No Town Hall Meetings In 4th District?
One Congressman: about $200,000 per year,
Two Senators: about $400,000 per year,
Zero town hall meetings in the 4th district and the election of November 2010: Priceless
Our elected representatives think we are the drive-over district in a fly-over state. They barely acknowledge we exist.
I challenge any one of them to come out of their ivory towers and debate me or any other constitution party candidate on the issues. I know they will not accept my challenge, because if they did, they would have to acknowledge we exist. They would have to acknowledge the people of the 4th district. They would have to defend their “good intentions legislation” with respect to the US Constitution.
Our current representatives are nothing more than overpaid lap-dogs of the lobbyists. They don’t take a position and defend it, they instead take a bad idea and try to sell it. That isn’t working out to well for them right now so they have resorted to calling us mobs, or right wing extremists or worse.
In November of 2010, send a representative you can trust to congress.
Elect the Constitution Party candidate.
VR/
Greg Cowan
Candidate for U.S. Congress 4th district
The Immorality of Government-Mandated Health Care
Dr. Cleveland is Professor of Economics and Finance at Birmingham-Southern College in Alabama.
As America’s politicians debate the issue of health-care reform, one element seems strangely missing from their deliberations: the question of the morality of gov-ernment-mandated health insurance. Is it moral for government to institute such insurance or to force employers to provide it? The current debate assumes that it is. Discussion has centered primarily on how far coverage can be extended, with no effort to defend the morality of mandated coverage.
To examine the morality of the proposed health reform we must ask the following questions: What is the role of government and what are its moral bounds? Also, how do these bounds apply to the current health-care reform debate? If, in this examination, it is discovered that government has no proper authority to insure the availability of goods and services generally, then all health- care reform proposals seeking to establish the provision of health insurance should be rejected.
How Much Is Your Liberty Worth?
Watch this video and decide.
Essay Of Freedom Contest Winners
From left to right: John Stormer (CP Founding Father and MO State Chairman Emeritus), Donna Ivanovich (State Chairman), Jesse Sullivan (1st place winner), Cindy Redburn (State Secretary), and David Wagenmaker (2nd place winner)

From left to right: South St. Louis County Chairmen Don Hosfeld, (First Place Winner) Jesse Sullivan and Valerie Hosfeld.





