Posts by AmileWilson

On the Entertainment Side!

By AmileWilson, 11 March, 2010, No Comment

IT’S ALMOST HERE!!!

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The most anticipated literary achievement since Shakespeare sonnetized his plays.  The most long awaited metrical composition of the millennia, sure to go down in the annals of history as a successor to Dante’s Comedia.  Not since Longfellow has a poet of such breadth and depth of soul been brought to the fore.  Soon, the children’s book The Fib:  A Wordy Tale, a literary masterpiece, can soon be yours!

Even now, these precious pages are being safely cradled in the womb of an enormous luxury line, (possibly the QE 2) where it will make its berth in the world’s most largest port at Long Beach, California.

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In just days, it will then take a ride on the legendary Bullet Train to America’s economic nerve center, Shreveport, Louisiana.

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From there it will be taken to the sprawling metropolis of Jackson, Mississippi on America’s answer to Canada’s mythical pony express, THE BIG RIG.  That’s a big Ten Four Good Buddies!

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The projected date of arrival in Jackson is March 16th, just nine days short of the maestro’s (Bill Wilson’s) 19th 29th birthday.  Help make this his best 29th birthday by ordering your copy of The Fib:  A Wordy Tale.

WARNING!!!

Before you buy this book, be aware that The President of the American Library Council has demanded that the corporate offices of Pippin & Maxx issue this warning to all parents.

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Should you choose to ignore this warning, you can go to pippinandmaxx.com to order your copy of

THE FIB:  A WORDY TALE.

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Conference Season and Long Term Planning

By AmileWilson, 6 March, 2010, No Comment

So for those of you who don’t know, I mostly work in the arts. So you’ll have to excuse the short post but I’m sitting at the food court at the South Eastern Theatre Conference having been only recently at CPAC!

This is conference season, which means that I’m working my rear end off attending trade shows, interviewing and trying to sell both me and my company to prospective clients.  It also means that I’m not making a whole lot.  The joys of self-employment.

Each year I plan that I’ll spend most of January through March working extremely long days in a variety of cities and making no money.  April is when my contracts that I spent the first two months securing start coming in and I actually start making money.  So when I budget my expenses throughout the year I make plans so that I’m not thrown into crisis the first quarter.

I could not help but wonder what would happen if the government practiced the same policy.  What would happen if the government actually planned ahead for the shortfalls of cash that it will one day experience?

So as I sit in a Lexington Kentucky food court typing away at this article in the few minutes I have stolen away from attending workshops and “working the crowd” I lift up the hope and prayer that one day our government will actually practice a little long term planning.

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Didn’t the GOP Build Consensus

By AmileWilson, 27 February, 2010, No Comment

This congress reeks of partisanship.  The Democrats have an overwhelming majority yet are continually blaming Republicans for being obstructionists.  The truth of the matter is that the Democrats in Congress are so partisan and so inept they can’t even get all of their own party behind legislation. But that’s another matter.

The Democrats would like to pretend that when the Republicans were in power, the GOP forced unpopular legislation through and lorded their authority over the minority party.  In actuality, let us turn back the clock to January 2001 and look at the Republican controlled Senate.  When the Republicans held a one vote majority in the Senate, Tom Daschle and his Democrat comrades raised all kinds of hell until Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott (a fellow Mississippian) proposed new rules giving the minority party extended rights (because the majority was so small).

Democrats were allowed the same number of seats on committees as Republicans, rules were changed requiring additional votes to allow bills out of committee, and other procedural changes were passed.

In effect the Republicans gave up the power of the majority in order to build a consensus with the minority party.

And Democrats still filibustered Bush appointees.  The filibuster was, in fact, the primary issue in the 2002 election.  Voters were so annoyed with the number of unconfirmed Bush nominees that they gave the Republicans a major boost in Senate seats in that year’s election.

While the majority party, the Republicans bent over backwards to include Democrats in policy decisions.  So much so, in fact, that Conservatives like me were angered at repeated concessions to the minority party!

“When we are in the minority again, you know they won’t be gentlemen to us,” I often said.

That has proven true.

When the Republicans held a majority, they actively included Democrats in the policy-making.  They even changed Senate rules to give the minority party more power.  Now that Democrats control congress, Republicans have been silenced.

Say what you will about the leadership of Trent Lott, but he truly ran a gentlemen’s Senate, full of compromises and consensus.

There might be many things the Democrats can rightly say about Republicans, but the one thing they can’t say is that Republicans didn’t respect them when they were in the minority.

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Increasing the Economic Pie

By AmileWilson, 20 February, 2010, No Comment

One of the great things that happens to me every time I go to a conference is that my mind is truly expanded beyond anything I ever thought.  The same thing is happening once again at CPAC.

The strength and creativity of the Conservative movement in social media, traditional media, fundraising and general communication is astounding.  As I go from booth to booth I see the array of services, groups, and agencies all dedicated to advancing freedom and my soul is lifted.

The most uplifting thing is that all these people are coming up with ideas I never could have thought of in my wildest dreams!  The fact that there are people succeeding genuinely makes me happy!  And then I realized, that is what separates conservatives from liberals!

A conservative loves to see others succeed.  Liberals assume that for someone to succeed somewhere else someone must be failing.  This is the problem liberals have with capitalism.  If someone is getting richer liberals assume that someone, somewhere, must be getting poorer.

This is why there is such a liberal dislike of American exceptionalism.  If America is getting a bigger piece of the pie, they assume someone else’s piece must be getting smaller.  Liberals have no vision of the pie actually getting bigger!  (Thanks to Albert Quaye with Victory Solutions for giving me that analogy in a conversation earlier today!!)

I’ve always had a vision of the pie getting bigger.  I’ve always enjoyed the notion of expanding our horizons whether economically, socially, mentally, or territorially.  Liberals don’t seem to get this.  Thus the support of government redistribution.  Thus the lack of support for the space program.

Conservatism holds the real vision of hope because only conservatism tries to increase the size of the pie so that everyone get a bigger piece.  That’s why liberalism stagnates and eventually fails every time it is implemented.

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CPAC Special Report

By AmileWilson, 18 February, 2010, No Comment

Reporting live from CPAC 2010 where we have had an amazing day of speeches, workshops, mixers and all around good times.

The energy here is unbelievable.  There is a renewed confidence in the mesage and hope that Conservatism has to offer.  The overarching message this weekend is one that we are on a path to victory in 2010.  More than a political movement, Conservatism offers hope for individuals and hope for the country.

More to come!  I’ll send extra reports this week!

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A Vision for Space

By AmileWilson, 6 February, 2010, No Comment

Science Fiction fans and other major advocates of space exploration were up in arms this week when the Obama budget was revealed cutting NASA’s budget for the Constellation program and the Ares rocket.  (“Obama Aims to Ax Moon Mission” in The Orlando Sentinel January 27, 2010, by Robert Block and Mark Matthews)

After spinning the recent Star Trek movie to his advantage and promising to take America “Where no one has gone before,” Obama once again appears to have reneged on a promise.

As a science geek myself, I cold not help but feel a little hurt too.  But at least I expected Obama to be a disappointment.  For those originally enamored with the Messianic message of the freshman senator from Illinois, any shortcomings are traumatic.

On further examination, however it is interesting to note that Obama’s budget for NASA actually increases it by around one billion dollars.

All this leaves my libertarian heart split.  Part of me looks at NASA and realizes the utter waste that is going on in the program.  NASA Scientists actually credited budget cuts for the success of the last Mars lander!  Previous projects had tried to use complex rocketry to soften landings on the planet and resulted in many destroyed landing craft.  The forced simplicity caused the scientists to have to think creatively and resulted in actual solutions to the complexity of landing on the red planet.

But a bigger part of me realizes that government has always taken an interest in the exploration and expansion of its territory.  From Columbus to Lewis & Clark on through the 1960’s government has been right there along side private industry taking the initiative to explore uncharted territory.  It has historically proved to be successful.

We explore new territories and venture out past  our borders not only because of possible economic benefits but also because it is human nature.

Humans will always want to Boldly Go and that is what drives us.  Success in business, success in love, success in exploration and adventure!  Without these mankind stagnates.

Aside from the national security advantages to space superiority, there is a sense of pride and accomplishment that makes mankind want to go further.

“We choose to go to the moon and do the other things in this decade, not because they are easy, but because they are hard.”

Thanks JFK – a democrat whose policies and outlook were more conservative than many republicans of the 20th century.

On the private side there is already a man pursuing first space and then the moon!

British entrepreneur and look alike to yours-truly, Richard Branson, has his heart set on space.  And on making money from space transit.

This man is really doing it!  He has commercialized space and is in the first stages of mounting pay-per-flight space explorations!  I bow to his greatness.

Here’s where my conflict comes in.  While I think for national security reasons, for national pride reasons, hell! for reasons of human nature and hope for a brighter tomorrow, NASA must continue to be funded, I cannot help but wonder what NASA’s role should be and what should NASA be allowing entrepreneurs to do instead?

The space shuttle was a horrible product.  It was the El Camino of space travel – passenger vehicle/cargo hauler that instead of doing either really well did both . . . . okay. . . . at best.  Only government can tolerate “Okay,” entrepreneurs know that to succeed on the market they must be exceptional.  Branson is about to launch one of the most pioneering commercial endeavors of all time and I just hope government regulators will get out of his way and let him take man into spac.

I’m not saying we don’t need NASA. . . . quite the contrary.  We need both a strong National Aeronautics and Space Administration and a strong commercial space fleet!

If mankind is to flourish it must continue to explore and adventure.  Whether to the depths of the sea or to the far reaches of the universe.

The message – we cannot cut funding for explorations to pay for “projects and needs at home” because it is those very explorations that give us hope and vision for our homes.  But government is not the only answer.  Commercial endeavors are the final and most lasting solution.  But commercial industry flourishes best in an environment protected from criminal threats.  NASA must continue to be funded as a national security priority and support must be given to those with the vision to finance private missions.

Why does a man want to go to the moon?  For the same reason he wants to climb a mountain – Because it’s there.

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More Debt, More Debt

By AmileWilson, 30 January, 2010, 3 Comments

I have a small credit card that I’ve had since high school. The card has a $500 limit is cosigned by my mother and pretty much just sits there. If I use it for a tank of gas or so, I immediately pay it off before the grace period and never carry any debt on it. I’ve been out of high school for a while now, but just never bothered changing it . . . . till this week.

I decided to at least call and see about having the limit raised because, honestly, what good is a credit card with a $500 limit? In order to do this I had to sign papers, go through a credit check, the works. So all this is happening in my life while the Senate votes to borrow an extra $1.9 trillion. Wow.

Amile Wilson Wins an Addy Award!

By AmileWilson, 29 January, 2010, 1 Comment
Amile Wilson Wins an Addy Award!

Amile Wilson one of the great authors of this blog, GrizzlyGroundswell.com has won an Addy Award for his music video

Balancing the Budget

By AmileWilson, 23 January, 2010, No Comment

In a world-wide recession, hard times hit even my humble state of Mississippi – as if we weren’t already facing hard enough time. In response, Governor Haley Barbour (R) has announced yet another round of budget cuts. What started at a $6 billion state budget has now faced cuts of 5%, 8.2% and an additional 3.2% based on yesterday’s executive statements. In all, this only amounts to $437 million cut, but many state officials are up in arms over the cuts. “These cuts will be devastating to Mississippi schools,” said state Superintendent of Education Tom Burnham in a press release. If only this were the case. If only the spending of taxpayer money was so streamlined, so effective, so waste-less that a 3.2 percent cut would cripple them. As I have reported on in the past, the Mississippi education system is fraught with waste. There are literally superintendents being paid to oversee districts with no schools. I think education is a wonderful thing and believe in fully funding public education, but part of the government’s job in funding anything is to make sure the money is well spent, not wasted or grafted. Before I will listen to any state office complain about wanting more money, let’s see just how those budgets are being used. . . . . . More than that, what I love about the south is the fact that common sense still applies. The world is in a recession, revenues are down, so what happens in Washington? We borrow more! In Mississippi, we lower spending and spend only what we have. It’s called fiscal responsibility and it’s something Obama promised us. The 2008 campaign promised us a balanced budget. Instead it has resulted in enormous, trillion dollar extensions on US debt? How long can this keep up? Mississippi was faced with a similar situation in 2003. A Democrat executive branch had continued to spend Mississippi into the red despite increases in revenues! People were sick of it. In 2003 Mississippi elected a Republican Governor and a Republican Treasurer. And not just Republicans, actual conservatives! Within only a few years, Mississippi had not only a balanced budget, but had paid off its debt entirely and was actively putting money into a rainy day fund. In the south we don’t spend money we don’t have, we don’t take things that don’t belong to us, and we show a little self-control. When we had a governor who didn’t, we threw him and his posse out. It seems that this attitude is spreading. Notoriously liberal Massachusetts made a similar decision only days ago? You hear that Washington? Take a look at Mississippi 2003. Learn from it.

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March Forward

By AmileWilson, 19 January, 2010, No Comment

The election tonight is the first major victory in the fight to win back America! Keep it coming guys! If we are to reduce the deficit and restore respect for America world wide we must not relent!

Win in 2010!
Win in 2010!

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Get Excited, But Don’t Loose the Vision!

By AmileWilson, 16 January, 2010, 1 Comment

The entire Conservative movement is ecstatic over the latest Massachusetts poll numbers.  We have every right to be. Securing enough votes to block and filibuster the totalitarian trash coming out of this Congress is enough to make even the most cynical Republican a bit giddy.

But the election isn’t over yet.  More importantly, the November election isn’t over yet either.  And no, this is not another plea for more money or volunteers for Brown. (However I wouldn’t mind if you did!)

Instead, this is a plea that in our focus on the politics of this election, we not forget the overarching moral theory upon which our views are based.

We are not a “political party,” we are a group of idealists.  We reach agreements, but we do not compromise our morals.

That’s what lost us the 2008 election.

We are the true liberals. (Look it up or log onto www.isi.org and find the meaning of classical liberalism).  Our party is not built out of some convenient coalition, it is about upholding the moral value of individual rights and that is where we must continue to take our stand.

Whatever happens on Monday, we must press forward to preserve the morality of individual independence.

If Brown is elected the fight is not over.  We WILL have to fight to seat him.  The Democrats are already saying they will block seating him until after the healthcare vote.  (Should this happen, I would love to see how it would play out if a sympathetic law enforcement officer arrest Sen. Paul Kirk for “impersonating a Senator”. . . . . .just suggesting. . . . .).

Should we seat Brown, block the government seizure of healthcare and everything we wish for play out, the battle must still go on.

We must defeat the despicable attitude of people who knowing support the government seizure of healthcare.  This attitude must be replaced by the “virtue of selfishness” as Rand described it.  (Yes liberals, there’s a bit of tongue in cheek in that title).

Below is a copy of my latest reply to an entire facebook thread concerning healthcare.  Thought I’d share.

God bless guys.  Keep up the good fight.  Remember it is not just for what works but for what is right.

The increase in government regulation exactly mirrors the increase costs in healthcare. Government does not compete, it only dominates. That’s the nature of government. I’m completely sympathetic to high medical costs. I’m self employed so have nothing but catastrophe insurance. Barely that.

The real moral question is whether or not the government has the right to seize the assets of citizens through taxes and use them to support a healthcare public option. The morality of “taking care of each other” is a completely individual subject. Is a man who donates thousands to cancer research suddenly uncompassionate because he does not do the same for AIDS research? And what of the person who donates for the a friend’s medical bills? Is he or she immoral because that is the chosen charity rather than Sickle Cell Research?

There are practical concerns here. The public option is too expensive even by the most optimistic Democrat rubrics. It doesn’t even provide better healthcare for all. Practically it sounds good but completely fails.

Above all, the question is a moral one: What is the proper role of government? Is it to preserve it’s citizen’s rights and protect the people from outside compulsion? Or is it to restrict those rights and forcefully compel the citizenry to conform to whatever whim the elected powers toss their way.

This bill, in fact the entire Democrat agenda, has become one of constricting rights and forcing people to conform to their moral structure. This is a perversion of everything America was founded upon.

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Welcome to the California Legislature

By AmileWilson, 10 January, 2010, No Comment
Welcome to the California Legislature

An interesting fact about California is that though it is only one of fifty states, it is responsible for 13% of the United States GDP. Were California its own country, the CIA World Factbook states that it would be the tenth largest economy in the world.

Great for the American economy. Not so great for American politics.

Because of its size and power, California is often excluded from American laws preventing states from regulating companies that conduct interstate commerce. The state is also such an intense bastion of liberalism that in it we can see first hand a microcosm of the policies that leftists would like to see implemented nationally.

The Perponderance of Useful Idiots

By AmileWilson, 9 January, 2010, No Comment
The Perponderance of Useful Idiots

There are now so many “major stories” in the news, it’s actually hard to keep track.

Climategate has exposed the lies and deception behind global warming.

The healthcare bill (complete with 14 tax increases), has even the most liberal of media outlets up in arms because of its secret negotiations. Fifteen Attorneys General are now threatening legal action against the Constitutionality of the bill.

On the economic side, jobless rates in December are worse than expected.

True Christmas Peace

By AmileWilson, 26 December, 2009, 1 Comment

So we have made it through another Christmas filled with presents, stockings, lights, family, copious amounts of food, and of course, discussions of the true meaning of the holiday season.

I’ve spent this Christmas season in Seattle, now honored as the second most un-churched city of the year. Even here, however, there is a continual talk of Christmas as a wonderful holiday of peace and love but any talk of peace, love, etc. seems to forget the truth of just what peace and cooperation are – both the secular and religious definition.

Here We Go Again

By AmileWilson, 19 December, 2009, 1 Comment

Everything seems to repeat itself in politics. Last year on this exact week I wrote an editorial about the bailout for a local paper in Jackson. When I started reading over things and thinking about a topic for today, I realized that the article I wrote last year, could nearly be reprinted today! Just change “bailout” to “healthcare” and the thing fit perfectly!

This annoyed me a little.

A private life in a public society

By AmileWilson, 12 December, 2009, 1 Comment
A private life in a public society

If you’re reading this blog, you’ve clearly caught onto the whole “new media” wave.

New media, social media, the whole new technology has been successful for both Republicans (it brought down Dan Rather) and Democrats (it elected Barak Obama). So why have Conservatives been so much slower to embrace these new media forms than Democrats?

Mississippi’s Government Consolidation

By AmileWilson, 5 December, 2009, 2 Comments
Mississippi’s Government Consolidation

Early this year I wrote an article for the local alternative newspaper, The Jackson Free Press, calling for a consolidation of Mississippi’s very top-heavy government. Due to antiquated systems of drawing district and county lines, Mississippi is paying millions of dollars more for extra county supervisors and school superintendents (some of whom don’t even have schools in their district!)

The original article was greeted with much enthusiasm by people on both sides of the aisle.

Everyone loves ideas like government consolidation. At least until someone starts to talk specifics.

Recently, Governor Barbour has proposed drastic government cuts including consolidating several of the state’s smaller universities into larger ones. This idea has met with a lot of resistance.

The opposition to Barbour’s proposal is not about any true policy difference. Opposition to Barbour’s plan comes from the most vitriolic of partisan and racial politics which has plagued Mississippi for years and continues to suppress our state’s success.

Merging Mississippi State University and the Mississippi University for Women is a no-brainer. The schools are 25 miles apart. And since “the W” started accepting men there has been a major push to change its name and its image. The match is perfect.

Hope From Macy’s

By AmileWilson, 28 November, 2009, 3 Comments
Hope From Macy’s

I’m not one to sit and watch the Macy’s parade. If I were in New York, sure I’d go down and check it out, but sitting at home watching it on television just isn’t my style.

That said, it was great to see the parade alive and in full swing this year! The grand scale of it all, the balloons, the bands, the floats, everything about the magic and tradition of Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade has such a meaning to America. It harkens back to a different era.

Introducing!

By AmileWilson, 22 November, 2009, 3 Comments
Introducing!

Greetings all! I’m proud to be part of the Grizzly Groundswell. Young and Conservative, I’m proud to be a believer in the free market while making my living as a photographer and filmmaker. Just produced my first feature film and have a few shorts about to hit the market.