Wallops Flight Facility and Chincoteague

Yesterday we went to Mass at a nice local church (Holy Name of Jesus in Pocomoke City, MD) before continuing our vacation. First we stopped at the NASA Wallops Flight Facility visitors center, which is on the mainland right before you cross into Chincoteague.

Wallops is pretty cool; it’s a former Naval Air Station which was turned over to NASA several decades ago and is used for all kinds of nifty research stuff for the space agency. Wallops was originally intended to be a launch facility for manned spaceflight, but all those operations got moved to Cape Canaveral in Florida. Wallops, however, is still used for all kinds of experimentation (including rocket launches) relating to both manned and unmanned spaceflight. The visitor center is pretty neat too, although their signs use quotes for emphasis (which is grammatically incorrect . . . ”please” don’t use quotes to indicate emphasis).

After that we went out to Chincoteague and had a go-kart race (Melissa was almost too short to drive ;-)), walked around for a while in the town, saw the odd rotating drawbridge in action, and just chilled out. Then we went out to the beach for an hour or two (no pics; it looks basically the same as Assateague minus the ponies). Then we had a nice dinner at the excellent Don’s Seafood, featuring mostly locally-caught sea creatures. Melissa ate about 15 pounds of crab. It’s turned a little rainy today, so we don’t really have any plans except to beat the Bay Bridge traffic back home early. Check out the pictures below!

Assateague Island (With Ponies!)

Melissa and I are spending the Labor Day weekend on the Eastern Shore of Maryland and Virginia. Today we went to the northern part of Assateague Island National Seashore. In the past we’ve gone to Chincoteague on the Virginia side and entered Assateague Island there. This time we entered the National Seashore at the northern entrance near Ocean City, Maryland, for a bit of a different experience, though we’ll probably be visiting Chincoteague tomorrow and/or Monday.

Assateague Island is known for its wild ponies (which are called Chincoteague Ponies, even though they live on Assateague—go figure). On the Virginia side of the island they don’t roam wildly, which is disappointing, but on the Maryland side they are actually wild and walk around at-will. It’s pretty cool. We had a whole bunch of them walk by while we were on the beach.

Anyway, check out some pictures below!

Intolerant Tolerance

I’m heading out of town for the weekend, but I wanted to share an article from First Things before I leave. George Cardinal Pell writes about ‘intolerant tolerance‘, which is a subject I have found very interesting.

Many on the political left claim the mantle of ‘tolerance’ and predicate many of their political and moral stances upon being ‘tolerant’ of others. Gay rights and gay marriage issues are often couched in these terms, for example, and we right-wingers are oft’ labeled as being ‘intolerant’ because we have different opinions on this and other issues.

What is interesting though is that tolerance means accepting others opinions even if you disagree with them. I am ‘tolerant’ when I support and defend the rights of (as an example) anti-war protesters to march on Washington, even when I disagree with them. This, however, doesn’t go both ways these days. Left-wingers would be ‘tolerant’ to support and defend my rights to march for what I believe in too, but if I were to march against abortion or against the legalization of gay marriage I’d be labeled a misogynist, homophobic, hate-monger unworthy of speaking in the public square (and soon I might be subject to arrest for ‘hate speech’).

We must be tolerant of others’ Constitutionally protected liberty to live, speak, practice their religion, bear arms, and so on without fear of repercussion. If we, as a society, don’t protect these core, enumerated human rights, then we have truly lost the republic and our liberty.

Wrongly Terminated HS Coach Reinstated

I wrote in July about a high school volleyball coach who was terminated from his job for holding a private party at his own home to which some other adults brought alcohol which was consumed only by consenting adults, not including the coach. This whole incident is ludicrous on many levels, and is another symptom of our public schools seizing for themselves more power than they rightfully have.

Well, I’m happy to report that (according to the Frederick News Post) Brad Young has been reinstated to his coaching job.

The fact that the school fired him in the first place, however, remains troubling. Under what authority can a man be fired for private, legal events that happen in his own home? In this case especially, where Young wasn’t even the one who committed the supposed ‘offense’, what idiot thought there were grounds for his termination?

This kind of thing is bothersome (and certainly immoral, if not illegal) for a private company, but we’re talking about a government agency here. Government agencies, including public schools, have to abide by regular employment law and constitutional limits on government.

It’s Deeper than Health Care and Deficits

Janet Adamy and Jonathan Weisman wrote in yesterday’s Wall St. Journal about how the visceral outrage manifesting itself at Health Care Town Halls and other public meetings is about much more than health care. President Barack Obama’s (D) and Congress’s misguided proposals to reform our screwed-up health care system have brought the anger out of the wood-work, but the anger is indeed much deeper and about much more fundamental issues.

Yes, the health care proposals have plenty of things in them to make normal Americans mad. But we’re also mad about the ballooning federal deficits. We put a new party in the White House (and gave them large super-majorities in Congress) on a promise that they would ‘change’ this maddening federal spending, and those new leaders have promptly quadrupled the deficits we wanted them to eliminate.

And it gets even deeper than that. The out of control spending under this administration and the last are symptoms of a government that answers to itself, not to us. It’s a government that blithely oversteps the authorities granted it by the Constitution and is slowly-but-surely seizing more and more control over our lives. We saw Bush spending billions to bail out Wall Street investors and misguided car companies and angrily voted for a new direction. Obama, following his election, went right about his business with the same massive bailouts, the government seizure of banks and car companies, and then embarked on an effort to seize control of our health care.

It’s interesting that our Constitutional scholar president seems, like most of his colleagues, to have never read the 9th and Tenth Amendments. The people are mad that they are losing their republic, and in the coming elections they will likely vote accordingly.

Scott Bradford is a writer and technologist who has been putting his opinions online since 1995. He believes in three inviolable human rights: life, liberty, and property. He is a Catholic Christian who worships the trinitarian God described in the Nicene Creed. Scott is a husband, nerd, pet lover, and AMC/Jeep enthusiast with a B.S. degree in public administration from George Mason University.