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Tuesday, December 14, 2010

"The Cost of Being Governor" excerpt from Jon Batson's novel "Terminal Research"


In his soon-to-be-released novel, Terminal ResearchJon Batson couldn't help but comment on the recent trial outcome of the past governor of North Carolina. Below is that chapter:
"The Cost of Being Governor"

What?” asked Teri, standing in the kitchen doorway, her hands on her hips.

It was moving day. Teri was making sandwiches for the road and finishing up the rest of everything we had for lunch. After which we would get into our respective cars and drive to Washington, where we would be staying with Eva at her house in Georgetown. We had stayed there before. It was a nice place. But my mind was on other things.

I had just turned off the television and thrown the remote on the chair in anger. I was pissed!

The former state governor admitted to filing a false campaign report, a felony. The investigation lasted two years. He's the first NC State Governor to admit to a felony. Two years! The public has been paying for an investigation into this guy for two years!”

And now they have him,” said Teri, shaking her head. “You're making too much of this.”

That's the point, if we get used to this, the criminals win. Guess what! He entered an Alford plea, which means that while he did not admit guilt, he acknowledged there was sufficient evidence to convict him of a crime. He'll pay a fine of $1,000, plus $153 in court costs. He'll pay a thousand friggin' dollars! That's less than a helicopter ride he took at taxpayer expense.”

OK, so that's not much,” admitted Teri.

He's quoted that he has to take responsibility for the campaign and that the buck stops with him.”

So, good. He's taking responsibility.”

No! He's not! He created a position for his wife at N.C. State at an enormous salary. According to the local paper, he got a $137,000 discount on a lot at a coastal development. He's fined $1000 and he got a kickback of 137 times that on a single land deal.”

You want ham or turkey?” asked Teri, changing the subject.

No prison time, no jail time, no time-out in the corner. He has to pay a hundred and fifty-three dollars in court costs. That's criminal! You want to cut costs in government? Have the felon you just convicted pay for the investigation. Two years to investigate his felonious actions? He might have to sell that seaside lot he bought.”

You can't do anything about it. Ham or turkey?” said Teri, pointedly. She was raising her voice.

The current governor is also coming under fire for possible misuse of funds. They'll spend two years investigating that one and then the fine will be whatever is in the lawyer's pocket at the time.”

Stop it, Jack. Yes, it's criminal. Yes, it's wrong. It's a windmill with which you cannot tilt at this time. I'm giving you turkey, you need a nap.”

Fined a thousand dollars!”

Come in and get some of this soup while it's hot.”

$153 in court costs!”

Jack!” yelled Teri. I stopped and looked at her. It took a few seconds for the room to stop spinning. I took a deep breath, feeling sheepish.

What's that thing,” asked Teri, “about changing the things you can and putting up with the things you can't and having the wisdom to know the difference? You need to recognize when you can't do anything about a thing. Next time, see it coming and be in the courtroom. Write an article or be in a position to make a statement on television.”

She stood there in the kitchen, a stack of wrapped sandwiches on the side counter and a pot of hot soup on the table, ready to pour into waiting bowls.

Right now, my knight, you can do something about lunch. Come and eat soup, then we'll go.”

I nodded and walked into the kitchen to get my soup.

She was right. She was usually right. Teri was my gyroscope, keeping me on course, on message.

The prosecutor said he “believed that the plea deal best served the interests of justice.” How he didn't break into laughter as the words were coming out of his mouth is beyond me. How the newspapers reported it without bursting into flame is also a wonder.

The reason that the grand conspiracy continues is that it is in plain sight, that the perpetrators lie openly and the lies are usually obvious and yet we accept them. 

Occasionally, a criminal comes along and uses up two years worth of resources that could have gone to schools or libraries or fire departments. He gets the proverbial slap-on-the-wrist and those in power think that's OK.

The only answer is for people to wake up; to realize that it's not OK and to replace those people as fast as possible; to demand good government on a large and small scale, and to be vigilant when it comes to expenditures.

Members of the modern day Tea Party are the closest thing we have to involved citizens and they are getting labeled by the media as a bunch of nut cases.

The Founding Fathers would storm the halls of government at the top of their lungs at what passes for governing today. It makes me want to stand up and scream, “Who's in charge here, anyway?”

Unfortunately, I know the answer to that question, and it chills me to the bone. I thought it was the Trilateral Commission. And to a certain extent, that's true. But it was Rutledge who said it, the Trilateral Commission doesn't run the world, the Council on Foreign Relations does that. 

NOTE: "The Trilateral Commission doesn't run the world, the Council on Foreign Relations does that!" is a statement by Winston Lord, Assistant Secretary of State, the U. S. State Department. Source: W Magazine, August 4-11, 1978, Fairchild Publications

Third in the Jack Richmond Conspiracy Series, this book is based on a true story, that of a young woman held against her will in a Raleigh mental hospital. While investigating her story, Jack returns home on Halloween to find that his fiancée, Teri, has been abducted. Finding her becomes his first objective, but along the way he has to deal with new assassins, old friends gone bad and members of the organization that is really running things. 

What are your thoughts about the past governor's "sentence" and his use of the Alford plea?

Friday, November 19, 2010

Another great WAKE UP AMERICA article by Beverly Eakman!

For the first time, all Americans, whatever their ethnic background or color, are seeing in-your-face challenges to civil rights that their grandparents would never have tolerated!

How do you feel about what's happening?

Just Because They Can:
Hill Hypocrites Pulling Out All the Stops
by Beverly Eakman
November 19, 2010

The latest civil rights flap over groping and body scanning of Americans at the gloved hands of the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) is symptomatic of a much larger effort. It’s a push to see how much our nation’s lawmakers can get away with before the inevitable massive backlash kicks in. Look at any daily newspaper or online news service, regardless of political stripe, and you’ll find evidence that our country’s leaders and their lapdogs in the bureaucracy are racing to finish what they started some 40 years ago — crafting a highly regimented and regulated America in the European model.

Constitutionally minded Americans tend to see the culprits as socialists or outright Marxists and fascists, but that’s not quite accurate. Capital Hill is awash in people who basically believe that the Founders’ vision was unsustainable to begin with, and that as time went on, new waves of immigrants, along with a native population more accustomed to comfort than venture, would demand more than self-determination and liberty. This idea was encouraged through institutions of learning at all levels, beginning in the 1950s (via UNESCO and the National Education Association) until today this viewpoint is an article of faith. Rugged individualism, self-sufficiency and excellence — all ideals once seen as virtuous, are now considered indicators of mental illness — red flags for antisocial, “loner” instincts averse to becoming “team players.”

If Tea Partiers, patriots, constitutionalists and even libertarians expect to fight politics-as-usual in Washington; if they are to comprehend the sudden speed with which our nation’s heritage has slipped away, the adage about knowing one’s enemy has never been more apt.

The key to the outlook described above is the concept of “a benevolent dictatorship.” This, of course, describes a Nanny State, which purports to take care of all citizens, but must, in the process, impose volumes of regulations, restrictions and arbitrary rules. Why?

Follow the logic here: If the masses are indeed too stupid to manage their own affairs, then officials of government and their appointed minions in the bureaucracy must somehow inculcate a more amenable attitude toward petty diktats and the agencies that enforce them. To accomplish that goal, totalitarian regimes have taught them that “effective” governance alternately intimidates and rewards, humiliates and praises, harasses and protects, degrades and “recognizes,” regiments and provides.

Outraged yet? Don’t be. Just understand the strategy — tactics all too familiar to anyone who once lived under a police state.

Policies like TSA-groping didn’t happen overnight, but in increments — a never-ending series of seemingly random “trial balloons” implemented in airports and government buildings around the country to see just how much Americans would put up with, and the strength of that opposition. This author can remember balking back in the 1990s, loudly enough to be heard and long before the September 11 terrorist attacks, to anyone in line who would listen: The time for people to refuse stripping off their watches, belts, metal barrettes, hearing aids and submitting purses, briefcases, even carry-on formals for inspection was then, not later when it got worse and more arbitrary.

Nobody listened. Most people had already bought into propaganda about hijacked planes (e.g., the Lockerbie incident) and disgruntled employees bearing weapons. They saw the gross inconvenience as “necessary in today’s world” — never considering that known criminals with long police records were boarding aircraft, streaming into our country and being released early from prison on parole here at home. In other words, crime was not taken seriously, even then, and in the interest of “even-handedness,” everyone became a suspect.

That was Trial Balloon #1. Despite the existence of 16 major intelligence agencies, plus some 1,270 adjunct government organizations and 1,900 private companies employed in 10,000 locations in the United States, and more than 850,000 people holding top-secret-and-above clearances, Americans increasingly felt they had to cocoon behind locked and bolted gates, cowering in fear of roving gangs and offenders-on-the-loose. Meanwhile, they waited for the dreaded terrorist plot — perhaps a cyberattack or an improvised explosive device at a café. They got the goods on September 11, 2001 — from thugs who should never have been in the country, and who gave plenty of warning signals (such as odd requests to their flying instructors).

Today, our “betters” in government are busy throwing their considerable weight around — telling us what to eat; installing speed bumps (at $1,200 a pop) every few feet; placing all manner of “traffic” (read: surveillance) cameras to generate revenue, not to stop terrorists; obsessing over whether girls or boys are being short-changed in high-school sports programs under Title IX (1972) of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act; trolling for seat belt violators and dogs off leash (to generate more revenue); tearing down Christian symbols with one hand (under the cover of the Establishment Clause), while offering a nod to Shariah law with the other; jailing our own border patrol agents for doing their job, then subjecting honest Americans to demeaning searches at airports!

All this defies common sense.

Or does it?

Not if you study the tactics.

The burgeoning numbers of not-so-well-educated Americans (illegal immigrants included) are unable to grasp that our population is “being played.” Complaints are too little — and way too late.

The fellow who recently hollered at the TSA staff “don’t touch my junk,” in the process becoming a kind of folk hero, may even be headed for jail. Behavioral Detection Officers (BDOs) are set to be deployed, first in airports and then anywhere that suits our “betters.” The purpose? To look for facial expressions or body language that signals disgust with the “security” process.

That’s right. Being disgruntled is symptomatic of “anger issues,” and you know where that leads — straight to the psychiatrist’s office. There you’ll get by with a little help from your friends (i.e., the newest psychotropic drugs), to make you calm and more amenable.

Hey! This isn’t alarmist talk. Already your kids are the beneficiaries of such policy. Is little LaToya exhibiting signs of “attention-deficit disorder”? Is Shawn “acting out” (all psychiatric terms) in school! Well, give ’em a pill! If Mom is okay with that, then let’s give her one, too, to help with “anger issues.”

In similar fashion, one constitutional freedom after another is being slashed, and not just here in the U.S., but throughout what used to be called, variously, “the civilized world,” “the free world,” “Christendom,” and Western Civilization.”

For the first time, all Americans, whatever their ethnic background or color, are seeing in-your-face challenges to civil rights that their grandparents would never have tolerated. Even now-aging Baby Boomers were not acclimated from toddler-age to accept this kind of across-the-board abridgment of their prerogatives. The old Boomer mantra “free to be, you and me” is now a pitiful joke. Those Boomers spent their college years demonstratin’ and protestin’ without a clue as to how they were being patronized by highly trained “agents of change” to demonize rules, authority and traditional mores (among the more famous “useful idiots” are Bernadine Dohrn and Bill Ayers, who emerged from their violent pasts to hold vaunted positions in academia and liberal think-tanks). Today, these same cohorts-in-chaos can’t think up enough rules to intimidate their fellow citizens.

Younger Americans, the under-35 crowd, can’t remember a time when passengers came to the airport gate with friends and relatives, hugging their loved ones joyously or saying tearful goodbyes, then just boarded the plane and plopped down. How many of that same demographic remember when no one needed a computerized key card or pass-code just to use a restroom? How long has it been since 12-year-olds frolicked into a school building without running a gauntlet of metal detectors, pat-downs and even strip-searches for aspirin hidden in their underpants? When did youngsters not see signs everywhere informing them that their belongings were “subject to inspection”? How many years since local police actually comported themselves as though they served the individuals in their communities instead of accosting little kids for setting up “unlicensed” lemonade stands, or handcuffing those who dared to bring the last few French fries from a fast-food chain onto a subway platform?

Do thirty-somethings recall a time when homeowners actually had a right to thwart burglars and rapists, including shooting intruders if necessary, when faced with an uninvited “guest”? Did they ever ride a bike and thrill to the feel of wind blowing through their hair, or were they forced (not asked) to wear the equivalent of a football helmet at threat of a fine? Do they remember a day when a good credit rating meant paying the full amount on your credit card statement each month before the interest was due, as opposed to paying with interest, but on time, by the due-date on the statement?

How about neighborhood fireworks on the Fourth of July? Or the right to rent a room only to those who, for whatever reason, met with the approval of the owner, not the dictates of the government? When did anyone last call a pest-control service to rid the house of disease-carrying vermin, without paying for expensive, government-approved concoctions that don’t work?

Today’s young graduates remember none of these things. And we call that “progress.”

Who cares that we are faced with a government which so depletes that national treasury through various “obligations” and “entitlements” as to bring the nation to a financial standstill? Who balks at a retiring U.S. Postmaster General (John E. Potter), undoubtedly laughing all the way to the bank as the Post Office he headed goes broke, getting an $800,000 salary; an “incentive compensation” of $228,926; a $219,000 pension; an executive pension plan worth $1.35 million and an accrued annual leave entitlement of $243,978? Would this man have trouble sending his kids or grandkids to a top private school (about $21,000 a year), or to college (typically some $40,000 a year)? Not likely.

But guess who the government considers “rich.” Potter? Heck, no. “Rich” is some sap making $250,000 a year or less — which, if that’s all he has, will not allow for splurges like private schools and top colleges. Don’t believe it? Do the math: two kids times $21,000 times 12 years, plus 4 (or more) years at $40,000 a year each. C’mon!

Our grandparents would have croaked at today’s ostentatious retirement packages for “public servants.” Not to mention the accumulated wealth of disgraced “public servants” headed for incarceration, or their loaded lobbyist-enablers in the private sector.

Meanwhile, the so-called Civil Rights Commission declines to pursue legitimate violations of the Voting Rights Act — as long as it’s a minority group doin’ the harrassin’, and not a white one. In university dormitories (among them, the University of Delaware), clueless residents face highly trained Resident Assistants (RA’s), who labor to change attitudes not in conformity with political correctness; then they report any reticent collegiates to their superiors to increase the pressure! (For shades of Hitler’s Youth, you can’t beat that one!)

As for K-12 pupils, we now have new and improved data collection systems, identifying with numerical codes every conceivable religious belief, from Calvinism to Wiccan — a topic that was totally off limits less than a decade ago — along with any “negative’ attitudinal data on parents’ beliefs. Students receive a state-supplied ID number, so they believe the information and perceptions they provide are anonymous.

Only later do they discover that their possibly erroneous data has been cross-matched and placed into a state data bank, which is forwarded to a federal database at the National Center for Education Statistics in Washington via a Social Security number for “longitudinal studies.” When do they find this out? When they receive follow-up questionnaires in college and on into the workplace. Ha-ha.

Why are our nation’s leaders at all three level — local, state and federal — aiding, abetting and subsidizing these kinds of overreaches with our tax dollars; and why are the nation’s bureaucrats pulling out all the stops to get their share of the action?

To paraphrase former President Bill Clinton, “Because they can, stupid!

© 2010 Beverly Eakman - All Rights Reserved
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Beverly K. Eakman is a former educator and retired federal employee who served as writer and editor for three government agencies, including the U.S. Dept. of Justice, NASA and the Voice of America. Today, she is a Washington, DC-based freelance writer, author of six books, and a frequent speaker on the lecture circuit. Her new book, hitting the street next week, is A Common-Sense Platform for the 21st Century (Midnight Whistler Publishers, 2010).  She can be reached through her website: BeverlyE.com

Books by Beverly Eakman on Amazon

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Conservatives: Stop Celebrating and Get To Work!

By Beverly K. Eakman © 2010

Note to conservatives: Curb your enthusiasm on the midterm elections.

Yesterday's Washington Times wowed conservatives with the front-page headline: "Obama concedes 'shellacking.'" Another prominent conservative sent out newsletters exulting that "on Tuesday the American People made their position clear. Americans oppose the policies of Barack Obama, Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi. … These leaders and their agenda were FIRED!" Rush Limbaugh is being hailed as a hero for saying on-air he hoped Barack Obama "would fail," as if that comment launched the ballyhooed "conservative victory." Forbes Magazine beamed that the "Republican victory may keep the bull market alive." Even my old stomping ground, the Voice of America, exulted: "Republican U.S. Election Victory Could Impact South Asia."


As election results came in, TV commentators on the left appeared apoplectic over the turn of events, variously opining that "the crazies have taken over"; "the ill-informed voter" is now king.

But a blogger yesterday at Huffington Post may have had a better handle on the realities of the midterm elections: "Reid wins, Angle loses: The crazies have not taken over."

The fact is, all the Democrats' dour post-mortems and long faces – publicized, photographed and disseminated far and wide – are about as phony as Barack Obama's campaign promise to end income taxes for seniors making less than $50,000 and that no family making less than $250,000 would see "any form of tax increase."

Here's what conservatives actually got for their midterm trouble: A possibility of being able to stall funding for some of the Obama administration's more onerous pieces of legislation and an opportunity to filibuster new spending binges and perhaps keep them from coming to the floor or going to committee. That's it. Other than that, we got nada. The leftist bureaucracy is still solidly in place; the worst of the socialist-minded tax-and-spenders are still at their posts in the Senate, along with their entourages of staff, lobbyists, foundational-union-association support apparatuses, as well as their pals in the media (helped along by a certain billionaire, living the high life abroad, George Soros, with his $1 million dollar re-investment in Media Matters).

Patriotic conservatives do many things well. What we don't do well is strategy. When will we recognize that political leftists are masters at outmaneuvering the opposition and silencing critics? That they could win Academy Awards (and sometimes have) for "framing the debate" and "controlling the psychological environment"?

That's what the techniques above are called in journalistic and legal-psychology classes. There is a good reason why a college major in psychology suddenly discovered a boom market in a post-1960s America, and it can be summed up in two words: political psychology. George Washington University, in Washington, D.C., for example, provides major course work in it.

Political psychology (or "psychopolitics") goes beyond typical the behavioral-oriented fare in marketing, public relations and advertising studies to "molding public opinion." That's what liberal Democrats do: mold public opinion. And they are very, very good at it.

If their agenda requires putting on a sad face and allowing pollsters to come to erroneous conclusions concerning their intentions and beliefs: no problem. If it means recruiting spokespersons who are highly intelligent but can appear to be stupid; individuals who may seem slightly naïve, but in reality are professional community organizers; supporters who appear to weary easily, but who turn out to be vigorous and energetic; cronies who can endure public humiliation in the service of their leftist mentors, but who later turn the tables to reveal themselves as highly articulate "smart-a--es," it's all A-OK with the leftist Democrats! If there's a need to extend an olive branch to Republicans on some high-profile issue, then behind the scenes conspire to "zap" conservative opponents on a different matter – the "app" for that is in the ultimate how-to book, Sun Tzu's "The Art of War," circa 476 B.C., improved upon only by the communists under Lenin, Stalin and Khrushchev.

Two examples of the latter: In 1999, the Democrats used a phony budget agreement, allowing Republicans to save face with the public by claiming victory. But once they seized this route, they worked discreetly to garner support for partial-birth abortion, something most people back then didn't even know existed. In 2002, George W. Bush was permitted to claim victory for education "standards" when he signed the No Child Left Behind Act. Whose was the real victory? Then-Sen. Ted Kennedy, catering to liberal Democrats who were anxious to further dumb down America's classrooms and move schools toward "functionality" instead of excellence.

Patriotic Americans have just one more shot rescuing this country from European-style leftism: 2012. This week's midterm elections constitute a start in that direction. But make no mistake: Every new class of voters is a product of an educational system progressively steeped in socialist ideals and an entitlement mentality.

Conservatives better get a reality check, quit kidding themselves and get down to serious work.
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Beverly K. Eakman is a former educator and retired federal employee who served as writer and editor for three government agencies, including the U.S. Department of Justice and the Voice of America. Today, she is a Washington, D.C.-based freelance writer, the author of five books and a frequent speaker on the lecture circuit, teaching audiences how to shut down professional provocateurs using group-manipulation techniques. Her most recent book is "Walking Targets: How Our Psychologized Classrooms Are Producing a Nation of Sitting Ducks" (Midnight Whistler Publishers, 2007).

WorldNet Daily Stop celebrating and get to work!