Saturday, February 1, 2014

Carson For President? Not So Fast!

Sometimes dummies know more than those who make them: http://www.youtube.com/embed/F584p5kJL-U?rel=0
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Fifty reasons. You Decide! (See 1 below.)
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Yeah I know this is not politically correct:


"Well, Child, Socialism is when white folks work every day so we can get all our benefits. You know. Like free cell phones for each
family member, rent subsidy, food stamps, free healthcare, utility subsidy, and on and on. That's Socialism."

"But mama, don't the white people get pissed off about that?

"Sure they do Honey. That's called Racism!"

Then for some different humor:


Raising social security retirement age to 70
This is what happens when you are forced to work after the age of 70.
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Investment advice. (See 2 below.)
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It is now becoming increasingly evident, Obama has succeeded in achieving one accomplishment. A large number of Americans no longer believe in big government solutions, small government solutions , government solutions at all..

As a conservative, I am  opposed to government taking on responsibilities that are best left to other sectors. I have written repeatedly, when government takes on more than it can chew, and thus is destined to fail, it erodes public support and that is dangerous. Citizens must believe in their government, be willing to support it and even to die for it and unless they are  that government is not long for this world.

Obama overreached for philosophical reasons, failed and now we are all paying the price.

Second, I believe politicians, and this includes the president, must have constraints placed upon them. Otherwise, they will spend and not fund. Spending is the easy part because it means dong something for constituents and that  results in buying votes but the hard part is getting others to pay the price for political largess so they opt out by dumping the debt load on future generations.

Many political desires have a genuine moral root, they are intended to do good but political unwillingness to pay for them, in my book is an immoral act. Therefore, the two do not jive.

Finally, history is replete with government policies that have failed to accomplish their espoused goal, cost beyond any proposed limit and yet, they continue to exist and be funded.  This is not only insane, it is fiscally irresponsible. Were politicians trustees in the private sector they would be subject to jail sentences for mismanagement and misappropriating if not downright theft by taking.

I hate the idea of placing a girdle on government and I know no balanced budget amendment is ever likely to pass . Most states live under this rule and thus their tax free bonds prove to be good investments.  The problem is that  huge continued government  deficits erode the value of the dollar and thusr purchasing power thereby, diminishing even Municipal Bond returns  - tax free status notwithstanding.

Even a boat can capsize if everyone stands on one side of the deck.  As government dependency grows, allocations to sustain this dependency increases and money transfers escalate from haves and the productive to support this nonsense we run the risk of capsizing. Were it not for the geographical , resource rich power of America, I daresay our collapse might have already occurred.  We are, however, entering the land where the margin of error is against us sustaining the pattern of deficit spending and it is inevitable the consequences will be tragic when it finally hits the fan.
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I was sent this by a friend and I made a few bracketed comments [ ]. (See 3 below.)

My response:  "Yes, it is going around and there is much truth in what is claimed. I do not believe he has the political experience to get bruised in a vicious campaign nor do I believe he has the executive experience and understands the inner workings of government.  As a Vice president on a Conservative Republican ticket I think he would add heft but again being in the second spot would be akin to what happened when Palin was selected though I believe Carson would make a far better candidate.  Just my thoughts . Me"
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Dick
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1)

50 Reasons We're Living Through the Greatest Period in World History

By Morgan House



I recently talked to a doctor who retired after a 30-year career. I asked him how much medicine had changed during the three decades he practiced. "Oh, tremendously," he said. He listed off a dozen examples. Deaths from heart disease and stroke are way down. Cancer survival rates are way up. We're better at diagnosing, treating, preventing, and curing disease than ever before.
Consider this: In 1900, 1% of American women giving birth died in labor. Today, the five-year mortality rate for localized breast cancer is 1.2%. Being pregnant 100 years ago was almost as dangerous as having breast cancer is today.
The problem, the doctor said, is that these advances happen slowly over time, so you probably don't hear about them. If cancer survival rates improve, say, 1% per year, any given year's progress looks low, but over three decades, extraordinary progress is made. 
Compare health-care improvements with the stuff that gets talked about in the news -- NBC anchor Andrea Mitchell interrupted a Congresswoman last week to announce Justin Bieber's arrest -- and you can understand why Americans aren't optimistic about the country's direction. We ignore the really important news because it happens slowly, but we obsess over trivial news because it happens all day long.
Expanding on my belief that everything is amazing and nobody is happy, here are 50 facts that show we're actually living through the greatest period in world history.  
1. U.S. life expectancy at birth was 39 years in 1800, 49 years in 1900, 68 years in 1950, and 79 years today. The average newborn today can expect to live an entire generation longer than his great-grandparents could.
2. A flu pandemic in 1918 infected 500 million people and killed as many as 100 million. In his book The Great Influenza, John Barry describes the illness as if "someone were hammering a wedge into your skull just behind the eyes, and body aches so intense they felt like bones breaking." Today, you can go to Safeway and get a flu shot. It costs 15 bucks. You might feel a little poke.
3. In 1950, 23 people per 100,000 Americans died each year in traffic accidents, according to the Census Bureau. That fell to 11 per 100,000 by 2009. If the traffic mortality rate had not declined, 37,800 more Americans would have died last year than actually did. In the time it will take you to read this article, one American is alive who would have died in a car accident 60 years ago.
4. In 1949, Popular Mechanics magazine made the bold prediction that someday a computer could weigh less than 1 ton. I wrote this sentence on an iPad that weighs 0.73 pounds.
5. The average American now retires at age 62. One hundred years ago, the average American died at age 51. Enjoy your golden years -- your ancestors didn't get any of them.
6. In his 1770s book The Wealth of Nations, Adam Smith wrote: "It is not uncommon in the highlands of Scotland for a mother who has borne 20 children not to have 2 alive." Infant mortality in America has dropped from 58 per 1,000 births in 1933 to less than six per 1,000 births in 2010, according to the World Health Organization. There are about 11,000 births in America each day, so this improvement means more than 200,000 infants now survive each year who wouldn't have 80 years ago. That's like adding a city the size of Boise, Idaho, every year. 
7. America averaged 20,919 murders per year in the 1990s, and 16,211 per year in the 2000s, according to the FBI. If the murder rate had not fallen, 47,000 more Americans would have been killed in the last decade than actually were. That's more than the population of Biloxi, Miss.
8. Despite a surge in airline travel, there were half as many fatal plane accidents in 2012 than there were in 1960, according to the Aviation Safety Network. 
9. No one has died from a new nuclear weapon attack since 1945. If you went back to 1950 and asked the world's smartest political scientists, they would have told you the odds of seeing that happen would be close to 0%. You don't have to be very imaginative to think that the most important news story of the past 70 years is what didn't happen. Congratulations, world.
10. People worry that the U.S. economy will end up stagnant like Japan's. Next time you hear that, remember that unemployment in Japan hasn't been above 5.6% in the past 25 years, its government corruption ranking has consistently improved, incomes per capita adjusted for purchasing power have grown at a decent rate, and life expectancy has risen by nearly five years. I can think of worse scenarios.
11. Two percent of American homes had electricity in 1900. J.P Morgan (the man) was one of the first to install electricity in his home, and it required a private power plant on his property. Even by 1950, close to 30% of American homes didn't have electricity. It wasn't until the 1970s that virtually all homes were powered. Adjusted for wage growth, electricity cost more than 10 times as much in 1900 as it does today, according to professor Julian Simon.
12. According to the Federal Reserve, the number of lifetime years spent in leisure -- retirement plus time off during your working years -- rose from 11 years in 1870 to 35 years by 1990. Given the rise in life expectancy, it's probably close to 40 years today. Which is amazing: The average American spends nearly half his life in leisure. If you had told this to the average American 100 years ago, that person would have considered you wealthy beyond imagination.
13. We are having a national discussion about whether a $7.25-per-hour minimum wage is too low. But even adjusted for inflation, the minimum wage was less than $4 per hour as recently as the late 1940s. The top 1% have captured most of the wage growth over the past three decades, but nearly everyone has grown richer -- much richer -- during the past seven decades.
14. In 1952, 38,000 people contracted polio in America alone, according to the Centers for Disease Control. In 2012, there were fewer than 300 reported cases of polio in the entire world.
15. From 1920 to 1949, an average of 433,000 people died each year globally from "extreme weather events." That figure has plunged to 27,500 per year, according to Indur Goklany of the International Policy Network, largely thanks to "increases in societies' collective adaptive capacities."
16. Worldwide deaths from battle have plunged from 300 per 100,000 people during World War II, to the low teens during the 1970s, to less than 10 in the 1980s, to fewer than one in the 21st century, according to Harvard professor Steven Pinker. "War really is going out of style," he says.
17. Median household income adjusted for inflation was around $25,000 per year during the 1950s. It's nearly double that amount today. We have false nostalgia about the prosperity of the 1950s because our definition of what counts as "middle class" has been inflated -- see the 34% rise in the size of the median American home in just the past 25 years. If you dig into how the average "prosperous" American family lived in the 1950s, I think you'll find a standard of living we'd call "poverty" today.
18. Reported rape per 100,000 Americans dropped from 42.3 in 1991 to 27.5 in 2010, according to the FBI. Robbery has dropped from 272 per 100,000 in 1991 to 119 in 2010. There were nearly 4 million fewer property crimes in 2010 than there were in 1991, which is amazing when you consider the U.S. population grew by 60 million during that period.
19. According to the Census Bureau, only one in 10 American homes had air conditioning in 1960. That rose to 49% in 1973, and 89% today -- the 11% that don't are mostly in cold climates. Simple improvements like this have changed our lives in immeasurable ways.
20. Almost no homes had a refrigerator in 1900, according to Frederick Lewis Allan's The Big Change, let alone a car. Today they sell cars with refrigerators in them.
21. Adjusted for overall inflation, the cost of an average round-trip airline ticket fell 50% from 1978 to 2011, according to Airlines for America.
22. According to the Census Bureau, the average new home now has more bathrooms than occupants.
23. According to the Census Bureau, in 1900 there was one housing unit for every five Americans. Today, there's one for every three. In 1910 the average home had 1.13 occupants per room. By 1997 it was down to 0.42 occupants per room.
24. According to professor Julian Simon, the average American house or apartment is twice as large as the average house or apartment in Japan, and three times larger than the average home or apartment in Russia.
25. Relative to hourly wages, the cost of an average new car has fallen fourfold since 1915, according to professor Julian Simon.
26. Google Maps is free. If you think about this for a few moments, it's really astounding. It's probably the single most useful piece of software ever invented, and it's free for anyone to use.
27. High school graduation rates are at a 40-year high, according to Education Week. 
28. The death rate from strokes has declined by 75% since the 1960s, according to the National Institutes of Health. Death from heart attacks has plunged, too: If the heart attack survival had had not declined since the 1960s, the number of Americans dying each year from heart disease would be more than 1 million higher than it currently is. 
29. In 1900, African Americans had an illiteracy rate of nearly 45%, according to the Census Bureau. Today, it's statistically close to zero. 
30. People talk about how expensive college is today, but a century ago fewer than one in 20 Americans ever stepped foot in a university. College wasn't an option at any price for some minorities because of segregation just six decades ago.
31. The average American work week has declined from 66 hours in 1850, to 51 hours in 1909, to 34.8 today, according to the Federal Reserve. Enjoy your weekend.
32. Incomes have grown so much faster than food prices that the average American household now spends less than half as much of its income on food as it did in the 1950s. Relative to wages, the price of food has declined more than 90% since the 19th century, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
33. As of March 2013, there were 8.99 million millionaire households in the U.S., according to the Spectrum Group. Put them together and they would make the largest city in the country, and the 18th largest city in the world, just behind Tokyo. We talk a lot about wealth concentration in the United States, but it's not just the very top that has done well.
34. More than 40% of adults smoked in 1965, according to the Centers for Disease Control. By 2011, 19% did. 
35. In 1900, 44% of all American jobs were in farming. Today, around 2% are. We've become so efficient at the basic need of feeding ourselves that nearly half the population can now work on other stuff.
36. One of the reasons Social Security and Medicare are underfunded is that the average American is living longer than ever before. I think this is literally the best problem to have.
37. In 1940, less than 5% of the adult population held a bachelor's degree or higher. By 2012, more than 30% did, according to the Census Bureau.
38. U.S. oil production in September was the highest it's been since 1989, and growth shows no sign of slowing. We produced 57% more oil in America in September 2013 than we did in September 2007. The International Energy Agency projects that America will be the world's largest oil producer as soon as 2015.
39. The average American car got 13 miles per gallon in 1975, and more than 26 miles per gallon in 2013, according to the Energy Protection Agency. This has an effect identical to cutting the cost of gasoline in half.
40. Annual inflation in the United States hasn't been above 10% since 1981 and has been below 5% in 77% of years over the past seven decades. When you consider all the hatred directed toward the Federal Reserve, this is astounding.
41. The percentage of Americans age 65 and older who live in poverty has dropped from nearly 30% in 1966 to less than 10% by 2010. For the elderly, the war on poverty has pretty much been won.
42. Adjusted for inflation, the average monthly Social Security benefit for retirees has increased from $378 in 1940 to $1,277 by 2010. What used to be a safety net is now a proper pension.
43. If you think Americans aren't prepared for retirement today, you should have seen what it was like a century ago. In 1900, 65% of men over age 65 were still in the labor force. By 2010, that figure was down to 22%. The entire concept of retirement is unique to the past few decades. Half a century ago, most Americans worked until they died.
44. From 1920 to 1980, an average of 395 people per 100,000 died from famine worldwide each decade. During the 2000s, that fell to three per 100,000, according to The Economist.
45. The cost of solar panels has declined by 75% since 2008, according to the Department of Energy. Last I checked, the sun is offering its services for free. 
46. As recently as 1950, nearly 40% of American homes didn't have a telephone. Today, there are 500 million Internet-connected devices in America, or enough for 5.7 per household.
47. According to AT&T archives and the Dallas Fed, a three-minute phone call from New York to San Francisco cost $341 in 1915, and $12.66 in 1960, adjusted for inflation. Today, Republic Wireless offers unlimited talk, text, and data for $5 a month.
48. In 1990, the American auto industry produced 7.15 vehicles per auto employee. In 2010 it produced 11.2 vehicles per employee. Manufacturing efficiency has improved dramatically.
49. You need an annual income of $34,000 a year to be in the richest 1% of the world, according to World Bank economist Branko Milanovic's 2010 book The Haves and the Have-Nots. To be in the top half of the globe you need to earn just $1,225 a year. For the top 20%, it's $5,000 per year. Enter the top 10% with $12,000 a year. To be included in the top 0.1% requires an annual income of $70,000. America's poorest are some of the world's richest. 
50. Only 4% of humans get to live in America. Odds are you're one of them. We've got it made. Be thankful. 
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2)
How to Invest in a Bipolar World

Alexander Green, Chief Investment Strategist, The Oxford Club

Alexander GreenI seem to have caused some confusion among readers with my two recent columns on "Obama's New War on Investors."

Several wrote to say they found my investment outlook positive and my new book inspiring, but they had a tough time squaring my optimism about the future with my profound pessimism about the state of today's federal government. (And, as you'll see, times have been better at the local and state level too.)

We truly live in a bipolar world today. As Charles Dickens put it in A Tale of Two Cities, "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times..."

The Best of Times

These are the best of times because Americans have never been richer. The Federal Reserve reported in December that the nation's household wealth hit $77.3 trillion in the third quarter, an all-time record, thanks to rising home prices and stock values.

These are the best of times because the human life span has doubled in the last hundred years. Standards of living have never been greater. Crime is in a long-term cycle of decline. The risk of death by violence has never been smaller.

I Bet You Can't Name This Company...

What company is more profitable than Apple... Wal-Mart... Microsoft... Exxon Mobil... Toyota... and Google... While selling for three times cheaper than all of them?

Go here to find out now - including why a major announcement could triple their share price by year's end.

Literacy and education levels are at all-time highs. Technology and medicine are revolutionizing our lives. We enjoy goods and services in almost limitless supply. Travel - to the next town or the other side of the world - has never been easier or more affordable. Human progress is in a decidedly upward arc.

The Debt Problem

Yet democracies from Tokyo to Washington, D.C., all face the same intractable problem: Elected representatives who simply cannot say "no" to runaway spending or the special interests who demand it.

Every discussion of this sort should start off not with a partisan rant - since there is plenty of blame to spread on both sides of the aisle - but with a dispassionate look at the numbers.

As you can easily see at usdebtclock.org, the United States is currently carrying a $17.34 trillion national debt. (This is more than our annual GDP and equal to $150,544 per taxpayer.)

Yet this doesn't even factor in our much larger entitlement crisis. Look at the bottom line and you'll see that unfunded liabilities for Social Security, Medicare and the prescription drug benefit (Part D) amount to more than $127.6 trillion. This shortfall amounts to a further $1.1 million per taxpayer.

Where will we get the money? Borrowing a sum this titanic is out of the question. It is beyond the capacity of global financial markets. And entitlement spending is projected to grow at more than $8 trillion per year.

Raise taxes? According to the IRS, the total corporate taxable income generated by all U.S. corporations is approximately $1.6 trillion. The total adjusted gross income of all Americans making over $66,000 per year is approximately $6.7 trillion.

So even if the federal government confiscated the entire adjusted gross income of all U.S. corporations and all these taxpayers every year, it still wouldn't be enough to meet just the $8 trillion a year growth in U.S. entitlement obligations.

Radically cut spending? Reform the system? Now we're getting warmer. Unfortunately, promising to cut benefits - especially for seniors - is seen as political suicide. That's why Obama completely ignored the recommendations of his own bipartisan panel on entitlement reform.

Making matters still worse in the pubic sector, a report by the States Project - a joint venture between Harvard's Institute of Politics and the University of Pennsylvania's Fels Institute of Government - estimates that state and local government owe yet another $7.3 trillion. (Amazingly, taxpayers never approved the vast majority of this debt and most remain generally unaware of the extent of their obligations.)

Predictable Crisis

In short, we are hurtling toward the most predicable financial crisis in our nation's history, one that is beyond solving with higher taxes, modest reforms or slightly stronger economic growth.

Most Americans understand that we have a federal budget deficit and that it is a negative. What they don't understand is the true extent of the problem and the terrific threat it poses.

Investors who shrug this off as "old news" are in for a rude awakening. If you took your credit cards to Las Vegas and maxed them out to the hilt, you might have the party of your life. But there would remain a great reckoning ahead. And we can only guess at the timing.

This is the negative aspect of our bipolar world. Look closely at these facts and it would seem logical that if you're going to invest in the stock market at all, it ought to be on the short side.

Yet that is not what I recommend. I remain bullish on the mid- to long-term outlook for the economy and the markets. How can this be? That's the other side of our bipolar world that I'll discuss here on Monday.

Until then, good investing,

Alex
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3)Dr. Carson needs to hear from you today!
<http://www.freedompartners.info/r.asp?U=389800&RID=40686309>

Five reasons why Dr. Carson is our best choice for 2016...

*       He is the only candidate that makes it mathematically
impossible for Hillary Clinton to win!
*       He is the only candidate who, like Ronald Reagan, can explain
the fallacy of liberal schemes in terms the average American can
understand.
*       He is the only candidate who can heal and unite America.
*       He is the only candidate who is a citizen statesman, the type
of candidate who our Founders envisioned would lead our nation.
*       He is the one candidate who you can trust to stick to his
conservative values, and to govern according to the United States
Constitution.

Reason #1: Ben Carson is sure to win!

If a Republican candidate for President receives just 17% of the black
vote, Hillary Clinton loses every single swing state. Did you know that
in 2012 Presidential candidate Herman Cain was polling more than 40% of
the black vote? Herman Cain was liked by the black community, but Dr.
Ben Carson is a revered figure in the African American community.

Dr. Carson is an icon in the African American community.

If businessman Herman Cain could receive 40% of the black vote, Dr.
Benjamin Carson would likely receive far greater support from African
Americans.

But, if he only receives 17% of the black vote, it becomes
mathematically impossible for Hillary Clinton or any Democrat to win
the White House in 2016.

Reason #2: Ben Carson has the communication skills of Ronald Reagan!

The Republican Party has lots of great conservatives, several of whom,
in my opinion, would make a great President. They are very good people.

However, not one of these prospective candidates has the wit, wisdom,
and persuasive eloquence of Ronald Reagan that Dr. Ben Carson possesses.

It was Ronald Reagan's power to persuade that made it possible for him
to win two landslide elections to the White House. He had the amazing
ability to take a complex issue and explain it in simple, commonsense
terms that the average voter could understand.

Dr. Carson is blessed with those same skills. In fact, he is the first
candidate since Ronald Reagan who has the necessary communication
skills to be elected President of the United States.

There is just no one else on the scene comparable to Dr.Carson.

Reason #3: Dr. Carson is the only candidate who can heal our nation.

Sadly, for the first time in American history, the President of the
United States has not tried to unify our nation, instead he has made
every effort to divide our nation by setting one group against another.

Barack Obama has encouraged racial strife. He has encouraged the poor
to hate the successful. He has worked to create anger against men by
women. He has set workers against employers. He has worked to set the
young against the old. In every way possible, following the dictates of
his radical idol, Saul Alinsky, he has gone about dividing Americans
and creating disunity.

In fact, America is more divided today than it has been since the Civil
War. [What about Viet Nam?]

President Ben Carson will bring our nation together. He will work to
heal our wounds, and bring about reconciliation.

As a Christian, Dr. Carson rejects envy and jealously as twin evils.

As an African American and a leader, and one who is respected in the
black community, he will bring healing and reconciliation to our land.

Ben Carson has been a healer his entire life. He will seek solutions to
America's most pressing problems, and he will do it in a way that
unifies and heals, not divides and creates disunity.

Reason #4: Ben Carson is a citizen statesman, not a politician.

It was politicians, both Democrat and Republican, that created the
current mess we are in. We don't need another politician, we need a
citizen statesman.

Ronald Reagan was disdained as an actor when he ran for Governor of
California. They said he didn't have the skill or experience needed to
run what was the 7th largest government in the world. But, relying on
commonsense and Godly wisdom, Ronald Reagan turned California around
and then saved the United States from economic collapse.

The last non-politician that was elected President of the United States
was Dwight Eisenhower, who united our nation and faced down the Soviet
Union. And, by the way, Eisenhower received 39% of the African American
vote.

Dr. Carson is a man of great intellect, great courage, and vast
commonsense. The one book he reads every day is the Book of Proverbs
where he soaks in Godly wisdom.

Ben Carson has far more life experience than Barack Obama had when he
was elected President as a newly minted, junior Senator from Illinois.

But, far more important, we need less Washington, D.C., political
experience and more real world experience, Godly wisdom, and
commonsense in our next President if America is to survive.

Reason #5: Ben Carson is a trustworthy conservative.

He proved that he would not compromise his values when he courageously
spoke directly to President Barack Obama about the danger of Obamacare
at the National Prayer Breakfast. Ben Carson also didn't mince any
words about the President's wrongheaded redistribution of income
policies when he said...

"When I pick up my Bible, you know what I see? I see the fairest
individual in the Universe, God, and he's given us a system. It's
called tithe. Now we don't necessarily have to [make] it 10%, but it's
[the] principle. He didn't say, if your crops fail, don't give me any
tithes. He didn't say, if you have a bumper crop, give me triple
tithes. So there must be something inherently fair about
proportionality."

Any American can understand exactly what Dr. Carson was talking about.
How could Hillary Clinton possibly respond to such clarity and wisdom?

Ben Carson is the kind of candidate we must have if we are going to
elect a solid conservative to the White House in 2016.

And, if you have any doubts whatsoever about Dr. Carson's conservative
values, just look at this brief list of where he stands on today's
important issues...

*       National Debt. Cut government spending by 10% each year, across
the board, until the budget is balanced! That's what you and I do when
things are tight, and it's what the government must do.
*       Obamacare. Repeal it! Replace it with a free market health
savings account program that begins at birth and that is owned by each
citizen.
*       Taxes. Follow the Biblical example and make it flat and make
sure that everyone has skin in the game. Everyone pays.
*       Abortion. End it now! It is barbaric, and it is not protected
by the Constitution. It contributes to a growing culture of death in
our society. [Not main stream enough.]
*       Illegal Immigration. Listen to the American people, secure our
borders. End it. [Too inflexible.]
*       Redistribution of Income. Stop it. It's un-American and it
causes universal misery as socialism always does.
*       Welfare. It not only encourages self-destructive behavior, it
is a trap that dehumanizes those caught in it. Replace it with a truly
compassionate, approach that works through churches and other nonprofit
groups, enabling those on welfare to share in the American dream.
*       Judges. Appoint judges committed to the U.S. Constitution.
*       Political Correctness. It is dangerous. It hinders progress and
divides our nation. It keeps us from solving problems and healing
America.
*       Right to Keep & Bear Arms. It's a vital part of our Bill of
Rights! End of story! We will not stop criminals by disarming Americans.
*       Democrats and Republicans. Both have been part of the problem.
They see themselves as masters instead of public servants. America
first!
*       Freedom of Religion. Freedom of religion does not mean freedom
from religion. As the Founders repeatedly said, without public virtue,
freedom cannot survive.

There's only one remaining question...

Will Ben Carson Choose to Run for President?

The answer he gives each time he is asked this question is yes, but
only if he is called by the American people and if God gives him the
direction to do so.

This is what Dr. Carson said to Newsmax reporter Bill Hoffmann on
January 7, 2014...

"If circumstances presented themselves in such a way that there were a
lot of people clamoring for me to do that [run for President]... I
would certainly have to give it consideration."

In other words, Dr. Carson believes that public office is not something
to be grasped, but rather something that one must be called to by his
fellow citizens. Dr. Carson has repeatedly made it clear that he will
run only if the American people "clamor" for him to run. That means...

It's up to you and me to "clamor" for Dr. Carson to run for President.
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