Government, society, politics, and media.

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Liberator Defibrillator - Feb 5


The Liberator is a free, biweekly Libertarian newsletter read by more than 70,000 people. Here is my recap of their February 5th newsletter:


Great Britain is piloting a Food Police program, under which officers will knock on the doors of citizens around lunch and dinner time and tell them what to do with their leftovers. "By hitting people at home, rather than in supermarkets, we can get inside their lives"


The new Massachusetts law decriminalizing one ounce or less of marijuana is now in full effect. Instead of facing jail time, those caught with one ounce or less of marijuana now face only a $100 fine and no police record. (For those of you who are wondering, Libertarians are big on marijuana decriminalization)


The mayor of Jackson, Mississippi supported a measure to ban baggy pants. When it was found to be unconstitutional, he was outraged. "...we have some issues that are much bigger than the Constitution," he said.


The new U.S. Agriculture Secretary doesn't know how many people he supervises. Though I'm sure he does know about the numerous fitness centers and cafeterias in his new workplace.


Want more? Subscribe to The Liberator! It's free and it's always interesting.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

How the government can double the tax cuts in the stimulus



The government can double the tax cuts in the stimulus package by cutting the Pentagon's budget in half.

That would save $230 billion. The current stimulus package proposes $275 billion in taxes.

It's not complicated. Look at the above graph. Is our risk of attack really six to eight times higher than England or France?

Graph from: "Do Austrians Have a Better Idea?" - Mises.org

Pentagon spending: defenselink.mil (PDF)

Thursday, January 29, 2009

My Poor Butt


I'm a clumsy guy, but I'm not this clumsy. Not clumsy enough to have fallen flat on my butt today, twice.

My gravitational challenges were due to the sad state of the sidewalks here in Boston: half of them are still covered in ice. Normally, I wouldn't be whining about it. I'll be the first to admit that my tush is padded enough to take a couple of falls. But when the governor of Massachusetts on the one hand proposes massive tax increases and on the other can't even keep the sidewalks clear, that's just one kick in the pants I can't take.

Deval Patrick is proposing new taxes on candy, juice, soda, and alcohol, as well as higher fees at the Registry of Motor Vehicles. Higher meals and hotels taxes are already on the way to the legislature.

Granted, the governor is proposing massive budget cuts as well--a surprisingly reasonable move for him. However, why doesn't our government stop focusing on how much money is going in and out and begin to focus on whether they are doing their job effectively?

In the city of Boston there is a $100 fine for apartment building owners who do not shovel their sidewalks. For commercial buildings, that fine is $150. Maybe if the city enforced these laws they wouldn't need to go to the state for municipal aid. Or, maybe if the state didn't dole out municipal aid like it was tax-free candy the city of Boston would step up their efforts. (A 2007 announcement about sidewalk fees)

It's not only the sidewalks that need work. Even as the number of emergency calls for fires declines, fire departments in Massachusetts refuse to merge with EMS agencies to achieve higher efficiency. Since 2005, the Massachusetts Department of Fire Services Administration has nearly doubled its budget.

Massachusetts spends over $50 million each year on incentives for new police officers at a time when crime rates are plummeting. This incentive program will receive $0 in cuts this year.

At the same time, the state only spent about $500,000 last year on their Teacher Quality Investment program. That budget is less than half of what it was in 2005, and with a 2009 cut of over $480,000, that program will be reduced to nothing. Do these people really think that our healthy police force needs more incentives than our dismal education system?

Let's not forget the important stuff: Massachusetts spends over $7 million each year on the Commonwealth Zoological Corporation. As part of his dramatic budget cuts, the governor is reducing that number by less than half a million--about the same amount he is cutting from incentives to teachers.

"Taken together, these measures are right and necessary steps to get us through these difficult times," said Patrick, according to a Boston Globe article on the tax hikes.

Get us through these difficult times? I think the governor is confused about who is having a hard time these days.

We are the ones having hard times. The people who'll be paying taxes on candy. You are disillusioned if you believe Deval Patrick when he sobs and moans about our poor, disheveled state.

We are the ones who are struggling to stay on our feet as life tries to kick our butts to the cold ground.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Stuck on Huck

Go suck a bee, Sparky.

One of Sparky's silliest theories of all time is that Mike Huckabee would have won the 2008 Republican presidential primaries were it not for his lack of funding. Sparky's logic goes like this:
  • Mike Huckabee was the most openly religious of all the candidates (being a Southern Baptist minister), and therefore had the undying support of the majority of Republicans, who are all religious wackos

  • Since Mike Huckabee was running a grassroots campaign and John McCain was not, John McCain was able to raise more money than Mike Huckabee

  • The only reason that largely non-religious John McCain was able to win the Republican primaries was that he was able to outspend Mike Huckabee

  • Although Mitt Romney outspent every other candidate, he did not win because he is a Mormon
Sparky is wrong.

It would be quite a task to prove that not all Republicans are religous wackos. Instead, I will prove that Republicans did like John McCain the best despite the fact that he was one of the least religious candidates.

According to the Campaign Finance Institute, John McCain did in fact outspend Mike Huckabee. In 2007 alone, Huckabee was able to raise only $9 million to McCain's $42 million.

However, Rudy Giuliani raised $62 million that same year. According to Sparky's theory, shouldn't he have gained the upper hand by January 2008? He didn't. By the end of February, Giuliani had raised only about $2 million more, Huckabee only $7 million more, and McCain about $14 million more.

According to the numbers, McCain was more popular than Huckabee all along. But wait, that doesn't take into account Huckabee's "grassroots campaign". Could it be that McCain's fundraising success was not due to the support of everyday Republicans, but rather to the support of a bunch of evil corporations and CEOs?

In 2007, John McCain raised $55 million in individual donations. Mike Huckabee raised only $15 in individual donations. If the majority of Republicans supported the religious guy, why didn't the religious guy get the most donations?

The one point that Sparky may be right on is Mitt Romney. In the same year that McCain and Giuliani spent about $60 million each, Romney spent about $110 million. Furthermore, Romney was well-known for his executive experience in business and as Governor of Massachusetts. It could be true that Republicans rejected Romney because they found his Mormon beliefs to be outlandish. It also may have been because of his political missteps on the campaign, such as when he claimed to remember hearing a speech he wasn't around to hear.

Nonetheless, Sparky is wrong about Mike Huckabee.

Most Republicans did not support Mike Huckabee. Most of them supported John McCain, and that is why he won the primaries. That's how fundraising and voting works!

Martin Luther Things


In school they teach us about Martin Luther King Jr's famous dream. Every year on the Friday before MLK day, they stop classes fifteen minutes early and play his Dream Speech over the loud speaker. We sit in last period, thankful that we are listening to the booming voice of history rather than writing an essay about it. Some of us listen with indifference, waiting for the final bell to ring. Most of us feel inspired, and we compliment our silent concentration with a knowing grin.

None of us, though, could ever comprehend what in the world Dr. King was talking about.

What is this dream? We already have classmates of all races and cultural backgrounds. We already have restaurants and movie theatres that serve every American no matter where they are from or what they look like. We just finished watching a two-year political theatre act staring the oldest and youngest presidential candidates ever, at least two women campaigning in major positions, and a black man giving a presidential victory speech. What else is there to dream about?

Dr. King's dream was an important one and it is important for us to commemorate it every year. It is a shame, though, that his most famous speech overshadows all of the other important things he believed in.

It would also be a shame if we forgot who Martin Luther King Jr. and his father were named after: Martin Luther--a German monk and religious reformer born in 1483.

Funny enough, the two men had quite a few opinions in common. So, in memory of both of them and in commemoration of tomorrow's inaguaration, here are a few quotes from Martin Luther and Martin Luther King Jr. that I think might enspire a few dreamers like me:

Even if I knew that tomorrow the world would go to pieces, I would still plant my apple tree.
-Martin Luther

Somehow this madness must cease. We must stop now. I speak as a child of God and brother to the suffering poor of Vietnam. I speak for those whose land is being laid waste, whose homes are being destroyed, whose culture is being subverted. I speak for the poor in America who are paying the double price of smashed hopes at home and death and corruption in Vietnam. I speak as a citizen of the world, for the world as it stands aghast at the path we have taken. I speak as an American to the leaders of my own nation. The great initiative in this war is ours. The initiative to stop it must be ours.
-Martin Luther King Jr.

Every man must do two things alone; he must do his own believing and his own dying.
-Martin Luther

The limitation of riots, moral questions aside, is that they cannot win and their participants know it. Hence, rioting is not revolutionary but reactionary because it invites defeat. It involves an emotional catharsis, but it must be followed by a sense of futility.
-Martin Luther King Jr.

Justice is a temporary thing that must at last come to an end; but the conscience is eternal and will never die.
-Martin Luther

It may be true that the law cannot make a man love me, but it can keep him from lynching me, and I think that's pretty important.
-Martin Luther King Jr.

You are not only responsible for what you say, but also for what you do not say.
-Martin Luther

Human salvation lies in the hands of the creatively maladjusted.
-Martin Luther King Jr.

Alive and, well....

I am alive. I've been having internet problems at my apartment in Boston and have been working full time, so posting has not made it to the top of my priority list. Also, my brain hasn't been inspired to write anything. However, maybe that will Change. Everything else is nowadays!

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Depression is Great



Let's stop this nonsense about the free market causing the economic crisis.

I challenge Democrats and Republicans alike to read this entire post, consider the facts I present, and in light of them explain to me exactly how the free market caused the oncoming depression or any other depression or recession in U.S. history.

Consider this:
  • In 1907 the United States economy was based on a free market

  • In 1907 the stock market crashed. On November 15, 1907, the Dow Jones Industrial Average stood at 53, down from almost 100 in January.

  • The resulting Panic of 1907 lasted no longer than June 1908

  • In 1914 the Federal Reserve system was established and the United States economy was no longer based on a free market

  • In 1929 the stock market crashed. On October 29, 1929, the Dow Jones Industrial Average stood at 230, down from almost 400 in September.

  • The resulting Great Depression lasted more than ten years and didn't truly end until the United States began to mobilize for World War II.
So, what really is the difference between a free market economy and an economy run by the Federal Reserve? The difference is that under a free market, our economy can survive stock market crashes and the popping of financial bubbles, whereas under the Federal Reserve the economy suffers deep recession given the same crashes.

The logic I have laid out here is simple and shallow, but it covers the basics of an economic argument that is quite complex, so it should not be dismissed on the grounds that it over-simplifies the events of the 1920's and 30's.

Do not blame problems in the economy on the free market. We have not been living in one since 1914.

Although the economic minutia are quite interesting to some people (like me), it does serve a good to present this juxtaposition to the average American and see what they think of it. So, what do you think of it? Try thinking about the economy and about history. Don't listen to what anyone tells you, including me. Read the facts and think about them.

Of course, that is only if you are ready for real Change.

Friday, January 2, 2009

You must watch this

Milton Friedman explains role of gold in Great Depression

You must watch this. If you do, you will better understand our current economic woes. Though this was clearly filmed in the sixties or seventies, the points Friedman makes about government-induced inflation apply directly to our current economic woes.

The more you know!

About Me

I find it's best to avoid filling in these "about me" things. You never know who's watching. And anyway, how would I decide which of my many personalities to portray? I wouldn't want to anger any of them. I WILL HARNESS THE POWER OF THE GOOGLE BLOGGINGS. Quiet, Pavlo. The point is that these things are dangerous. If I'm not careful, I could come across as a weirdo. Or boring. Also, I believe that every photo of me steals a little bit of my soul, so no profile picture.