WV Farm Bureau Magazine December 2014 | Page 5

Something to Think About Don Michael, WVFB Director of Governmental Affairs God, Guns and Guts – CHRISTmas is the favorite time of the year for the Michael family. God’s love is in full bloom (as it is every day) as we focus on family, friends and the greatest gift of all – God’s gift of the Christ child. At this time of year we concentrate less on our concern about America’s challenges (which will still be there next year) and more on the many wonderful blessings we as a people continue to enjoy in this great land of the free and home of the brave. Looking at Christmases past, two of PoliticusUSA’s Archives “Top Five Presidential Christmas Quotes” have special meaning to me – one from President John F. Kennedy when I was a young teenager worried about America on the brink of war and the other from President Ronald Reagan when I was a young adult, married with two young sons and eager about the future. In 1962 with the Cuban missile crisis behind us, President Kennedy provided much needed encouragement to Americans – “It is the day when we remind ourselves that man can and must live in peace with his neighbors and that it is the peacemakers who are truly blessed. In this year of 1962 we greet each other at Christmas with some special sense of blessings of peace. This has been a year of peril when the peace has been sorely threatened. But it has been a year when peril was faced and when reason ruled. As a result, we may talk, at this Christmas, just a little bit more confidently of peace on earth, good will to men. As a result, the hopes of the American people are perhaps a little higher. We have much yet to do. We still need to ask that God bless everyone.” Shifting to 1981 President Reagan’s inspirational message noted – “On Christmas, we celebrate the birth of Christ with prayer, feasting, and great merriment. But, most of all, we experience it in our hearts. For, more than just a day, Christmas is a state of mind. It is found throughout the year whenever faith overcomes doubt, hope conquers despair, and love triumphs over hate. It is present when men of any creed bring love and understanding to the hearts of their fellow man. The feeling is seen in the wondrous faces of children and in the hopeful eyes of the aged. It overflows the hearts of cheerful givers and the souls.” Here’s wishing you and your loved ones God’s richest blessings for CHRISTmas and the New Year ahead. Turning to the topic of guns, Farm Bureau appreciates the efforts of Attorney General Patrick Morrisey to uphold our Second Amendment rights. Attorney General Morrisey led a bipartisan coalition of 21 state attorneys general in an amicus curiae, or friend of the court, brief urging the U.S Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit to declare unconstitutional a Maryland law forbidding the possession, sale or transfer of certain firearms. “We are proud to have led this bipartisan group of states in this amicus brief,” Morrisey said. “States must band together in times when they see citizens’ rights being diminished or infringed upon. If the courts decide this law passes muster, it would undermine a core part of the Second Amendment . . . This law’s broad categorical ban is no different than trying to impose a content-based ban on speech. It simply cannot be done.” Thanks Mr. Morrisey! In closing I want to reflect on our recent Annual Meeting at the Flatwoods Days Hotel and the upcoming Legislative Session. The annual meeting always provides an opportunity for great fellowship and fun as the agriculture community unites to focus on policy development to guide legislative and congressional efforts in the year ahead. Legislative insights provided by some of West Virginia’s finest public servants has become an annual highlight. Thanks again to Senators David Nohe (District 3Wood) and Dave Sypolt (District 14 – Preston), and Delegates Bill Hartman (District 43 – Randolph) and “Woody” Ireland (District 7 – Ritchie). As I noted at our meeting, “West Virginians are for