August 27, 2011

  • Still Around … but barely

    Well, that has been an ordeal… ever felt like you were being “muzzled”?  I have.

    This is just a quick post to let you know that Xanga has made it more difficult for me to access it and my account on a day to day basis. I can’t even access the login page except by some workarounds so I seldom have convenient means to come back here because of the added difficulty.

    I have done my own investigations and working with internet experts and the story is simple. Xanga has locked out my ISP for some reason. No one else is blocking my ISP from what can be discerned. Given that my ISP is my best means to get to the internet, Xanga loses. That also means that I’m not the only one affected but everyone that uses the same ISP as I do. Sounds like pretty poor business practices or someone in Xanga’s IT department has issues or something but who can tell and I digress. I still get your posts by email. Thankfully that is not blocked. So if you have sent me messages and I have not responded, you now know what was has been going on.

    Do I want to get it fixed? Probably not at this point. While I have been quite busy since my last post (Thanksgiving 2009!), I’ve been forced to find better ways to connect and I’ve pretty much moved on at least as far as my means to post and communicate.

    I’ll hang around a bit longer to stay in touch but I don’t expect things to change much as far as connectivity since I’m not the one in control of that. What I’ve learned from this is that, going forward, I’ll have better control over my access to means to post and communicate with those who share common interests than what’s happened here in a year or two.

    Take care and may the Lord watch over you and keep you in the palm of His hand as you walk in His way… Mr. Vee

     

November 25, 2009

  • Happy Thanksgiving!

    Status:
    Still here, still kicking, still pressing forward… wondering when I’ll ever get time to squeeze in some  posts.

    Wishing everyone the best and have a great time with your families and friends… and bless the Lord for all the goodness and provisions He gives us out of His benevolence.

    Psalm 145 (NASB)

    I will extol You, my God, O King, and I will bless Your name forever and ever.
    Every day I will bless You, and I will praise Your name forever and ever.
    Great is the LORD, and highly to be praised, and His greatness is unsearchable.
    One generation shall praise Your works to another, and shall declare Your mighty acts.
    On the glorious splendor of Your majesty and on Your wonderful works, I will meditate.
    Men shall speak of the power of Your awesome acts, and I will tell of Your greatness.
    They shall eagerly utter the memory of Your abundant goodness and will shout joyfully of Your righteousness.

    The LORD is gracious and merciful; slow to anger and great in lovingkindness.

    The LORD is good to all, and His mercies are over all His works.
    All Your works shall give thanks to You, O LORD, and Your godly ones shall bless You.
    They shall speak of the glory of Your kingdom and talk of Your power;
    To make known to the sons of men Your mighty acts and the glory of the majesty of Your kingdom.
    Your kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and Your dominion endures throughout all generations.

    The LORD sustains all who fall and raises up all who are bowed down.

    The eyes of all look to You, and You give them their food in due time.
    You open Your hand and satisfy the desire of every living thing.
    The LORD is righteous in all His ways and kind in all His deeds.
    The LORD is near to all who call upon Him, to all who call upon Him in truth.
    He will fulfill the desire of those who fear Him; He will also hear their cry and will save them.
    The LORD keeps all who love Him, but all the wicked He will destroy.

    My mouth will speak the praise of the LORD, and all flesh will bless His holy name forever and ever.

    Blessings, Mr.Vee

October 5, 2009

August 15, 2009

  • Watchman Updates

    I’m starting a new format for just quick points of potential interest. Often these days I cannot always write longer pieces but I can pass along some thoughts or information that might be useful to you. Given the urgency of the times, perhaps spreading the word is just as good as trying to explain it. Anyway, I hope this is useful to you in your walk of faith.

    Obama vacationing? Maybe not. The Earthquakes happening out there might be of more interest.

    Obama happens to be “sightseeing” out at Yellowstone this weekend… it just also so happens that its also where there have been a lot of earthquakes around that area this month as I reported before.  He’s also planning a trip to the Grand Canyon as well.  Both points roughly represent the easternmost boundaries of the earthquakes that approximately follow along I-15.

    http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/08/15/obama-mixes-business-family-pleasure-trip-west/

    A Voice from the Past: Ronald Reagan and Healthcare

    Yes, it’s true. The Healthcare bill that this country is in an uproar about didn’t start with this administration. There have been strong socialist tendencies by the Democrats at least back to 1961 when Ronald Reagan, as a private citizen, speaking on this YouTube.  It’s worth your time and it sounds just like he’s being a prophet but instead others who have gone before this present bunch of Democrats has tried to pass this thing before but the American people voted it down.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fRdLpem-AAs

    Some History on Community Organizing… and Socialism… hippies, beatniks, drugs, the beginnings of the “green movement” and mysticism.

    There are just some things that when you find them there are so many avenues to explore to dig up critical information. There is no way I can tell you all the stuff that Bee and I uncovered in a few hours of digging on this one especially when one understands the Marxist connection that exists here with “community organizing” efforts from the 50′s and onward. In fact, this is referred to in the articles I am about to tell you about.

    I had remembered reading something about that on the web some time back concerning a meeting called the “Houseboat Summit” in February 1967 in Sausalito California that was documented by the San Francisco Oracle. It’s in three parts. There is a lot of rambling but it does reveal the vision of these people (Timothy Leary of LSD fame is one and other figureheads of the Beat and hippie generations). 

    Part of the interesting thing here is SO many things that we’ve seen promoted on our society (include various forms of Eastern mysticism) and the world … even global warming seem to come together as a concerted effort by liberals/socialists to convert our nation toward their way of thinking if not force it on us by “making us like it”. You can even see how they want to get rid of the automobile. The most revealing thing to find here is while these folks have passed on, we can easily see that the “hippies” haven’t gone away. They’ve just traded their long hair and beads for short hair and business suits and have become politicians, union leaders, and political activists who are either the more violent kind or the not so peaceful “greenie”.

    http://www.vallejo.to/articles/summit_pt1.htm
    http://www.vallejo.to/articles/summit_pt2.htm
    http://www.vallejo.to/articles/summit_pt3.htm

    The timing is very contemporary to “Rules for Radicals” by Saul Alinsky which was written a few years later. These are the very methods that are being used to force this sort of thinking onto the rest of us.

    There’s a lot here and it isn’t possible to go into it all but if you think about it… this stuff has been going on for a long time and it hasn’t just been a few people behind it and these aren’t nice people. 

    Blessings,  Mr.Vee

August 12, 2009

  • Random Thoughts

    Have you noticed the unusual number of earthquakes?

    I’m a little late with this post but several days ago, I had heard about the recent large earthquakes off Japan and in the Indian Ocean threatening areas around them with tsunami warnings. There was also one off Baja California as well.

    So I opened up Google Earth to take a look at what was going on since I have the USGS Real-time Earthquake  plug-in installed that gives you a legend off to the side that shows earthquakes that happened in the last hour, day, and week.  I noticed that Google Earth was taking a long time to load but I was not prepared for what I was to find. The news media had not even told us the half of it.

    I’ve been watching these things for several years now and while there are a lot of historical earthquakes, more often than not, when they occur they happen here and there over a long period of time and will group around major fault lines. I saw a lot more new earthquakes than usual and most of them very recent and many are now scrolling off being that they are over a week old now.

    As I was looking around I noticed that Alaska and the Aleutian Islands had a huge cluster of brand new “small earthquakes”(since the beginning of August) and then I noticed down the North American coast that California and thereabouts and clusters more had happened since the beginning of August. Also, earthquakes occurred in many of the western US states in the same time period along with the Missouri Bootheel and eastern Tennessee. Many of these were fairly small so size wasn’t the thing that was standing out here.

    I noticed over by Haiti and the Dominican Republic there was a rash of them there as well. Back over by the Philippines, the same thing, not as many but they were stronger. In fact, as I’m writing this several significant quakes have just popped onto the map there that has happened in the last hour. And on down the fault line to Fiji on its way to New Zealand.  Also, China and Russia, the Caspian Sea,  Iran, Greece, Turkey, and Poland. Central and South American was not excluded.  Mexico, off the coast of Guatemala, Colombia, western Argentina, even in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. Just about every major fault was active to some degree… in a relatively short period of time … since Aug 1.

    This seems quite out of the ordinary. Most of them are in predictable places but not so many spread over a large area in such a short time.

    Just thought you’d like to know…

    Blessings, Mr.Vee

August 1, 2009

  • Random Thoughts

    People Act From What They Really Believe

    I’d like to recommend an excellent article dated July 31, 2009 in “American Thinker” for you to read if you haven’t. There are two pictures that are found there that I’d like to point out for your interest.

    Obama’s Revealing Body Language
    http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2009/07/obamas_revealing_body_language.htm

    I have a few simple tests that I do to estimate what people are like “inside” despite what may appear on the outside (or what they’d like to appear on the outside).  Compare these pictures of the “Beer Summit” w/ Obama and Bush w/Senator Byrd (Democrat leader)


     
    This is a photo after the “Beer Summit”.  What does this picture say of Sgt. Crowley. Professor Gates. and Obama.


     
    This is a photo of President Bush w/ Senator Byrd, a high ranking Democratic leader. What does this say about Bush and Byrd?

    A picture is worth a thousand words as they say….  

    Blessings,  Mr.Vee

May 31, 2009

  • Random Thoughts

    What Time Is It?

    Have you noticed what’s going on around you?

    Why is it that evil in recent days is getting so impatient to overcome everything, to control it, and destroy it?

    Why is it that evil is not hiding itself anymore?

    Why is it that there are an extraordinary number of people who amazingly cannot see evil for what it is but are actually welcoming it?

    Why are we seeing good being labeled as evil and evil as good?

    Why are grown men afraid to speak out against the evil?

    Why is it that the news media openly sees things going on and cannot bring itself to declare the truth or to ask hard questions?

    Why is slander and libel so widely accepted now as an appropriate means to destroy people without cause?

    In the same line, why is it such that those who do ask the hard questions and expose the truth are taken out of the way by various means of evil and many are fine with that?

    For our country, why is it that our Constitution and Bill of Rights has suddenly become not good enough to be the law of the land anymore without twisting its meaning to be whatever contemporary interpreters want it to mean?
     
    Why is it that the righteous find themselves suddenly labeled as enemies of the people when they had done only good and promoted peace?

    Why do we seem to hear of claims that our world is suddenly embroiled in all sorts of impending calamities that are so hard to substantiate scientifically and/or resolve economically, etc. without excessive force being applied to those who disagree?

    Why do we find that the world’s nations want to unify themselves again?

    Why is it that we now find out that Jerusalem will be taken from Israel and given to the Palestinians as the deal to conclude the peace negotiations in the Middle East?

    Why is it that we turn a blind eye to the enemies of Israel and pretend that we are talking “peacemaking” with Israel?

    While I am not really seeking for answers here, you are welcome to answer them if you like. I can read the scriptures for myself. In fact, the very reason why these questions can be asked in a relevant way brings to mind a thought of a certain time.

    I am just wondering if you know what time it is?

    Blessings, Mr.Vee

March 26, 2009

  • Random Thoughts

    Weary and heavy laden?  A Reminder… without Christ it is much worse

    Yes, I’ve been busy. I have been distracted. A lot of things are going on right now, both seemingly good and sometimes appearing not so good. I often feel tired and discouraged with not only the things going on with my life but the way that evil men are spitefully taking our country down for their own wicked purposes. I would bet that you have felt that way, too.  Maybe you feel that way even now.  That doesn’t mean that you (or I for that matter) have given up. It just means we are in the heat of the battle. And we need peace and rest for our souls in the midst of the fury of the times.

    For those who are Christ’s, we have this promise…

    Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and YOU WILL FIND REST FOR YOUR SOULS. For My yoke is easy and My burden is light.” Matthew 11:29-30 (NASB)

    Compared to the hopelessness of those who have denied God and found themselves in atheism’s bitter dregs, the rest we have in our souls in Christ is something that those folks will never share before turning to Christ for their salvation.

    Until they do, their self-imposed burdens get heavier and heavier… and they want none of it…

    Why are the nations in an uproar and the peoples devising a vain thing?
    The kings of the earth take their stand and the rulers take counsel together against the LORD and against His Anointed, saying, “Let us tear their fetters apart and cast away their cords from us!” Psalm 2 (NASB)

    That’s what we are seeing right now… atheists/Darwinists finally showing us what they are all about. The truth is now evident to all. They have no morality. A lie is the same as truth to them. Stealing is the same as giving to them. Oppression is the same as freedom to them.The poison of secular academia has infected the souls of the people and has reached the halls of power.  They are the reward of the malignant souls of those who have refused God a place in His own universe. They are bringing to us the kind of “hope and change”… (actually “hopelessness and chains”) gleefully offering the best that springs forth from their wicked hearts. They wish to impose their soulish pain that they have thrust upon themselves onto every living soul to torture and control to try to ease the pain of what it means to have rejected God.  The torment that they know has either driven them into complete denial of the truth, into insanity, into self-dissipation, or the depths of dread that only the fallen angels know.

    What is their end? It is said of Christ that…

    You shall break them with a rod of iron, You shall shatter them like earthenware. Psalm 2:9 (NASB)

    All for the lack of a simple act of faith that God exists and trusting in Christ’s blood for the forgiveness of their sin. Sometimes the simplest answers are the hardest to accept. Yet when we think of our weariness, it is important to realize that there are worse things. Accepting Christ is the only way for salvation. Do not delay. Rest for your souls awaits.

    Blessings,  Mr. Vee

January 18, 2009

  • Insights

    What You See Is Not What You Get

    There is one thing that I’d like to especially point out about the Bible that I appreciate a lot. It does not change and what it tells us is dependable, having been tested by time. That’s like the One who wrote it in the first place through the agency of the apostles and prophets.  Even though many would like to make special interpretations of what is said in it, the original words and meanings still come out clear and concise when they are read in context with the entirety of the work and understood in the realities of the world we live in.

    Contrast that with what’s going on today. Nothing can be trusted here anymore. When the fools of today say there are no absolutes, it is not hard to look around and find the devastating results of relativism. Those who have thrown off God have instead found for themselves a hell of their own making, one that they find meets their needs and pleasures initially but in the end becomes their own condemnation and destruction. Yet it is as if they have no clue what they have done to themselves.

    Now normally I’d go into a long list of things that I see going on but  I’m going to do something different this time.  This will require some thought and you may post as many times as you like as things come to your mind that you see represented in the picture below from “photoshopdisasters.blogspot.com”. I am not only looking for the “obvious & concrete” aspects of the picture but also the more subtle aspects of it as well. I’d like to hear what you think this picture “says” to us.

    At this point, I only offer that it provides us with a remarkably profound statement of our times.  Altering photos is not a new phenomenon. It has been done before. Its perfect since it really doesn’t show the face of an important American personage so we don’t necessarily get tied up in all of that yet we can extract some deep implications of what this picture means.  It is a picture of Pope Benedict and French President Sarkozy leaving a room with people behind him yet if you gaze into the lower right corner of the picture you will see a circle.  What is notable within that circle?

      

    Some of you will see more “obvious” things and others will see more “subtle” things but I’m sure everyone is going to “see” something of meaning here.  Have fun!  Blessings, Mr.Vee

November 20, 2008

  • Insights:

    Thoughts on the Nation: Exploring Love Does No Harm to a Neighbor

    I had thought of writing something else for this installment and my son found this on the web and shared it with me.

    It is long but it’s an excellent excerpt from “The Life of Colonel David Crockett” by Edward S. Ellis. You can purchase the book from Amazon. It is an interesting story involving just what welfare means to us as a nation and an interesting study following our thoughts on “Love does no harm to a neighbor” from Romans 13 and the government’s responsibility to “do good to its citizens” but just what kind? 

    This hits hard at the socialist/collectivist ideologies of those who currently are a majority in the House and Senate and especially now that Obama is president-elect.  So see whether in this arena of welfare if government is actually doing good for all of its citizens…

    Davy Crockett vs. Welfare
    From The Life of Colonel David Crockett,
    by Edward S. Ellis (Philadelphia: Porter & Coates, 1884)

    Crockett was then the lion of Washington. I was a great admirer of his character, and, having several friends who were intimate with him, I found no difficulty in making his acquaintance. I was fascinated with him, and he seemed to take a fancy to me.

    I was one day in the lobby of the House of Representatives when a bill was taken up appropriating money for the benefit of a widow of a distinguished naval officer. Several beautiful speeches had been made in its support – rather, as I thought, because it afforded the speakers a fine opportunity for display than from the necessity of convincing anybody, for it seemed to me that everybody favored it. The Speaker was just about to put the question when Crockett arose. Everybody expected, of course, that he was going to make one of his characteristic speeches in support of the bill. He commenced:

    “Mr. Speaker – I have as much respect for the memory of the deceased, and as much sympathy for the sufferings of the living, if suffering there be, as any man in this House, but we must not permit our respect for the dead or our sympathy for a part of the living to lead us into an act of injustice to the balance of the living. I will not go into an argument to prove that Congress has no power to appropriate this money as an act of charity. Every member upon this floor knows it. We have the right, as individuals, to give away as much of our own money as we please in charity; but as members of Congress we have no right so to appropriate a dollar of the public money. Some eloquent appeals have been made to us upon the ground that it is a debt due the deceased. Mr. Speaker, the deceased lived long after the close of the war; he was in office to the day of his death, and I have never heard that the government was in arrears to him. This government can owe no debts but for services rendered, and at a stipulated price. If it is a debt, how much is it? Has it been audited, and the amount due ascertained? If it is a debt, this is not the place to present it for payment, or to have its merits examined. If it is a debt, we owe more than we can ever hope to pay, for we owe the widow of every soldier who fought in the War of 1812 precisely the same amount. There is a woman in my neighborhood, the widow of as gallant a man as ever shouldered a musket. He fell in battle. She is as good in every respect as this lady, and is as poor. She is earning her daily bread by her daily labor; but if I were to introduce a bill to appropriate five or ten thousand dollars for her benefit, I should be laughed at, and my bill would not get five votes in this House. There are thousands of widows in the country just such as the one I have spoken of, but we never hear of any of these large debts to them. Sir, this is no debt. The government did not owe it to the deceased when he was alive; it could not contract it after he died. I do not wish to be rude, but I must be plain. Every man in this House knows it is not a debt. We cannot, without the grossest corruption, appropriate this money as the payment of a debt. We have not the semblance of authority to appropriate it as a charity. Mr. Speaker, I have said we have the right to give as much of our own money as we please. I am the poorest man on this floor. I cannot vote for this bill, but I will give one week’s pay to the object, and if every member of Congress will do the same, it will amount to more than the bill asks.”

    He took his seat. Nobody replied. The bill was put upon its passage, and, instead of passing unanimously, as was generally supposed, and as, no doubt, it would, but for that speech, it received but few votes, and, of course, was lost.

    Like many other young men, and old ones, too, for that matter, who had not thought upon the subject, I desired the passage of the bill, and felt outraged at its defeat. I determined that I would persuade my friend Crockett to move a reconsideration the next day.

    Previous engagements preventing me from seeing Crockett that night, I went early to his room the next morning and found him engaged in addressing and franking letters, a large pile of which lay upon his table.

    I broke in upon him rather abruptly, by asking him what devil had possessed him to make that speech and defeat that bill yesterday. Without turning his head or looking up from his work, he replied:

    “You see that I am very busy now; take a seat and cool yourself. I will be through in a few minutes, and then I will tell you all about it.”

    He continued his employment for about ten minutes, and when he had finished he turned to me and said:
    “Now, sir, I will answer your question. But thereby hangs a tale, and one of considerable length, to which you will have to listen.”

    I listened, and this is the tale which I heard:

    Several years ago I was one evening standing on the steps of the Capitol with some other members of Congress, when our attention was attracted by a great light over in Georgetown. It was evidently a large fire. We jumped into a hack and drove over as fast as we could. When we got there, I went to work, and I never worked as hard in my life as I did there for several hours. But, in spite of all that could be done, many houses were burned and many families made homeless, and, besides, some of them had lost all but the clothes they had on. The weather was very cold, and when I saw so many women and children suffering, I felt that something ought to be done for them, and everybody else seemed to feel the same way.

    The next morning a bill was introduced appropriating $20,000 for their relief. We put aside all other business and rushed it through as soon as it could be done. I said everybody felt as I did. That was not quite so; for, though they perhaps sympathized as deeply with the sufferers as I did, there were a few of the members who did not think we had the right to indulge our sympathy or excite our charity at the expense of anybody but ourselves. They opposed the bill, and upon its passage demanded the yeas and nays. There were not enough of them to sustain the call, but many of us wanted our names to appear in favor of what we considered a praiseworthy measure, and we voted with them to sustain it. So the yeas and nays were recorded, and my name appeared on the journals in favor of the bill.
     
    The next summer, when it began to be time to think about the election, I concluded I would take a scout around among the boys of my district. I had no opposition there, but, as the election was some time off, I did not know what might turn up, and I thought it was best to let the boys know that I had not forgot them, and that going to Congress had not made me too proud to go to see them.

    So I put a couple of shirts and a few twists of tobacco into my saddlebags, and put out. I had been out about a week and had found things going very smoothly, when, riding one day in a part of my district in which I was more of a stranger than any other, I saw a man in a field plowing and coming toward the road. I gauged my gait so that we should meet as he came to the fence. As he came up I spoke to the man. He replied politely, but, as I thought, rather coldly, and was about turning his horse for another furrow when I said to him: “Don’t be in such a hurry, my friend; I want to have a little talk with you, and get better acquainted.”

    He replied: “I am very busy, and have but little time to talk, but if it does not take too long, I will listen to what you have to say.”

    I began: “Well, friend, I am one of those unfortunate beings called candidates, and – ”

    “‘Yes, I know you; you are Colonel Crockett. I have seen you once before, and voted for you the last time you were elected. I suppose you are out electioneering now, but you had better not waste your time or mine. I shall not vote for you again.’

    This was a sockdolager… I begged him to tell me what was the matter.

    “Well, Colonel, it is hardly worthwhile to waste time or words upon it. I do not see how it can be mended, but you gave a vote last winter which shows that either you have not capacity to understand the Constitution, or that you are wanting in honesty and firmness to be guided by it. In either case you are not the man to represent me. But I beg your pardon for expressing it in that way. I did not intend to avail myself of the privilege of the Constitution to speak plainly to a candidate for the purpose of insulting or wounding you. I intend by it only to say that your understanding of the Constitution is very different from mine; and I will say to you what, but for my rudeness, I should not have said, that I believe you to be honest. But an understanding of the Constitution different from mine I cannot overlook, because the Constitution, to be worth anything, must be held sacred, and rigidly observed in all its provisions. The man who wields power and misinterprets it is the more dangerous the more honest he is.”
    “I admit the truth of all you say, but there must be some mistake about it, for I do not remember that I gave any vote last winter upon any constitutional question.”

    “No, Colonel, there’s no mistake. Though I live here in the backwoods and seldom go from home, I take the papers from Washington and read very carefully all the proceedings of Congress. My papers say that last winter you voted for a bill to appropriate $20,000 to some sufferers by a fire in Georgetown. Is that true?”
    “Certainly it is, and I thought that was the last vote which anybody in the world would have found fault with.”

    “Well, Colonel, where do you find in the Constitution any authority to give away the public money in charity?”

    Here was another sockdolager; for, when I began to think about it, I could not remember a thing in the Constitution that authorized it. I found I must take another tack, so I said:

    “Well, my friend; I may as well own up. You have got me there. But certainly nobody will complain that a great and rich country like ours should give the insignificant sum of $20,000 to relieve its suffering women and children, particularly with a full and overflowing Treasury, and I am sure, if you had been there, you would have done just as I did.”

    “It is not the amount, Colonel, that I complain of; it is the principle. In the first place, the government ought to have in the Treasury no more than enough for its legitimate purposes. But that has nothing to do with the question. The power of collecting and disbursing money at pleasure is the most dangerous power that can be entrusted to man, particularly under our system of collecting revenue by a tariff, which reaches every man in the country, no matter how poor he may be, and the poorer he is the more he pays in proportion to his means. What is worse, it presses upon him without his knowledge where the weight centers, for there is not a man in the United States who can ever guess how much he pays to the government. So you see, that while you are contributing to relieve one, you are drawing it from thousands who are even worse off than he. If you had the right to give anything, the amount was simply a matter of discretion with you, and you had as much right to give $20,000,000 as $20,000. If you have the right to give to one, you have the right to give to all; and, as the Constitution neither defines charity nor stipulates the amount, you are at liberty to give to any and everything which you may believe, or profess to believe, is a charity, and to any amount you may think proper. You will very easily perceive what a wide door this would open for fraud and corruption and favoritism, on the one hand, and for robbing the people on the other. No, Colonel, Congress has no right to give charity. Individual members may give as much of their own money as they please, but they have no right to touch a dollar of the public money for that purpose. If twice as many houses had been burned in this county as in Georgetown, neither you nor any other member of Congress would have thought of appropriating a dollar for our relief. There are about two hundred and forty members of Congress. If they had shown their sympathy for the sufferers by contributing each one week’s pay, it would have made over $13,000. There are plenty of wealthy men in and around Washington who could have given $20,000 without depriving themselves of even a luxury of life. The Congressmen chose to keep their own money, which, if reports be true, some of them spend not very creditably; and the people about Washington, no doubt, applauded you for relieving them from the necessity of giving by giving what was not yours to give. The people have delegated to Congress, by the Constitution, the power to do certain things. To do these, it is authorized to collect and pay moneys, and for nothing else. Everything beyond this is usurpation, and a violation of the Constitution.”

    I have given you an imperfect account of what he said. Long before he was through, I was convinced that I had done wrong. He wound up by saying:

    “So you see, Colonel, you have violated the Constitution in what I consider a vital point. It is a precedent fraught with danger to the country, for when Congress once begins to stretch its power beyond the limits of the Constitution, there is no limit to it, and no security for the people. I have no doubt you acted honestly, but that does not make it any better, except as far as you are personally concerned, and you see that I cannot vote for you.”

    I tell you I felt streaked. I saw if I should have opposition, and this man should go talking, he would set others to talking, and in that district I was a gone fawn-skin. I could not answer him, and the fact is, I did not want to. But I must satisfy him, and I said to him:

    “Well, my friend, you hit the nail upon the head when you said I had not sense enough to understand the Constitution. I intended to be guided by it, and thought I had studied it full. I have heard many speeches in Congress about the powers of Congress, but what you have said there at your plow has got more hard, sound sense in it than all the fine speeches I ever heard. If I had ever taken the view of it that you have, I would have put my head into the fire before I would have given that vote; and if you will forgive me and vote for me again, if I ever vote for another unconstitutional law I wish I may be shot.”

    He laughingly replied:
    “Yes, Colonel, you have sworn to that once before, but I will trust you again upon one condition. You say that you are convinced that your vote was wrong. Your acknowledgment of it will do more good than beating you for it. If, as you go around the district, you will tell people about this vote, and that you are satisfied it was wrong, I will not only vote for you, but will do what I can to keep down opposition, and, perhaps, I may exert some little influence in that way.”

    “If I don’t,” said I, “I wish I may be shot; and to convince you that I am in earnest in what I say, I will come back this way in a week or ten days, and if you will get up a gathering of the people, I will make a speech to them. Get up a barbecue, and I will pay for it.”

    “No, Colonel, we are not rich people in this section, but we have plenty of provisions to contribute for a barbecue, and some to spare for those who have none. The push of crops will be over in a few days, and we can then afford a day for a barbecue. This is Thursday; I will see to getting it up on Saturday week. Come to my house on Friday, and we will go together, and I promise you a very respectable crowd to see and hear you.”

    “Well, I will be here. But one thing more before I say good-bye. I must know your name.”

    “My name is Bunce.”

    “Not Horatio Bunce?”

    “Yes.”

    “Well, Mr. Bunce, I never saw you before, though you say you have seen me; but I know you very well. I am glad I have met you, and very proud that I may hope to have you for my friend. You must let me shake your hand before I go.”

    We shook hands and parted.

    It was one of the luckiest hits of my life that I met him. He mingled but little with the public, but was widely known for his remarkable intelligence and incorruptible integrity, and for a heart brimful and running over with kindness and benevolence, which showed themselves not only in words but in acts. He was the oracle of the whole country around him, and his fame had extended far beyond the circle of his immediate acquaintance. Though I had never met him before, I had heard much of him, and but for this meeting it is very likely I should have had opposition, and had been beaten. One thing is very certain, no man could now stand up in that district under such a vote.
    At the appointed time I was at his house, having told our conversation to every crowd I had met, and to every man I stayed all night with, and I found that it gave the people an interest and a confidence in me stronger than I had ever seen manifested before.

    Though I was considerably fatigued when I reached his house, and, under ordinary circumstances, should have gone early to bed, I kept him up until midnight, talking about the principles and affairs of government, and got more real, true knowledge of them than I had got all my life before.

    I have told you Mr. Bunce converted me politically. He came nearer converting me religiously than I had ever been before. He did not make a very good Christian of me, as you know; but he has wrought upon my mind a conviction of the truth of Christianity, and upon my feelings a reverence for its purifying and elevating power such as I had never felt before.

    I have known and seen much of him since, for I respect him – no, that is not the word – I reverence and love him more than any living man, and I go to see him two or three times every year; and I will tell you, sir, if everyone who professes to be a Christian lived and acted and enjoyed it as he does, the religion of Christ would take the world by storm.

    But to return to my story. The next morning we went to the barbecue, and, to my surprise, found about a thousand men there. I met a good many whom I had not known before, and they and my friend introduced me around until I had got pretty well acquainted – at least, they all knew me.

    In due time notice was given that I would speak to them. They gathered around a stand that had been erected. I opened my speech by saying:

    “Fellow citizens – I present myself before you today feeling like a new man. My eyes have lately been opened to truths which ignorance or prejudice, or both, had heretofore hidden from my view. I feel that I can today offer you the ability to render you more valuable service than I have ever been able to render before. I am here today more for the purpose of acknowledging my error than to seek your votes. That I should make this acknowledgment is due to myself as well as to you. Whether you will vote for me is a matter for your consideration only.”

    I went on to tell them about the fire and my vote for the appropriation as I have told it to you, and then told them why I was satisfied it was wrong. I closed by saying:

    “And now, fellow citizens, it remains only for me to tell you that the most of the speech you have listened to with so much interest was simply a repetition of the arguments by which your neighbor, Mr. Bunce, convinced me of my error.

    “It is the best speech I ever made in my life, but he is entitled to the credit of it. And now I hope he is satisfied with his convert and that he will get up here and tell you so.”

    He came upon the stand and said:

    “Fellow citizens – It affords me great pleasure to comply with the request of Colonel Crockett. I have always considered him a thoroughly honest man, and I am satisfied that he will faithfully perform all that he has promised you today.”

    He went down, and there went up from the crowd such a shout for Davy Crockett as his name never called forth before.

    I am not much given to tears, but I was taken with a choking then and felt some big drops rolling down my cheeks. And I tell you now that the remembrance of those few words spoken by such a man, and the honest, hearty shout they produced, is worth more to me than all the honors I have received and all the reputation I have ever made, or ever shall make, as a member of Congress.

    “Now, Sir,” concluded Crockett, “you know why I made that speech yesterday. I have had several thousand copies of it printed and was directing them to my constituents when you came in.

    “There is one thing now to which I will call your attention. You remember that I proposed to give a week’s pay. There are in that House many very wealthy men – men who think nothing of spending a week’s pay, or a dozen of them for a dinner or a wine party when they have something to accomplish by it. Some of those same men made beautiful speeches upon the great debt of gratitude which the country owed the deceased – a debt which could not be paid by money, particularly so insignificant a sum as $10,000, when weighed against the honor of the nation. Yet not one of them responded to my proposition. Money with them is nothing but trash when it is to come out of the people. But it is the one great thing for which most of them are striving, and many of them sacrifice honor, integrity, and justice to obtain it.”
    …….

    That story puts the truth of the matter right on target. Looks like the Left hasn’t learned a thing. So many of the Left in our government would certainly spend the taxpayer’s money but not offer a dime out of their own pockets… I think we would call that some form of “hypocrisy”.

    May the Lord protect us from becoming such…  Blessings, Mr.Vee