To Jimmy Kimmel: It's Because America Doesn't Live in Your Bubble
Thursday, April 4, 2024
Playing the Powerball is a Bet on the Impossible, But It's Still Kind of Possible
Wednesday, April 3, 2024
President Obama Is Not My President, Or Is He?
For me this really took hold after the 2020 election. I still make it very clear that I am not saying the election was stolen, but that I simply very strongly suspect that it may have been stolen. Can we call Trump's election claims lies if we don't know the truth?
To me it's simply a question we don't have a solid answer for yet.
But there's another question that began popping up recently when a very old blog post from 2010 about former President Obama suddenly surged. Being that what the blog is talking about has nothing to do with anything happening now, it got me wondering about why.
The post was simply titled, "President Obama Is Not My President."
For a long time, it has been felt by many that Joe Biden is not actually running the country. Granted, that theory comes mostly from the right. But there are enough things happening that strongly suggest it could be possible.
Namely the clear and undeniable evidence that President Joe Biden is in mental decline. How could he be running things, and if he's not the one doing it, who is?
I remember there was a lot of chatter back when President Obama was president that he may have some desire to seek out a third term one way or another. I wrote that I felt it was mostly hyperbole, but at the same time did also point out, "President Barack Obama is exactly the kind of person I think we should be very cautious about, and very suspicious of."
You have to keep in mind that even if you can't get a two-thirds vote from Congress to pave the way for presidents to seek more terms, the progressive and liberal movements are exactly that. Movements. All they want to do is keep that movement alive and well.
So, it makes you begin to wonder how far they might go to get that done? When Obama's term was done, it was clear that if Hillary Clinton were elected, she'd have absolutely carried Obama's torch and continued his agenda. The movement's agenda.
But then Trump won the election and threatened to stop it in its tracks.
With all of the effort there was around trying to remove Trump from office, all led by the Democrats, it began to form a thought. They'll try anything. And we saw that they did exactly that. They tried everything to get Trump out and to convince the American people Trump was a really bad guy.
And then Biden won the election. A very questionable win, as I have stated, that makes me very suspicious something was just not right that happened there. And it goes back to the other question. How far might they go to carry on their agenda?
And if Biden's not running the country, could it be that the answer to who is actually running the country is Barack Obama? Did he actually get his third term after all?
It makes you wonder a bit more recently since we've seen Barack Obama running around with the president. Granted, so is Bill Clinton, and it is an election year, and these are largely campaign fundraiser visits.
But it's also not the first time we've seen Barack Obama with the president or even in the White House.
I am not saying Barack Obama is the president any more than I am saying without a doubt that the 2020 election was stolen. But there are enough reasons to ask the question. Even if Barack Obama is not leading vicariously through Biden, he is the true Democrat figurehead right now, and so even if there is a consortium at work to lead the country and carry on the progressive and liberal movement, Obama is certainly the guy everyone else is going to talk to in order to potentially deliver the orders and instructions to whomever it is in the White House who is directing Biden to put his signature on things to make it all seem official.
Like I said. It's all conspiratorial. There was a time when I would have questioned the logic of any of this. Stolen elections, January 6th plans and coverups to hide the truth of what really happened in November of 2020, shadow presidents, single world leaders and so on and so forth.
But it all seems to be appearing to be more truth than fiction. It is at least plausible. It doesn't have that "farfetched" quality to it that so many things before it had. Because again, you can actually see it. It makes at least some sense, and just enough sense that you can believe it.
Will we ever know the truth? I fear we won't. Not about the 2020 election and not whether or not President Obama is the real president today in his third term, seeking a fourth. Because what happens with conspiracy theories in general is that we never truly ever do get to the bottom of them.
But I will say this about these recent theories. It is in our best interest to deeply question the validity of them and keep our eyes and ears well peeled. Because things like this, if they are true, pose a very serious threat to the America we know—and Her future could forever be altered as a result.
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Tuesday, April 2, 2024
Of COURSE the Biden Border Bill is Nothing More than a Political Stunt
For one thing, the border was, for all intents and purposes, one of the leading issues that landed former president Trump in the White House in 2016 in the first place. It was a key component of Trump's entire campaign.
Yet, President Joe Biden, among a host of other things, in the first hours of his taking the oath of office, saw fit to reverse nearly all of President Trump's border policies, cease construction of the wall, and essentially send a message to Mexican nationals, "The border is open. Come one, come all."
The problem is that it created a massive border crisis worse than any border issues we faced long before Trump was ever in office.
Perhaps the Biden Administration simply didn't see the damage coming? Or did they somehow think it would not become the problem it is? It's hard to say exactly what they thought was going to happen, but clearly it became a much bigger problem than, I think, behind closed doors they would acknowledge now is a huge problem.
And one that they would rather not have to deal with in an election year. But deal with it they must, even if the reality is, that despite acknowledging it is a problem, they don't see it as a problem for America. They see it as a problem for winning an election.
The fact is, the Democrats simply have no interest in really doing anything at all about fixing the border crisis. But they sure want to look like they are concerned. That's why they tried to introduce a border bill—one that they can hang around the necks of Republicans to make it look like Republicans, and even Trump himself, are simply using the border issue to win points for the reelection of Trump.
The Democrats know two things. The American people won't bother to read the bill and understand what it does or doesn't do, and the media won't report on the bill according to its actual contents, but rather will report on the Republican's dismissal of the bill.
It is something they can use, ultimately, to try and make it appear that the Republican's interests in securing the border are just smoke and mirrors.
The Biden Administration has quickly tried to tell the American people that he cannot act on the border issue without the aid of Congress. A statement that is patently false. Just as quickly as Biden reversed Trump's border policies, he could turn around and put them back into place through the same executive actions he used to create the mess.
Not to mention the fact that the powers that Biden has according to laws already on the books are exactly the same powers to close the border as Obama and Trump had when they were in the White House. The real game of smoke and mirrors is being played by Biden himself and the Democrat party.
The Republican's rejection of the so-called bipartisan border bill is something the Democrats can take to voters and say, "See, they really don't want to secure the border."
But that's not the case at all. Of course we know that. But does everyone else? Because in conversation after conversation about the border issue that's the one thing thrown in the face of any conservative who argues we need to do something to fix the issue.
"We gave you the opportunity to do that and you said no just because it would give Biden a win that Trump and his supporters don't want him to have."
It's just not true, is the problem here. It's not about what the bill is called. It's not about what the Democrats say the bill does. It's about what the bill actually does and doesn't do, and the one huge thing it doesn't do is actually secure the border.
Sure, the bill may provide Biden funding for 1,300 border patrol agents, 1,600 asylum officers and 375 immigration judges. But what about the asylum system that's broken? And what about the authority to shut down the border being discretionary?
These are important factors voters need to be aware of.
For one thing, provisions in the bill wouldn't even become possible to do anything until inadmissible immigrant encounters reached numbers totaling more than 4,000 to 5,000 over a 7-day average. That piece is strategic, mind you, in the bill, considering that the averages now are between 4,000 and 5,000. So essentially that piece alone makes the bill worthless.
If the bill's aim was to close the border and solve the issue, that provision would not be in it at all. Essentially what it allows the administration to do is to catch and release somewhere around 2 million illegals a year with no authority to stop it unless the numbers surpassed that.
That is insanity, by the way.
All in all, I think voters need to be more aware of what is actually in the bill itself and the media should do its job to explain that. The Republicans are attempting to explain it, but of course there are limits to what the media will disseminate to the public regarding their opposing statements and reasoning behind not wanting to pass the bill.
As Senator Ted Cruz put it, "It's a way for Democrats running in elections to say I wanted to secure the border, but those mean Republicans won't let me."
Democrats aren't going to sway from their idea that the border bill Biden wants secures the border. So, the ones who need to know and hear the message are the independent voters. The good news is that I think they are, in fact, getting the message as polls continue to show that most voters believe Trump is better equipped to handle the border than Biden is.
Either way, the insistence by Democrats that the bill proposed is the answer Republicans don't want to hear is more than a little bit annoying. Because we know it isn't the right answer, and the one that is, is already sitting on President Biden's desk.
He can close the border practically overnight with a signature.
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