Friday, May 2, 2008

Do as I Say, Not as I Pay


Why is it that most liberals scream against tax cuts but do everything possible to avoid paying taxes themselves? Sometimes the greatest opponents of tax cuts use savvy accounting practices to pay the least amount of taxes as possible for themselves.

Al Franken who has railed against tax cuts for years has been found to owe $70,000 in back taxes. He said he was given some bad advice by his accountant. Yeah okay.

To avoid hypocrisy why don't these people simply use a 1040 EZ tax form, pay the highest amount possible?

Peggy Noonan on Rev. Wright


Peggy Noonan is an old school conservative that I've always admired. I don't always agree with her thoughts. But, she is consistent, fair and has been a strong champion of limited government even in the face of a pseudo-conservative administration that has increased the size of government to levels that would make LBJ seem like Ron Paul . Of course, today's Republicans are more likely to listen to big-government Republican flamethrowers like Ann Coulter.


"I have been watching America up close for many years – if you count a bright childhood, for half a century. I have seen, heard and respected the pain of a people who were forced to come here when they did not want to and made to live in a way that no one would want to. Who could deny them their grief or anger?"

She likens Rev. Wright's speeches and sermons to the Irish Catholic folk group Wolfe Tones; whose music has Irish Nationalistic undertones against British rule. She discusses why a 20 year old Irish-American who has never personally been supressed would still listen to their music.

My 20-year-old friend has lived a good life in America and is well aware that he is not an abused farmer in the fields holding secret Mass in defiance of the prohibitions of the English ruling class. His life has not been like that. Yet he enjoys the bitterness. He likes going to Wolfe Tones concerts raising his fist, thinking "Up the Rebels." It is good to feel that old ethnic religious solidarity, and that in part is what he is in search of, solidarity. And it's not so bad to take a little free-floating anger, apply it to politics, and express it in applause.
He knows the dark days are over. He just enjoys remembering them even if he didn't experience them. His people did.
I know exactly what he feels, for I felt the same when I was his age. And so what? It's just a way of saying, "I'm still loyal to our bitterness." Which is another way of saying, "I'm still loyal." I have a nice life, I'm American, I live far away, an Englishman has never hurt me, and yet I am still Irish. I can prove it. I can summon the old anger.
Is this terrible? I don't think so. It's human and messy and warm-blooded, as a human would be.

I wonder if Irish Catholics like Sean Hannity and Bill O'Reilly listen to Wolfe Tones? Are they full of hate because of this?