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Name: Jim Hunt
Location: Alpharetta, GA
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Keep the Faith

Recently I had a long conversation with a very conservative “trusted advisor” about the future of our country. This individual is convinced that we have lost the war, the great experiment in freedom known as the United States is over. Needless to say, I disagree. But what truly bothered me about the conversation was not the defeatism, but the reasoning behind it.

As the conversation progressed it became clear that my friend felt that the problem was that Americans are too stupid to vote the right way. It occurred to me that I had heard this argument before. It is the argument that is used to justify virtually every liberal program and concept. Parents can’t raise their own children, “it takes a village”; we can’t be trusted to manage our own retirements, government must provide “security”; Americans can’t be trusted with guns, and so on.

This is a very dangerous trap that leads to a belief that the ends justify the means. This is the liberal view that explains why they see no problem with attempting (and sometimes succeeding) to steal elections in Washington state, Minnesota, and Florida. This is why liberals turn to the courts rather than the people when they want to force their agenda on America.

 For forty years we have allowed the left to control the education and media in this country. The problem is not that Americans are stupid, we are not. However we are not as well educated or informed about civics and politics as we should be. We have been lied to and manipulated and indoctrinated into believing more in government than in ourselves. But I believe that Americans still understand freedom and still desire it more than anything. But in the absence of strong leaders committed to freedom, Americans sometimes fall for strong speakers with a compelling message of hope and change, particularly when he is running against a candidate without a strong message of freedom following an unpopular President.

 Gerald Ford was defeated by Jimmy Carter’s big smile and easy manner when the voters were sickened by Watergate and the loss of the Vietnam War. But only four years later, Ronald Reagan told them that he knew Americans could do anything, that the “malaise” existed only in Washington and that government was not the solution to the problem, government was the problem.  Ronald Reagan’s magic wasn’t his speaking skills or rhetoric; it was his fundamental belief in the goodness of America and Americans. He spoke directly to the American people as often as possible, when the liberals in Congress tried to block his goals, he didn’t turn to the courts, he turned to the people.

When Ronald Reagan was elected president in 1980 the Dow Jones Industrial average stood at 771, interest rates, inflation and unemployment all stood in double-digits, the Soviet Union had invaded Afghanistan, 52 Americans were being held hostage by the Iranian government, and the Cold War was at its peak.

When Ronald Reagan left office eight years later, our economy was booming in what would become the longest peacetime growth in our nation’s history. The Cold War was effectively over with the collapse of the Soviet Union a few years later.

In 1976 when Jimmy Carter was elected, I am quite sure there were many who believe that the American dream was over. Teddy Kennedy was pushing universal healthcare, taxes were brutally high and the government was expanding every day. Our military was being cut back and demoralized. In many ways February 1997 resembled February 2009. In that there is a message of real hope. Americans are not stupid. If we conservatives can put forth our message with a strong, likable candidate with an unwavering message of freedom, personal responsibility and personal success. That candidate will win in a landslide; particularly if President Obama continues down his current path.

If, on the other hand, we put forward a candidate like John McCain, with a “centrist” message trying to appeal to the left as well as the right, we will again lose and deservedly so. Americans want a strong leader to protect their freedoms, to fight for them in Congress and overseas. They don’t want a milquetoast seeking compromise on every issue. Despite all of the media whining about bi-partisanship, the record clearly shows that the American people want the conflict and consider it good.

I hope that everyone will keep the faith in the American dream and the American people alive. We are a great people and we will survive this as we have survived in the past. We have a long war ahead of us, and we will have to fight for every inch of freedom against Obama’s encroachments. We have lost a major battle, but the war is far from over. We Shall Return.

God Bless America

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The American Spirit: The Impossible Dream

This isn’t the column I planned to write for today. I actually had a couple of different topics in mind, but they are going to have to wait for another day. Last night I watched a movie that I had seen once before. It is the sixth movie in a series that started more than 30 years ago. It is a story of indomitable spirit, a love story, a story of optimism against impossible odds.

In the play Man of La Mancha, Don Quixote sings the incredible song The Impossible Dream (lyrics by Joe Darian):

To dream ... the impossible dream ...
To fight ... the unbeatable foe ...
To bear ... with unbearable sorrow ...
To run ... where the brave dare not go ...
To right ... the unrightable wrong ...
To love ... pure and chaste from afar ...
To try ... when your arms are too weary ...
To reach ... the unreachable star ...

This is my quest, to follow that star ...
No matter how hopeless, no matter how far ...
To fight for the right, without question or pause ...
To be willing to march into Hell, for a Heavenly cause ...

And I know, if I'll only be true to this glorious quest,
That my heart will lie will lie peaceful and calm,
when I'm laid to my rest ...
And the world will be better for this:
That one man, scorned and covered with scars,
Still strove, with his last ounce of courage,
To reach ... the unreachable star ...

The movie I saw had nothing and everything to do with this song. Although most people probably wouldn’t recognize it as such, this song could have been the script for this series of movies, particularly the first and the last films in the series which I believe were the best. It is also the story of America, of the American dream; a dream which sometimes seems impossible, but is only impossible if we don’t try.

The first movie in the series won the Best Picture Oscar in 1976. The last was panned by the critics and ignored by the Oscars. I find this unfortunate because to me it simply shows how badly the critics and many others missed the point of the film. Although some of the middle films of the series lost their way (particularly the fifth, which was truly awful), Sylvester Stallone’s 1976 film Rocky and his 2006 film Rocky Balboa truly captured the essence of the American dream. Rocky III and Rocky IV picked it up well too, but not as well as the original or the last. This is the story of a nobody who literally fought his way to the top, crashed down and fought his way back again. It is a truly uplifting story of what can be done only in America. If you have the talent, the drive and the heart to get back up when you are knocked down, to keep moving forward no matter the odds, you can make it in America.

Remember what the world was like in 1976 when Rocky fought his first fight? Jimmy Carter was getting ready to tell us that America’s best years were behind us, that there was a sense of “national malaise” that the American dream was dead. Our government was in chaos due to Watergate, the Vietnam War was fresh in all of our memories. But a young man named Sylvester Stallone wrote, produced, directed and starred in a movie that 32 years later still quickens the pulse.

If you haven’t seen Rocky Balboa yet, I urge you to do so. Listen to the message of that movie, and be sure when it is over to watch the credits. Watch dozens of people of all ages re-create Rocky’s run up the steps in Philadelphia. As I watched that I realized how few of those people had even been born when the first Rocky was released. It is very powerful, touching and fun. If you haven’t seen Rocky in years, rent it again. The message is as meaningful today as it was 32 years ago.
It took 37 years for the Impossible Dream of the 1967 Red Sox to be reached by the 2004 Red Sox.

I pray that we Americans never give up on our Impossible Dreams. The only way we can lose is if we stop trying. We are on a glorious quest, please be true to it, the world will be better for this.

God Bless America

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