Bio

My life has been episodic, so it's hard to know even where to start. I ran away from home six times during my youth to see the world. The first three trips were the usual rail pass & hostel tours of Europe that should be a rite of passage for every kid. I rode a motorcycle from Washington DC to Santiago, Chile on my fourth trip. I did Asia sans motorcycle on the fifth ("doing" a continent is traveller's lingo). I attempted to cross Australia by bicycle on my final trip before deciding the place was a big, bloody bore. There's enough here for a lengthy autobiography that I won't write today.

My work resume is so full of holes that you could put it on a player piano. A few highlights: professional motorcyclist, IRS agent, auto mechanic, assistant nurse, pimp (it was an accident!), landscape foreman, union organizer, novelist, and high school teacher. At the moment I'm in one of my self-imposed monastic cycles while I contemplate another change of careers.

I joined Ricochet to network with other conservatives. I consider myself a culture warrior for the good guys.

~Paules


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~Paules's Profile

~Paules
Name:
~Paules
Hometown:
Santa Fe, New Mexico
Joined:
Jun 13, 2010

Recent Comments

~Paules

As with Watergate in 1973-74 these scandals will drag out for quite awhile, especially if the administration continues to stonewall.  Combined with the full effects of Obamacare when it kicks in next year the table will be well set for a Republican take away in 2014.  What do you suppose will be Harry Reid's attitude toward a lame-duck, scandal ridden Obama if he loses control of the Senate?  Reid is an opportunist, no ideologue he.  The perfect man to deliver the news about a cancer on the presidency.      

~Paules

People are getting lost in the microsphere when there's a macrosphere in play.  Bigger things are afoot than what might be covered in the daily spin.  If character is destiny, the entire raft of scandals will end badly for Obama.  Eventually a fantasy world no matter how carefully contrived falls in the face of truth.  Look for increasingly preposterous explanations leading eventually to a full-blown panic in the inner circle.  Obama will not escape this time.  He's going down for the count even if this drags out for months, which it probably will.   

~Paules
Richard Fulmer: I'm uncomfortable with the word "inevitable" as it brings in questions of free will and determinism.  But by-passing all of those philosophical blind alleys, I think that scandals were certainly made more likely by a number of factors, including:
   - Obama's arrogance
   - The general the-ends-justifies-the-means attitude of the left in
      general and of the administration in particular
   - Obama's Chicago/Alinsky background
   - The lack of press scrutiny that must have given Obama and
      his people a certain sense of invulnerability · 7 minutes ago

More Plato and less Alinsky would have served Obama better, but it's rather too late for that. 

~Paules

I'm starting to question the narrative that the order to stand down was based on indifference to the fate of the men under fire.  Roger Simon at PJM says that new witnesses are about to come forward.  The House committee investigating this matter has just begun to peal the onion.  I'm going to break the CoC by suggesting that someone got deliberately double-crossed in Benghazi.  Given the people involved my suspicion is not beyond the realm of possibility. 

~Paules

Who will be the first liberal pundit to ask what kind of man would sacrifice American lives in the pursuit of an election victory?  Is there even one person on the other side who will admit the obvious?  In a sense the press is culpable in the murders because their partisan attitude convinced Obama and Clinton thought they could get away with it.  (I'm looking at you, Candy Crowley.)  Is this not the same as aiding and abetting a crime?  Where is the moral conscience of the left?  Or is the maintenance of power the only thing that matters?        

~Paules

Religion provides people with a basis for moral discrimination which is why religious institutions are a primary target for leftists.  If we didn't have religion, we could do whatever we want, right?  What a utopia that would be!  "Imagine there's no religion, it isn't hard to do . . . "

~Paules

I was introduced to some of Coolidge's speeches and personal letters by a conservative friend.  What struck me immediately was that Coolidge was first and foremost a moral philosopher.  He was a deep thinker and a man of tremendous personal integrity.  The contrast between Silent Cal and the current resident in the White House couldn't more striking.         

~Paules

"It didn't have to happen" is only semantically correct.  The word you are looking for is "inevitable."  It was inevitable that a politicized civil service would eventually use state power to suppress the political opposition.  Whether the decisions were ordered by upper echelon apparatchiks or initiated by low level functionaries makes little difference.  Abuse of this kind is characteristic of a one party state.  The long march through the nation's institutions is nearly complete.  The left is merely showing its true colors:  mostly red.  The seed of tyranny has germinated.  If Republicans leaders actually understood the problem, they would begin the process of dismantling the institutions where tyranny has already taken root.  Not by eliminating individual ideologues, but by eliminating entire agencies.  What we are seeing now is only the tip of the iceberg.   

~Paules

In the materialist worldview a man is just the sum of his appetites.  The progressive agenda would turn us all into animals, all the easier to enslave once we are fully debauched and debased.  Eventually the day comes when it's time to cull the herd.  The pogrom to eliminate humanity ends in Dr. Gosnell's abattoir and places worse.  Mother Gaia will be revealed as a bloodthirsty bitch with a taste for human flesh.  Some will accuse me of exaggeration, but others know better.  We don't have another generation to set things right.   

~Paules

KC, I could agree with but for the fact that you're applying a rational and logical analysis to a person suffering from pathological narcissism.  Obama the Great thinks that he can rule by pronouncement.  If he declares that something can be done, then it's up to his minions to carry out the royal decree.  He's not interested in the details, or in a contrary opinion.  When something fails, his reaction is twofold:  a)  it's got to be someone else's fault, and b) the failure cannot reflect on him.  Obama lies first to himself to protect his own self-image.  He then lies to the public in an attempt to change the reality.  The last thing Obama is capable of doing is telling the truth because the reality would cause his self-image to crumble.  It's a form of madness insulated from reality as you and I know it. 

~Paules

Correct.  The real danger is the regulatory state.  I fear we have already reached critical mass. 

~Paules

I couldn't agree more, but I worry that the American mind, as per Alan Bloom, might be totally and irrevocably closed.  It's easier for most people to embrace something that is socially acceptable than to think about principles.  And I shudder at the implications. 

~Paules

I got my first job right out of college with the IRS back in 1981.  Unlike the EPA, for example, the IRS doesn't write the rules and regulations.  The entire tax code is a creature of congress.  Back when I was a lowly GS-4 the code was about the size of three telephone books.  I can't even speculate on its size today.  Keep in mind that every provision in the code was drafted by a congressman to serve a constituent.  That's how business is done these days.

But if wanted to get rid of tax filing (and who wouldn't unless you're an accountant?) there are plenty of alternative methods of taxation that don't require a VAT.  I would personally rather see taxes collected and applied to specific government agencies.  We could fund the entire DOT with gas and excise taxes.  We could do the same for the SEC with a minor tax on stock transactions.  The key would be to set a budget for each agency and design a tax to match it and not a penny more.  Unfortunately, the tax code we have will be with us as long as we have_congressmen.    

~Paules

Dallin Oaks?  Wasn't he one of the characters from The Hobbit?

~Paules

I used to ask my students why we call it The Cold War.  Invariably the answer would come back as something like following:  "Well, Russia is a really cold place, right?" 

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