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Show The Paper That Dares To Take A Stand September 9, 1976 The Utah Independent Page 11 FREAK BALLOTS TRICK Continued from page POLICY 1 the functions and services want government to do for they them, then retain all power not Continued from page list only Rhodesia's six million black Africans, Kissinger was unable to provide the British leader with the names of the proposed black leaders that the U.S. would like to see in power. In adOTHER US AID dition to the half billion dollar That practice has been in successful operation in the United States for at least 200 years. The current metro encroachment is a invasion intended to make it easy for outsiders coming in. or local power seekers to capture the governing power from the lv people. The proposed charter and the trick ballot are underfire. Billings voters are quoting the U.S. An injunction Constitution. followed by a class action lawsuit under the 4th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution would be not out of order. Obviously the voters are being denied their constitutional right to vote either for or against the proposed metro charter. 1 Proposed Charter for the City of Billings, Voter 76 Review Final Report, Special Election Tuesday Sept. 14, 1976. Ref. Undeclared War The resettlement program, Kissinger reported that the U.S. planned to increase its aid programs for the other black nations in southern GLORIOUS Africa. These programs are expected A more glorious edifice than Greece or Rome ever saw. " In his matchless eulogy on General Washington in 1832, Daniel Webster closed iwith the words quoted below. Now, 144 years later, when we must defend our heritage against enemies foreign and domestic, they deserve our respectful attention. Other misfortunes may be borne, or their effects overcome. If disastrous war (should sweep our commerce from the ocean, another, generation might renew it; if it lexhaust our treasury, future industry may replenish it; if it desolate and lay waste our (fields, still, under a new cultivation, they will grow green again, and ripen to future (harvests. It were but a trifle even if the walls of yonder Capitol were to crumble, if its lofty pillars should fall, and its gorgeous decorations be all covered by the dust of the ivalley. All these may be rebuilt. But who shall reconstruct the fabric of demolished government? columns of constitutional liberty? Caribbean much greater than they had at the time of the 1962 missile Who shall rear again the crisis. Who shall frame together the skillful architecture which unites national Since President Ford and Secretaiy Kissinger refuse to recognize the offensive significance of the Soviet base in Cuba and its role in the undeclared war, they have rejected all proposals by the Joint Chiefs of Staff to neutralize the base. It is this lack of will to protect well-proportion- (sovereignty with State rights, individual security, and Public prosperity? No, if these columns fall, they will be raised not again. Like the Coliseum and the Parthenon, they will be destined to a mournful and melancholy immortality. Bitterer tears, however, will flow over them than were ever shed over the monuments of Roman or Grecian art; for they will be the monuments of a more glorious edifice than Greece or Rome ever saw, the edifice of constitutional American Liberty. our vital interests throughout the world that is encouraging Moscow backed communist nations and terrorist groups to attack and kill Americans. If there is no policy to punish At least some of Westerns coming out Hollywood these days modern. Like the new or we of be southern Africa, Kissinger remarked: There will of grumthe but bling, Congress really has no other alternative if its members want to avoid involvement in another war. The British leader reported after the meeting that Kissinger had noted that Congress had put up $300 million for the resettlement of Vietnamese refugees, and more than $4 billion to support the uneasy peace settlement in the Mideast. These programs are all the price of keeping peace in the world," Prime Minister Callaghan quoted Kissinger as saying. Whether Congress agrees with is expected to be Kissinger in determined by events southern Africa and how the Ford Administration presents the massive new resettlement program to the lawmakers. The granting of taxpayers money to aid refugees is one thing but the use of those funds to undermine a pro-U.government which creates a massive refugee problem is another matter. Most members of Congress should be able to see the difference. be a lot Government can only give without limit by taking without limit. No wonder Americans are losing confidence in and respect for what the government's become as it the of expanded are one beyond its Constitutional limits to its bloated form. J. Kesner Kahn where the good guy couldn't get the badmen so he jailed any other way them to total approximately $30 million in 1976 and will be increased to more than $100 million in 1977 and to S2S0 million by 1980. When asked by Callaghan if the U.S. Congress would support in these large expenditures S. international these murderers by destroying neutralizing their bases, then can soon expect the killing Americans to increase and extended to this country. 1 among delegated. come-late- RHODESIAN COSTLY VOTERS - for income tax CLICHES evasion. DONT TRADE UNEMPLOYMENT FOR SOCIALISM Continued from page 10 humanitarian, appeal does precisely what they deplore: it insists that some must lose what others are to gain. That is why socialism has to be compulsory. Every variation of the welfare state in the world today is but a crude reversion to the ruthless law of the jungle: might makes right, one mans gain is another's loss, to the victor belongs the spoils. The better alternative is competitive private enterprise and voluntary exchange the only economic game that allows every player to win, the only social system that affords the maximum of true voluntary charity, and the only political concept consistent with the belief that individuals are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights. Paul L Poirot share-the-weal- th Now that the Democratic National Convention is in the history books, it is a good time to take a hard look at a major plank of that partys platform that could be devastating if it becomes national policy. The plan calls for a reduction of the adult unemployment rate to 3 percent within four years. On its face, that goal is laudable enough. No one likes g unemployment. The problem is that behind the Democratic plank lies a horrendous proposal called the Humphrey-IIawkin- s Bill, which has become a keystone measure on Capitol Hill among a wide swath of Democrats. Humphrey-Hawkin- s (named for its sponsors, Senator Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota and Representative Augustus F. Hawkins of California), in essence proposes to repeal the business cycle and limit unemployment to 3 percent by The bills making the government the employer of last resort. that little matter sponsors dont bother filling in the details is left to the White House. could increase the It is estimated that Humphrey-Hawkin- s federal budget by around $45 Billion. Persons employed in the under the bill private sector, if not satisfied with their wages, could quit their jobs and demand that Uncle Sam hire them at the highest prevailing wage rates for their specialties. 10 A common figure on Capitol Hill is that an estimated mild-soundin- million workers now making less than the highest wages in private jobs would become unemployed so they could go to work for the government. In a year when major political candiates have fallen by the wayside because of their close ties to Washington, it seems incredible that such a bill as Humphrey-Hawkin- s could be riding as high as it now is. The bill is a monument to the power of special interest groups at the expense of the public as a whole. In this case, the groups pushing Humphrey-Hawkin- s hardest are labor leaders and blacks abetted by many Democrats. Jimmy Carter himself is on record favoring one recent version of the bill, which has been amended over and over. Although the nations unemployment rate rose in June for the first time since September, its general trend is still clearly downward. It would he a tragedy of major proportions -unleashing an inflation rate seldom if ever seen in this country to abort the current economic progress with anything akin to Humphrey-Hawkin- s. Everyone wants a lower rate of unemployment. But no easonable person wants to trade unemployment expecially in improving rate of unemployment for blatant socialism. -- Middletown Transcript - - - |