Friday, March 24, 2006

An Open Letter to the Republican Party

Dear Tulsa Republican Party Leadership,

You will find that grassroots Republicans in Tulsa are:
First – Christians.
Second – Socially Conservative.
Third – Fiscally Conservative
Lastly, IF the party matches up with the first three, then Republicans.

We have no loyalty to the Republican Party; instead we have firm principles, and we will support whoever best represents those principles regardless of their party. It is for that reason that I never have, and probably never will, give money to the local Republican Party because I cannot trust that it will always be used to support candidates that I support. Instead, I contribute directly to the candidates and causes that do match my principles.

Similarly, I will not support a candidate who does not match my principles regardless of who endorses him.

Bill LaFortune has demonstrated over four years that he will not stand up for his beliefs as a Christian. (Example: LaFortune’s support of Tulsa Talks, the OCCJ, and of other religions to the exclusion of Christianity at the zoo.)
Bill LaFortune has demonstrated over four years that he is not socially conservative. (Example: LaFortune’s support of Tulsa Talks and similar gay and Muslim causes that seek to indoctrinate our children.)
Bill LaFortune has demonstrated over four years that he is not fiscally conservative.
(Example: LaFortune’s support of Vision 2025 and, well, do we need anything else?)

Bill LaFortune is not a genuine Christian, or a social or fiscal conservative. He in no way matches my values and beliefs, and as such I cannot support Bill LaFortune.

Let’s get our own (Republican) house in order; then we can unite to defeat Hillary Clinton…I mean, her sister, Kathy Taylor.

Sincerely,

Your Grassroots Support

Thursday, March 23, 2006

Medlock Endorses “Good Ol’ Boy” Bill

Chris Medlock endorsed Bill LaFortune for mayor earlier today. I’m sure Mr. Medlock’s logic is that the devil you know is better than the devil you don’t.

Shortly after his loss, Mr. Medlock said that even if he did endorse “Good Ol’ Boy” Bill, it wouldn’t matter because his supporters are informed, independent thinkers. Mr. Medlock was right. I was an adamant Medlock supporter, and I spent every second I could spare working to get him elected. I respect him and am proud to have supported him. However, I will not take Mr. Medlock’s suggestion that I vote for LaFortune.

Instead, I urge that we take back the local Republican Party from the good ol’ boy network. The way to do that is to throw the RINO’s such as LaFortune out, and have the “average people” of Tulsa become active in the party.

I plan to support Ben Faulk for mayor in the general election.

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

Good News/Bad News

Good news:
We control the council. This is a long-term battle for the minds of our fellow citizens, and we’re making progress in taking our town back.

Bad news:
Kathy “Vote Fraud” Taylor will be our next mayor. I cast an educated ballot in every election, but I cannot bring myself to vote for a person who should be in jail, and I will not ever support LaFortune.

Who were the independent candidates, again?

Friday, March 03, 2006

Broken Glass Tulsans

In the 2000 presidential elections, the phrase “Broken Glass Republicans” was bandied about by pundits referring to those of us who were so determined to overcome the political reign of the Clinton/Gore administration that we would crawl over broken glass to throw them out of office.

I believe that Tulsa is now in a similar situation. There is a growing group of people who are “Broken Glass Tulsans.” We are people who are so determined to take back our city from the current elitist governing class that we would crawl over broken glass to throw them out of power.

We don’t care if the people we elect are Republicans or Democrats. We only care about whether or not those we elect will work to reform Tulsa from the corrupt way business has been conducted for the past few decades.

We have seen the miserable failure of Bill LaFortune and have vowed to defeat him and the rest of the Cockroach Caucus.

All that leads me to my point:
I don’t recall ever having voted for a Democrat in my life. However, if the only true reform candidate, Chris Medlock, doesn’t win the Republican primary, I will vote for Don McCorkell or even Kathy “Vote Fraud” Taylor over LaFortune. With Taylor or LaFortune you get a big-tax, big-spend, liberal, but at least with Mrs. Taylor it’s apparent to everyone what she is and the party can unite to defeat her in the next election.

Besides, judging from the way she’s handled the media in her past couple of scandals, I’m guessing that having Taylor as a mayor could be very entertaining.

Monday, February 20, 2006

Something Ain’t Right (LeFortune & Chief Been)

Last week, Police Chief Been appeared on Michael DelGiorno’s show on KFAQ and admitted to the audience that Tulsa’s Police force is understaffed. Then, today, Mayor LaFortune took decisive action (placing him on administrative leave) against Police Chief Been because Been allegedly intentionally withheld information from the mayor about a negative report about Tulsa's SWAT team.

I don’t buy it. It REEKS of political retaliation.

When has Bill LaFortune taken decisive action about anything that wasn’t politically motivated? Isn’t this the man who took over a year to put Brent Kitchens on paid leave when corruption was discovered at Tulsa International Airport? And yet it only took him one day to act against Chief Been?

It will be interesting to see how this one plays out. Obviously, there is much more to this story than we presently know, but my “dirty politics meter” is pegging off the charts.

THE KOTV STORY

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

Election Results

According to KOTV:

Union Schools
$13,555,000 Bond Issue-construction
YES 2,098 [approved]
NO 649

Union Schools
$1,645,000 Bond Issue-transportation
YES 2,090 [approved]
NO 649

Collinsville Schools
$5,510,000 Bond Issue-construction
YES 877 [approved]
NO 123

Tulsa School Board
Office 7
Francis Skonicki 309
Matthew Livingood 787

The Tulsa Whirled supported Matthew Livingood, so I voted for Skonicki. I also supported John Bernardine for the Tulsa Technology seat, but have not yet been able to determine who won that election.

Sunday, February 12, 2006

What Happened to You?

One of my eighteen or so regular readers (Yes, this is a very large and influential blog.) wrote to ask why it has been so long since I've posted anything. Well, its not a lack of topics or desire; like many Tulsa bloggers at present, I have a little guy who occupies virtually every moment of time that I'm not at work, sleeping, or conducting other necessary tasks. You can check up on our little miracle at: http://www.chasingnoah.blogspot.com

Wednesday, January 18, 2006

Murderer or Hero?

Wow, what a difference between Channel 6 and Channel 8. At first, I thought I was reading about two different incidents.

According to Channel 8: Family Says Teenager Didn't Deserve To Die Following Alleged Robbery.
Funeral services have been set for a 15-year-old boy killed during an alleged robbery. Police say the clerk shot Lamarrio Hunter in the back as he ran out of the store's front door. NewsChannel 8's Kim Jackson spoke with Lamarrio's family, which is torn up over losing the teenager.
What Channel 8 doesn’t mention in their sob piece is that that ‘boy’ was a 6’2”, 200lb thug who was beating the proprietor, Gene, and his wife in an unprovoked attack.

Channel 6’s story was: Robbery Victim Fights Back.

Channel 6 mentioned that the gentleman had his concealed carry license. However, this was actually the case of a businessman in his place of employment. Therefore, according to a lawyer friend, Oklahoma’s Make My Day Law actually applies rather than the Self Defense Act. The Make My Day Law states:

A. The Legislature hereby recognizes that the citizens of the State of Oklahoma have a right to expect absolute safety within their own homes.
B. Any occupant of a dwelling is justified in using any degree of physical force, including but not limited to deadly force, against another person who has made an unlawful entry into that dwelling, and when the occupant has a reasonable belief that such other person might use any physical force, no matter how slight, against any occupant of the dwelling.
C. Any occupant of a dwelling using physical force, including but not limited to deadly force, pursuant to the provisions of subsection B of this section, shall have an affirmative defense in any criminal prosecution for an offense arising from the reasonable use of such force and shall be immune from any civil liability for injuries or death resulting from the reasonable use of such force.
D. The provisions of this section and the provisions of the Oklahoma Self-Defense Act, Sections 1 through 25 of this act, shall not be construed to require any person using a pistol pursuant to the provisions of this section to be licensed in any manner.


It is my understanding that this applies to a proprietor at his or her place of business, as well as their dwelling. Therefore, the question is whether or not Gene had a reasonable belief that he should be in fear for his life? I can’t answer that because I don’t have all the information, but I do think that people should consider three things before jumping to an emotional conclusion that the boy should not have been shot.

First, if the danger had reasonably passed, (taking into consideration the rash of recent murders in Tulsa, and the fact that Gene has just been assaulted by two large “kids”) then Gene should not have fired his weapon.

Second, especially considering that Gene had done everything the law required concerning his firearm (I.E. Concealed Carry Permit), I believe he should be given the benefit of the doubt.

Lastly, to the people who keep crying about this ‘boy’ being gunned down, the age of the boy is irrelevant. The facts that we do know are that the ‘boy’ was the aggressor in this situation. This ‘boy’ violently assaulted Gene and his wife. The ‘boy’ was 6’ 2” and 200lbs.

My point: This ‘boy’ was a scumbag thug. The world is better off without him. Deal with it.

Sunday, January 15, 2006

Should I be Concerned About Iran?

I just received an e-mail from a regular reader asking what I thought about the situation in Iran. While conducting some research to ensure that the opinions and perspectives I had were in line with the facts, I came across an article by Victor Davis Hanson that deals with the issue far more elegantly and thoroughly than I could. I encourage you to read his entire article, but here is an except covering our options at this point:

When a supposedly unhinged Mr. Ahmadinejad threatens the destruction of Israel and then summarily proceeds to violate international protocols aimed at monitoring Iran’s nuclear industry, we all take note. Any country that burns off some of its natural gas at the wellhead while claiming that it needs nuclear power for domestic energy is simply lying. Terrorism, vast petroleum reserves, nuclear weapons, and boasts of wiping neighboring nations off the map are a bad combination.

So we all agree on the extent of the crisis, but not on the solutions, which can be summarized by four general options.

First is the ostrich strategy — see and hear no evil, if extending occasional peace feelers out to more reasonable mullahs. Hope that “moderates” in the Iranian government exercise a restraining influence on Mr. Ahmadinejad. Sigh that nuclear Iran may well become like Pakistan — dangerous and unpredictable, but still perhaps “manageable.” Talk as if George Bush and the Iranians both need to take a time out.

I doubt that many serious planners any longer entertain this passive fantasy, especially after the latest rantings of Ahmadinejad. Pakistan, after all, has some secular leaders, is checked by nuclear India, and has a recent past of cooperation with the United States. Most importantly, it is more than ever a lesson in past laxity, as the United States and Europe were proven criminally derelict in giving Dr. Khan and his nuclear-mart a pass — which may well come back to haunt us all yet.

Alternatively, we could step up further global condemnation. The West could press the U.N. more aggressively — repeatedly calling for more resolutions, and, ltimately, for sanctions, boycotts, and embargos, energizes our allies to cut all ties to Iran, and provides far more money to dissident groups inside Iran to rid the country of the Khomeinists. Ensuring that democracy works in Iraq would be subversive to the mullahs across the border. Some sort of peaceful regime change is the solution preferred by most — and, of course, can be pursued in a manner contemporaneous with, not exclusionary to, other strategies.

It is a long-term therapy and therefore suffers the obvious defect that Iran might become nuclear in the meantime. Then the regime’s resulting braggadocio might well deflate the dissident opposition, as the mullahs boast that they alone have restored Iranian national prestige with an Achaemenid bomb.

A third, and often unmentionable, course is to allow the most likely intended target of nuclear Iran, Israel, to take matters into its own hands. We know this scenario from the 1981 destruction of Saddam’s French-built Osirak nuclear reactor: the world immediately deplores such “unilateral” and “preemptory” recklessness, and then sighs relief that Israel, not it, put the bell on the fanged cat.

But 2006 is not 1981. We are in war with Islamic radicalism, at the moment largely near the Iranian border in Iraq and Afghanistan. The resulting furor over a “Zionist” strike on Shia Iran might galvanize Iraqi Shiites to break with us, rather than bring them relief that the Jewish state had eliminated a nearby nuclear threat and had humiliated an age-old rival nation and bitter former enemy. Thousands of Americans are in range of Iranian artillery and short-term missile salvoes, and, in theory, we could face in Iraq a conventional enemy at the front and a fifth column at the rear.

And Iran poses far greater risks than in the past for Israeli pilots flying in over the heart of the Muslim world, with 200-300 possible nuclear sites that are burrowed into mountains, bunkers and suburbs. Such a mission would require greater flight distances, messy refueling, careful intelligence, and the need to put Israeli forces on alert for an Iranian counterstrike or a terrorist move from Lebanon. Former Israeli friends like Turkey are now not so cordial, and the violation of Islamic airspace might in the short-term draw an ugly response, despite the eventual relief in Arab
capitals at the elimination of the Iranian nuclear arsenal.

If the Israeli raids did not take out the entire structure, or if there were already plutonium present in undisclosed bunkers, then the Iranians might shift from their sickening rhetoric and provide terrorists in Syria and Lebanon with dirty bombs or nuclear devices to “avenge” the attack as part of a “defensive” war of “striking back” at “Israeli aggression”. Europeans might even shrug at any such hit, concluding that Israel had it coming by attacking first.

The fourth scenario is as increasingly dreaded as it is apparently inevitable — a U.S. air strike. Most hope that it can be delayed, since its one virtue — the elimination of the Iranian nuclear threat — must ipso facto outweigh the multifaceted disadvantages.

The Shiite allies in Iraq might go ballistic and start up a second front as in 2004. Muslim countries, the primary beneficiaries of a disarmed Iran, would still protest loudly that some of their territories, if only for purposes of intelligence and post-operative surveillance, were used in the strike. After Iraq, a hit on Iran would confirm to the Middle East Street a disturbing picture of American preemptory wars
against Islamic nations.

Experts warn that we are not talking about a Clintonian one-day cruise-missile hit, or even something akin to General Zinni’s 1998 extended Operation Desert Fox campaign. Rather, the challenges call for something far more sustained and comprehensive — perhaps a week or two of bombing at every imaginable facility, many of them hidden in suburbs or populated areas. Commando raids might need to augment air sorties, especially for mountain redoubts deep in solid rock.

The political heat would mount hourly, as Russia, China, and Europe all would express shock and condemnation, and whine that their careful diplomatic dialogue had once again been ruined by the American outlaws. Soon the focus of the U.N. would not be on Iranian nuclear proliferation, or the role of Europe, Pakistan, China, and Russia in lending nuclear expertise to the theocracy, but instead on the mad
bomber-cowboy George Bush. We remember that in 1981 the world did not blame the reckless and greedy French for their construction of a nuclear reactor for
Saddam Hussein, but the sober Israelis for taking it out.

Politically, the administration would have to vie with CNN’s daily live feeds of collateral damage that might entail killed Iranian girls and boys, maimed innocents, and street-side reporters who thrust microphones into stretchers of civilian dead. The Europeans’ and American Left’s slurs of empire and hegemony would only grow.

We remember the “quagmire” hysteria that followed week three in Afghanistan, and the sandstorm “pause” that prompted cries that we had lost Iraq. All that would be child’s play compared to an Iranian war, as retired generals and investigative reporters haggled every night on cable news over how many reactor sites were still left to go. So take for granted that we would be saturated by day four of the bombing with al Jazeera’s harangues, perhaps a downed and blindfolded pilot or two paraded on television, some gruesome footage of arms and legs in Tehran’s streets, and the usual Nancy Pelosi and Barbara Boxer outtakes.


One of my liberal friends constantly quotes the statistic that almost two-thirds of Iran’s population is under the age of thirty and that those people tend to be far more secularized. It is his belief that if we can simply delay Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons for the next ten to fifteen years, the Iran problem will take care of itself. I actually agreed with him until Iran’s most recent president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, was elected. Ahmadinejad is quite different from Iran's former leaders in that he believes he is on a divine mission and wants to die as a martyr. We can no longer wait for the problem to fix itself. It won’t.

Friday, January 13, 2006

Pray for Tulsa

Michael Bates is calling for Tulsans to pray for good leaders to triumph in the mayor's race.

Mr. Bates doesn't mention exactly what has him "hacked off", but I'm guessing it involves some sort of ulterior motive that Richard Roberts and/or Ron Howell may have in supporting Randi Miller. Be assured that Tulsa bloggers will be seeking to reveal the truth on this situation.

For my take on Randi Miller, see here.

Wednesday, January 11, 2006

Miller vs. Medlock

I just listened to Randi Miller’s interview on KFAQ’s Michael DelGiorno show in which she announced her candidacy for mayor.

Here’s the problem with Miller:
Miller stated that her style is more one of dealing with issues behind the scenes rather than publicly like Mr. Medlock. I consider that to be a problem. Tulsa needs a strong and open leader to clean up Tulsa. If the leader is not aggressive, wise, strong, principled, and very transparent to the public, he or she will not be effective in reforming the “good ol’ boy network” of Tulsa.

Miller may make fine decisions, she may have the same principles as Chris Medlock, and she would certainly be a better choice than LaFortune.

But Randi Miller has made it clear from her past actions that she is not a transformational leader. Ms. Miller may be a voice of reason among the insane, but she is in no way a reformer.

Tulsa is at a crucial point in the course of our city. The "good ol’ boy network" that has been ruling Tulsa since before I was born is destroying the city. Tulsa needs a strong leader who can stand up to the mid-town elitists. Tulsa needs a reformer.

I endorse Chris Medlock as that leader.

Saturday, December 24, 2005

A PC Christmas

MeeCiteeWurkor has one of the funniest posts I have read in a long time regarding political correctness and Christmas.

Have a read at:
http://meeciteewurkor.com/wp/2005/12/22/happy-holidaze/