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        <title>deviantART: by:grosh</title>
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        <pubDate>Sat, 19 Dec 2009 19:33:17 PST</pubDate>        
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                  <item>
                <title>deviantart</title>
                <link>http://grosh.deviantart.com/journal/20442940/</link>
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                <pubDate>Thu, 11 Sep 2008 17:09:41 PDT</pubDate>
                
                <description><![CDATA[ is great!<br /><br /> ]]></description>
                <author>~grosh</author>
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          <item>
                <title>more bullshit from bush and co.</title>
                <link>http://grosh.deviantart.com/journal/4242827/</link>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">http://grosh.deviantart.com/journal/4242827/</guid>
                <pubDate>Wed, 05 Jan 2005 00:59:44 PST</pubDate>
                
                <description><![CDATA[ We are told that preemptive strikes,  torture, military tribunals, suspension  of habeas corpus, executive orders to  wage war, and sacrificing privacy with  a weakened 4th Amendment are the  minimum required to save our country  from the threat of terrorism.   Congressman Ron Paul, June 27, 2002<br />
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After reading most of <i>The Emperor Wears  No Clothes</i>, I am becoming more  convinced that the federal governments  War on Terror is a ploy, with dire  consequences for the American people.   Like the War on Drugs, the War on  Terror benefits a select few and  oppresses many.  Both wars give the  federal government a blank check in  exercising its power to win an  unwinnable war.  Both wars increase  the initial problem in several ways,  so that the war increases with time,  all the while legislatures spread these  misguided goals into almost all aspects  of politics.<br />
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In order to control the war in what  ways the federal government deems  necessary, massive amounts of  misinformation is spread.  Back in the  1930s, Hearsts virtual monopoly on the  newspapers and media trained entire  generations to hate the cannabis plant,  which allowed subsequent prohibition  legislation to pass and grow.  In  modern society, huge corporate  conglomerates basically control the  predominant news outlets: television,  newspaper, and radio.  The media is  incredibly powerful, but who is the  media accountable to?  As long as the  general public is misinformed, there is  little hope that these oppressive  wars will end.  Because one cannot  eradicate drugs, nor eradicate  terrorism, these wars go on for an  indefinite period.<br />
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Congressman Ron Paul, a Libertarian  Republican from Texas, said that the  misnamed Patriot Act, presented to the  public as an anti-terrorism measure,  actually focuses on American citizens  rather than foreign terrorists.  In  another speech, he states that the  recently passed legislation (HR 10)  broadens the definition of terrorism  contained in the PATRIOT Act.  HR 10  characterizes terrorism as acts  intended to influence the policy of a  government by intimidation or  coercion.  The definition is clearly  written in that broad manner to allow  lax interpretation in designating  terrorist groups.  Who knows how far  the federal government plans to  implement such laws and power?  Current  legislation being passed in the name of  security threatens our rights,  decreases checks and balances in the  executive branch and the federal  government, and increases secrecy.   This course of action cannot possibly  lead to any good. ]]></description>
                <author>~grosh</author>
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          <item>
                <title>flag burning</title>
                <link>http://grosh.deviantart.com/journal/4242812/</link>
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                <pubDate>Wed, 05 Jan 2005 00:54:31 PST</pubDate>
                
                <description><![CDATA[ <i>Values in a free society are accepted  voluntarily, not through coercion, and  certainly not by law.</i>  Congressman  Ron Paul in the House of  Representatives, June 3, 2003<br />
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Flag burning is not a common  occurrence, and there is absolutely no  need to legislate a commonly held  notion  that burning the American flag  is disrespectful.  Virtually all  Americans do not condone burning or  defacing the American flag.  For many  people, especially those in the  military establishment, the American  flag evokes the deepest of emotions.   It commonly represents the values and  ideals that this nation was founded  upon, as well as represents those who  defended these ideals against foreign  and domestic tyranny.  For some, the  flag is the epitome of all that is good  and just in the world.  Regardless of  what the flag may or may not represent  to the citizens of this country, most  people have enormous respect for the  flag.  Since a vast majority of  Americans despise the defacing of the  American flag, there is absolutely no  reason to legislate this widely held  notion, and therefore limit free  speech.<br />
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The Citizens Flag Alliance, a lobbying  group for the flag desecration  amendment, states that public opinion  surveys showed three out of four  Americans favored protection for the  flag, and a similar number believed a  constitutional amendment was needed to  achieve that goal.  A democracy is  majority rule, with or without rights  for the minority.  Democracy can lead  to tyranny if the majority imposes its  will on the populace.  Although the  founding fathers knew the importance of  the peoples voice over the government  and recognized the need for majority  rule, they also knew that a true  democracy is a vile form of government,  because the majority often rules over  the minority.  Bear in mind this  sacred principle, that though the will  of the majority is in all cases to  prevail, that will, to be rightful,  must be reasonable; that the minority  possess their equal rights, which equal  laws must protect, and to violate would  be oppression." --Thomas Jefferson.   Since the government of the United  States of America is a constitutional  republic, the majority does not need  to, nor should, impose their values on  the rest of society. <br />
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The government of the United States of  America is not perfect, and there are  many instances in American history in  which the majority imposes values on  the minority.   For instance, in  contemporary American society, the  conservative  anti-homosexual/anti-abortion movement  seeks to basically impose these values  on the American public.  This is  apparent when Republican leadership  endorses a Constitutional Amendment to  ban gay marriage as well as endorses  strict anti-abortion legislation.  This  is the very essence of oppression in a  free society.  These issues are evenly  divided among the American people, and  one half of the American people should  not be able to dictate to the other  half anything, much less matters  concerning morality.  Regarding the  issue of defacing the American flag,  virtually all Americans despise flag  burning.  What exactly are we  protecting the flag from?  From a few  miscreants that burn the American flag?   The Citizens Flag Alliance reported  that in 2004, approximately seven flags  were lit on fire.   There are roughly  eight flag-burning cases a year in the  United States of America.  In fact,  most flag burning is done on foreign  soil as a form of protest against this  governments foreign policy.  Regarding  those done on American soil, local and  state laws already deal with defacing  the American flag under vandalism  clauses, so this legislation is quite  unnecessary.<br />
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The recent flag desecration legislation  in question is H.J. Res. 4 and S.J.  Res. 4. Rep. Randy Cunningham and Sen.  Orrin Hatch introduced the legislation  to the House and the Senate.  Although  the proponents of this flag desecration  amendment may have good intentions, the  amendment is fundamentally flawed.   This proposed amendment of the  Constitution would authorize Congress  to prohibit the physical desecration of  the flag of the United States.   Although this amendment does not  directly violate the First Amendment,  it gives Congress the authority to  write laws that do violate the First  Amendment. <br />
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Furthermore, the term desecrate is  traditionally reserved for religious  symbols.  According to Websters  Dictionary, to desecrate is defined  as violating the sacredness of an  object.  Congressman Ron Paul stated  that the authors of this amendment are  placing the symbol of the state on the  same plane as the symbol of the church.   The practical effect of this is to  either lower religious symbols to the  level of the secular state, or raise  the state symbol to the status of a  holy icon.  James Ostrowski, a  li... ]]></description>
                <author>~grosh</author>
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                <title>more machiavelli and bush admin</title>
                <link>http://grosh.deviantart.com/journal/3867670/</link>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">http://grosh.deviantart.com/journal/3867670/</guid>
                <pubDate>Thu, 18 Nov 2004 22:40:00 PST</pubDate>
                
                <description><![CDATA[ <img src="http://e.deviantart.com/emoticons/p/pissed.gif" width="15" height="20" alt=":pissed:" title="Pissed" /><br />
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As I read <i>The Prince</i>, I cannot help but  notice various parallels in the current  Bush administration with Machiavellis  power politics.  It may be hard to  notice these consistencies if ones  view of current politics encompasses  the black-and-white oversimplification  that is the trend today in political  discourse.  It is really difficult  sometimes to have an intellectual  discussion about politics without the  various terrorism mantras and such  being repeated on both sides of the  political spectrum.  Although I do not  claim to be as nearly as knowledgeable  about power politics and geopolitics as  many others are, I am confident in my  limited knowledge of such things.  Once  one understands and considers  geopolitics, one finds that geopolitics  has little (if anything) to do with any  of the commonly held beliefs about  politics  particularly foreign  relations.  <br />
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It is fairly obvious that George W.  Bush and his administration has close  ties with the corporate elite within  this country (as most politicians do),  but I think that this administration in  particular holds a somewhat reckless  adherence to the wealthy and to the  corporate aristocracy.  However, I do  not wish to single out the Bush  administration in regards to their  close ties with corporate power,  because modern American politics and  money is synonymous.  The Bush  administration carries out support of  the elite consistently and skillfully,  because if it [generosity] is employed  virtuously and as one should employ it,  it will not be recognized and you will  not avoid the reproach of its  opposite.  So, although Bush has  nationwide support from the masses, his  true power derives from the wealthy, as  he once stated to a group of corporate  bigwigs  they say you are the  elite. I say you are my base.   Regarding economics, Bush does favor  the wealthy, as his tax breaks show,  because as Machiavelli wrote, the elite  support one among them and make him  [leader] in order to be able, under his  protection, to satisfy their  appetites.  But because a leader must  not only have the support of the elite  while holding the masses with contempt,  Bush must have the friendship of the  common people; otherwise he will have  no support in times of adversity   perhaps this is why he is portrayed as  a Texas cowboy when he is really from  an extremely wealthy family in  Connecticut.<br />
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Furthermore, regarding military  adventurism abroad, Bush has chosen  wisely his fellow advisors and  administration.  He has surrounded  himself with numerous neo-conservative  Machiavellian war-hawks, including Dick  Cheney, Paul Wolfowitz, Donald  Rumsfeld, and Richard Perle.  This is  because a [leader] must not have any  other object nor any other thought, nor  must he take anything as his profession  but war, its institutions, and its  discipline, especially when ensuring  and prolonging Pax Americana.  So in  discussing war, you must, therefore,  know that there are two means of  fighting: one according to the laws,  the other with force.  With the laws,  one can conclude these are the means of  being able to dictate to foreign powers   such as resolutions, trade embargoes,  sanctions, and others.  Force is  obviously military power and the  willingness to enforce the laws.<br />
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I would like to mention and elaborate  that ones word in politics (domestic  and foreign) is rarely strong, because  a wise [leader] cannot and should not  keep his word when such an observance  of faith would be to his  disadvantage[thus] a [leader] never  lacks legitimate reasons to break his  promisebut it is necessary to know how  to disguise this nature well and to be  a great hypocrite and liar.  Deception  is a powerful tool when used wisely,  simply because men are so  simple-minded and so controlled by  their present needs that one who  deceives will always find another who  will allow himself to be deceived.  As  such, Leo Strauss comes to mind (as  there are many Straussians in the  current Bush administration).  Simply  put, Strauss (like Machiavelli)  stressed that the general public has an  inability to understand the truth, so  that it is necessary to lie for  expedience in order to fulfill ones  (or ones nations) goals.  This is  partly because men in general judge  more by their eyes than their hands;  for everyone can see but few can feel.   Everyone sees what you seem to be, few  touch upon what you are, and those who  do do not dare to contradict the  opinion of the many who have the  majesty of the state to defend themfor  ordinary people are always deceived by  appearance and by the outcome of a  thing.  So in discussing the masses,  so long as you do not deprive them  [the people] of either their property  or their honou... ]]></description>
                <author>~grosh</author>
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          <item>
                <title>machiavelli and the bush admin</title>
                <link>http://grosh.deviantart.com/journal/3849453/</link>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">http://grosh.deviantart.com/journal/3849453/</guid>
                <pubDate>Tue, 16 Nov 2004 12:53:30 PST</pubDate>
                
                <description><![CDATA[ i didnt include this, but michael  ledeen is highly influenced by  machiavelli and he even wrote a book  about machiavellian concepts in modern  times.  the bush admin is highly  influenced by this "total war"  neoconservative.  check out this: <a href="http://130.238.79.99/ilmh/Ren/mach-ledeen.htm">[link]</a> <br />
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anyway, heres something i wrote about  machiavelli and the bush admin for my  english class.  not the best essay, but  whatever<br />
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<b>Machiavelli And Power Politics</b><br />
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Fairly recently, I became interested in  politics  and more specifically power  politics and what drives our nations  leaders in foreign relations - as well  as some of our nations domestic  policies.  I am naturally mistrusting  of authority, and I have a deep  mistrust of most politicians in this  country  not because I feel they are  bad people, but because their job  requires a form of governance (however  mild or extreme) over the populace.   Some politicians take joy in  controlling others lives, whereas  others merely try to please their  constituents as best as possible.   Others think of me as liberal, but my  belief system leans more towards the  libertarian ideology.  I believe the  government has no right in regulating  anything, much less has the right to  order citizens in what they can and  cannot do.  I tend not to become too  immersed in the issues of today  (especially with the polarization  within the past few years), unless I  feel a particular issue has special  relevance to me or unless I feel a side  of an issue is inherently unjust.<br />
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I do not think many people really  understand the scope of the actions  that the United States government  condones and employs across the globe,  many of which are deplorable.  Machiavelli was successful in  justifying acts of evil during the 15th  and 16th century, by way of his  reasoning.  Machiavellian political  ideals are just as prevalent (and the  barbarity as well) today as they were  then. Regarding the United States  actions abroad, these actions can be  thought of as necessary, and even just   if it means prolonging and enforcing  American supremacy.  However, in a more  ethical sense, these actions  spanning  decades and encompassing far too many  things to merely state a few examples   are unmerited and crooked. <br />
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A very recent example is the Iraq War.   I see the Iraq War as unnecessary and  unjust (as I feel very few wars are  necessary and even fewer are just).   From a governernmental standpoint, many  members of the current Bush  administration were ardent supporters  of regime change in Iraq (for roughly a  decade and a half) because they knew  that war cannot be avoided but can only  be put off to the advantage of others.   I believe the Iraq war was not for any  of the reasons stated by government  officials.  Although I know it sounds  cliché, I believe the war was and is  being fought for control of resources  in that region (namely oil and natural  gas, as my understanding of geopolitics  supports) - partly because the desire  to acquire is truly a very natural and  normal thing; and when men who are able  to do so, they will be praised and not  condemned; but when they cannot and  wish to do so at any cost, herein lies  the error and the blame, but mostly  because strategic energy policy  requires such a course of action.  As I  read The Prince, I notice various  consistencies in what he wrote in  regards to current United States policy  in Iraq and the greater Middle East  region.  In some aspects  such as the  necessity of a leader to live in newly  acquired foreign territories - one must  take into consideration the massive  advancements in communication and  military technologies.  Such things  considered, the Machiavellian  fundamentals are seemingly forever  true.  Sending and creating colonies in  Iraq would be unnecessary and simply  unneeded in contemporary warfare  and  as such a large contingent of ground  forces are needed to occupy the land.   This costs enormous amounts of money,  as well as embitters the citizens of  Iraq  because everyone resents this  inconvenience, and everyone becomes an  enemy; and these are enemies that can  be harmful, since they remain, although  conquered, in their own home.   Furthermore, a province that is not  similar in language, customs, and  laws,it is here that difficulties  ariseand one needsmuch diligence to  hold on to them.  I think that the  Bush administration knew and  anticipated the dangers of attacking  and occupying Iraq  as testament to  Colin Powells and Dick Cheneys own  words  but the geopolitical  significance of controlling that region  superseded such logic.  The nearly  unanimous support for insurgents in  Iraq by neighboring Iran and Syria  lends itself to the fact that once  another foreigner (in this case one  that shares many or some of the same  cultural/political belie... ]]></description>
                <author>~grosh</author>
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