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How to pick up Muslim women
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in pieces?

On Apr 17, 8:12 pm, Travis <baconl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> After I pick one up how far do I get to throw it?
>
>     <http://barenakedislam.wordpress.com/author/barenakedislam/> How to pick
> up Muslim women<http://barenakedislam.wordpress.com/2011/04/16/how-to-pick-up-muslim-...>
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> * | April 16, 2011 at 2:43 PM | Categories:
> Women<http://barenakedislam.wordpress.com/?cat=598>| URL:http://wp.me/peHnV-sGb
>
> This begs the question, but why would you want to?
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After I pick one up how far do I get to throw it?


How to pick up Muslim women

barenakedislam | April 16, 2011 at 2:43 PM | Categories: Women | URL: http://wp.me/peHnV-sGb

This begs the question, but why would you want to?

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Will a trash bag do?


LONDONISTAN TALIBAN to women: "Wear a headbag or we will kill you."

barenakedislam | April 17, 2011 at 7:54 PM | Categories: Islamic Britain | URL: http://wp.me/peHnV-sJD

Women who do not wear headbags are being threatened with violence and even death by Islamic extremists intent on imposing sharia law on all of Britain, it was claimed today. Other targets of the 'Talibanesque thugs' include homosexuals. UK DAILY MAIL -  (H/T gc) -Posters for H&M which feature women in bikinis and a racy poster for a [...]

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Typical of the rutabaga iq gang.


Left Taunts, Harasses and Hurls Racial Insults at African American Man Attending TEA Party (Video)

watch?v=RgV3PZkJmk4&feature=player_embedded

Ironic that the one Black man in the leftist crowd is calling someone a token. Anyone who can vote for the party that wanted to keep his ancestors as slaves is a true token.

Wonder if Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson or the NAACP is going to stand up for the Black Tea Party member and reject these lefties calling him a token and Uncle Tom? Don't hold your breath.

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cr
j   

IBD Responds to Obama’s ‘Third World’ Rip at GOP

Filed under: Business Moves,Economy,Environment,Health Care,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 10:17 am

In a Friday evening editorial (bolds are mine), in response to President Obama’s assertion that “Republicans will make US a ‘Third World’ country’” (AFP’s headline; bolds are mine):

Excuse us, isn’t that the way we’ve been heading under Obama? Consider for a moment these trends:

• Real earnings have fallen for five straight months, and are down 1% since the end of last year.

• Consumer price inflation is growing at a 6.1% annual rate over the last three months, while producer prices are rising an even-faster 13%. According to John Williams of the Shadow Government Statistics website, if we measure consumer prices the way we did before 1992, inflation is now running at 10% a year.

• The U.S. has added $6 trillion to its debt under Obama, a sure sign of being on the road to Third World status. Three years ago, the U.S. had $7.9 trillion in debt. Today, we have $14 trillion. Bankrupt, hyperinflated Zimbabwe couldn’t do any better.

• The U.S. dollar has fallen so much and foreign nations have so little confidence in our ability to run our fiscal affairs that the “BRIC” nations — the mostly fast-growing former Third World nations of Brazil, Russia, India and China — are talking about replacing the U.S. dollar in foreign trade with the Chinese yuan.

 Just 45.4% of Americans had jobs last year, the lowest since 1983, according to census data crunched by USA Today. Among men, just 66.8% had work last year, the lowest ever.

• Obama touts the “recovery” that supposedly began in June of 2009, but a look at the data show that last year’s real private sector GDP was in fact still down 1.1% from its peak in 2007 — so all of the “expansion” has been in government, not the private sector.

• While we’re at it, under Obama, spending has risen farther and faster than under any president in history.At current rates, government at all levels will take up more than half of all economic activity by 2050.

Can’t happen here, you say? In 1920, Argentina was one of the five richest countries on Earth. Then it followed policies similar to Obama’s — kowtowing to unions, government control of industry, price controls. It crashed, burned and never really recovered.

Third World nations also either lose respect or have longstanding disrespect for the rule of law. This administration would appear to care less about the rule of law, as exemplified by the following notorious items in a far less than complete list:

As IBD’s editorial intro states: “As psychologists say, it sounds like projection to us.” It IS projection to anyone looking at the administration’s record.


Just another piece of garbage destroyed.  Was not art is any sense of the word.  Art requires talent to create.


 
 

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Do Americans Owe Their Freedom to the Marines?
Posted by Michael S. Rozeff on April 17, 2011 01:49 PM

If the Marines (and the U.S. military) had stayed home for nearly all their engagements, Americans would have been no less free. And for those few engagements that may be debatable, strong cases can be made that the U.S. government either drew the nation into war or could have avoided it. Many Americans do not believe this, however.

I give you Duncan Hunter who is a conservative Republican. In this video, he's being asked about the recent little budget impasse and his vote for it, rather than toughing it out with Obama. He makes clear that he voted for it so that the military would be paid. He explains why: "I'm not going to take a risk, and I'm not going to play chicken with the U.S. military. I owe them for my freedom more than I owe my constituents." [My added emphasis.] Hunter is an ex-marine who did two tours in Iraq and one in Afghanistan. His bio says that "he and his fellow Marines were at the center of operations in Fallujah, Iraq."

Clearly he believes what he is saying when he says he owes the armed forces for his freedom. Although he may be accused of bias, being such a strong advocate of the military, I take his attitude as being rather common in America. For example, someone on Huffington Post wrote the following: "Bottom line is that we owe our Military the freedom with which we live and the very ground we stand on. If we cannot compensate them adequately and keep the promises that we make to them, then we, as a nation, are truly lost." For another example of this idea, see the web site of the "Defending Freedom" organization. For further examples emanating from top U.S. political officials, see here.

Now, it's ludicrous to think that Marines in Iraq and Afghanistan are bringing about freedom in America. Neither the Iraqis nor the Afghanis attacked the U.S. or even threatened it with attack. They could not amount an attack on North America, certainly not any kind of a sustained attack that represented a sustained threat to freedom on these shores. The Marines and other military units in those places can't possibly be defending freedom. If anything they draw, attract, and incite retaliations against Americans from some occupants of those lands.

It is not even clear that Congressman Hunter and others who claim that the military is providing us with freedom even understand what freedom is. After a century and more of foreign expeditions of the U.S. military, is the country actually more free today? Are our lives, liberty, and property more secure from the depredations of our own governments now than in 1895? Hardly. Have our governments even moved forward on programs of greater freedom for Americans, in confirmation that freedom is the aim of our many government? Clearly, they have mostly done just the opposite.

Let's be more precise. What engagements have the Marines actually been involved in? Where were they? When were they? Why did they occur? What if the Marines had been kept at home? For a tabulation of such engagements, see the web site of Dr. Zoltan Grossman. It is impossible after perusing this list to conclude that we owe our freedom to the Marines. Most all the foreign engagements are in pursuit of various special interests, but not the freedom of Americans.

Although the U.S. government had come to some sort of accommodations with Canada and Mexico as well as with Great Britain, France, and Spain by 1895, its expansion into the Pacific, its war with Spain, and its entry into World War I signalled its decision to girdle the globe, insofar as possible. It submerged this ambition beneath a rhetoric of peace, freedom, democracy, security, and humanitarianism to the point where Americans cannot recognize their own hypocrisy. In point of fact, the military expansion has diminished freedom at home. The military draft for most of the 20th century is hardly an institution of freedom, nor are higher taxes and inflation.

Various fighting forces on this continent might be useful in defending against attack. The Marines might be one of them. But that does not imply that we owe our freedom to the Marines as currently constituted or as they have been employed for the past 120 years. The main attack on the U.S. in this period from an organized state with substantial armed force was the Japanese attack on Hawaii, a chain of islands that the U.S. annexed in 1893, and this attack followed upon unnecessary and warlike U.S. provocations. If the U.S. government had acted differently, that threat to the freedom of Americans could probably have been averted. America could probably have been secured without entering a major war in the Pacific. Even in this case which is the main clear case of an attack on the U.S., it cannot be said that Americans owe their freedom to the Marines. Rather, they were the instrument of U.S. policies in the Pacific.

As for 9/11, this was not an attack by an armed foreign state. There is no state of war between the U.S. and any antagonist, terrorist or otherwise, held to be responsible for that attack. The reasons behind that attack trace back to U.S. interventions in foreign lands. Those are what brought about whatever threat to Americans such terrorism constitutes. There is no generalized threat or war against American freedom stemming from terrorist sources. The terrorists who might like to hit targets in America do not have an agenda of destroying American freedom here in America. The Marines in Iraq and Afghanistan are not keeping Americans free from terrorists in that sense because that is not what the terrorists are after. Their objectives are more to keep Americans from using force in Muslim lands and from supporting anti-Muslim governments in those lands.

The notion that Americans owe their freedom to the Marines (or military in general) is a simple-minded idea that reduces to blind support of the American military as a tool of the national government in its expansionist aims. It is simply a slogan in support of American empire. It is a false slogan. The opposite is more nearly true. Every dollar spent in support of  the empire's worldwide military is another dollar that is a tax burden on Americans, and this burden enslaves Americans. Since half of Americans no longer pay taxes, the empire has conveniently arranged matters so that most Americans do not care and do not question its policies.
http://www.newsmax.com/Headline/BarackObama-FederalElectionCommission-Investigation-2008PresidentialElection/2011/04/16/id/393093?s=al&promo_code=C18E-1
<http://www.newsmax.com/Headline/BarackObama-FederalElectionCommission-Investigation-2008PresidentialElection/2011/04/16/id/393093?s=al&promo_code=C18E-1>

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Description: http://www.americanthinker.com/images/at-logo.gif

April 16, 2011

Atlas Shrugged Part I

By Richard Baehr

Ayn Rand's The Fountainhead was published in 1943, and a film version was released in 1949. It took a bit longer to get Atlas Shrugged to the screen. Rand's lengthy book, a 12 year effort for the author, was published in 1957, and 54 years later, Part 1 of a planned three part film version opened (on April 15) at about 300 theatres around the country. Parts 2 and 3 are planned for release on tax day of 2012 and 2013.

Thursday night, I was invited by the Chicago Young Republicans to see a screening of the movie, hosted by the film's Co-Producer Harmon Kaslov. For one night the age limit on "young" Republicans was waived. Kaslov discussed the difficulty in getting the movie made, comments he also offered in a phone interview with the Illinois Policy Institute:

Predictably, the reviews of Atlas Shrugged in the mainstream press in Chicago Friday were generally awful, and some papers chose not to review the film. The reviewer in the Wall Street Journal, Joe Morgenstern, pledged that he had really tried to be fair and open-minded, before damning the film. The local Chicago papers had nice things to say, however, about several movies in the latest run of the Palestinian Film Festival.

I did not grow up as a big Ayn Rand fan, and read little of what she wrote. That made me part of a small minority in the group of 50 or so in attendance last night, many of whom seemed to recognize scenes or specific lines, and were smiling or chuckling throughout. Kaslov made clear that the film was made with a production team and actors who wanted to work, and quickly (only 26 days for filming), and with a modest production budget of about $7 million. Many in Hollywood said they had no interest in bringingAlas Shrugged to the screen because they thought the movie would have little commercial appeal. That view is consistent with thefamous comment by film critic Pauline Kael that she was sure George McGovern would win the Presidential election in 1972, since everyone she knew (in her tiny corner of the upper west side of Manhattan) was voting for him.

I don't know if the movie version of Atlas Shrugged will be a commercial success, but 8 million Americans have bought the book, and sales have increased dramatically since Barack Obama became President. Much of this is undoubtedly due the fact that Obama started running the government much in the way Rand described government officials in Atlas Shrugged -- primarily interested in redistributing (government enforced charity), and sapping the success of society's achievers and inventers with taxes and regulations, since achieving equality of results (living arrangements, income and wealth) was the highest purpose of government.

Last year I reviewed for American Thinker a fine new intellectual biography of Rand written by Jennifer Burns Goddess of the Market: Ayn Rand and the American Right. Burns made clear that Rand lived in a world of ideas and loved intellectual combat. Avoiding intellectual combat by dismissiveness is how many on the left treat ideas and thinkers from the right side of the spectrum. As Burns describes, many on the right were also pretty dismissive of Rand in her era, due to her atheism, her opposition to the war in Viet Nam, and jealousy of her popularity with young conservatives.

The movie version of Atlas Shrugged presents an America in decline in the year 2016, with declining oil resources, wars in the Middle East, and rapidly rising inflation. Some of the cityscapes look like the bad parts of Detroit or the South Bronx (are there good parts?) . Crony capitalism is the order of the day, with the corporate losers working with their lobbyists and totally corrupted "policy institutes" and bought and paid for members of Congress, to derail the winners, and insure that the losers in the competitive market, nonetheless get their fair share of the business.

Derail is a good word to describe what passes for "managing competition" in the book and the movie, since the corporate heroine, Dagny Taggart of rail line Taggart Intercontinental, has to fight her laggard brother to get the company to invest in new track (to avoid derailments and accidents) and to make use of an untested but highly promising new metal alloy for the tracks, manufactured by Rearden Metal. It is more than a bit ironic that the result of the joint efforts of Taggart and Henry Rearden, is a high speed rail line, with long trains speeding along at up to 250 miles per hour. If such a thing could come from private industry without enormous federal subsidies, it might change the thinking of a lot of conservatives about the value of high speed rail. In any case, the scenes of the trains gliding through the Colorado Rockies are pretty spectacular.

Viewers who are unfamiliar with the story, or Rand, or the book, may find the movie confusing at times; why are corporate executives disappearing after meeting with the man in the trench coat? Who is John Galt? Do business people really speak that way and admit (proudly) that their goal is to make money? It is an entirely different experience, in general, for those who have read a book, and then see the movie version, than for those who have no idea what they will be seeing. This may be particularly true forAtlas Shrugged, since it is Rand's fullest exposition of her philosophy of objectivism, and lots of the dialogue are not there just to advance the plot.

The running time for Part I was 102 minutes, during which the federal deficit increased by just over $320 million, about the amount of spending reductions for 2011 actually realized from the recent budget deal. There are 8,760 hours in a year, and 2 of them are now a balanced federal budget. Rand would be appalled at how far we have moved towards the "collective good."

As government grows as a share of the economy, almost half now financed by debt, a film version of one of the great defenses of free markets, individualism and entrepreneurial creativity is a welcome addition to the general garbage now playing at the Cineplex. If Atlas Shrugged Part 1 is a box office success, the next two parts will be made. This is a pretty high stakes opportunity for the conservative film industry, and specifically for the producers of this movie. Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ was a huge box office success for Gibson, who financed the movie himself after it was rejected by the studios. That movie had an appeal to a large number of observant Christians, despite Gibson's Charlie Sheen-like rants through the years. I don't know how many objectivist or free market film fans are out there, but it would be nice if all three parts were made. Maybe Barack Obama will get his chance to purchase the 3 disc box set in his first year as a private citizen again in 2013. 

Update: Ayn Rand devotee Charlotte Cushman offers these thoughts:

The book Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand has been getting a lot of attention since Obama took office. In 2009 sales were higher than they have ever been since the book was published in 1957. Why is that? Americans know that they are losing their freedom and are looking for solutions. And they want answers, real answers. So many people have turned to Ayn Rand because she is a strong, consistent defender of Capitalism. Through her revolutionary philosophical ideas she was able to determine why countries eventually fall to totalitarianism and those ideas are brought to light in Atlas Shrugged.

So when the movie, Atlas Shrugged Part 1, premiered on April 15, it opened in over 300 theatres throughout the country, rather than just some theaters in a few big cities. This was because of grass-roots pressure from people expressing a desire to have the film shown in their area. The movie also had the support of the Tea Party organization Freedom Works which ran an ad for it..

The book Atlas Shrugged is near and dear to my heart. It sounds so trite to say it, because the expression is overused, but Atlas Shrugged changed my life. It is wonderful to live a life without inner doubt and contradictions. Nothing did more for my self-confidence than reading and thinking about Ayn Rand's ideas, which challenges over 2000 years of philosophy.

Therefore I had mixed feelings when I went to see the film. Would the film be able to capture the essence of the message in the book? Since many Tea Party people seem to want to see the movie, will they think that the answer to our country's problems will be in this movie? Will people understand that Atlas Shrugged is not essentially about politics? That it has a much deeper message?

The movie followed the basic story line in Part 1 of the book and I was glad to see that the movie was good. I wouldn't rate this movie as high as the classics that I love like the Sound of Music or Star Wars, and it wasn't nearly as good as the movie We the Living (another Ayn Rand movie filmed in Italy), but it was worthwhile seeing. A couple of my favorite parts, the most emotional parts, were when the John Galt line ran for the first time and the ending when Ellis Wyatt destroyed his assets and disappeared.

I do have some criticisms. The casting of some of the characters was not good. Francisco did not come across as humorous, confident and heroic as he should have and James Taggart could have come across as nastier. There was a lack of background information about the history of the relationship between Francisco and Dagny. Unless you had read the book, you would not have fully understood the scene when Dagny asked Francisco for money for the John Galt line. The pacing of the story was too fast at times. Some of the scenes could have been slower to give the audience more of a chance to think, understand their meanings and therefore feel more of an emotional impact.

If you go to see the movie and you haven't read the book, however, don't expect to get an understanding of Ayn Rand's revolutionary ideas. A few of those ideas are only hinted at in this film, but an unavoidable flaw of any movie of this book is that it couldn't possibly explore the depth of the book unless it was unusually long. Also, this is just the first third of the story and theproducers plan to get into more of the philosophy in Parts 2 and 3. So perhaps if those movies are made, they will include the answer to the question, "Who is John Galt?"

Charlotte Cushman is a Montessori educator at Minnesota Renaissance School, Anoka, Minnesota and has been involved in the study of Ayn Rand's philosophy since 1970.


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    And they really believe this krep!

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: DAILY KOSHOLE
Date: Sun, 3 Apr 2011 12:12:55 -0400 (EDT)
From: claguerra245@aol.com
To: Rhomp2002@earthlink.net




Daily Kos: Scott Walker, Fox News Show America's Becoming A Capitalist USSR

Tim Graham's picture
The leftist panic over Republican governors like Wisconsin's Scott Walker (and this week, Ohio's John Kasich) curbing union power has the bloggers at the Daily Kos is producing all the typical fringy fulminations. See the article headlined "Totalitarian Capitalism stages a show trial for teachers." Since "Anyone to the left of Atilla the Hun is regularly demonized as a communist, socialist, atheist, subversive traitor," the Kosmonaut with the byline "Arendt" is teasing out all the apparent connections between American Big Box Store Capitalism and Soviet Totalitarianism:
We have not yet arrived at true totalitarianism - with its industrial-scale elimination of "superfluous" people; but we are on the road to it. The governmental assault (by both parties -- Obama has been for Charter Schools since before Day One. Can you say Arne Duncan? ...) on teachers and unions tracks the beginnings of collectivization and the atomization of society in Stalin's Russia... 
Since the Kosmonaut found that "The baseless indictment of school teachers, ACORN, and minority voter fraud by the corporate media and GOP operatives are nothing more than show trials for the elimination of class enemies," this U.S.-to-U.S.S.R. connection somehow naturally follows: "Has anything changed in 80 years?  A Fox News host would be perfectly at home being a prosecutor at a Moscow Show Trial. They have the same relentless, one-sided, accusatory attitude and total disregard for the facts."
Outrageously, the Kosmonaut quoted from Solzhenitsyn's anti-communist classic The Gulag Archipelago and compared it to Wisconsin:
Is this not exactly what is going on in America today? Are not the educated being held up for mockery and scapegoating while their rights, their organizations, and their jobs are being summarily smashed? Are not teachers and unions being blamed for all the country's financial and social ills? The banks? The tax cuts? The endless wars? All of these real causes have been disappeared under a tsunami of denial and whipped up cultural hatred.
Contempt for any kind of thinking is a hallmark of the rage-filled Tea Party and the theocratic fundamentalists. The same was true of communists.
The blog post ended with the slogan "Welcome to the open-air Gulag that is America today". 
Share this

Comments

#1 If Wisconsin...

If Wisconsin is the beginning of totalitarianism, it has a long way to go before catching up to its southern neighbor, The Land of Stinkin! Our governor here, Pat Quinnochio, raises taxes on the private sector people to give raises to public employees. The deficit? Why he's going to borrow 6 billion and pay it off in the future when the economy is better! These KosmoNuts Do belong in a gulag. Maybe then [But I doubt it!], they might really appreciate the freedom they ehjoy as a result of Capitalism!
"Old Soldiers never die, they just fade away"!

#2 Daily Kos blog should be named...

THIS IS YOUR BRAIN ON DRUGS
Don't try this at home, kids! Your brain may not recover!

#3 Amen, Tim!! The level of

Amen, Tim!!
The level of delusion over there is positively jaw-dropping!

#4 How about

The Daily Kooks
or
The Daily Krooks
or
The Daily Coprophage
?
hbnolikeee

#5 As usual, a leftist accuses

As usual, a leftist accuses others of what his side is actually doing.
Totalitarianism?  Isn't that what the teachers' unions want to be?  They want the right to dictate all the terms, and yank taxpayer money away from the states to do it. It's the very imitation of Soviet Russia where the apparatchiks lived high on the hog at the expense of the proletariat.
A Fox News host would be perfectly at home being a prosecutor at a Moscow Show Trial. They have the same relentless, one-sided, accusatory attitude and total disregard for the facts.
[  ]
Contempt for any kind of thinking is a hallmark of the rage-filled Tea Party and the theocratic fundamentalists. The same was true of communists.
Good everloving grief!!  Fox???  Rage-filled Tea Party????
Has this guy listened to MSNBC lately??? Does the name Ed Schultz ring any bells???
 
 

#6 The psychological term for this

is "projecting". It's a standard Ayers/liberal ploy to draw attention away from what they are doing.

#7 Here's an example of that

Here's an example of that rage-filled Tea Party...
Oh, wait!!
 

#8 Huh?

Wasn't the Soviet Union the People's refuge from capitalism? Weren't all the Workers United? Didn't everybody have a job, health care, a pension? Why is Arendt upset that the Revolutionary Peoples Collective crushed capitalism and gave us the USSR?
Americans keeping their own earnings is a Civil Right! Demand your Civil Rights!

#9 America is becoming Stalin's USSR all right...

...and that very rapidly, but thanks to the Kenyan Comrade Chairman, capitalism ( as in free enterprise of any kind) will not be a part of it, so the Kossacks need not worry.
And as long as they keep American Idol on the air, keep putting those People Magazines on the racks at the supermarket, and keep allowing the jock-sniffing sports talkers on the radio, the regime will have little to fear from any revolt by the government-educated, compliant sheeple, who traded their love of freedom for "security" a long time ago. 
-Dave
It's either Obama or America. There cannot be both.

#10 Bread and circuses, Dave

Bread and Circuses.

#11 mb, Exactly

And don't forget the cake.
I guess you have noticed I am not a little disgusted with a large percentage of my fellow Americans, who appear blissfully oblivious to what is rapidly happening to our country.
At least now I have a better understanding of how Winston Churchill must have felt in the 1930s, as he saw so clearly what was coming.
Sad that so many of his fellow countrymen pretended otherwise, even right up until the day Goering's bombs began falling on London.
Of course by then, it was too late.
-Dave
It's either Obama or America. There cannot be both.

#12 For the Morons at Daily Kos:

Totalitarian Capitalism is an oxymoron.
Totalitarianism is based in government and Capitalism is based on private ownership.
Here is an oxymoron that might help you understand: smart dimwit.

#13 'Dos were dah dayz!

Soviet UNION ... Hello!
I remember when (at the age of 18) I went to apply for a job at the GM plant in Michigan.
"Are you a member of the Union?"
"No."
"Well, you have to be a member of the Union to get a job."
"How do I become a member of the Union?"
"You have to get a job."
"Huh?!"
Shortly after, I ended up working at the ill fated A&P. They filed for bankruptcy in 1980/81. I was twenty, still in college; which was about to be put on hold.
I showed up for my shift and the doors were locked, the lights were off. We waited for nearly twenty minutes before the Union rep showed up to inform us employees that the store went out of business.
After I got home I decided to call the help number on the back of my union card.
"Hello."
"Yes, I worked for A&P in Mason, Michigan and I'd like to know what the Union can do to help."
"Call this number, they'll be able to assist you further."
Optimistically, I took down the number, then dialed the number.
"Michigan Unemployment Office."
I realized then that I would never see a dime of the dues that I paid for nearly two years. I also realized that Michigan was in a Depression, not a recession! I remembered reading once that Georgia was a 'right to work State'. So, like so many Michigander's, I packed up and moved down to Atlanta and never looked back.
A few years later, I was blown away when I saw that Eastern Airlines filed for bankruptcy, in a 'right to work State' no less, shutting down over a Union labor dispute. Every person whom worked for Eastern lost their job, as well as, their pension. I hired a few former Eastern employees who previously thought they were set for life, only to take a $7/hr job driving straight trucks.
Keep up the good fight Gov. Walker and Company. Bust the Unions, before they bankrupt our businesses.

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