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Archive of entries posted on May 2010

Memorial Day

In honor of those men and women who’ve given their lives in defense of our country, I’d like to call on the Memorial Day remarks of Presidents past:

From Ronald Reagan in 1988:

Once each May, amid the quiet hills and rolling lanes and breeze-brushed trees of Arlington National Cemetery, far above the majestic Potomac and the monuments and memorials of our Nation’s Capital just beyond, the graves of America’s military dead are decorated with the beautiful flag that in life these brave souls followed and loved. This scene is repeated across our land and around the world, wherever our defenders rest. Let us hold it our sacred duty and our inestimable privilege on this day to decorate these graves ourselves — with a fervent prayer and a pledge of true allegiance to the cause of liberty, peace, and country for which America’s own have ever served and sacrificed.

Our pledge and our prayer this day are those of free men and free women who know that all we hold dear must constantly be built up, fostered, revered, and guarded vigilantly from those in every age who seek its destruction. We know, as have our Nation’s defenders down through the years, that there can never be peace without its essential elements of liberty, justice, and independence.

and previous to that, in 1982:

The willingness of some to give their lives so that others might live never fails to evoke in us a sense of wonder and mystery. One gets that feeling here on this hallowed ground, and I have known that same poignant feeling as I looked out across the rows of white crosses and Stars of David in Europe, in the Philippines, and the military cemeteries here in our own land. Each one marks the resting place of an American hero and, in my lifetime, the heroes of World War I, the Doughboys, the GI’s of World War II or Korea or Vietnam. They span several generations of young Americans, all different and yet all alike, like the markers above their resting places, all alike in a truly meaningful way.

Winston Churchill said of those he knew in World War II they seemed to be the only young men who could laugh and fight at the same time. A great general in that war called them our secret weapon, “just the best darn kids in the world.” Each died for a cause he considered more important than his own life. Well, they didn’t volunteer to die; they volunteered to defend values for which men have always been willing to die if need be, the values which make up what we call civilization. And how they must have wished, in all the ugliness that war brings, that no other generation of young men to follow would have to undergo that same experience.

And from President Clinton, in 1994:

Here at Arlington, row after row of headstones, aligned in silent formation, reminds us of the high cost of our freedom. Almost a quarter of a million Americans rest here alone, from every war since the Revolution. Among them are many names we know: General Pershing, Audie Murphy, General Marshall and so many others.

But far more numerous are the Americans whose names are not famous, whose lives were not legend, but whose deeds were the backbone that secured our nation’s liberty. Today we honor them. We honor them all as heroes — those who are buried here and those who are buried all around the nation and the world.

If you look at the headstones, they don’t tell you whether the people buried there are poor or rich. They make no distinction of race, or of age, or of condition. They simply stand, each of them, for one American. Each reminds us that we are descendants, whatever our differences, of a common creed — unbeatable when we are united, one nation under God.

5-26-2010 Newsletter

It’s been a busy few weeks for my campaign and for all Colorado Republicans. Last week we had the State Assembly; we are coming up on Memorial Day Weekend and that time of year when citizens usually begin paying serious attention to politics.

Of course, this will be anything but a typical year. The Sharf campaign has been out there with the rest of the wonderful Republican candidates, hitting the hustings and getting our message out. This past month, I’ve had the pleasure of addressing the Colorado Jewish Republicans, and giving a legislative update to the Windsor Gardens Republican Club. At the CD-1 Assembly, we nominated the very talented Mike Fallon as Republican challenger to Diana DeGette’s seat here in Denver, and this past Sunday, he was generous enough to invite me to share space with him at his campaign kickoff.

I also met with the Denver Labor Council at the local AFL-CIO headquarters, which is not traditionally friendly ground for Republicans. I appreciated their taking more than the allotted time to talk to me, and they appreciated my willingness to meet with them and the straight talk that came along with that. Last night, I was downtown at Hamburger Mary’s addressing the Denver Metro Young Republicans. I emphasized the importance of supporting our State House candidates across Colorado and discussed why it’s especially important that Republicans from strongly Republican districts help candidates in competitive districts.

And in my, er, spare time, I also launched a new monthly radio program on 710 KNUS called Backbone Business, a division of Backbone Radio, devoted to a (mostly) non-political exploration of business, economic, and financial issues. If you missed the live broadcast, you can catch it on BackboneBusiness.com. Our next show will be Sunday, June 20, from 7-8 PM. I’m having lots of fun doing the broadcast, and I’m really pleased with the wonderful reaction I’ve been getting from our audience.

Next week, I’ll be at the Denver County Party’s First Thursday Breakfast, after which I’ll be off to a meeting with the House Republican members for a strategy session. You can catch my calendar here to see when I’ll be appearing in your part of town.

Walkers Wanted!

We’re beginning a very ambitious schedule of walking precincts and meeting voters at community events. Please download my “walking card” here and check out my schedule to see when I’ll be walking in your neighborhood. I’d love for you to come and burn some shoe leather with me; please join me this summer as we stroll through the beautiful precincts of House District 6 and meet our neighbors.

Issue of the Week – Energy

As a state we have an obligation to encourage the responsible development of cheap energy sources, while exercising proper stewardship of our environment. Please click here and read about what we can do to turn Colorado’s energy challenges around.

Your Support

Please help me get this common-sense message out to all of the citizens of HD-6. We need to reach not only like-minded Conservatives, but also traditional unaffiliated and even Democrat voters, and make them aware that there is an alternative on the ballot. We can’t get our message out effectively – or respond to the inevitable attacks from a threatened Democrat majority – without your support. Please help me fight the good fight. If you think Colorado can do better, please help me represent you and what YOU care about in this amazing state of ours.

See you on the front lines,
Joshua

Colorado Needs Good Jobs…

…not subsidized “green energy jobs.”

Colorado needs to take advantage of its 300 days of sunshine and its good locations for wind energy.  But subsidizing these energies’ end markets – paying people to use them, or forcing electric companies to use them – is going to cost Colorado jobs in any number of ways.

Now, the model for President Obama’s Green Energy strategy, and for Governor Ritter’s “New Energy Economy” is admitting as much, privately (the original Spanish Government report is here).

In any industrialized economy, energy costs far outstrip labor costs, which makes employment much more vulnerable to increases in the price of electricity.  And wind and solar are exceptionally expensive to produce.  Which means that the jobs they create actually significantly reduce employment in those and other industries.

Colorado is lucky in its abundance of clean natural gas and clean coal.  While continuing to help along the research end of solar and wind, we should make full use of our coal and natural gas resources, to get our economy back to full employment.

Backbone Business Debuts

We launched the Backbone Business subfranchise of Backbone Radio on Sunday night.  It’s an hour a month devoted to business, finance, and economic topics, from a mostly non-political standpoint.

The first installment was on financial derivatives, and we have it posted as streaming audio.

The schedule, in deference to the options markets, it the Sunday after the 3rd Friday of the month – kind of like the Tuesday after the first Monday of November – so our next show will be on June 20, and while the date would suggest something about astrology or astronomy, we’re probably going to talk about bubbles.

Take a listen, and tell me what you think.

Destination Imagination

This evening, the Republican 1st Congressional District held its assembly over at Hill Middle School, placing Dr. Mike Fallon on the primary ballot as the presumptive nominee.  Given Rep. Diana DeGette’s long (many would say overly-long) tenure in her seat, some might be forgiven for thinking that the headline for this posting applies to him, but Mike brings confidence, energy, enthusiasm, and a winning personality to the campaign.

One of the most fun parts of the evening was the total lack of air conditioning, which at least contributed to people wanting to conclude business in an orderly fashion.  It also meant that the 8th-grade Destination Imagination team, selling cookies and water for their trip to the Global Finals in Tennessee in a couple of weeks were doing a brisk business in water.

Destination Imagination is an international program that sets out engineering and scientific challenges each year at the Elementary, Middle, and High School levels.  Hill’s 8th-grade team chose the robot challenge, and finished 2nd at States in April, so are preparing for their competition at globals.

It is, perhaps, an additional point of pride that Hill Middle School is an Arts & Sciences magnet school located in HD-6.

Have a safe trip, and good luck at Globals!