An open journal featuring forays into the dark religion of conspiracy theorism, infotainment, yellow journalism, pseudoscience, and weird historical trivia. As seen on Google+... a shadowy flight into the dangerous world of a man who does not exist. -- Knight Rider opening narration
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Monday, August 09, 2010
House Ready to Pass the "Whatever" Bill
I know this for a fact: if I signed off on anything with "XXXXX" as a title, $26 billion worth of spending aside, I would be in the street before the ink dried.
Friday, August 06, 2010
Darian Worden on Practical Anarchy
The principles of liberty, classical liberalism, and anarchist society.
Help Fund the Punk Mathematics Book
Check out the previous interview and judge for yourself just how badly the world needs this book.
Thursday, August 05, 2010
Hello. I'm Drew. I'm a voter.
Tom Knapp over at C4SS manned up and admitted he has a problem.
He's a voter.
Well that monkey's on my back too, and he's got his teeth in my neck pretty deep.
"Laws are like sausages, it is better not to see them being made." ~ Otto von Bismarck
Voting is indeed part of the ugly, filthy, bloody, bone-grinding process of turning your hopes, dreams, ideals and principles into law sausages and I'm hooked. I don't vote to "win." What is there to win? I vote so the sleazy spin-meisters of the Demopublican elite know what extra hoops they have to jump through before they can even dream of getting my vote.
And I won't vote for them. I'm cruel that way.
Some say "If voting could change anything they'd make it illegal." Did that work for booze? Has "making it illegal" worked for pot, sex, cheating on your income tax? No.
If voting could change anything they'd regulate it, making sure you could only do it at approved times in approved places for approved reasons.
And if they don't approve, it doesn't count.
Yes, I voted. Schlepped down to the polling place on Tuesday, presented my papers, and poked the screen until the machine informed me that I had successfully cast my ballot.
The anarchist arguments against voting (“it only encourages them;” “if it changed anything, they’d make it illegal;” “it falsely legitimizes the system”) all strike me as sound, although Murray Rothbard’s “voting as self-defense” argument holds some water, too.
The “voting as self-defense” bit was part of what got me this time (this one last time, just this one last time, I keep promising myself).
Read more at c4ss.org
Armistice Day on Net Wars? Not Yet
Will Google and Verizon make a stand for internet liberty? Or is this the thin end of the wedge for federal regulation?
Net Neutrality, Verizon and Google: A Separate Peace?
"The buzz in telecom policy circles this morning is the word that Verizon and Google are close to an agreement that will allow the search giant to purchase from Verizon a faster tier for delivery of its bandwidth heavy services, notably YouTube, its video-sharing site.
"If the two companies reach an agreement, it could be a death blow to the entire “non-discriminatory” idea behind network neutrality: that no service provider should be give favored treatment to any service or application. FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski has made it a mission to get the “non-discrimination” principle encoded into law, to the point of calling for reclassification of broadband ISPs as regulated telecommunications carriers."
Wednesday, August 04, 2010
Time to Feel Good About Feeling "Bad"
“Reasonable people adapt themselves to the world. Unreasonable people attempt to adapt the world to themselves. All progress, therefore, depends on unreasonable people.” ~ George Bernard Shaw
For many years I believed my constant irritation with the willful ignorance and thundering stupidity copiously displayed by humankind was something to be ashamed of. But shame and regret couldn't stop the natural, logical revulsion at blatant displays of smug corruption and gleeful malice. For my own self-preservation I decided to enjoy my "bad attitude." In a moment of zen-like clarity I entered a state of "joyous antipathy." I learned damn quick that my feelings of self-righteous superiority were no less despicable than the smug boasting of any schoolyard bully.
"Hate the sin, love the sinner." ~ Mahatma Gandhi
Well, "love," is a rather strong term. I think I'll stick with a sort of "compassionate distaste" for now. I will enjoy the freedom to call "Bullshit!" when I smell it. While the freedom lasts.
The next time you hear complaints about someone having a “bad attitude,” keep this in mind: It’s entirely because of people with “bad attitudes” that you’re not a slave. For the fact that you’re not working on a chain gang building a pyramid, you should thank all those whose previous bad attitudes won your present degree of freedom. Their bad attitudes echo down to us through time as the principal obstacle to your re-enslavement in the here and now.
When, in all of human history, have those with wealth and power ever willingly surrendered the tiniest crumb of it, or extended the range of freedom by a single milimeter, merely because in the goodness of their hearts they thought it would be a nice thing to do? Have the classes that own the world ever voluntarily reduced the tribute they charged to labor?
No. Throughout history, what Adam Smith called “the masters of mankind” have been motivated by a single “vile maxim”: All for ourselves and nothing for other people. They have departed from it only in the face of resistance. To quote Frederick Douglass, power concedes nothing without a demand.
Read more at c4ss.org
Tuesday, August 03, 2010
Egalitarians Against Democracy
On the drawbacks of democracy and the advantage of a market in governance.
Consumer Spending Doesn’t Drive the Economy
The truth is that consumer spending does not account for 70 percent of economic activity and is not the mainstay of the U. S. economy. Investment is! Business spending on capital goods, new technology, entrepreneurship, and productivity are more significant than consumer spending in sustaining the economy and a higher standard of living. In the business cycle, production and investment lead the economy into and out a recession; retail demand is the most stable component of economic activity.
Read more at www.thefreemanonline.org
Travel by Quantum Entanglement
What would it mean to be instantaneously replaced by a near exact duplicate? The only difference being the origin of the atoms composing your mass?
But Monroe's work is a long way from being able to teleport a living being. The problem with such an act, Kaku says, is that "you have to be destroyed in order to have your body teleported to the other side of the room. So if you've been destroyed and teleported, then who is that person there? They have the same memory, the same jokes, the same everything, except the original was destroyed in the process of being teleported."
Read more at www.npr.org
Monday, August 02, 2010
Reason is a shameless lawyer kept on retainer by our desires
So says Mike Gibson at 'Let a Thousand Nations Bloom.'
I agree with Mr. Gibson's conclusion: "Truth seeking does not come naturally so if we care about such things, we ought to pay greater attention to the incentives for finding them."
Brief aside: isn't 'moral psychologist' another way of saying 'philosophy major?'
At the Edge, moral psychologist Jonathan Haidt recommends a thought provoking paper on the function of reasoning in human interaction. In case you haven’t heard, it turns out Reason is a shameless lawyer kept on retainer by our desires. We’re hardwired to argue to attain higher in-group status and to form winning coalitions. Contrary to what intellectuals, Kant, Rawlsians, deliberative democrats, and other wordsmiths in the academic zoo will tell you, argument is seldom about truth seeking. It is about winning. Sez Haidt:
Read more at athousandnations.com
Needed: Civics Lessons for Elected Officials
Flatcap has posted a youtube video on Government Against the People underscoring a dangerous delusion about the Federal government. This 'urban legend' of unlimited Federal power has spun out of hand. How long will we let this blatant abuse continue?
http://drewt333.blogspot.com/2009/10/serious-like-heart-attack.html
http://drewt333.blogspot.com/2009/10/serious-like-heart-attack-ii-prequel.html
Lay aside for the moment your feelings about healthcare. This is a question about Federal authority. The questioner—who talks like a Libertarian—bravely asserts that there are Constitutional limits to Federal power. Representative Pete Stark claims the Federal government “can do most anything in this country.” The people understandably jeer at this remark.
Read more at governmentagainstthepeople.wordpress.com
Friday, July 30, 2010
Wikileaks: Our Weapon Shop of Ishtar
Kevin Carson kind of spirals off into anarchotopia-la-la land in the last paragraph but I think the key takeaway item is here:
"This is a giant leap forward for the kind of networked resistance I constantly advocate in this column: not lobbying or begging the state for permission, but bypassing it and treating it as irrelevant. This is a monumental contribution to the ability of free people to organize the kind of society they want here and now, below the state’s radar and beyond the reach of its enforcement apparatus."
Liberty For All Means Immigrants Too
"Liberty means nothing if the freedom of any group is placed above individual liberty. And people do not stop being individuals if they are born in a different country. All individuals have the right to claim the fullest liberty to do as they will, provided they do not invade the liberty of others. Moving to a different part of the world and trying to improve one’s life – with or without permission from a government – does not violate anyone’s liberty."
Breaking Down the 2009 DMCA Rulemaking, Part 1: Victory for Vidders
The EFF takes on the pros and cons of the new DMCA circumvention exemptions.
The Difference between ‘True Science’ and ‘Cargo-Cult Science’
[excerpt] In the South Pacific during the Second World War, the locals noticed that cargo planes would fly into airports that had been established on their islands, and unload vast amounts of goodies. The natives wanted the wealth too, so they hacked runways out of the jungle, made “radar antennas” out of wood, and sat at “radio sets” they had also fashioned out of wood. To their eyes, it looked like the real thing, but alas, no planes arrived with cargo. The native “cargo-cult” airport had the superficial appearance of an airport, but not the reality.
Thursday, July 29, 2010
DOJ Pushing to Expand Warrantless Access to Internet Records
"(T)he DOJ is asking Congress to pass vague and broad new language meant to expand the kinds of data that can be acquired through NSLs. This morning's Washington Post article suggests that the new language could allow access to detailed web browsing history, search history, location information, or even Facebook friend requests."
Concerns Aplenty for the 2 Federal Privacy Bills
New privacy bills raise concerns over intrusive regulation of standard business communications.
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Our Communities Depend Upon Individual Nullifiers with Courage
"American culture is many things, but it is definitively not about respect for unjust authority. The entire history and culture of this place echoes a profound respect (at the very least rhetorically) for freedom and justice under the law. America has seen a strong tradition of individuals acting immediately as nullifiers to laws they deem unjust."
Seniors Know More than Polltakers - John Goodman - NCPA
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Needed: The Separation of Cable and State
"While no local government would be likely even to attempt to grant a monopoly to a local newspaper, cable television systems routinely receive such preference. More than 99 percent of the cable markets in the United States are served by only one cable company. An FCC survey found that cable systems with monopolies charged an average of 65 cents a channel per month while those that faced competition charged only 48 cents per channel."
Externalities, Libertarianism, and Social Dilemmas
"Every reasonable person understands that being part of society means living with a certain amount of annoyance and idiosyncrasy in exchange for a greater diversity of culture, opportunity, and luxury. Participating in society has such externalities built into it. Society is founded upon the tolerance of minor differences and justified on the basis that one gets more out of it than they end up losing."
Monday, July 26, 2010
No Substitute for Economic Justice
"By making capital and land artificially scarce and expensive, the state forces workers to sell their labor in a buyer’s market and thereby reduces the bargaining power of labor. The owners of land and capital are thereby enabled to collect scarcity rents.
"The economic effects are destabilizing. Income shifts from workers, who work mainly to meet their consumption needs, to rentiers with a high propensity to save and invest. The result is a chronic tendency toward overaccumulation and underconsumption.
"At the same time, the state subsidizes the most centralized, capital-intensive forms of production, leading to mass-production industry with overbuilt plant and equipment that’s constantly plagued with idle capacity."
I think he skates right by how the political class seeks to appease all sides with tax-funded, state-approved privilege and the resulting transfer of power to the state.
Crovitz on the First Amendment, Parenting & “The Technology of Decency”
Adam Thierer of the Technology Liberation Front on empowering parents and bringing responsibility back to broadcasting with WSJ columnist L. Gordon Crovitz' "The Technology of Decency."
EFF Wins New Legal Protections for Video Artists, Cell Phone Jailbreakers, and Unlockers
"The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) won three critical exemptions to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) anticircumvention provisions today, carving out new legal protections for consumers who modify their cell phones and artists who remix videos — people who, until now, could have been sued for their non-infringing or fair use activities."
Friday, July 23, 2010
A radical idea for airline security
"Americans have a constitutionally protected right, recognized by the U.S. Supreme Court, to travel freely. They also have the right not to be subject to unreasonable searches and other government intrusions. But in the blind pursuit of safety, we have swallowed restrictions on travel and infringements on privacy we would never tolerate elsewhere."
Thursday, July 22, 2010
The Great Bacon Odyssey: Fried Chicken With a Bacon Crust
Tuesday, July 06, 2010
Noblesse Oblige
Is it just me or does this sound a little, well, arrogant? Why would anyone assume that people of the Muslim faith wouldn't feel good about their historic contribution to science? Is "Nannyism" taking over Foreign Policy as well as domestic?
in reference to:"he wanted me to find a way to reach out to the Muslim world and engage much more with dominantly Muslim nations to help them feel good about their historic contribution to science, math, and engineering."
- NASA's new mission: Building ties to Muslim world | San Francisco Examiner (view on Google Sidewiki)
Tuesday, May 04, 2010
Libertarianism from A to Z
Harvard economist Jeffrey Miron, author of The Budgetary Implications of Marijuana Prohibition, is interviewed by Reason.tv's Nick Gillespie regarding his new book "Libertarianism From A to Z"
Monday, February 15, 2010
Remembering a Governor and President
As long as there are matching private contributions to mental health clinics and homeless shelters I think that would be a fitting memorial to his legacy.
Saturday, February 13, 2010
Business as usual
The Federal Government agrees to spend more money and increase taxes. How is that even news?
Vote the bums out: http://www.voidnow.org/
Protect your money by keeping it local: http://moveyourmoney.info/
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Support Direct Relief International
Create your own personal Tribute web page to share with your friends and family; it's easy to do, and you'll support Direct Relief's work in the process.
Today, Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2010, a 7.0-magnitude earthquake struck Port au Prince, Haiti. Please visit DRI and donate if you can.
"Create your own personal Tribute web page to share with your friends and family; it's easy to do, and you'll support Direct Relief's work in the process."
- Direct Relief International: Support Us - Tributes: (view on Google Sidewiki)
Monday, November 23, 2009
Thoughts on the Death of a Husband and Father
Ever wonder why junk food is so cheap? It's not just "mystery meat" and chemicals. Every "Super-sized" combo in the U.S. is subsidized by the Federal Gov't with U.S. tax dollars. Disinfo - http://bit.ly/84ItWY
The AMA calls obesity "the greatest threat to public health today." What are some of the big solutions?
Tax soda: http://bit.ly/6uD5KO
Menu labeling: http://bit.ly/81sTTb
Stop the subsidies and let the farmers put some variety back in our diet!
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Three Feds are Not Better than One
So that would be three MORE Federal Agencies plus whats left of the Reserve. That is NOT a solution, that is three NEW problems. Just dismantle the Fed and be done with it! - http://bit.ly/10rVql
Sunday, October 25, 2009
Serious Like A Heart Attack II: The Prequel
CNSNews.com - Senate Judiciary Chairman Unable to Say Where Constitution Authorizes Congress to Order Americans to Buy Health Insurance http://bit.ly/3Da6U2That little gem was posted the day before Rep. Pelosi claimed R. U. Sirius gave Congress the authority for the insurance mandate act. Excuse me? No, I'm pretty sure she said "R. U. Sirius." That just makes more sense.
Leahy, whose committee is responsible for vetting Supreme Court nominees, was asked by CNSNews.com where in the Constitution Congress is specifically granted the authority to require that every American purchase health insurance. Leahy answered by saying that “nobody questions” Congress’ authority for such an action.That's the same answer I would give if asked "Why is everything so screwed up anyway?" Perhaps a more direct question was called for:
What he should have asked was, “Madam Speaker, do you really think the Supreme Court would let you get away with such a blatantly unconstitutional move?” Had he done that, Pelosi could have said, “What a ridiculous question. They always do!” http://bit.ly/P4sBt
Friday, October 23, 2009
Serious like a Heart Attack
CNSNews.com - When Asked Where the Constitution Authorizes Congress to Order Americans To Buy Health Insurance, Pelosi Says: 'Are You Serious?' http://bit.ly/VOfWh
Just two things I want to say here:
1) The final word on interpreting the Constitution will always be from the People.
2) The 'Auto Insurance' argument is irrelevant. Several States may have mandatory Auto insurance laws, but these are not Federal laws. These laws provide no precedent.
Tuesday, October 06, 2009
G-20: Here to Save the World
Anthony Randazzo compares what the G-20 leaders say to what they have done.
Education, not Litigation!
Lisa Snell of the Reason Foundation "Out of Control Policy Blog" provides a rundown on the effectiveness of "adequacy lawsuits. "
Saturday, August 15, 2009
Caring About Health
Image by wstera2 via Flickr
Where the ‘economic argument’ regarding health care reform fails.
Professor Hans-Hermann Hoppe has a great article at Mises Daily: A Four-Step Healthcare Solution. Please give it a read. I am very much in agreement but there is a point I think needs to be addressed in the light of current events.
Points one and two, regarding government licensing and over-regulation of health care providers and the medical industry, are right on the money. Using licensing and regulation to “paper over” the cracks simply doesn’t work. Government intervention does nothing that academic accreditation and consumer watchdog organizations can’t do for themselves.
Point three paints a clear picture of how government interference rewards the irresponsible and breaks the feedback needed to provide quality service. Addressing consumer concerns creates quality service. Defending the irresponsible at the cost of the responsible creates… well you can clearly see what that policy has created.
All of these arguments provide useful talking points on health care reform. But point four has a problem. The unsentimental analysis of the economist simply opens the door to “Death panels will kill my baby” reactions.
Where the logic is true, subsidizing the irresponsible creates a market for irresponsibility, many of the causes for ill-health and infirmity lie far outside the sphere of personal responsibility. Age, for example, or the simple fact that the actions of a few irresponsible people can easily overwhelm the precautions of the responsible.
I personally think the argument for point four is simply the government is incapable of participating in the “care” portion of health care. Any given government policy, no matter how well-intentioned, devolves into a series of detached bureaucratic functionaries matching perfunctory profiles against arcane checklists and stamping “denied” or “approved” in the appropriate box. Those involved with the people themselves become dispensers of '”policy” instead of care.
Private charities can do so much more when people are free to give of their time and resources without interference. People, not “programs” provide real care. That’s what builds community and that’s what creates reform.
Related articles by Zemanta
- Rx for High Health Care Costs: Stop Protecting Inefficient Providers (cato-at-liberty.org)
- Prescriptions: Senate Bill Will Not Address End-of-Life Care (prescriptions.blogs.nytimes.com)
- Urgent Care Required (thehealthcareblog.com)
Friday, August 07, 2009
Nasty, Brutish and Short
Image via Wikipedia
In Leviathan, Thomas Hobbes presents a sad picture of the nature of mankind: “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.” Back in the days of Bellum omnium contra omnes ("the war of all against all") you could define “health care” as a strong arm, a fast mind and a sharp stick. Better sharpen those sticks, folks, it looks like "the war of all against all" is back again.
It seems everybody is plagued by signs and portents of a fascistic coup. Rush Limbaugh is seeing Nazi eagles in the Greek caduceus and Rep. Brian Baird is hiding from brownshirts. Those not seeing apparitions of Hitler (or the Joker) seem to be obsessed with Astroturf.
How will it all end? After all the carefully staged theatrics and “pay no attention to the man behind the curtain” orations are at an end, Pres. Obama will warm up the Executive Pen and sign off on his own Healthcare Package, making it an Executive Order. This will be followed quickly by a stern, fatherly speech on the theme of “Now look what you made me do.”
The skies will part, angels will sing and the Republican Brownshirts will be taken up by the Rapture. Democrats will raise high their Nazi Caduceii(?) and align with the Planetary Intelligence. The rest of us will bear witness to the Miracle of Astroturf turned to (purely medicinal) Marijuana.
The petty bickering will cease and the output of carbon dioxide will suddenly drop by two-thirds, quickly killing most plant life. The death of most animal species (us included) will follow soon after. Better sharpen those sticks.
Related articles by Zemanta
- Reductio ad Hitlerum: I See Nazis! (reason.com)
- And Now A Call To Carry Arms To Protests Against Health Care Reform (themoderatevoice.com)
- Stop your screaming... (ourownsystem.com)
Thursday, June 18, 2009
California Legislature Surrenders Database
Friday, May 22, 2009
Blogola: The FTC Takes On Paid Posts - BusinessWeek
read more | digg story
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
What to do when you're stopped by police along the road
read more | digg story
Monday, May 18, 2009
Buy USA Program puts US Workers Out of Work
read more | digg story
Thursday, May 14, 2009
California Election Measures Fail to Address State's Problem
read more | digg story
Monday, April 27, 2009
The Barack Obama Book Club
Mary Anastasia O'Grady, editor of The Wall Street Journal's weekly column "Americas," provides a useful corrective for Uruguayan Marxist Eduardo Galeano's "Open Veins of Latin America." In her recent article "The Idiot's Bible" she introduces us to "The Manual of the Perfect Latin American Idiot," written by three Latin American journalists — Plinio Apuleyo Mendoza, Carlos Alberto Montaner and Alvaro Vargas Llosa. Many baseline media sources have misrepresented "Open Veins" as the sole repository of Latin American political thought, due entirely to President Hugo Chávez's gift of the book to President Obama at the recent Summit of the Americas.
I'm hoping we can find enough copies to give the gift of political literacy to President Obama's speech writing corps and supply them with a more balanced view.
Pimping the Pandemic
Image by Fugue via Flickr
So, wash your hands and keep your powder dry.
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
National RFID Tags
Michigan Rep. Paul Opsommer, District 93, makes some pertinent observations in his post SNAKE OIL & DRIVER’S LICENSES regarding the Department of Homeland Security's "Enhanced Drivers License" (EDL) program and the federal Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative (WHTI). The EDL is a license with an RFID chip, readable from up to 30 feet away. Chris Paget has posted his experiment in RFID tag security:
Chris' gear cost less than $250. How much money have the drug cartels already spent on identity theft? Useful identities are just a commodity, easily purchased by terrorists. Adding RFID tags to drivers' licenses and passports is meaningless gesture of pacification. It provides only a new avenue of attack for well-funded drug lords and political extremists to exploit.
Monday, April 20, 2009
The California Legislature Is Being Misled
The California Assembly Committee on Revenue and Taxation is holding hearings today on bill AB 279, the “Great Schools Tax Credit Act.” This bill is much like the scholarship donation tax credit program in Florida, which is a bi-partisan success that saves the state $1.49 for every $1 it reduces state revenue.
But you wouldn’t know that if you read the Committee’s remarkably flawed official Bill Analysis.
Monday, April 13, 2009
Free World Outlaws Free Speech
Thursday, April 09, 2009
50 FOOT ROBOT STUDIOS
50footrobot.com — Publishers and creators of comic books, crossing many genres both online and soon in print. Also a graphic design house whose artists have over 10 years of experience in corporate design, web design, and the comic book creation process. Check out the dark, edgy science fiction world of "Skip Tracers" and the virtual reality murder mystery "Vent."
Wednesday, April 08, 2009
The 5 Most Popular Safety Laws (That Don't Work)
cracked.com —Is it ever possible to be too safe? Yes. Especially when the rule or law intended to protect us is so poorly thought-out that it either does nothing or creates a ripple effect of unintended side effects.
more...
Stop Spending Our Future!
read more | digg story
The Afpak muddle (part 2): How serious is the threat?
read more | digg story
Tuesday, April 07, 2009
The Serve America Act
read more | digg story
Monday, April 06, 2009
The Human Cost of Foreign Aid
read more | digg story
Monday, March 30, 2009
Personal Foul: Poor Sportsmanship as Federal Crime
read more | digg story
Friday, March 27, 2009
The Top 10 People Who Almost Destroyed Fun
read more | digg story
Saturday, March 21, 2009
The Credit Bubble Explained
The Crisis of Credit Visualized from Jonathan Jarvis on Vimeo.
A clear, straightforward look at wtf happened without the political "blamemanship" or Procrustean cant of the Demopublican/Republicrat Party.
Except for the portrayal of the "credit risk" family. I think that was a little elitist. :)
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Where I Stand
Friday, March 13, 2009
Thursday, February 19, 2009
$99 Music Videos
From: http://ping.fm/vDGZL
Thursday, February 12, 2009
Viva la evolución!
Friday, February 06, 2009
Crime Dosen't Pay Dept.
"In the midst of allegedly embezzling money from his own clients, this stockbroker received an email from someone claiming to have an inheritance for him. He lost $400,000 to the fraud scheme."
From: http://ping.fm/uLopq
Monday, December 22, 2008
Bush assailant kick-starts sales for shoemaker - CNN.com
Image via Wikipedia
From: http://ping.fm/u5Aqv
Monday, December 01, 2008
Midnight in the Career Track Switchin' Yard
But instead of getting all weepy and bitter I'm going to remind myself that because this offer exists, there may be an offer like it out there for me. So I'm passing this offer on to anyone in the range of this post who can make use of it.
I wish you success.
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Moving into the 21st century
http://www.zoybar.net/
Monday, November 24, 2008
Thursday, November 20, 2008
1001 Things to do with the Intertubes
Monday, November 03, 2008
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Friday, October 27, 2006
Friday, March 15, 2002
Wednesday, March 06, 2002
I never liked Geocities anyway...
Yeah, I've moved, and I'm going to move again fairly soon. Geocities punked out on FTP access, so now I get to shop for a real service provider. About time too.
Saturday, February 23, 2002
Friday, February 22, 2002
In Defense of Liberty
Just for the record, I am a Libertarian. It has come to my attention that many people don't know what "Libertarian" means. I am often treated to the joke (I think it's from a Dennis Miller routine) "I'd vote Libertarian but I like roads." (racous laughter on soundtrack)
Here's a nice essay on contractualization and tolerance which explains more than I can.
Our Friend, Junk Science
Well the DHMO debate rages on. I apologize, it was a joke! For more junk:
- Everything You Know Is Wrong (EYKIW)
A cleansing mental enema. - JunkScience.com
All hail the all-seeing, all-knowing and all-debunking Eye. - Junk Science in the Courtroom
This one's scary. - The Skeptic's Refuge
Careful here, this site is designed to sell books, but there's a lot of good essays too.
Friday, February 15, 2002
Interesting...
As a show of support for my fellow bloggers, I direct your attention these two Blogs of Note:
- Commentariat
Interesting and topical. - This Modern World by Tom Tomorrow
Good stuff. Ponder privacy, weep with the Sad Kitten.
Stay tuned! More to come!
Tuesday, January 29, 2002
DHMO: Pro and Con
Perhaps you've seen the warnings, perhaps not. The issue of DHMO in the environment is too big for me to ignore.
Read, and decide for yourself.
Wednesday, September 19, 2001
Remember the Fallen, Honor the Brave
You may be asking "What will replace World Trade Center?" IMHO a twin memorial. One section left in ruins, like the memorial in Hiroshima, and one section a park dedicated to the Fireman, Police, Paramedics and all other Emergency Personell who daily put themselves in harm's way.
Thursday, September 13, 2001
Warning Signs
You know, we were warned about this day. I'm not talking about Nostradamus, I'm talking about Thomas Jefferson:
The spirit of the times may alter, will alter. Our rulers will become corrupt, our people careless... From the conclusion of this war [for independence] we shall be going down hill. It will not then be necessary to resort every moment to the people for support. They will be forgotten, therefore, and thier rights disregarded. They will forget themselves in the sole faculty of making money, and will never think of uniting to effect a due respect for thier rights. The shackles, therefore, which shall not be knocked off at the conclusion of theis war, will be heavier and heavier, till out rights shall revive or expire in a convulsion.
--Thomas Jefferson, Notes on Virginia
Our liberty is under assault, both from without and within. Those who love liberty are constantly under attack, fighting a war of thoughts and words. Every day, every 24 hours, each one of us is called on to claim our individual responsibility for defending our personal liberty. Each one of us who faces the resposibility squarely, who asks the questions and challenges the authorities, brings the benefits of liberty closer to all of us.
For we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this age, against spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places.
--Ephesians 6:12:: NKJV
The struggle for liberty is not against "flesh and blood," but against the irrational fears and the philosophies based on those fears that hold us in slavery. These are the shackles that Jefferson spoke of. We must face the fact that every day brings a new tyrant, a new prince, a new power, a new ruler of the darkness, with a new philososphy of fear, a new absolute authority, a new host of wickedness.
It is part of the general pattern of misguided policy that our country is now geared to an arms economy which was bred in an artificially induced psychosis of war hysteria and nurtured upon an incessant propaganda of fear.
--Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Speech May 15, 1951
We must not submit to fear. We must not submit to the philosphy of fear that demands obedience to an immaterial ultimate authority and calls for death to unbelievers. We must not submit to the propaganda of fear that demands obedience to a corporeal, temporal authority and calls for posturings of power and strength and unreasoning retribution.
Obedience,
Bane of all genius, virtue, freedom, truth,
Makes slaves of men, and of the human frame,
A mechanized automoton.
--Percy Bysshe Shelly, Queen Mab
Wednesday, September 12, 2001
Why We Fight
Eternal Vigilance is the Price of LibertyYesterday I spoke against war, but the truth is, we are at war. This is not a new war. This war began when a human mind first conceived of liberty. Every human who desires to live with the benefits of liberty must stand as a warrior to defend that liberty. For liberty to survive this war, it must be liberty for all, and only when each one of us stands to defend our individual liberty will we truly have liberty for all.
Tuesday, September 11, 2001
Another Fallen Ally
Key Foe of Taliban Is Dead, U.S. SaysAhmed Shah Masoud, a warrior-intellectual who beat back seven Soviet incursions into his home region in the 1980s, was the victim of a bomb hidden in a television camera or on the body of a man posing as a journalist that went off at the remote base of the Northern Alliance in Khodja Bahauddin, according to Masoud's aides.
Sounds familiar, anyone remember La Penca? Someone stole a page from the CIA playbook.
Johnny get your Gun!
Chronology of terror1:04 p.m.: President Bush, speaking from an undisclosed location, says that all appropriate security measures are being taken, including putting the U.S. military on high alert worldwide. He asks for prayers for those killed or wounded in the attacks and says: "Make no mistake, the United States will hunt down and punish those responsible for these cowardly acts."
Same shit different day. You know, there are places in this world where the bombing of major buildings is business as usual. Terrorism is as old as the Bible. Terrorism is the rage of the underclass. Terrorism is the tool of those who have abandoned rationality and feel they have nothing else left to lose.
From home-grown terrorists like McVeigh to today's attacks, terrorism is what you get when the marginalized strike back at an indifferent elite. Terrorism is what you get when the gap between the "haves" and the "have-nots" grows too big and too fast. Terrorism is the knee-jerk backlash of the undeclared war on human rights that grinds us down day after day after day.
Already the war drums are sounding, listen:
"This is the second Pearl Harbor. I don't think that I overstate it,'' said Sen. Chuck Hagel, R-Neb. The Dec. 7, 1941, Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor killed nearly 2,400 people and drew the United States into World War II.
Johnny get your gun, America's going to war! Look, Pearl harbor was a military action taken by military units against a military target during a time of war. It is an insult to the memory of those who died, both in Pearl Harbor and Manhattan, to compare a military action to this criminal act of premeditated murder. An act not only criminal, but wholly immoral when viewed in the light of any rational philosophy. I have no illusions that these irrationally motivated attacks will be used as a pretext to war, but they are still in essence criminal acts. These acts call for justice, the rationally applied rule of law, not a vigilante mob.
Thursday, August 09, 2001
Basic Human Rights
American Student, Freed From Russian Jail, Is Home``It's great to be back in the land of the free ... and a country where basic human rights are respected,'' an exhausted-looking Tobin ... told reporters at a press conference in an airport hangar.
Is that a fact, Jack? Wise up, sport. If you had been arrested by federal agents for marijuana possession here, "in the land of the free", you would still be in jail!
BTW, Jack, seeing as how you and your father are such good buddies with Pres. Bush, maybe you could ask him to put a good word in for some other wrongly imprisoned folks here at home?



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