The Augusta Free Press interviews Michael Badnarik, Libertarian Presidential candidate:
AFP: Mr. Badnarik, the federal government has grown three times the size of the Democratic administration of President Bill Clinton. Who's to blame?
Badnarik: "Who's to blame? Who's in the White House? Who controls Congress?
"Over the last four years, the Republican administration and the Republican Congress have grown government like LBJ on a crack binge. They got a one-party government for the first time in 40 years by claiming that they'd cut government back. Now they're fresh out of excuses."
AFP: What steps are needed to control the rate of growth for the federal government?
Badnarik: "I don't propose to 'control the growth of the federal government.' I propose to prune it until the pile of dead branches is bigger than the shrub. The steps needed to do this are simple: Cut operations, cut taxes and cut spending. As president, I'll slash the executive branch by eliminating all of its unconstitutional functions, I'll veto any budget bill that doesn't include elimination of the income tax, and I'll veto any budget bill that spends more money than reasonable projections say we'll have."
[Finder's credit: atuttle]
no subject
Oh, I don't think Badnarik is saying that pulling our troops out will solve the entire problem. It won't, of course. But as noted, we have troops stationed in 130 countries, and frankly, most of those 130 countries are none of our damned business.
Granted, Embassy Marine guards figure into that number. But still, we have military presences in a lot of places in the world where we frankly have no right to. Recall the phrase in the Constitution about a standing army encouraging foreign military adventures.
Certainly, Islam's goal is to subjugate the entire world. No-one's arguing that. So, frankly, is Christianity's, and always has been; the Roman Catholic Church in particular has never been shy about gaining converts via fire and the sword. Christianity has merely shifted emphasis from doing it via Crusades to doing it with missionaries (and at that, the harm done by misguided missionaries in Africa in the 19th Century is not to be underestimated).
Every religion's god tells them that they will inherit the world and all other peoples will be under their power. It's one of those things we humans seem to look for when taking applications for a new god -- "Must be willing to grant us a divine mandate to rule the world." Islam is just in a phase of being more overt about it than some.
And yes, I'm familiar with Stephen den Beste.