Thursday, October 11, 2007

Review: "Collapse of the American Empire" by Kirkpatrick Sale

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This article is a link from The Middlebury Institute about why empires fail. Of course the premise has to be accepted that the United States is an empire. Although the term, “lone superpower” has been used since the mid 90’s buy both Democrats and Republicans, empire it is not.

This article went after “neocons” in D.C. as the power using the U.S.as an empire with the fall of the Soviet Union. However, a “Google” search found only leftist articles using the term “empire” against the neocons. I found no articles written by the right that advocates an American empire, and the only interesting thing I found was an article by a self claimed “associate” of the neocons, that indicated the original neocons were former liberals who became disenchanted with the excesses of the Democrat party of the 60’s and 70’s, and still saw a need to stand strong against the Soviets and be pro-Israel.

This is probably why the liberals are so obsessed with neocons, they were once one of them. Much like the guy who stops smoking and becomes overly anti-smoking, current smokers hate them.

Kirkpatrick’s proof of the fall of the “American Empire” is as follows:

Environmental degradation – Destruction of land and water by over use & climate change.

  • The examples given by Kirkpatrick such as erosion of topsoils, over fishing and depletion of oil & minerals, are happening mostly in other parts of the world and not in our “empire”. Topsoil is eroding but we know were it is. At the end of the Mississippi river. We can always dredge it up and bring it back north. It just costs too much right now. The quote Kirkpatrick uses is, "ecological footprint is already too large for the planet to sustain, and it is getting larger." Uses the word, “planet” I think Europe & China might argue that they are part of our “Empire”

Economic meltdown – Excessive resource exploitation, colonizing.

  • Although the numbers the author uses are correct and disturbing, he has nothing to compare them too. What was Rome’s percent of manufacturing? What was their percent of GDP used for military or trade deficit? Why is the manufacture worker so cherished by the left but the owner of that company is such a villain? Our economy is not fragile, it is the continued over spending of our government and our own selves that needs to change.


Overextended military – Because of colonizing they are forced in more and more engagements.

  • We don’t colonize! Iraq is not and never will be a U.S. colony. Is Germany a colony of the U.S.? We have troops there since 1945! Every soldier in Iraq has over $17,000 worth of equipment on them. Democrats can help the military by just supporting the President and thus sending a signal to our enemies that they have no choice but to deal with us.

Finally, Domestic dissent and upheaval – Collapsing from within and attacked from without.

  • Well overextending the military is to fight the attack from outside, and it is mostly the liberals that are trying to destroy us from within, with its persistent demand for increased social programs, welfare, Medicaid, Medicare, Universal healthcare, making every minority group equal to the majority of the country. This leads to the bad economics point out previousely. Also other social issues such that homosexual marriage is an important issue for everyone, populations of 5% (Muslims & Jewish religions) need to have equal stance in our society like schools and city hall lawns, like the majority.

This is how you destroy from within. It use to be in America you could live your life they way you wanted as long as you left the rest of us out of it. Now you have to stick my nose in it too. Yuk!

Chris Mendelsohn

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

Government Obligation and future costs.

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Elected officials believe they have their constituent’s best interest in mind when they vote on a program or a project that will spend some money now and in the future. Programs like Social Security, Medicaid, Medicare and Welfare have had both positive and negative influences on our society. However, all of these programs had a current expense and a projected expense when they were first created and all of them, without exception, have been wrong in its projection of future expenses. Not just wrong, but devastatingly wrong by factors of 10.

Thirty years ago the City of Urbandale entered a contract with the Urbandale School District to open and operate an indoor pool on the school property. The operation costs were split out 60% for the city and 40% for the school. The lease was for 50 years and apparently no one did a good job at projecting costs out that far ahead or envisioning the need for massive repairs down the road. Something I might add that every home owner knows they will need to have done when they buy a home and that is why we ask about the furnace, roof and water heater.

Now 30 years later the building needs 2.8 million in repairs. The school can only pay for it out of its general funds and so voted to support the park and rec.’s suggestion to close the pool and void the contract.

The school district will still be on the hook for 40% of the cost to close and demolish the building and apparently that number is unknown at this time, although usually the costs of all project outcomes are calculated so that the managers involved can determine the best course of action, in this case it was not.

It is becoming more and more clear that any project or program that any politician, either elected or appointed, wants to pursue must not only have the cost of today and 10 years from now, but the cost of renovations and population growth and changes decades down the line, otherwise we are just sticking our kids and grandkids with a bill that can not be paid.

Follow up: If the pool is closed the school district will get out of the lease. Why not just ask the city to renegotiate the lease? One that is user based and not a set percentage. Then the city can raise rates on public swimming to make up difference, have a vote on a bond for the repairs & improvements and for god's sake allow the school to have enough money in to teach our kids to read, write, solve math & learn how to learn.

Follow up to the Follow up: The city council punted on Sept. 25th and will now hold open meetings to get the opinion Urbandale's citizens on the issue. Dates TBA.

Chris Mendelsohn

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Legal Americans

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Well I know it has been a while since I updated the site but I’ve been on vacation and working on big projects for my business.

My vacation was a 10 day trip starting in New York City then a train ride to Delaware and then a drive to Washington D.C... It was a long yet educational trip on several levels. It helped me understand the “East Coast” attitude towards the “Fly over country” and why they are more liberal then most of the rest of the country.

New York has a lot of energy and I can see why it has inspired many people to greatness in the arts and science, yet has my friend Frank told me, (he lives in Delaware) “100 million people live within 4 hours of his house, yet 95% of them are idiots. But that still means 5 million are smart, and that is more then all the people that live in Iowa.” And I believe I met a lot of those “95 percenters” on my trip.

However, New York’s energy leads the nation and world in change, unlike Washington D.C. where I loved the giant buildings and monuments of granite, but I realized that it also meant that change was slow and honoring the past was more important then fixing the present or the future.

Commentators like Rush Limbaugh talk about how Republicans who first get elected to Washington fall for the trap of being in the “in crowd” and alter their views to be accepted and get on TV because they differ from other Republicans. I believe the city also traps men into moving slow and not making the choices that will make real change, not realizing the only people with monuments or buildings named after them are the ones that separated them selves from the crowd and made changes.

The recent immigration legislation is an example of why the solution can not come from the east coast but must come from the southwestern states who are directly involved with the situation. The east cost has such a vast population of immigrants that the average height of its population must be 5’7”! I am 6’0 and I don’t normally feel that much taller then people here in my home town of Des Moines, but in New York I felt like a giant.

This made me look around harder had who is an immigrant and I realized that almost all the service jobs were done by first or second generation immigrants. It was amazing that the first 6 cab rides had only guys from the middle-east, all the maids, doorman, fast food order takers. It had to be 75% or more from the places I went to and saw in N.Y. which lead me to the conclusion that there is an almost “Master/Slave” relationship between the wealthy, middle class and everyone else.

I believe that easterners believe that if we get tough on immigration that this “service” class would disappear and who would take care of them? Or that they fear some sort of uprising or labor strike that would close down the city and states. That’s why they don’t want the legislation to include having to go home to them come back. This would cause too much interruption in services.

The truth is that we need to first just stop the inflow by building the fence on the border. Then we work on a system to get those who have skills we can use to get into the system, get the criminals out, also we need to overhaul the whole thing to allow immigrants from other countries with skills and cash to get in easier too.

This also needs to be tempered with welfare reform. If there are “Job’s American’s won’t do” then that is because welfare pays better then those jobs, if it didn’t then they would get those jobs wouldn’t they?

Wouldn’t it be a great way to celebrate “Independence day” by making more legal Americans, and making more American’s independent of the government.

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

A Mad World and a President

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Elections matter! Tuesday’s “State of the Union” speech by President Bush has been viewed by most as a “good” speech. However, I saw it as a president who has been brought to his knees.

Most of the president’s problems have been self inflicted. His plan for a quick victory was brilliant and correct, however, his plan for winning the peace has been just as bad and slow as any guy off the street could have designed.

President Bush’s speech did point out very clearly the problem in Iraq, on the one hand you have the Sunni minority who had supported Saddam Hussein and were seen as the problem in Iraq. Those Sunni’s that have decided to take up arms have aligned themselves with Al-Qaeda. On the other hand you have the Shiite majority who has the support (openly) of Iran. So what are we to do?

The answer, not an easy or simple one, is to kill the leadership of the Shiite & Sunni militias and organize a strong central government. However, that government is always going to have to have a strong hand in dealing with religious thugs.

Because of the problems in Iraq, President Bush can not deal with N. Korea and Iran in the way that he needs to as he pointed out so correctly in 2002 as the “Axis of evil” We now get reports that N. Korea is directly helping Iran with its testing program. Ahmadinejad has promised an active enrichment process and bomb in their new year, which begins on March 20th, 2007. He has also continued his promise to end the “United States and the Zionist regime of Israel” Words that we must listen too. Although I know Iran is not ready to “destroy” the U.S. it would not take much to devastate Israel.

The Democrats have made it very clear they do not want to do anything that would expand the war in Iraq or move on to Iran. They won’t say they want to cut and run, but instead continue to use words like, “precipitous withdrawal”.

Tuesday night, newly elected Sen. Webb (D-VA) said, “…immediate shift toward strong regionally based diplomacy, a policy that takes our soldiers off the streets of Iraq's cities and a formula that will in short order allow our combat forces to leave Iraq." Sen. Webb’s words seem reasonable, but he doesn’t give us specific information on how the peace will be won, if our troops are off the streets and out of Iraq. I guess they will just come together, hold hands and sing some song from the 60’s.

President Bush is weakened and now we are in a more dangerous place, in this mad world.

Chris Mendelsohn
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Tuesday, January 23, 2007

It is lonely being the world leader

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These are the main areas that the world has a problem with us in: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6286755.stm

*The war in Iraq: an average of 73% of respondents disapproved (57% in the US). Disapproval was strongest in Argentina and France, while people in Nigeria, Kenya and the Philippines were more likely to approve.

*Detainees in Guantanamo: 67% disapproved (50% in the US). Backing for America on this issue was highest in Nigeria, where 49% approved.
Israeli-Hezbollah war: Washington's role met with approval from respondents in Nigeria and

*Philippines, but on average 65% disapproved across the 25 countries (50% in the US).
Iran's nuclear program: again, support for US actions appeared strongest in Kenya (62%), Nigeria (53%) and the Philippines (52%). But, overall 60% of respondents disapproved (50% in the US).

*Global warming: more than 80% of respondents in Argentina, France and Germany disapproved compared to 56% overall (54% in the US). But the White House had 50% or more support among those polled in Nigeria, Kenya, the Philippines and South Korea.

*North Korea's nuclear program: opposition to US policy was strongest among respondents in Argentina and Brazil. On average across the 25 countries 54% disapproved (43% in the US).

The heart of this poll was to see if the US was a stabilizing power in the world. Countries that have never liked our “cowboy” diplomacy don’t like it now even more. France and Argentina have never been real friends to the US and I doubt anything we do gets a positive response.

As far as the War in Iraq and Club Gitmo I disagree but understand their problem with our involvement. However, I don’t understand the negative view of the Israeli-Hezbollah war (we weren’t involved there militarily) other then we support Israel. Same with our handling of Iran’s nuclear program. What are we to do, nothing? Allow a country that supports terrorism to have a nuclear program? Again, anti-Israel.

Global warming is a bill of goods sold to people who are self haters. That the world would be great if it were not for man. Specifically the US and its industry, which isn’t as pronounced as it use to be. But we are just energy wasters as we produce 20-25 percent of the world’s GDP.

N. Korea is ran by a whack job and what are we to do, nothing? I guess we would be much more popular if we did nothing and just went a way. Then there would be no check on evil people in the world. The world may hate us but they need us on the wall.

Chris Mendelsohn
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Thursday, January 11, 2007

Plan "B" for Baghdad

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President Bush outlined a plan to increase the number of troops around Baghdad by 21,500 in the near future. His reasoning was that 80% of the violence in Iraq occurs within 30 miles of the city. This level of troop increase would also double the number of U.S. troops in that area. Not insignificant.

As we get farther away from the initial invasion, the more I question the strategy of the war. I however, do not question the need for the military action. Hussein had to go, the middle-east needed to be changed and made more connected to the west. These countries are slipping away from the world, the more the Islamic fascist are gaining power. Iraq may have not been directly involved with 9/11 but were sympathetic to the cause.

Obviously I am not a military strategist, however, I have reviewed military actions in history and know that in every situation there are multiple plans and back ups when encountering the actual enemy and not a theoretical one. Why we would have a plan that didn’t also have plans for 20, 50 & 100,000 troops in reserve if needed is beyond my understanding. From my reading of the Pentagon they are always writing papers on this stuff and have plans to invadeCanada.

One thing I do know is that it is the President's responsibility only, and the Democrats trying to get involved with this issue is wrong and without bases in the constitution. The President told us last night that the enemy in Iraq will be very willing to increase the violence as the new troops enter the country. What he failed to mention is that the media and the Democrat leadership are also willing to increase its verbal violence too. The administration might not confirm a “Plan B” but they better have one ready!

Chris Mendelsohn
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Other Minor Powers: North Korea

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The fact that I even mention North Korea as a “minor power” is stretching it. They have no economy and a conventional military that can only hurt S. Korea. So the only reason they are a world player is that they are testing nuclear weapons. More importantly they have missiles that could carry them to the U.S.

Kim Jong il (best portrayed in the movie: “Team America: World Police”) raised in Russia during WWII, educated in China, he is the “Manchurian Candidate”. He became leader after the death of his father in 1994. N. Korea has broken a deal with the U.S. made in the 90’s, some say it was because the Republican controlled congress pushed too aggressively against N. Korea, but the fact is that this country has too many problems to be concerned about nuclear energy or weapons.

I see N. Korea as a person who threatens suicide without really going through with it. Why do they do it? For the attention. “The leader” who has a degree in Political economics (what ever that means) hasn’t a clue to running any type of economy. So he resorts to blackmail and forgery to prop up his country. A government official of N. Korea was busted with millions in forged U.S. currency and N. Korea had the balls to ask for the cash back.

This failed communist dream of a country is another example of why that form of government and economy goes against human nature and does not inspire the best in man. I rank Kim Jong il as most likely to use his nuclear weapons in a suicide attempt. The question is how we will retaliate with China and Russia as their neighbors and throw him on the trash heap of history.

Chris Mendelsohn
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