Monday, July 25, 2016

America Could Use Another Roy Rogers

A deadly war on American police officers.  Bloody terrorists attacks in Europe.  A failed coup in Turkey.  An evil dictator leaving a trail of carnage in Syria.  The splintering of the European Union. A nasty political season.  The events of the last few months have sowed seeds of universal despair.

What the world needs now is a smiling Roy Rogers.  Yes, that Roy Rogers.  The singing cowboy who ruled the movie box offices and early television.  The King of Cowboys, as Roy was known, was one of the most trusted Americans who ever lived.  Everyone believed in Roy Rogers.

Born in 1911, Roy picked fruit and toiled grueling hours in a factory while he was still a teenager. From these humble beginnings, he rose to fame first on radio, then movies and television.  He was one of those rare public figures who was the same in real life as he was on the stage.

During his career, he appeared in more than 100 films which often stressed cowboy principles such as honor, loyalty and courage.  Roy was a straight shooter, who could ride a horse, yodel and twirl a rope. Rogers lived by an honest, unpretentious code of ethics.

Rogers often shared his values with the legions of his juvenile fans, affectionately known as Little Buckaroos. There are adults today who grew up in the 1940's and 50's who can still quote the principles Roy wove into the dialogue of his westerns.

Rogers' philosophy is embodied in the ten principles promoted by The Center for Cowboy Ethics and Leadership, a non-profit organization in Austin that advocates a set of moral guidelines for people, businesses and organizations.  Roy would approve of these ten virtues he championed:

1.  Live Each Day with Courage  In the face of so much depressing news, Americans need to conduct their lives without fear or trepidation. Never cower in the face of evil.

2.  Take Pride in Your Work   Made in America used to mean something.  It stood for quality, a fair price and craftsmanship.  Those values need to be instilled in every workplace.

3.  Always Finish What You Start Americans still dream big. But too many allow life to detour their aspirations.  If you have an idea or a passion, pursue it with gusto until you succeed.

4.  Do What Has To Be Done  Americans often feel helpless in the midst of turmoil.  Even the least among us can make a difference with a smile and a kind word.  Just do it and quit making excuses.

5.  Be Tough, But Fair  Raising children in today's world requires more than just an app on a smart phone.  Parents need to be involved and demanding while loving each child unconditionally.

6. When You Make A Promise Keep It  Presidential elections are the mother of all promise generators. Candidates pledge free stuff, vow unity and profess equality.  Few deliver.

7. Ride For Your Brand  A handshake and your word are your bond. Never go back on either.  How you act tells everyone what you stand for.  Your good name is your brand.

8.  Talk Less And Say More  It is almost impossible to have an honest political debate anymore in America. Everyone wants to be heard, but no one wants to listen and compromise.

9.  Remember That Some Things Aren't For Sale  Integrity, fairness and decency should never be traded for a sale, a deal or a job.  Your moral compass should always be worn with pride.

10.  Know Where To Draw The Line  Americans need to stand for freedom at home and abroad. The nation needs patriots who know when to rise up against tyranny.

Who will be the next Roy Rogers?  Amid the world's turmoil, America needs decent and noble leaders like the white-hatted cowboy who will stand for honor, generosity and hope.  Not just leaders in Washington, but in neighborhoods, schools, businesses and civic organizations.

Whatever your station in life, accept the challenge to make a difference by standing for principles that will change the world for the better.

Happy Trails everyone.


Name: Leonard Franklin Slye 

Monday, July 18, 2016

Hillary: Not Guilty But Hardly Innocent

Anyone paying attention understood the FBI probe of Hillary Clinton was going nowhere the second former president Bill Clinton waltzed on a plane for a secret meeting with Attorney General Loretta Lynch.  Seven days later, the FBI gave the former Secretary of State a get-out-of-jail card.

Coincidence?  That's what Democrats and the news media would like for you to believe.  But it requires a suspension of reality to conclude the "chance" meeting had nothing to do with the swift resolution of an FBI investigation that had been plodding along since at least August of last year.

Consider the breathtaking speed of events that unfolded after Ms. Lynch welcomed Mr. Clinton onto her government jet in Phoenix.  Within short order, the long-awaited FBI interview with Mrs. Clinton was held in New York.  After a three-and-one-half hour grilling, she sauntered to a Broadway show.

In the meantime, an embarrassed Ms. Lynch conducted a damage-control tour.  She appeared on television to assure Americans she was taking a hands off approach to the email inquiry.  Ms. Lynch is FBI director James Comey's boss.  Yet she intimated she was out of the loop.

Ms. Lynch's subordinate was handling a high-profile case, involving the Democratic Party's presidential nominee.  Are Americans supposed to believe she never bothered to ask about the FBI's progress?  There is no question Ms. Lynch was thoroughly briefed on the inquest.

Days after Ms. Lynch's 20-to-30 minute private chat with the former president, the FBI put a neat ribbon on its investigation, concluding that "no charges are appropriate in this case."  A Clinton campaign spokesman immediately crowed "this matter is now resolved."

Is there any doubt Bill Clinton lobbied Ms. Lynch for a speedy resolution of the probe? Did he also dangle a promise Ms. Lynch would remain AG if his wife is elected? These questions may sound like little more than conspiracy theory to some, but the meeting altered the trajectory of the FBI probe.

Even if the meeting had not happened, there never was going to be an indictment of Mrs. Clinton. That was obvious after Mr. Obama's endorsement of his former Secretary of State and his expression of confidence that she would be exonerated by the FBI.

As far back as April, Mr. Obama sent public signals to Comey about what the president expected.  In an interview, the president called her use of a private server "carelessness" and added Mrs. Clinton "would never intentionally put America in any kind of jeopardy."  Comey obviously paid attention.

Not coincidentally, the six-foot-eight inch FBI director almost used Mr. Obama's exact words and same logic in declining to recommend prosecution.  

In his media briefing, Comey tried his best to appear transparent in presenting the FBI finding. However, he relied on a legal definition of the former secretary's "intent," even as he acknowledged that Mrs. Clinton was "extremely careless" in the handling of classified information.

"Although there is evidence of potential violations of statues regarding the handling of classified information, our judgment is that no reasonable prosecutor would bring such a case," Comey said. His conclusion was that Mrs. Clinton did not "willfully mishandle classified information."

Clearly, Comey's decision hinged on his belief Mrs. Clinton was not guilty of intentionally mistreating classified documents.  That is a curious finding in light of her intentional deployment of a non-secure private server to handle her email, instead of using the State Department's secure system.

Even Comey tried to tap dance around the obvious contradiction.

"To be clear, this is not to suggest that in similar circumstances, a person who engaged in this activity would face no consequences," he told reporters.  "To the contrary, those individuals are often subject to security or administrative sanctions.  But that is not what we are deciding now."

His explanation was an obvious attempt to head-off his critics, who contend he applied a different standard to Mrs. Clinton. By raising the specter of serious repercussions, he hoped people would infer the director could have nailed her except for the legal interpretation he was compelled to follow.

Under questioning by Congress, Comey was forced to admit that Mrs. Clinton's version of her handling of emails did not square with his agency's findings. The FBI found she sent and received classified documents, she used more than one device and her server was likely compromised.

On numerous occasions, Mrs. Clinton had unequivocally denied every one of those offenses. Curiously, the FBI did not require the former secretary to testify under oath, sparing her a future prosecution on perjury charges. This wasn't the only unusual accommodation that Comey made.

Days after Comey's briefing, it was learned that FBI agents who worked the investigation of Mrs. Clinton were required to sign an unorthodox non-disclosure agreement banning them from talking about the case. Obviously, Comey wanted to prevent leaks that might embarrass the secretary.

An ABC/Washington Post poll delivered a stunning rebuke of both Clinton and the FBI.  A majority (56%) of those surveyed disapproved of the federal agency's decision not to charge Mrs. Clinton with a crime. Only 35 percent approved of the FBI verdict.

Americans know a fix when they see one. The FBI and Justice Department colluded to make the email scandal disappear before the Democratic Convention.  The probe's ending has left Americans shaking their heads in disbelief as once again the Clintons escape legal prosecution.

Monday, July 11, 2016

Time For Healing: America's Leadership Crisis

Pandering politicians, race-baiters, cop-haters and the biased media need to shut the hell up.  Their racially incendiary rhetoric has stoked the national fires of hated, distrust and hostility.  Americans need healing, reconciliation and honest dialogue based on factual evidence not raw emotion.

America's crisis began with the shooting of two African-Americans by police.  The killings were captured on amateur video, an increasing by-product of violent confrontations.  The crude footage exploded on social media, unedited and without informative context.

Unfortunately, many people jumped to conclusions based on the recordings.  The cops were guilty. However, as Americans should know by now, often the pictures capture but a snippet of the evidence. Only a thorough investigation can reveal the truth and assign liability.  

No one should know that better than President Obama, who studied law in college.  Yet there he was on national television within hours of the shootings suggesting the police were to blame.  His politically motivated statement, instead of reassuring Americans, helped ignite discord.

Black Lives Matter, a growing movement launched in 2013, took their cue from the president and launched protests.  Its founders and supporters include many involved in Occupy Wall Street, ACORN and the Freedom Road Socialist Organization.  The group has become increasingly volatile.

During the recent protests, supporters are captured on video screaming such epithets as: "Pigs in a Blanket, Fry Em Like Bacon." How exactly does that create an open discussion of legitimate racial issues?  As the nation soon witnessed, anti-police rhetoric has deadly consequences.

A heavily-armed African-American ambushed police during a Black Lives Matter demonstration in Dallas, killing five and wounding seven others. The murderer bragged to police negotiators that he wanted to kill "white people" in retribution for the two shootings earlier in the week.

How does a nation descend into this kind of violence?  When cooler heads and words were needed, the American public was whipped into a frenzy by wall-to-wall media coverage of the black killings accompanied by heated words from faux journalists and discredited experts.

There was a universal rush to judgment.  The country's tradition of assuming innocence was brushed aside by the Justice Department, President Obama and vulgar politicians eager to solidify their standing with the black community or police.  Everyone took sides. No on spoke for all Americans.

For its part, the news media sowed seeds of fear with a false narrative about white cops out to get blacks.  America's news organizations fan racial alienation by highlighting police shootings involving only black victims. Forty-six per cent of cop violence victims are white. Can you name one?

Lost in the nasty discourse are these inconvenient facts that should form the nucleus of our national discussion.

Police killings have risen an alarming 44 percent this year.  Twenty-six police officers have been killed by firearms this year.  At the same time last year, there were 18 police deaths by gunfire. Here are a few facts that don't fit the media narrative: Nearly 30 percent of the police victims were black. The most recent FBI statistics show that 40 percent of cop killers are black.  Why are more policemen and women being gunned down?  Americans need answers to that question as part of any conversation about race and police. The war on police must stop.

African-Americans represent 15 percent of the population in America's big cities, but 26 percent of the police shooting victims.  A disproportionate percentage of blacks are killed, however, the police shooters are most often not white.  Black and Hispanic cops are more likely to fire a gun at African-Americans than white officers, according to a Department of Justice Report in 2012. Another study by a University of Pennsylvania criminologist in 2015 found that black cops were 3.3 times more likely to fire a gun at a crime scene than other police.  White officers killing African-Americans represent four percent of all fatal police shootings, the Washington Post recently reported. Why are confrontations between African-Americans and police increasingly becoming more violent?  Without an answer to that question, no solution is worth serious consideration.

Crime in big cities is increasing after years of decline.  Murders have risen nine percent in America's 63 largest cities during the first three months of this year.  The statistics are part of the Violent Crime Survey released by the Major Cities Chiefs of Police.  So far this year, there have been 16,121 homicides nationwide.  In all of 2013, the country recorded 14,827 killings.  What is driving this deadly crime wave?  Crime creates more occasions for police and crooks to confront one another under tension-filled circumstances.  That's why a hike in crime matters.

In these troubled times, America needs leadership that understands what unites us rather than demagogues who preach division.  The executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police, an organization representing 330,000 officers, provided a sober assessment of national leadership.

"We'd like to see the president make one speech that speaks to everybody instead of one speech that speaks to black people as they grieve and one speech that speaks to police officers as they grieve," said Jim Pasco, the police union executive.  "We don't need two presidents, we only need one.  We need one who works to unify the United States."

Amen.

Monday, July 4, 2016

Declaration of Independence Needed Today

America's Declaration of Independence turns 240 years old on July 4. The revolutionary document, approved by the Second Continental Congress in 1776 at Philadelphia, articulates the founding principles that fueled the building of the greatest nation on Earth.

Our nation's greatness can be traced to the courageous patriots who debated, wrote and approved the document that changed the course of American history.  With the whole world watching, partisans drafted principles that created a democracy where colonists switched roles from subjects to citizens.

The document can rightly be called the birth certificate of the United States of America.  Its adoption by the 13 original colonies transformed the identity of Virginians, New Yorkers, Pennsylvanians and North Carolinians into Americans first and foremost.

They were united as one nation, no longer autonomous dominions. Colonists took their cue from the opening lines of the declaration which referred to newborn America as "one people."  That principle was not lost on future immigrants, who surrendered their old loyalties and embraced American ideals.

In retrospect, a document, even one as old as the Declaration of Independence, must be preserved against unfaithful interpretations and defended by those in power, including elected representatives, the judiciary and executive branch of government.

America's future greatness is dependent on continued diligence.  As history has proven, democracies can splinter and collapse in a blink of an eye.  Recent examples include Thailand, Egypt, Venezuela, Zimbabwe and Turkey.  When abuses erode democracy, tyranny fills the power vacuum.  

America's founders, smarting under the sting of the British yoke, made certain future generations would be forewarned about freedom's threats.  That's why the Declaration of Independence includes 27 grievances against iron-fisted King George III of England, who ruled the colonies.

The indictment cites violations of colonists' civil, political and natural rights by the crown.  It is worth recalling a few of the complaints as a history lesson on the tyrannical injustices which should make Americans today wary of the direction of the country.

"Imposing taxes on us without our consent."  Obamacare, the president's signature insurance plan, contains a raft of 20 new or higher taxes cleverly hidden in the law to avoid public detection.  It wasn't until after the bill was rubber-stamped by Democrats that Americans learned about the tax increases for small businesses and ordinary citizens. Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi sheepishly confided during the debate: "But we have to pass the bill so you can find out what is in it, away from the fog of controversy."

"He has erected a multitude of new offices, and sent hither swarms of officers to harass our people..."  Under President Obama, the powerful Internal Revenue Service unleashed its army of enforcement agents to intimidate political organizations aligned against his party, targeting those groups with non-profit status. Despite the harassment, no IRS officials were charged with a crime.

He has suspended our "legislatures, and declaring themselves invested with power to legislate for us in all cases whatsoever." State legislatures, duly elected representatives of the people, have been overridden numerous times by the federal government and courts on issues ranging from same-sex marriage to abortion and voter ID laws.

"He has plundered our seas, ravaged our coasts, burned our towns and destroyed the lives of our people." By failing to enforce laws prohibiting illegal immigration, the president has wrecked havoc on the budgets of states, allowed foreigners to usurp American jobs, increased crime especially in cities and states bordering Mexico and fostered human trafficking violations.  An estimated 2.5 million illegal immigrants have flooded into the country since Mr. Obama became president.

"For taking away our charters, abolishing our most valuable laws, and altering fundamentally the forms of our government."  True to his threat, President Obama has used the power of his pen to issue 235 executive orders during his presidency with still six months to go before he leaves the White House.  In addition, the federal bureaucracy has spun out 184 new regulations with an estimated cost of $80 billion for businesses and consumers.

It may be time for American citizens to again convene in Philadelphia. Once more Americans need to reaffirm their independence from an intrusive government in Washington, determined to manage our lives from afar as the bully English King once tried.

(Answer: George Mason)

Declaration of Independence Needed Today

America's Declaration of Independence turns 240 years old on July 4. The revolutionary document, approved by the Second Continental Congress in 1776 at Philadelphia, articulates the founding principles that fueled the building of the greatest nation on Earth.

Our nation's greatness can be traced to the courageous patriots who debated, wrote and approved the document that changed the course of American history.  With the whole world watching, partisans drafted principles that created a democracy where colonists switched roles from subjects to citizens.

The document can rightly be called the birth certificate of the United States of America.  Its adoption by the 13 original colonies transformed the identity of Virginians, New Yorkers, Pennsylvanians and North Carolinians into Americans first and foremost.

They were united as one nation, no longer autonomous dominions. Colonists took their cue from the opening lines of the declaration which referred to newborn America as "one people."  That principle was not lost on future immigrants, who surrendered their old loyalties and embraced American ideals.

In retrospect, a document, even one as old as the Declaration of Independence, must be preserved against unfaithful interpretations and defended by those in power, including elected representatives, the judiciary and executive branch of government.

America's future greatness is dependent on continued diligence.  As history has proven, democracies can splinter and collapse in a blink of an eye.  Recent examples include Thailand, Egypt, Venezuela, Zimbabwe and Turkey.  When abuses erode democracy, tyranny fills the power vacuum.  

America's founders, smarting under the sting of the British yoke, made certain future generations would be forewarned about freedom's threats.  That's why the Declaration of Independence includes 27 grievances against iron-fisted King George III of England, who ruled the colonies.

The indictment cites violations of colonists' civil, political and natural rights by the crown.  It is worth recalling a few of the complaints as a history lesson on the tyrannical injustices which should make Americans today wary of the direction of the country.

"Imposing taxes on us without our consent."  Obamacare, the president's signature insurance plan, contains a raft of 20 new or higher taxes cleverly hidden in the law to avoid public detection.  It wasn't until after the bill was rubber-stamped by Democrats that Americans learned about the tax increases for small businesses and ordinary citizens. Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi sheepishly confided during the debate: "But we have to pass the bill so you can find out what is in it, away from the fog of controversy."

"He has erected a multitude of new offices, and sent hither swarms of officers to harass our people..."  Under President Obama, the powerful Internal Revenue Service unleashed its army of enforcement agents to intimidate political organizations aligned against his party, targeting those groups with non-profit status. Despite the harassment, the top official with the IRS was allowed to continue in his job and no officials were charged with a crime.

He has suspended our "legislatures, and declaring themselves invested with power to legislate for us in all cases whatsoever." State legislatures, duly elected representatives of the people, have been overridden numerous times by the federal government and courts on issues ranging from same-sex marriage to abortion and voter ID laws.

"He has plundered our seas, ravaged our coasts, burned our towns and destroyed the lives of our people." By failing to enforce laws prohibiting illegal immigration, the president has wrecked havoc on the budgets of states, allowed foreigners to usurp American jobs, increased crime especially in cities and states bordering Mexico and fostered human trafficking violations.  An estimated 2.5 million illegal immigrants have flooded into the country since Mr. Obama became president.

"For taking away our charters, abolishing our most valuable laws, and altering fundamentally the forms of our government."  True to his threat, President Obama has used the power of his pen to issue 235 executive orders during his presidency with still six months to go before he leaves the White House.  In addition, the federal bureaucracy has spun out 184 new regulations with an estimated cost of $80 billion for businesses and consumers.

It may be time for American citizens to again convene in Philadelphia. Once more Americans need to reaffirm their independence from an intrusive government in Washington, determined to manage our lives from afar as the bully English King once tried.

(Answer: George Mason)