A memorial day thought

Following a post I made on 9-20-07.  I thought I re-post it before the memorial day festivities that will have little to do with memorial day.

I am an “American”. My status as an American carries no prefix. I am, plain and simple, an “American”. It is only by virtue of chance, luck or any number of variables that I was conceived and born on the shores of the greatest nation on earth. I did not choose to be American. However, based on observation and education, had I been given the choice that choice would be, to be an American.

As an American I have guaranteed to me certain rights. These are not “God” given rights. Were they “God” given rights, every human being on earth would be accorded the same rights as we, who are “Americans”. No, the rights I have today are “fought for” rights.

The rights that I have as an American are the end result of mans struggle through the years to define just what are the “rights” of man. The rights that I or any other Americans have were bought and paid for by the wisdom, courage and blood of persons who were not Americans. By persons who through an intense desire for “freedom” and “liberty” made a decision to throw off the yoke of tyranny and declared themselves, “Americans”. Persons who believed that “all men” had a God given right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. They believed this so intently as to risk all that they had including their lives.

These brave “individuals” fought bitterly among themselves to insure that if not in their time, then someday, equality would be available to all who came to these shores and became “Americans”. That no government, religion, or majority would ever supersede the rights of the “individual”. That it was the collective strength of individuals that would define the strength of America.

Primarily “Christians”, they wisely separated religion and state. Fierce fighters, they wisely separated the military from political debate. Men with a common goal, they wisely encouraged dissent. In fact their belief in the “rights” of the individual were so strong they intentionally set up a government that could not be ruled by majority thought. Primary to insuring these principles were the guarantees of free speech and a free press that would insure that free thought could not be suppressed.

There was no dictate handed down as to what could be “spoken.” That free speech would be regulated by it's political, religious or social appropriateness. There was no litmus test designed to measure an individuals “patriotism” or “Americanism” based on what party they belonged to, what God (if any) they chose to believe in, what they thought about abortion, race, sexuality or any of the multiple social issues that today have somehow become politicized and a yardstick by which which men judge each other. In fact, they went to great pains to insure that men might discuss and debate these issues freely and openly so that all persons might rightfully argue for their freedom.

These men were not burdened by concerns of the sensibilities of the weak minded who would bite their tongue for fear of incurring retribution of kings and princes. These were men who fed on the soles of their boots and tempered their will by walking barefoot in the snow and ice so that you and I might live in a land they could only dream of.

And because of their will and determination they gave birth to a country so strong that it has been called on, more than once, to save the world. And save the world it has done. However it was not our government that saved the world. For a government is nothing more than a reflection of the will of the governed. It was the collective effort of “individuals” who despite individual differences had a common bond. They were Americans. Part of a grand experiment that has made many mistakes and in doing so has shed blood and wears the scars of internal battles over issues such as discrimination, sexism, racism, religious differences and ill conceived wars. And as Americans they would fight to the death any encroachment upon their hard fought for liberties.

Until today.
Today we face the greatest threat to our liberties we have ever faced. Today we face the greatest enemy we will ever face. Because today, the threat, the enemy, is us.

Today we would restrict the speech that we fear may violate the sensibilities of those who do wish to hear the free speech of uncommon ideas. Today we would condemn those that do not believe in a “God” of “our” choosing. Today we divide ourselves not only by color, ethnicity, sex, economic status or religion. But we further divide ourselves by “left” and “right”. And today we are all to willing to elect representatives, not to uphold the ideals upon which this country was founded, but who would push for our own personal agendas, even at the cost of another's freedoms..

Today we have grown soft and look to the government as a dog to it's master to have our wounds licked. We have lost the taste for the boot leather of our forefathers and are to comfortable to temper our will barefoot in battlefields of snow and ice. We allow the media and the government to censure the atrocities of war so as not to be exposed to it's horrors and our responsibility to care for those we throw into the fray. As unlike World War II we do not yet have a casualty on every block to mourn and can still distance our selves from “our” responsibility and accountability. We turn our heads and pretend not to notice the street side casualties of another war from whose wounds we have not yet healed.

Today we have allowed our government to become very much like the government from which our forefathers broke ranks with. We have allowed our government to engage in the same totalitarian actions we condemned and went to war to save the rest of the world from.

Today we have become so focused on our differences that our government is at danger of having no effect other than the furthering of restriction of liberties as a result of it's incompetence at addressing the issues of our times. A government whose spinelessness in governing by virtue of the Constitution of the United States of America must resort to government by suppression. Of government for sale to corporations who would pit the economically disadvantaged against each other lest they focus their attention on the real enemy. Those who divide us to keep us weak out of fear that united we may rise up and reclaim that which our forefathers fought to bequeath to us.

Today we have become so focused on differences we have forgotten our true strength. That we are all “Americans”. Or at least we were. Because the Americans of our forefathers time would call us to task for for allowing their vision to become so corrupted. I am an American. I will not stand down. No compromise, no retreat, no surrender. I am an American.

In every persons lifetime comes occasions by which we define ourselves. Not in the eyes of others. But through our own eyes. If that occasion has not yet occurred for you. Make it.
RIDE HARD, RIDE FREE, STAND FOR SOMETHING!!!rc

Memorial Day is a United States federal holiday observed on the last Monday of May (May 25 in 2009). Formerly known as Decoration Day, it commemorates U.S. men and women who died while in the military service. First enacted to honor Union soldiers of the American Civil War (it is celebrated near the day of reunification after the civil war), it was expanded after World War I to include American casualties of any war or military action. From WikipediaAdd to Technorati Favorites


PGR send off mission-779th Engineer Battalion

The 180 men and women of the 779th Engineer Battalion are being deployed to the sandbox. There will be a brief ceremony at the capitol with many dignitaries including Governor Crist, Lt. Governor Kottkamp, US Senator Mel Martinez, and others. It is important that we show them how we feel. We would like to have a good showing for this send off. Any support we can get from surrounding areas will be appreciated. Here are the details:


8:00 a.m. - Staging - Publix parking lot, 3111 Mahan Dr., near the Burger King

8:15 - Briefing

8:25 - KSU - travel to the Armory on Easterwood Drive off Capital Circle NE

8:45 - Depart the Armory with LEO escort to the North side of Capitol complex (leave bikes parked on street)

ETA 9:15

9:25 - Establish flag line

10:00 - Ceremony begins

11:00 - Ceremony ends (light snacks provided by USO or Red Cross - limited time allowed- PGR invited)

Escort to airport - TBA

Flag line at Airport

Dress appropriately for the weather of the day. Hydration is always important. Times listed are not variable.

Mike Donohoe
Florida State Captain
Patriot Guard RidersAdd to Technorati Favorites

July 4th Tea Party Tallahassee, Florida

Independence Day Tea Party

at the Tallahassee Automobile Museum

3 pm - FIREWORKS at 9 p.m.

Fantastic Fireworks display by Premier Pyrotecnics

$10 Adults - Children $5 includes Museum Entrance

In addition to PERHAPS WE NEED A TEA PARTY AGAIN,local performers and the following music and videos will be featured at the Independence Day Tea Party at the Tallahassee Automobile Museum. PaceClick: We Must Take America Back, by Steve Vause [over 30,000 views] Click American Tea Party Anthem, by Lloyd Marcus [over 100,000 views]Click: Kid's History Lesson - Schoolhouse Rock - No More Kings [over 500,000 views]Click: Second American Revolution, Thomas Paine [over 3 million views]


Celebrate the 4th of July at the Tallahassee Automobile Museum and celebrate the Automobile Museum's One Year Anniversary, "Back to the Future". The theme of the Independence Day Tea Party is "Freedom Isn't Free - Back to the Future." The Delorean car used in the movie, "Back to the Future" will be at the Museum on July 4.


The event begins at 3 p.m. Premier Pyrotecnics begins a fantastic fireworks display at 9 p.m. Speakers and performing artists are being scheduled. Performers from the April 15 Tallahassee Tea Party will sing: (1) Tallahassee's own Tony ODonnell, Tony O "Conserv Opunk" (2) Ben 'Jamin Franklin (CLICK HERE) sing God Bless America at the Museum and sing PERHAPS WE NEED A TEA PARTY AGAIN as he did at the Capitol April 15. (3) H.J. Kuntry will sing his original songs, "I've Heard Freedom's Whistle Blow" and "Don't Be Afraid" again. Kuntry is a Leon High School grad and has performed in more counties in the United States than any other performer alive or deceased,link to Tallahassee Magazine). If you have performer, speaker or agenda suggestions, call Pace. The event will feature patriotic music, local performing artists and local speakers. Some of the subjects that speakers will address: American history, Florida Oil drilling, The Patrick Henry Caucus, We Surround Them groups and The 912 Project and other issues. Francisco Gonzalez, speaker and organizer of the at the April 15 Tea Party will be one of our speakers.


To me, having this Tea Party at the car museum is ideal. American freedom and idependence are associated with car ownership and capitalism. At the event, folks can also sign an original document: the DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE FROM FOREIGN OIL, now being written. Plans are also in the works to form The Floirda Patrick Henry Caucus.

We will have fireworks, food and entertainment depending on our stimulus free budget. $10 per adult and $5 per child includes entrance to the Museum, seeing the Back to the Future Delorean and to the "Museum - Field of Dreams" where there will be games and; entertainment for everyone beginning at 3 p.m. At this event, you can be a signer of the original Declaration of Independence from Foreign Oil.


Sponsor the July 4 Tea Party and the signing of the

Declaration of Independence from Foreign Oil

We seek local car clubs, volunteers and businesses to sponsor, promote and staff this event. Also, celebrate the one year "Back to the Future" anniversary of the opening of the Tallahassee Automobile Museum. The Delorean used in the Back to the Future will be at the Museum.

See http://www.taxteaparty.com/ for more detailsAdd to Technorati Favorites

OPEN LETTER TO LORA L. HUNT Reckless Killer of Anita Zaffke

From Bruce Arnold at ldrlongdistancerider:22 May 2009
Lora L. Hunt
6125 Peart Road
Morris, IL 60450-9514
Tel/Fax: 815-942-2022
Dear Ms. Hunt,
On the afternoon of 2 May 2009--the second day of "Motorcycle Awareness Month"--you made the deliberate decision to engage in the personal vanity of painting your fingernails rather than paying attention to your driving. In so doing, you knew or should have known that (just as if you were texting or talking on a cell phone) this deplorable discretionary distraction would transform the possibility of you being in an accident into a probability of causing one. In so doing, you exhibited a culpable disregard of the foreseeable consequences of your actions, and recklessly endangered the lives of all motorists who shared the road with you that day. And in so doing, you wantonly took the life of a helmeted, conspicuously clad, experienced and responsible motorcyclist, a loving wife and mother named Anita Zaffke:
 
It's too bad Anita Zaffke didn't take the interstate that day. If she had, at least there'd be much less chance you could have plowed full speed into the rear of her Honda as she waited for a light to change. Instead she was on an undivided road, where according to NHTSA ( DOT HS 810 606 Table 20 ), 90% of all motorcycle accidents occur. And why is that? Because those are the roads where motorists guilty of inattentional blindness resulting from discretionary distractions are most likely to commit a right-of-way violation ... like pulling out or turning left in front of us as they chat on their cell phones ... or weaving into our lane and hitting us head on as they tap out their text messages ... or ramming us at a red light while they paint their fingernails.
That doesn't change the facts, however, that Anita Zaffke had every right to be where she was, and that you had no right to hit her stopped motorcycle so hard that you knocked her two hundred feet through the air, causing her to suffer for more than an hour before succumbing to the mortal wounds inflicted by your total disregard for the lives of others.
You are responsible for taking a human life, Lora Hunt, because you made a conscious decision to engage in a distraction that you knew impaired your ability to drive. Yes, you were just as impaired as if you'd been driving under the influence of alcohol, if not more so. And had this been a DUI manslaughter, you'd probably be charged with a Class 2 Felony and sentenced to a jail term of 3 to 14 years. But "DWI" has yet to be redefined as "driving while impaired", in Illinois or elsewhere, so the charge you're more likely to face is reckless homicide, a Class 3 Felony punishable by only 2 to 5 years imprisonment. And even THAT charge has not been filed against you by the State's Attorneys ... yet. 
Your untested but politically connected young lawyer, Ms. Ragan R. Freitag, only graduated from Mississippi College School of Law last year and passed her Illinois bar exam last October. But she has been quick to remind the masses through the media that "distracted driving is not illegal". That is true. And it is a sad commentary on the hypocrisy of our society that willfully endangering others by driving while impaired due to alcohol or drugs is a crime, but driving while being equally impaired by discretionary distractions is not. We will not allow Ms. Freitag's naive attempt at redirection, however, to obfuscate the real issue here. For even the staunchest Libertarians will agree that your freedom to swing a fist ends where someone else's right not to be hit begins. You crossed that line, Lora Hunt, when you took the life of Anita Zaffke. And no amount of remorse, staged or sincere, can undo the damage you have done.
For consciously deciding to engage in a discretionary distraction that led directly to the death of a responsible motorcyclist, you must be held accountable. That process begins, Lora Hunt, when you are scheduled to appear in Lake County Court at 9 a.m. Monday, June 8, to deal with your ticket for "failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident":
Lake County Courthouse and Administration Building
18 North County Street
Waukegan, Illinois 60085-4359
RAIN OR SHINE, I HOPE THAT EVERY BIKER IN ILLINOIS RIDES TO MEET YOU THERE. I also hope that every rider reading this will join me in demanding that justice be done for Anita Zaffke, for her family, and for all American motorcyclists. And in closing, I hope that as a member of the First Christian Church of Morris IL, Lora Hunt, you realize how fortunate you are that the State of Illinois is not likely to apply the penalty for your crime prescribed in Leviticus 24(19-21):
"If anyone injures his neighbor, whatever he has done must be done to him: fracture for fracture, eye for eye, tooth for tooth. As he has injured the other, so he is to be injured. Whoever kills an animal must make restitution, but whoever kills a man must be put to death."
 
I, for one, wish they would. Then maybe, over time, more would change in these reports than just the names
Speaking strictly for myself and no other individuals or organizations,
Bruce Arnold
Bruce@LdrLongDistanceRider.com
Author and Publisher, LdrLongDistanceRider.com
Co-Moderator, Bruce-n-RC's Biker Forum
Mile Eater Gold Member, Iron Butt Association (IBA)
Sustaining Member, Motorcycle Riders Foundation (MRF)
2009 Chairman's Circle, American Motorcyclist Association (AMA)
cc:

Ragan R. Freitag, Attorney 
116 N. Chicago Street 
Suite 500 
Joliet, IL 60432 
Tel: 815-723-4400
Fax: 815-723-4422 

State's Attorneys Office
18 N. County St.
4th Floor
Waukegan, IL 60085
Tel: 847-377-3000
statesattorney@lakecountyil.gov 

Lisa Madigan
Illinois Attorney General
500 South Second Street 
Springfield, IL 62706 
Tel: 217-782-1090 
http://www.illinoisattorneygeneral.gov/about/email_ag.jsp

Pat Quinn, Governor
Office of the Governor 
207 State House 
Springfield, IL 62706 
Tel: 217-782-0244 
http://www.illinois.gov/GOV/contactthegovernor.cfm

Ray LaHood, Secretary
U.S. Department of Transportation
1200 New Jersey Ave, SE
Washington, DC 20590
Tel: 202-366-4000 
Ray.LaHood@dot.govAdd to Technorati Favorites