You might have missed it, but voting has already begun. No, I’m not referring to the South Carolina primary; I’m referring to the Texas primary … scheduled for March 1. You heard that right. Voting for the March 1 primary has begun two weeks early, even before the South Carolina primary. Other Super Tuesday primary states, such as Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Arkansas, have early voting as well.
Art. II §1 cl. 4 of the Constitution states: “The Congress may determine the Time of chusing the Electors, and the Day on which they shall give their Votes; which Day shall be the same throughout the United States.”
In 1845, Congress designated that day as “the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November.” For some states to allow voting on multiple days prior to the one set by Congress and have more than half their votes cast before Election Day is incontrovertibly unconstitutional.
Common sense also dictates that we should have a single national election day. The notion that, over the course of a volatile campaign, different people would vote at different times is absurd because there are so many events that could alter the public perception about a candidate. It makes sense that everyone should observe the same campaign for the same duration and render their verdict on a uniform set of information when the entire campaign is completed.
That some states hold voting open for an entire month before the general election in November is clearly against the spirit of the Constitution and the foundation of democratic elections. There is already a remedy for those who can’t show up at the polls on the designated Election Day — the absentee ballot. Now we have an entire month of early voting in some states, the turnout of which often influences the outcome of the legitimate Election Day.
Obviously, the Constitution is silent on the question of primaries because that is a party election, not a constitutionally mandated election. Political parties, in cooperation with the states, can do what they please. And clearly, primaries were designed to be staggered over the period of a few months to allow new candidates to slowly gain traction. But the notion that individual voters within the same state would vote at different times definitely violates the same spirit of free democratic elections.
In some ways early voting during the primaries is even worse than during the general election. For the most part, people voting in the same primary share similar values and priorities but are unsure as to which candidate best represents those values. This is why primaries are so volatile. We see candidates rise and tumble within a few days based on one statement, revelation, or debate performance. Who knows which candidates will be seriously competing by March 1? Who knows what will be revealed about any number of candidates. It’s simply absurd to begin voting two weeks ahead of time during a presidential primary with such a large field.
The bottom line is that we already have enough low-information voters casting ballots that will affect the future of the republic. There is no need for a protracted “election month” just for the purposes of boosting turnout. Anyone who is incapable of voting in person on Election Day or casting an absentee ballot shouldn’t participate in the process anyway. (For more from the author of “Early Voting Is Dumb and Unconstitutional” please click HERE)
https://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/election-day-voting.jpg373663Joe Millerhttps://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/logotext.pngJoe Miller2016-02-16 22:36:332016-04-11 10:52:36Early Voting Is Dumb and Unconstitutional
Although Alaska is experiencing another painful trough in the oil price cycle, it is only temporary in nature and should not be used to permanently sandblast the shine off of Alaska. To go there would cause a rapid exodus of Alaska’s voluntary private sector causing a Detroit-style death spiral.
The responsibility for our hemorrhaging $3.8 Billion state deficit lies squarely on Juneau’s shoulders that has more than doubled the size of state government since 2006 under the ferry dust assumption that oil prices would remain boosted to their lofty heights and not cycle up and down as they always do with the ebb and flow of supply and demand.
Public unions, hundreds of 100% state funded non-profits, and various other government dependent groups have surrounded our state legislators in Juneau in a budget Alamo and have demanded they surrender to new taxes without making any meaningful cuts in state spending.
Only the free market sets the price for a barrel of oil. When prices go up, oil companies tend to drill more and hire more employees. Conversely, when oil prices plummet, they lay off excess employees and streamline their operations to ride out the low price cycle. The big three oil producers in Alaska have been doing just that. The public sector refuses to do so. Yet, cut we must- to near a pre-bubble 2006 spending level adjusted for population growth and inflation (around $4.1 Billion). Any politician can spend someone else’s money and get perpetually reelected, yet it’s in the streamlining of government in the face of staunch organized opposition where true leaders are born.
Elected leaders tend to forget that they were elected to serve the non-government sector, not the government sector. It’s the public sector that supports the private sector, not the other way around. We are a people with a government, not a government with a people.
Governor Bill Walker and Senator Lesil McGuire/ GCI have both sponsored plans to tax the private sector to pay for excess government rather than to cut back to a sustainable level. The biggest tax would be on your PFD check- Alaska’s way of providing a mineral rights dividend because our statehood compact restricts private ownership of mineral rights. For instance, the lion’s share of a $2000 PFD check could be hoovered up into state coffers leaving you with a paltry $300-500. Governor Walker has also proposed a plethora of other new creative taxes including a gasoline and a state income tax. His administration has evidently not researched the massive fleeing of labor and private investment capital that always results when a state drops an income tax on them- like dropping a wolf into a herd of caribou.
If we cut the Alaska state budget to sustainable amount ($4.5 Billion is this year’s target goal with some more cuts needed next year), we do not need to sandblast the shine of Alaska’s economy and punish Alaska’s poorest with a PFD tax. Governor Walker would not need to tax everything that drives, floats, or flies, nor hire a small army of tax collectors.
Tax and spend socialism is the dark utopian model of the past. Individual freedom and limited government are the sunrise of the future. Alaska’s state motto is, “North to the Future.” Will Alaska continue to march “North to the future” or will it backslide into the insatiable bureaucratic model that has collapsed many economies in the past? It’s all up to you- the grassroots voter and taxpayer. Join me in individually contacting your legislators to stand firm on the $4.5 Billion budget line with no new taxes or PFD raid. You can also sign this letter and email it to the legislators listed below.
The Juneau Alamo is under heavy siege by an army of public lobbyists. Your voice must penetrate that siege. Rest assured that if they falter now, we the voters will remember the budget Alamo. This fall’s election will be their San Jacinto.
By Reuters. U.S. Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump blasted close rival Ted Cruz on Monday, threatening to file a lawsuit challenging his eligibility for the White House if the Texas senator does not take down his “false ads.”
The New York billionaire, whose campaign has long been littered with insults, called Cruz “totally unstable” and said he is “the single biggest liar I’ve ever come across, in politics or otherwise, and I have seen some of the best of them.”
Speaking at a news conference in South Carolina, Trump said he could “fight back” by bringing a lawsuit against Cruz over the fact that he was born in Canada, which Trump argues makes him ineligible to become president.
“If he doesn’t take down his false ads and retract his lies, I will do so immediately,” he said. (Read more from “Trump Is Threatening Cruz With This Major Lawsuit If Ted Doesn’t Remove ‘False Ads'” HERE)
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Donald Trump: Ted Cruz Is ‘Unstable’
By Jeremy Diamond and Tom LoBianco. Donald Trump escalated his battle with Ted Cruz on Monday, calling the Texas senator “unstable,” threatening a lawsuit and urging the Republican National Committee to “intervene.”
“One of the ways I can fight back is to bring a lawsuit against him relative to the fact that he was born in Canada and therefore cannot be President,” Donald Trump said in a statement. “If he doesn’t take down his false ads and retract his lies, I will do so immediately. Additionally, the RNC should intervene and if they don’t they are in default of their pledge to me. ”
The billionaire businessman later held a press conference in which he said he “never ever met a person that lies more than Ted Cruz.”
Trump continued to heap criticism on Cruz in an interview with CNN’s Jim Sciutto Monday afternoon on “The Lead,” saying that with “guys like Ted Cruz — it’s all talk and no action.” (Read more from “Donald Trump: Ted Cruz Is ‘Unstable'” HERE)
https://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/hqdefault-30.jpg360480Joe Millerhttps://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/logotext.pngJoe Miller2016-02-15 23:59:192016-04-11 10:52:36Trump Is Threatening Cruz With This Major Lawsuit If Ted Doesn’t Remove ‘False Ads’
Saturday was a tough day for America. We lost the leading champion of our Constitution, Justice Antonin Scalia, a great-souled scholar who with learning, wit and principle defended the actual words, sentences and paragraphs of our precious founding document. Without men like him, it will surely become so much scrap paper for liberal elites to fill with their latest fetishes. His death affected me like the passing of Richard John Neuhaus and the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI: One by one, the lights are winking out, and the darkness grows ever deeper.
All the more reason to start a fire. For too long, Republican and Democratic senators have played by radically different rules when it came to approving Supreme Court (and other federal court) appointments by the other party’s presidents. Republicans have mostly toed the old civics-class line that every judge should be evaluated by his or her professional qualifications, and not subjected to “litmus tests” on particular issues, since the courts are not meant to be activist. (Jeb Bush is still repeating that talking point.) So in theory, a judge’s personal politics ought not to be at issue.
[Listen to this recent interview with the author:]
And liberals have nodded and smiled, as Republican senators were voting to confirm ideologues like Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor. But when a Republican president appointed principled conservatives such as Robert Bork and Clarence Thomas, Democrats threw that fine pretense aside and acted as if the Court were a crucial power center in the struggle for America, because in fact it does legislate, and aggressively so, on issues of critical importance to life, liberty and happiness.
And the Democrats were right. Not on the kinds of judges they wanted, nor even on what the Court should do, but on what it does, and how we should respond. Ronald Reagan once quipped that in the arms race with the Soviet Union, “only one side is running.” And that is the problem with our courts, the reason that Democratic appointees are absolutely lockstep predictable in how they will vote on crucial social issues, while Republican picks are open questions.
Some of the Republican appointees, such as the late Justice Scalia, and Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas, hew closely to Constitutional principles. But George W. Bush appointee John Roberts and especially Reagan appointee Anthony Kennedy are unreliable, subject some observers say to the press of public opinion, and even political pressure. And don’t forget President George H. Bush’s now infamous David Souter appointment. Souter was a somewhat unknown quantity at the time and sailed through the confirmation process, but he became a reliably liberal vote during his tenure on the high court, and even waited out George W. Bush’s eight years in the White House in order to retire when Bush’s Democratic successor had moved into the Oval Office, thus allowing President Obama to appoint Souter’s successor, the liberal Sonya Sotomayor.
As Ted Cruz rightly observed in the first GOP debate, the reason for this pattern of Republican presidents appointing unreliable candidates for the high court is that those justices were chosen to sail through a Senate that might not confirm conservatives, by White Houses that weren’t willing to fight.
Can you imagine the outrage that would flame across America among the left if a Clinton or Obama appointee started voting with Justice Thomas? Democratic donors and activists would be on the warpath. There would be agonized “listening sessions” at Harvard and Oberlin College, and future judges would be vetted by retired East German Stasi agents. But when GOP appointees betray the voters who elected the presidents in question, and collude in the use of the Constitution to impose leftist agendas that Americans rejected at the voting booth — from legal abortion to same sex “marriage” and beyond — we mostly shrug. We are used to it. Our party’s elites are unreliable, and this is the price we pay.
This year’s primary season is showing those party elites the price of those and other betrayals. The voters don’t trust the leaders of the party or even the conservative movement, and are toying with the idea of giving the nomination to an untested, crass, unprincipled demagogue, by way of teaching the GOP a lesson. Such populism could be defined as “the dumb thing you do when elites have foreclosed all the smart options.”
But we do have smart options. There is more than one potential GOP nominee who has credibly pledged to appoint solid, pro-life conservatives to our courts. The question is whether they’d have the spine to do it, to face the firestorm of elite and media abuse that would accompany such an appointment, and be prepared to stand their ground. This is what a conservative president would need to do to overcome the fanatical opposition that a real conservative nominee would face in the Senate:
1. Choose a solid, Constitutional conservative with a long track record.
2. Make it clear that he will put all his political muscle behind winning his confirmation, and will punish any senator who opposes him.
3. Broadcast the fact that if this nominee is rejected, the next one will be as conservative or more conservative, as will the next one after that — because that president would rather leave a vacant seat on the court for the rest of his term in office than be responsible for turning over our fragile, complex Constitutional order to political perversion.
There are two pro-life senators among the presidential candidates. Each of them could show his mettle by leading the fight right now to stop the Senate from even considering any appointee by Barack Obama to fill Justice Scalia’s seat on the court. Ideally, senators Rubio and Cruz should hold a joint press conference to this effect this very week, putting aside their differences to form a common front in defense of the Constitution, religious liberty and unborn life. They should gather as many of their colleagues as they can in such an effort, with a pledge to block by any and every legal means any Obama appointment.
But they should go further. As long as Republicans control the Senate, there is no excuse for any pro-choice, anti-gun rights, anti-marriage justices to be confirmed to our highest court. If, God forbid, Bernie Sanders or Hillary Clinton is elected, they should face a Republican Senate — or even a GOP minority — that will obstruct their every judicial appointment, even if it means leaving key seats on national benches empty, for years at a time. As justices retire or die, the court will simply grow smaller. Big deal. America will muddle through. This is the kind of implacable determination that defeated the solidly conservative Justice Bork and got us the muddled Anthony Kennedy — and Casey v. Planned Parenthood and Obergefell. It is time for that worm to turn.
Conservatives must drop the facade of high-minded bipartisanship, which only ever cuts to the left. The courts have staggering power to change our lives, and damage our country. They can kill our nation’s unborn babies, seize our guns and punish our churches. If GOP senators aren’t willing to fight long, hard and relentlessly to stop that from happening, we should find other senators who can, back them in the next primary election, and cripple the re-election of squishy moderate turncoats. A presidential candidate who appreciates all this will get my vote. And I think he’ll earn yours.
In the meantime, of Justice Scalia, I feel sure that he is enjoying his reward, and I hope that the Catholic Church recognizes him soon. As they said of John Paul II, santo subito! Antonin Scalia, pray for us. (For more from the author of “Honor Justice Scalia by Keeping His Court Seat Empty — for Years, If Necessary” please click HERE)
https://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/Antonin-Scalia-compressed.jpg579900Joe Millerhttps://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/logotext.pngJoe Miller2016-02-15 23:58:502016-04-11 10:52:37Honor Justice Scalia by Keeping His Court Seat Empty — for Years, If Necessary
Hillary Clinton’s stump speech has gone to the dogs.
Not really. But Clinton told a colorful story on Monday in Reno that ended with the former secretary of state barking like a dog . . .
“One of my favorite political ads of all time was a radio ad in rural Arkansas where the announcer said, ‘Wouldn’t it be great if somebody running for office said something, we could have an immediate reaction to whether it was true or not. Well, we have trained this dog. Well, the dog, if it is not true, he is going to bark,'” Clinton said. “And the dog was barking on the radio and so people were barking at each other for days after that.”
“I want to figure out how we can do that with Republicans. We need to get that dog and follow them around and every time they say these things like, ‘Oh, the Great Recession was caused by too much regulation,’ arh, arh, arh, arh,” Clinton said, letting out a barking noise that caused the audience to laugh and some people to mimic her. (Read more from “Hillary Clinton Barks Like a Dog to Slam Republicans” HERE)
https://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/15597723400_aa7befc853_b.jpg504720Joe Millerhttps://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/logotext.pngJoe Miller2016-02-15 23:58:322016-04-11 10:52:37Hillary Clinton Barks Like a Dog to Slam Republicans
At a time when U.S. special operations are devising plans for the mission of accepting women into the male domains of SEALs, Green Berets and Army Rangers, the terrorist-fighting community is facing a looming readiness problem.
The new challenge is tucked inside President Obama’s 2017 defense budget. It states that U.S. Special Operations Command (SOCOM) and its 69,000 personnel are up against “training challenges” and is seeing “minor impacts to the forces’ ability to accomplish missions” that could grow worse.
Army Green Berets and Navy SEALs face some limits on training due to cutbacks in fleet and training range operations, according to a budget overview document sent to Congress last week.
As this happens, SOCOM is looking at a spring deadline to begin tryouts for integrating women into teams where 85 percent of men oppose the move, according to a Pentagon-sponsored survey by the Rand Corp. Nearly 90 percent say that blending the sexes will lead to lowered physical standards for missions in which high endurance and brute strength are vital. Some male warriors are so opposed that Rand scholars labeled them “extreme.”
Special operations forces are deploying at one of the most frequent rotations in history during the war on terror, begun Sept. 11, 2001. After conducting hundreds of manhunts in Iraq against al Qaeda, they are back in that country preparing for raids on the Islamic State terrorist army. (Read more from “U.S. Special Forces Not Ready to Integrate Women, Report Finds” HERE)
https://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/Women_in_Combat.jpeg20073000kathleenhttps://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/logotext.pngkathleen2016-02-15 23:56:562016-04-11 10:52:37U.S. Special Forces Not Ready to Integrate Women, Report Finds
Photo Credit: IJReview.com The GOP debate in South Carolina is being talked about as one of the most raucous events of the season so far. But tongues are also wagging about what Donald Trump did — or more precisely for what he didn’t do — during the moment of silence for deceased judge Antonin Scalia.
As the debate started the CBS moderator asked the candidates to observe a moment of silence for Supreme Court Justice and conservative giant Antonin Scalia who had died that morning. As a sign of respect, all the GOP candidates bowed his head during the moment of silence. Marco Rubio even made the sign of the cross in memorial to the fallen judge.
All the candidates bowed their heads — that is, but one…
Notice in the video Donald Trump doesn’t bow his head, nor does he even seem to close his eyes. Trump stands ram-rod straight with his head raised high . . .
Some are saying it was arrogant and disrespectful for Trump not to bow his head. Others don’t seem to care . . .
As for the rest of the debate, it was one rowdy event, for sure. With a crowd that hooted and hollered at the candidates, not to mention the candidates themselves repeatedly calling each other a liar, it was quite an affair. (Read more from “Watch: One Thing During GOP Debate’s Moment of Silence for Justice Scalia Had Some Viewers Outraged” HERE)
https://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/Trump_Head_Up_01.jpg352700Joe Millerhttps://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/logotext.pngJoe Miller2016-02-15 23:56:322016-04-11 10:52:37Watch: One Thing During GOP Debate’s Moment of Silence for Justice Scalia Had Some Viewers Outraged
A three-judge federal appeals panel in Washington has overturned a lower court ruling that allowed the Department of Justice (DOJ) to withhold documents from the public regarding its Fast and Furious gun-running scandal.
Senior Circuit Judge Douglas Ginsburg, who wrote the February 12 ruling, cited a prior case which found that “the test for determining whether an agency has improperly withheld records placed under seal by a court is ‘whether the seal, like an injunction, prohibits the agency from disclosing the records’.”
But “the government has not carried its burden in this case,” Ginsburg concluded.
However, Friday’s appellate ruling does not order the immediate release of the Fast and Furious documents which Judicial Watch had requested under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). It merely sends the case back to the lower court for clarification.
In Operation Fast and Furious, Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) agents in Phoenix allowed drug cartel “straw purchasers” to buy more than 2,000 firearms in the U.S. and smuggle them over the border into Mexico, including two AK-47s used to murder U.S. Border Patrol agent Brian Terry in 2010. (Read more from “Appeals Panel Overturns Ruling Allowing DOJ to Withhold Fast and Furious Docs” HERE)
I’m a sophomore at the University of Alaska Anchorage and every time I step foot on my campus, I’m not as safe as I should be. Doorways are adorned with signs reaffirming this fact to a would-be mass shooter. Students, staff and faculty complying with UA policy are all sitting ducks. While a mass-shooter style event is unlikely, statistics show that the possibility of a young woman like myself being subjected to a physical or sexual assault while on my way to or from class is not unlikely and has in fact been the terrible reality for some.
The Alaska State Legislature shouldn’t need to waste their time reining in the University of Alaska’s Board of Regents who’ve acted beyond their authority. UA Regents have no business denying me my God-given right to defend myself. The outright ban on concealed carry by the BOR’s policy is entirely unconstitutional and that is why the Alaska State Legislature must act by passing SB174. Article I, sec. 19 of the Alaska State Constitution affirms that neither the State, nor any political subdivision of the State (aka the UA BOR), shall deny or infringe the individual right to keep and bear arms. The Board of Regents has acted in direct violation of Alaska’s State Constitution which makes their present policy unacceptable.
SB174 does nothing but change where a concealed firearm can be carried, it does not change the requirements for obtaining or owning said firearm. The argument that college students are incapable of safely handling a weapon on a college campus belies the fact that these same adults carry a weapon in equally crowded public spaces, without incident. This bill simply allows law-abiding and then policy abiding folks like myself the ability to defend ourselves at school just as we may in other public areas.
I often hear that the “allowance” of concealed carry would distract from the learning environment. I vehemently disagree. I couldn’t tell you the last time I noticed someone carrying a concealed weapon. That’s the whole point; it is concealed. It’s equally bogus to say that professors will be too afraid to give out an earned poor grade to a student due to the possibility that they are carrying a weapon. If anything, instructors should feel safer knowing that they are allowed the means to defend themselves.
I hate to repeat a cliché, but it’s true that “when seconds count, police are only minutes away”. The average shootout lasts approximately 3 to 10 seconds. How anyone could think that a shootout between an armed citizen and an armed assailant (who are only shooting at each other) is scarier or more threatening than a mass shooter executing defenseless victims at point-blank range by shooting them sometimes several times in the head (as occurred in the Virginia Tech Massacre), for minutes while waiting for police to arrive is beyond me.
Truly, my favorite argument against campus carry is that “the answer to bullets flying isn’t more bullets flying.” Yes, I am sure that’s why when police arrive on the scene of an active shooter event they don’t bring any guns whatsoever. They just “hug it out”, or employ some other equally ridiculous fantasy based solution.
Choosing to carry a gun in any situation is a personal choice that everyone must make for themselves. It includes accepting responsibility for the consequences of drawing your weapon. When faced with a threat to one’s life, students, just like every other person in most any context, absolutely have the right to defend themselves. The University of Alaska’s Board of Regents has over-stepped its bounds and needs to follow the law. Senator Pete Kelly is attempting to require them to do just that with SB174 and he has my continued support. There is no legitimate reason for a law abiding citizen to be prohibited from carrying a concealed firearm for self defense.
https://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/White-stag-holsters.jpg498750Joe Millerhttps://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/logotext.pngJoe Miller2016-02-15 23:55:442016-04-11 10:52:37SB174 Could Save My Life: Supporting Campus Carry
President Obama’s silence on a wave of recent killings of police officers is being ripped by law enforcement, with one Maryland sheriff taking to Facebook to mock that he will “save you a spot next to me!” at this week’s funerals for two deputies.
“Mr. President, your silence about these events SPEAKS VOLUMES!!!! PS: I’ll be standing outside in the cold next week with my deputies for the funerals of the Harford Co deputies; I’ll save you a spot next to me!” Facebooked Carroll County Sheriff Jim DeWees.
His post, blasted throughout law enforcement social media and highlighted by the National Sheriffs’ Association, has become part of the rallying cry among cops that the president is ignoring attacks on them, and even fostering anti-police feelings.
The Fraternal Order of Police even called on Obama to expand hate-crime laws to those targeting police. In a letter also posted on Facebook, FOP President Chuck Canterbury wrote, “Mr. President, that is eight officers–six in less than a week–who have been gunned down by assailants striking from ambush or career criminals with active warrants who decided they would not be taken into custody, no matter the cost. Enough is enough! This must end.” (Read more from “Obama Silence on Cop Deaths Ripped, ‘I’ll Save You a Spot’ at Funerals Mocks Sheriff” HERE)
https://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/Barack_Obama_at_White_House_gun_violence_meeting.jpg27314096Joe Millerhttps://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/logotext.pngJoe Miller2016-02-15 23:54:542016-04-11 10:52:38Obama Silence on Cop Deaths Ripped, ‘I’ll Save You a Spot’ at Funerals Mocks Sheriff