Posts Tagged brooklyn gop

What We Stand For Is Only the Beginning

The Brooklyn Young Republicans and several other young activist groups often chant the tenets of “Reform” in politics; however, what does reform actually mean?

For instance, we Reformers know what we’re against, both locally and federally. We know that we’re against the status quo. We know that corporatism and socialism has been glorified as the be-all-end-all means of politicking and that is effectively wrong. We’re against high taxation and the manipulation of markets. We’re against those abroad to physically threaten our citizens and their security. We’re against a lot of things, but what are we for?

I think the Reform movement in Brooklyn can be categorized into two pinnacles of stratagem.

1) We are for Transparency.

2) We are for Limited Government.

I think these two pillars of Reform are the branches that grow from the tree of Liberty. And from those branches come the leaves, the small issues that form the synergy of the Republican Party. Let’s review. Read the rest of this entry »

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On Guns in New York

Craig Eaton Brooklyn GOP Chairman

Craig Eaton, Brooklyn GOP Chairman. Endorsed a Big Government Mayor.

It’s quite evident that a tenet of a free society includes the ability of the individual to own property. That property includes a gun. One of the first things Nazi Germany did to secure its power in the Reichstag was seize all weapons from every German’s home. Czechoslovakia was next and, soon enough, the Gestapo became social law. I do believe that we would be living in a safer world if individuals were allowed to carry weapons. Criminals will find ways to acquire firearms regardless of whether they are legal or not. I would rather be ready than dead. Individuals would inevitably learn firearm responsibility because they will understand that using it irresponsibly will result in punitive measures; government does have the obligation to protect an individual’s life and if you start firing aimlessly at a crowd or begin to use your gun for reasons beyond self defense, then government must intervene for the victim’s safety. However, government also has the obligation to protect an individual’s property and that includes my right to own a weapon and land.

Mayor Bloomberg is pushing for this legislation to further limit the capacity to which a gun owner can use his gun. Now they want to “microstamp ammunition” which is basically bullet tracking. If we truly want to crack down on crime, perhaps alleviating taxes on the poor and revamping the New York City welfare system will keep the impoverished off the streets and, instead, working and producing capital for society.

Although “abject poverty” is somewhat of a different topic, it is somehow interrelated in that those unemployed in impoverished neighborhoods tend to find havens in gangs and misconduct to pass the time or provide for themselves (because the State clearly is not facilitating that process anyway…). You can even find this in war-stricken countries. Taliban fighters in Afghanistan, for example, are poor farmers or students who have lost their jobs because of the war and have picked up firearms because a local elite is paying them to do so. Yemen, which has recently gone bankrupt is now a haven for “terrorists” because Al Qaeda is paying the unemployed to do their bidding. Violence is usually a byproduct of poverty.

What is more disappointing is that the Brooklyn GOP has given Mayor Bloomberg an endorsement when he ran for reelection in 2009. Mayor Bloomberg founded “Mayors Against Illegal Guns” in 2006. Something didn’t click in GOP Chairman Craig Eaton’s head; perhaps something clicked in his wallet instead. Luckily enough, the State Senate stopped the bill from passing.

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Why I’m Shrugging with Atlas

The Atlas Shrugs in Brooklyn blog has been the leading dissenter in the front lines combating the neoconservative Brooklyn GOP establishment. I don’t write for the blog, but I most certainly do support their efforts in pushing for smaller, limited, and transparent government. And I know clearly that the bloggers on this website understand that cannot be done with the Democratic Party in New York. But the sad part is, it can’t be done with the Republican Party in Brooklyn either.

For many Brooklynites, lower taxes and less government intrusion on their private lives are a far cry from what we currently have. The Brooklyn Republican Party, which is supposed to be the party of smaller government, is defunct. No one knows where the money goes and election results clearly show that. And does the party chairman even bother to support principled candidates? In the words of John Boehner, “Hell no!” Did he help my good friend, Jonathan Judge, in his campaign for City Council? Hell No. Is he as clueless about Ayn Rand’s philosophy as the rest of the twits running the party? Hell yes.

I’ve been attacked repetitively by the party establishment for thinking differently. I’ve been attacked because when I say I believe in small government, I really believe in small government. When I want an unnecessary war to end because it’s costing we, the tax payers, a ton of money, it means I want true peace. When I say government is the biggest proponent of corporatism and monopolies, I mean government truly is the biggest proponent of corporatism and monopolies. But what has the establishment done? They have praised big-government “republicans” like Scott Brown, and democrats in Brooklyn. They have outlandishly declared themselves as “Hate Bloggers” and engaged in racist dialog about Arabs living in Bay Ridge and Dyker Heights. The last time I heard a political party outwardly profess hate in the public, we had the holocaust and National Socialism, which isn’t too far off from how the party actually operates in its exclusivity to its members.

So, in lieu of this little Revolution, I give my full support to whoever is running “Atlas Shrugs in Brooklyn.” I shrug with you.

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