Sierra Sage                        
Reason, Justice and Common Sense
June 2011... MAJOR CHANGES ARE COMING TO THE SIERRA SAGE...CHECK BACK

S
From the Publisher
AN OVERDUE UPDATE

I know you have been wondering about the status of the Sierra Sage. Some have told me they thought it had stopped publishing. NO WAY! The Sage, however, has taken a brief hiatus. This has been necessitated out of personal health, financial, and changing market conditions. 

I had a couple of small health related matters over recent months but am feeling fine. More lingering have been the effects of the Obama economy. The Sage has lost a considerable amount of ad revenue as our clients continue to struggle with the economic mess created by this president, this administration, and this congress of the past 4 years. For all of you who voted for him, I trust you are not liking the "change" you got and we can only "hope" that it goes away very soon! 

The reality of continued financial bleeding prompted an awareness of a new reality for me: the future of publishing is electronic. This is not the end of an old friend: the printed Sierra Sage. It is the opening of a new and exciting chapter: the introduction of the DIGITAL Sage. 

Soon the Sierra Sage will be available here as a "page-flip" magazine. It will have the same look and feel of the printed version but it will be on your computer screen. You can flip the pages, mark them, enlarge, highlight, go to links and much more. AND, if you want a printed copy, you can print your individual copy of the Sage. The digital version will also be available on your iPad, iPhone and other devices. 

All current Sage subscribers will receive subscriptions to the new site as well as other special bonuses. New readers will require a subscription. More will follow in the coming weeks.

I hope all of our existing readers will embrace this new change. I know there will be some who won't. All I can say to them is that I have lost money on the Sage for as long as I have published it. That can't continue and still have the Sage. This change will assure it will be around for a long time to come! Please join me. 




About the Publisher
Leonard A. (Len) Semas was born in 1947 in Taunton, MA. He grew up in Santa Clara, CA, the middle child of five, in a traditional family of the 1950s era. He was taught the virtues of hard work at an early age and worked since the age of 10. He was also taught basic principles of justice and common sense – reason came later!

Len was the product of a Jesuit education, graduating from Santa Clara University. He majored in biology and minored in chemistry and philosophy. He volunteered for service in the military and attended Officer Candidate School. He served 3 years from 1960-1972 and was honorably discharged as a 1st Lieutenant.

Following the military, Len returned to Santa Clara University and earned a Master of Business Administration degree. He spent the next 35+ years in various areas of employment including a stint with a large health care corporation, self employment in the real estate field, and a start-up technology company. For the past 7 years, he has been the owner and publisher of the Sierra Sage magazine and is the author of Reason, Justice and Common Sense.
About the Sierra Sage

The Sierra Sage is a monthly magazine published electronically in Northern Nevada with subscribers throughout the world. The Sage is a community publication, with a variety of content and contributors, but its hallmark is its cover essay on politics and contemporary issues. 

 

We are somewhat unique in our attempts to enlighten and provoke. Most news- oriented publications tend to advocate by stealth. While they claim an unbiased reporting of fact, nothing could be further from the truth. We have no problem with their bias; we just wish they would acknowledge it as such and stop hiding behind a dishonest claim of objectivity. We are biased  and we tell you so right up front. 

 

So what is our bias? Is the Sage a Republican publication? Well, yes  and no. Is the Sage Conservative? We would say Constitutional Conservative, but that depends on to whom one speaks – each has their own opinion. 

 

Our understanding of reason, justice and common sense, embodies views generally ascribed to Conservatism. In contrast, modern Liberalism derives largely from emotion, without regard to justice and in utter defiance of common sense. Modern Liberals believe that simply feeling something is necessary or right is a sufficient basis for its adoption. There is no requirement for an action or point of view to be either reasoned or reasonable. 

 

What about common sense? This is an area that a regular Joe can grasp but college professors, politicians, and leading intellects seem unable to. It too, is an essential part of Sage philosophy. It is a recognition of that which is either obvious or absurd on its face. Liberals will require a more extensive definition. Liberals love complication and obfuscation, but neither problems nor solutions are generally as complex as they are made to be. As Einstein observed, “simplicity is the highest form of technology.”

 

The Sage philosophy has other elements beyond its central tenet. A philosophy, to be meaningful, has to be consistent. We strive for consistency as an essential component of logic. 

 

We distinguish between private choices and public policy as an essential aspect of liberty. This is consistent with our constitutional foundations, however eroded in modern law and politics, which support the notions of free choice and limited government. Government does best when it limits itself to public policy on matters delegated to it. It does its worst when it expands beyond that and into the realm of personal choice and private behavior. 

 

We believe that the founders of this Republic were among the brightest men in history, and that they largely got it right. We take our guidance from the words and intentions of their philosophies expressed in the founding documents These grand works have been trampled by liberal theorists, jurists, politicians, and academics. Our nation will be lost if they are not restored to their rightful place in society.

 

The Sage philosophy reflects favorably on real solutions; its not just emotional salve. Feeling good is not doing good; feeding one a fish will never accomplish what teaching one to fish will. It is that simple. We reject the popular calls for bi-partisanship and compromise, as neither provide for real solutions; mostly just feel good solidarity about a middle ground that is neither wholly right nor wholly wrong. Appeasement of two opposing views is not likely to resolve itself to a correct decision, only an acceptable one. Expediency is seldom the road to truth.

 

The Sage does not publish “train wrecks, car crashes or divorces.” We understand the imperfection of man, and the tragedy that accompanies life. We  refuse to glorify the tragedy or to dwell on the imperfection. Making a mistake is often punishment itself; we see no value in dragging down people for being human and erring in their lives. The content of journalism has become more tabloid-like than ever. We think that demeans both the medium, and the society in which we live. We elect not to join the circus.

 

The Sage is not defined by dogma or ideology, but by application of fundamental precepts based on our principles. We simply favor the truth  as we see it.

Expanded 2nd edition coming - Digital (iPad, Kindle and other formats). Orders  are being accepted at special pre-publication pricing. Go to Sage Store.