Showing posts with label Tom Shaw. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tom Shaw. Show all posts

Friday, October 30, 2009

The Soda Pop Candidate

My favorite Iowa Independent has composed another great article. Since I know him to be a good, God-fearing man, I have no problem giving him all the extra exposure that I can muster. Go Tom Shaw!!!! Go Iowa!  This article was copied, with permission of the author, from the Iowa Defense Alliance website.

Guest Commentary: The Politics of Soda Pop Part Two
Posted on October 27, 2009 by Al Bregar


The Politics of Soda Pop, Part Two

By Tom Shaw

Independent Candidate for Iowa House District 8


“However (political parties) may now and then answer popular ends, they are likely in the course of time and things, to become potent engines, by which cunning, ambitious, and unprincipled men will be enabled to subvert the power of the people and to usurp for themselves the reins of government, destroying afterwards the very engines which have lifted them to unjust dominion.”

(George Washington, Farewell Address, Sept. 17, 1796)


I recently wrote an article in which I described the Republican Party’s abandonment of its core social values contained in its party platform in order to attract moderate voters. In short, I likened it to the disastrous results when Coca-Cola changed its recipe to “New Coke” in order to attract Pepsi drinkers. But the “politics of soda pop” doesn’t stop there.

Years ago I watched an interview with an executive from RC Cola on a television news magazine. He described the power and leverage that was held by both Pepsi and Coke in the soft drink market. His assertion was that although the two soda giants were in fierce competition with each other, they colluded together to make sure that no other soft drink company could successfully expand its market share. A clear example of this was provided when he told about his company not being able to purchase vending machines in order to sell its product. According to him, when RC Cola would order vending machines from a manufacturer, Pepsi and Coke would buy up the machines at a higher price in order to keep them from being used by RC Cola.

George Washington was clearly, and justifiably, concerned about the inevitable corruption which would prevail if political parties misused their power. His ominous prediction has clearly come to pass in recent years. Both major parties, Democratic and Republican, have gained such a stranglehold of power, for the sole sake of power, that they will collude together to make sure no other voice is heard. They, like Pepsi and Coke, do not want any outside competition and therefore will link hands together in order to stifle any challengers to their dominion. The two parties have become very adept at conditioning voters that they are the only game in town. Want proof? Just tell someone that you are going to vote for a candidate that is not a “D” or an “R”. You will be labeled as a nut and be told that you are just wasting your vote, for everyone knows we have a “two-party system.”

But the electorate is waking up and openly defying the parties. The ranks of independent voters are swelling and the parties are experiencing a mass exodus. “We the People” are starting to demand not only more choices in candidates, but candidates that truly represent their values. Our election system was never meant to result in “I voted for the lesser of two evils,” but rather that voters should have a range of options so that they can say “I voted for good today.”

As an RC Cola candidate, I know the challenges that I face in overcoming the party system. The parties have mutually designed the “straight ticket” voting process to purposely inhibit candidates like myself. The “straight ticket” argument is also used as leverage to force or coerce candidates to run on a Democratic or Republican ticket. I say it is time for the voters to shed their party shackles and vote based on their principles. And I end this with a reminder from Samuel Adams, “Let each citizen remember at the moment he is offering his vote ... that he is executing one of the most solemn trusts in human society for which he is accountable to God and his country.”

Saturday, October 24, 2009

A Fed Up Republican Vents


Another stellar article from Tom Shaw in Iowa. Our nation needs 100s more just like him!

By Tom Shaw
Independent Candidate for Iowa House District 8
October 23rd, 2009

I received a very interesting copy of a letter today in the mail. It was written by a gentleman who lives outside of my district, and it was addressed to Senator Snowe. The author had written the Senator to voice his disapproval of her recent vote on the health care bill. And then, the topic turned to Republican politics here in Iowa. His letter reflects the growing anger and distrust of the Republican Party, and represents the attitude of an ever increasing number of the voters in my district.

I thought I’d share a couple of excerpts from his letter:

“In Iowa, we have had several Republicans like Tom Shaw quit the party and are going to be running as an Independent for various offices. Quite frankly, I don’t blame them and am thinking about doing the same myself next year. This especially after the way the party treated Joe Wilson and your recent vote. It is d**n sad when Independents are more than willing to stand up for a party platform than a member of that very party. Just Saturday the Iowa GOP called asking for money. He hung up on me when I started to tell him how upset I was. The party thinks it is more important to win an election than advance the platform. Well how did that work out for you with Jim Leach coming out for Obama? President Bush coming out for Arlen Spector? Or a leader in the Iowa GOP party stabbing Chris Reed in the back against Harkin? And just this week we didn’t hear a word from the Iowa GOP when the head of the local NAACP came out for Vander Plaats. Could it be that they were too busy kissing “raised the sales tax twice, went to court over budget tricks, put judges on the bench who gave us gay marriage” Terry Brandstad’s ring?

“You better get used to being in the minority because you will never get the base behind you again. The base, like me, live by principle, what do you do? And don’t give me the line about having to be in the majority to get anything done. You cannot even vote right in the minority so how can I trust you later?....”

Signed
John B. Johnson
Britt, Iowa

Thursday, October 15, 2009

It IS my business...

[Tom Shaw is an independent candidate running in the great state of Iowa for the Iowa state legislature.  I wish I was part of his district so that I could vote for such a strong candidate.]


October 9, 2009

Tom W. Shaw

I have a confession to make. Simply, I have been unworried, untroubled and unconcerned. I was unwilling to take the time to study the subject of life and unenthusiastic about preserving it. Abortion didn’t affect me, so, why should I invest any thought into the debate? Although I did not believe in abortion, I was disposed to allowing the mother to make her own decision … she would have to live with it. In short, it was none of my business.

A few years back, during the process of a sexual assault investigation, I was sent to get evidence at a Planned Parenthood clinic. The alleged victim in the case decided to have an abortion and I was to pick up the aborted fetus and take it to the crime lab for DNA analysis. And to the clinic I went, totally unprepared for what I was to encounter. I told an employee that I was there to retrieve a fetus. I was immediately told that it was not a fetus, rather, it was a “product of conception.” Moments later, I was handed a small, plastic bag. (Another confession: My stomach turned violently and I almost vomited.) I did not see a “product of conception” in that bag, I saw a murdered baby. It’s hard to relate the emotional turmoil that I subsequently went through. I can, and frequently do, deal with dead bodies. But I was totally repulsed by the fact that riding next to me in my patrol car, in a cooler, packed in ice, was an innocent victim who was robbed of the opportunity to live its life.

It is my business. No longer will I allow those who support abortion to dehumanize a baby by calling it a “product of conception.”

It is my business. No longer will I fail to uphold my duty to protect all innocent life.

It is my business. No longer will I violate my oath by not defending the God given right to life.

It is my business. No longer shall I be complacent.