Thursday, November 05, 2009

Reboot revisited: To Think Or Not To Think - That is the Term Limit Question

This post has grown out of my previous, carefully worded, cool headed post (er… rant) against the “Reboot Congress” and “Term Limits” crowd, and I think I need to bring some of the commentators points up to the surface. In the comments, Mxdg replied to me that,

“…Maybe voting them all out won't work and most likely will hurt but you haven't convinced me that term limits are a bad thing. The pipe dream of people learning about positions of pols and how it effects the country and voting responsibly, while being something I would dearly love to see, is just that, a dream.”

I replied, in part that, due to the reams of existing regulations, regulatory agencies, laws and byzantine committees, sub committees and ad hoc committees... which are in place before a rep arrives in D.C., and which continue on during and after their terms have ended; not to mention the gazillion measures and bills striving for their attention, and the importance of knowing which influential person favors which… the 'legislator', especially the new representative, has to rely upon their aides who have experience in the capital, those who make up the local bureaucracy, to tell the new member who supports what, what he should support, and what he should oppose, and what it is that the bills themselves actually mean (their having grown too long to be able to bother with actually reading them(!)).

It is only through experience, favors done and returned, connections made, gained and strengthened over time, that a legislator can hope to get to the point that they can themselves begin to steer the course of their office and their vote.

If we pass a law to substitute for our vote, to override our ability to make an intelligent choice between candidates on our own; not only do we enshrine stupidity into the electoral process (not only will good and bad both be turned out, but even the possibility to make an intelligent decision between them will be ruled out), but the weak legislator will be replaced by even more powerless ones who have no possibility of attaining any significant understanding and influence of their own, and the result will be that those who 'aide' the process, career minded bureaucratic aides focused on their own long term futures, influence and power, will become even more needed by our ‘elected’ representatives, ever more relied upon and powerful, than they now are.
The elected representative, who can’t serve more than two terms, would become a mere figurehead, having not even the possibility of ever attaining actual power over the process.

In short, if you think it's bad now, while legislators and their aides still actually care about the results of elections, imagine what it will be like when those who have the actual power will have been permanently entrenched, and won't give a rat’s ass who wins.

The problem is NOT in the number of terms that our elected representatives are allowed to seek, it is in the existing regulations, regulatory agencies, laws and byzantine committees, sub committees and ad hoc committees, concerned with things congress has no constitutional authority to be concerned with, which We The People have allowed and even encouraged, to entrench itself in Washington D.C.; what allowed them to take root, what waters and fertilizes them and cross pollinates them, is the fact that we allowed our govt to interfere in the free enterprise system, to make ‘safe’ decisions for us, by law, so that we could shuck some of our own personal responsibility – a veritable dinner gong for the power hungry to rush towards the feeding trough.

Teddy Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, even more so than FDR, rang that dinner gong, and along with the complicit and instigating aid of proregressive legal minds such as Oliver Wendell Holmes, and ‘educators’ like Wilson, they established in our society and laws a pragmatic disdain for principle, a disregard for property rights, and a reverence and trust for x-spurts to regulate and supervise the market for us – to replace our own thoughts and choices, with their legal decrees.

No aid, no progress, is going to be made by replacing even more of our ability to choose, with more of their decrees.

Missing The Point
To this, ZZMike replied that
"The argument against term limits is that it takes a few years to "learn the ropes" and get really good at being a Congressman. So by the time you know which way is up, you're out.
The arguments for term limits are Harry Reid, Nancy Pelosi, Ted Kennedy, maybe even Richard C. Byrd, and any number of people who've been there forever."

A common sentiment, but, IMHO, it is missing the real point by a long shot. It is not so much missing the forest for the trees, as missing the trees for the one tree you've got your face pressed up so close to, that the bark is getting stuck in your teeth.

Let me try it this way. I say that the 'no term limits' option is like continuing to taking a slow acting poison, while fighting for the 'enforce term limits' option is like taking lethal doses of cyanide. ZZMike and others take a narrow look at my position and argue that I've got the roles reversed, that it is instead the ‘no term limits’ position that is the lethal dose of cyanide, and ‘enforce term limits’ that is the slow acting poison.

Do you see what’s wrong with that picture? While on one hand I do think they are wrong, that Pelosi & Reid are not foul incumbents because they can win unlimited terms, but because they've enacted rules and regulations that do things like supply defacto financing for incumbents campaigns, through mailers and so forth... but on the other hand, that is missing the real point entirely!

What I'm arguing is, is that that is not the argument! My argument is that it is foolish to argue over which way you'd like to be poisoned, the real argument is that we must stop allowing ourselves to be poisoned at all! Period!

We need to realize that govt is the way it is, because we've allowed it to pass laws that are unreadable, and that subvert or circumvent the constitution, in order to 'make things safe' so we don't have to think for ourselves, so that we can avoid thinking for ourselves, so that each of us is, in light of some group we belong to (worker, consumer, investor, etc), too big and sacred to fail!

Rather than deciding to commit massive time and resources to what would certainly be a multiple year effort in order to pass a constitutional amendment to impose term limits, which at the very best, in my estimation, would only switch out the players while the same game continues on unabated; we should instead choose to commit massive time and resources to publicly examining what it is our constitution actually means (and a sufficient understanding is not that difficult to acquire), how current practices, rules, regulations and agencies are either a-constitutional or flat out un-constitutional, and so we should actively work towards electing representatives who will work towards repealing them brick by brick – and our time and vocal attentions should be focused on keeping a Tea Partyish political 'consumer reports' type eye upon them, holding their feet, and votes, to the fire.

It may indeed be difficult to accomplish this, but no other measure will work, certainly not term limits, they will only distract us from the real issue, and sink us deeper into the constitutional hole we are already in.

Sneaking A Peak
ZZMike also said that the Founders
"… also figured that someone would run for Congress, take time off from the family business (usually a farm), do his bit for a couple of years, then go back home and let somebody else have a shot at it."

At the risk of sounding too ‘Pie in the sky’, if we remove the unconstitutional agencies, rules, regulations and powers from the hands of our legislators, then they will again have a less complicated system and limited scope of concerns; concerns which will not support corrupt aims or opportunities to feather their nests more than their own farms and businesses would offer them, and they might again consider serving in congress to be a worthwhile duty and honor, instead of a long term desire for personal gain.

It is not limited or unlimited congressional and senatorial terms that corrupts politicians or attracts corrupt politicians; it is a system that has been recentered around a corruption of our constitutional republic. Allowing the Fed govt to wield its power in the free market, corrupts both the market and our Govt, and our Rights are trampled in the process.

The free market is based upon incentives, not guarantees; risks, actions and choices freely made, not forced upon them - a free government is based upon impartial laws defined and delimited by a Constitution, which defends the right of its citizens to choose freely.

A free Govt is based upon objective law: lady justice blindfolded, her scales weighing matters without favor or prejudice, in order to dispense Justice – her sword ready to defend the innocent and to punish the unjust.

When Govt and the Free Market intermingle, Lady Justice is made to peek beyond her blindfold, giving unjust favor to those which an influential lawmaker favors, and in turn, the market will use its wealth to invite, bribe and control, the favors of the government, which in turn will use it’s sword to force the market to ‘choose’ it’s favored desires.

The free market is based upon incentives, not guarantees; actions and choices freely made, not forced upon them - a free government is based upon impartial laws defined and delimited by a Constitution, which defends the right of its citizens to choose freely. Allowing the two to mingle, forces ‘choices’ upon us, and dissolves impartiality, and guarantees the corruption of both.

The "Safe Choice" Means No Choice
ZZMike said
"As I remember, one of the reasons the Founding Geezers had Senators sit for longer terms than Representatives is so they wouldn't have to be so dependent on drumming up the vote."
Yes they did... and the 1920's version of 'term limits' was a campaign finance reform that was to 'democratize' the Senate, that would put power 'in the hands of the people', a push for ‘hope and change!’… which was the 17th amendment. It took the election of Senators out of the hands of the locally elected State representatives – in direct opposition to one of the Founding Fathers most deliberately designed hierarchical features of our Constitution, that would ‘cool off’ the passions of the House, into nothing different than a more concentrated version of the House of Representatives with triple the length terms.

Even more than the 16th amendment (Income Tax, The Fed, etc), the 17th amendment has damaged our govt - almost beyond repair.

The Senate was designed to be a deliberative body, several arms lengths removed from the passions of the people, concerned with and answerable to the real concerns and interests of their States and the nation as a whole. Senators were to be elected by their state legislators, those locally elected representatives who were closest to the people themselves (closer even (by presumed district size) than those elected to the House of Representatives). These representatives who the Senators had to earn the votes of, would much more likely be known by, and know the real needs and concerns, of their constituents, and who would choose the best and most experienced representatives from among themselves, or some similarly person of competence and character.

This kept the Senate at several arms lengths from the rabid popular hue and cries of the moment. The popular whims and flash points of the day, which are so easily demagogued, was what the House of Representatives was designed to respond to – the Senate on the other hand, was to be a deliberative body, one which could serve as cooling off chamber, weeding out unwise, populist passions. And it could do so, because it didn’t need to curry favor from the populace, which would be consumed by those popular whims and flash points of the day, but from elected officials who knew the people, but also knew more about the issues themselves and were able to make cooler headed judgments, and see to it that Senators paid more mind to the real substantive concerns of their state. And because the Senate held terms of six years, it would need even less, to be concerned about those hot-button issues.

The 17th amendment was pushed through on similar populist grounds to today’s ‘reboot congress’ and ‘term limit’ mania, it rode a proregressive wave of 'throw the bums out' and 'make them more answerable to us!' demagoguery, spurred on by, ironically enough, corruption in Chicago Style Politics of Illinois, and promised hope and change for the People!

Predictably, what it in fact did, was make it almost guaranteed that Senators would have to mug for pictures, kiss babies and zoom around the state to be seen as much as possible, and heard saying less and less of substance, and worse, it made them answerable NOT to a handful of knowledgeable members of state legislators, who themselves were plugged into not only the peoples concerns, but the more valid concerns of the state as a whole - it made them have to sell themselves to passionate interest groups across the state, it made them have to stage huge campaigns, and it made it necessary for Senators to spend huge amounts of time catering to the whims of interest groups and those few who most influenced them – it guaranteed that no Senator could ever really know the constituents who would elect them - and vice versa.

Rather than give power to the people, it made them more anonymous and powerless.

The Real Point
The real point, is that a republic requires a carefully structured and delimited government rooted in and bound by a written constitution, representative of and answerable to, a moral, principled, people, who are not only willing to pay attention to the issues and carefully elect their representatives, but who understand that it is their duty as citizens, to do so.

Arguing that we are no longer that people, and so we must consume more and more poison, is an insane plan to restore the health of the Republic.

We must educate ourselves; we must encourage our neighbors to become educated as well. We must seek to remove the responsibility of educating our children, from those who are teaching them the exact opposite of what they need to know – the pragmatism (ala John Dewey, the founder of modern diseducation) – and return the responsibility of educating children to parents who will seek an education for them that is rooted in the principles our Founders understood, and which enabled them to write our Constitution.

That process cannot be shortened, the burden cannot be reduced, by legislating short cuts.

Think... or be prepared to be told what to think.

Tuesday, November 03, 2009

One Raccoon passes on into the One Cosmos

One of the One Cosmos Raccoon's has passed on...

One of the great things about the internet, is that I've gotten to know people from across the world that I've never met... and one of the special ones, 'Ximeze', I've really enjoyed getting to know over the last couple years... always looked forward to her name popping up... and enjoyed our conversations... and because of the nature of those conversations, reflections, quips & teasing, I feel as if I knew her better than many people I know in my own neighborhood... but... saying goodbye to someone I physically knew only through her name and words... what a strange new world...

goodbye Ximeze,


we'll miss you so very much.













(Thanks to her friend, Todd, for the pics)

Gagdad has put up a very nice bon voyage.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

A sincere message to Reboot Congress and Term Limit supporters - THINK!

I just got an email from someone I very much respect, and while I understand the sentiment of the message, I very much disagree with it. In part it says,

"In November of 2010 the entire House of Representatives will stand for re-election; all 435 of them. One third of the Senate, a total of 33 of them, will also stand for re-election. Vote every incumbent out. And I mean every one of them. No matter their Party affiliation. ... Two years later, in 2012, vote the next third of the incumbents in the Senate out. We can do the same thing in 2014 ...I am also suggesting term limits ..."

Well.

You can check back through my previous two plus years of posts to see how rarely I've ever cursed, do that, in order to get a gauge how emphatic I am being in the following message to the Term Limit and 'Vote them Out' 'Reboot Congress' movements... with one slight qualifier, that many of those who favor these actions, I deeply care for and respect, in person and online.

Ahem - warning blue language below...

Ok, here we go....

Take fucking responsibility for your own god damned civil and moral responsibility as Free men and women, as citizens of America, to know who your candidates are, what their positions and records are, and then VOTE! Learn for yourself whether a candidate is worth a god damn or not! If he is, strengthen him! If Not, WORK to vote him the hell out!

THE ONLY THING THAT VOTING OUT EVERYONE WILL ACCOMPLISH, WITH NO DIRECTING INTELLIGENCE OF CHOICE ON YOUR PART, IS WHAT ANY ACTION WITHOUT INTELLIGENCE BEHIND IT CAN ACCOMPLISH! FUCKING STUPIDITY AND MAYHEM!!!

Do you know who will benefit? Do you know who will be in power when all the 'don't know jack shit' new politico's come to town?

THOSE WHO WERE THERE BEFORE THOSE YOU REPLACED CAME TO TOWN, AND WHO WILL BE THERE WHEN THE NEW FACES LEAVE - THE FUCKING GOD DAMN BUREAUCRATS, INTERNS AND AIDES WHO KNOW HOW THE SYSTEM AND REGULATIONS WORK!!! VOTING THEM ALL OUT WILL MEAN PUTTING THE UNELECTED AND UNSEEN PEOPLE IN TOTAL CONTROL AND POWER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

TERM LIMITS?! TAKE MY PREVIOUS RANT AND AMP IT UP BY TEN POWERS OF TEN!!!!!!!!!!

IF YOU WANT TO BE AN AMERICAN, TAKE THE GOD DAMN TIME AND ENERGY IT TAKES TO GOOGLE UP THE RECORDS OF YOUR REPRESENTATIVES, AND ACT ACCORDINGLY!!!

EMPHASIS ON ACT!!!

Here's an idea - INSTEAD OF WATCHING AMERICAN IDOL, READ THE CONSTITUTION! LEARN WHAT IT MEANS!!! LEARN WHAT IT MEANS TO BE AN AMERICAN!!!

TALK TO YOUR NEIGHBORS WHO KNOW EVEN LESS THAN YOU DO! SPEAK UP AT HOME, AT CHURCH, AT BAR-B-Q'S AND GET TOGETHER'S!!!

DO SOMETHING TO SAVE YOUR NATION!!!

STOP TAKING THE GOD DAMN COWARDS WAY OUT, OF TRYING TO PASS LEGISLATION THAT WHAT WILL SUBSTITUTE FOR YOUR UNWILLINGNESS TO THINK AND ACT ON YOUR OWN!!!

HOW IN THE GOD DAMNED HELL DO YOU THINK WE GOT IN THIS SITUATION IN THE FIRST PLACE!!!

YOU FUCKING DEBASED POSTERITY BUNCH OF GOD DAMNED SELF WILLED MORONS!

Ok, done. Sorry. Unfair in the extreme, I know, but... a man's got to rant what a man's got to rant.

Monday, October 26, 2009

The Best of Times, or the Worst of Times?

Gambling on the outcomes
I was forwarded a very interesting article (a newsletter by John Mauldin, that is worth getting, here's the preview link) on the prospects for our economy, which sees some coming economic hardship and impending gloom, but is essentially optimistic for the coming years... and if the actions of the FED and businesses in the marketplace were the critical ones affecting the health of our economy, I'd agree with his optimism.

But, IMHO, they are not. Personally, I don't think the future of the financial markets lies with the financial markets.

I've no doubt that they would eventually recover and adjust... if they are not held back. But I think Mauldin would do better to look outside the financial, Internet and manufacturing sphere's, if he wants to see their future - because they don't control it. What does control them, what can hold them back, is the government enacting controls over what they can and cannot do, and the chances of their best intentions not holding the markets back, is, I think, nil.

I watched the epitome of a little bureaucratic nullity on CSPAN this morning (the passage begins at 18:10-18:55), talking about interfering in the Internet through the Orwellian 'Net Neutrality' issue. Dem member of the FCC, Michael Copps, gave a 'don't worry, we're in control' speech that begins by noting that the Internet has enormous power, and has developed and spread to the unimaginable degree it has, without controls... but that growth has been only an 'infancy', and that infancy must now be guided, it's openness must now be 'controlled', so that it will remain open.

Logic check anyone?

Throughout his grey little monotonous-olog, he repeatedly utters the word 'transparency' like a bad case of the hiccups... and I've no doubt he means the same 'transparency' which candidate Obama spoke about promising to provide in the development of automotive, financial and healthcare policy - none whatsoever.

His telling phrase, the sum of all D.C. pontifications, is this one, "History tells us that when technological capabilities to exercise control, combined with the financial incentive to do so, some will try to turn this power and this opportunity to do so, to their own advantage. That doesn't mean I expect this to become normal business practice, but even if it is only a few who try, the risk to our interconnected and interdependent Internet, is too great to take. I'm not into riverboat gambles that everything will be fine, if we just look the other way."

In other words, the integrated system of financial incentives of providers and consumers to deliver services and satisfaction such that it results in profits, which built the Internet into the scope which no 'expert', private or public, foresaw even 10 years ago... is now seen in this 'transformative age' as fraught with would be tyrants - in the business world. Methinks if you dared play the roulette wheels on his riverboat, you'd best look under the table to be sure there were no levers running from them to where he is standing... but if you could look under his table, I don't think you'd find the view to be transparent at all.

Government bureaucrats, who invariably see themselves as fully knowledgeable and capable of creating rules and regulations to 'guide' the growth of what they don't understand, in this case the Internet, and despite the fact that it is government whose core focus and reason for being, is power, rather than profit, IT, Govt, being in control of the enormous power of the Internet, with its ability to affect and control hundreds of millions of lives, lifestyles, ideas and business, that power can be trusted to the Govt to NOT be tempted to turn that enormous power, in its control, to its, and its supporters and friends, advantage.

That is a bit of thinking without any hope of explanation, justification or even a shred of decency. Did Copps miss the Twentieth Century? Lenin? Mussolini? Hitler? Stalin? FDR? Castro? Mao? What history tells us, is that when technological capabilities can be used to control a people, it will be government that will step up and seize that power, if it is not prevented from doing so, by its own people. Unfortunately, the only point in time where the people have that possibility of checking their government, is during it's initial growth, where the people are so enamored of governments promises of aid and benefits, they ignore what will obviously result.

That is the mindset that is now intent on taking control of the Internet, the auto industry, the financial industry and the medical care industry - and any corner of any industry not affected by those, will surely be overwhelmed by Cap and Trade and other Glowbull Warming regulations and taxes.

There are very few serious historians and economists, who don't acknowledge that FDR's New Deal policies (A relatively kind critique from UCLA is here, or a more realistic and comprehensive look can be found in FDR's folly) extended a sizable recession of likely 1 to 2 years duration, into the 12 year Great Depression.

FDR too had pay czars, and too-big-to-fail justifications for interfering in every aspect of the economy, in order to prevent business from suddenly doing what it has little or no incentive to do, by instead giving total power to govt bureaucrats and politicians in the hopes that they won't do what they have every incentive, including ignorance, to do - abuse their power.

The housing industry, financial industry, manufacturing industry, Internet, etc, I have no long term fears for... if they are allowed to operate as they see fit - keeping in mind their core focus is the growth of their products and profit.

The govt, whose core focus is control, power and dispensing of favors, if it is allowed continued control, or even further powers, over our industries, will continue to pursue its interests - gaining more control, power and dispensing of favors - and to the extent it is successful in doing so 'to benefit the public', our liberty, prosperity and financial forecast will be bleak, with ever more crippling effects and extending the duration of those effects.

Just like the 1930's... but probably worse. Btw, do you know how FDR succeeded in controlling aspects of Americans lives that the constitution was NEVER intended to even enter, let alone control? By the proregressives favorite passage, the interstate commerce clause.

Know how they're intending to mandate, compel, force, you to sign up for Govt healthcontrol? Yep, interstate commerce clause... but only after laughing at your daring to think that the constitution would in anyway hinder their using their power to do whateverthehell they felt like doing... such as Nancy Pelosi, Speaker of the House, sworn to uphold and defend the Constitution of The United States of America, when asked by a reporter

“Madam Speaker, where specifically does the Constitution grant Congress the authority to enact an individual health insurance mandate?”
Speaker of the House of Representatives Pelosi answered “Are you serious? Are you serious?”When the CNSNews reporter replied “Yes, yes I am.”, Pelosi only shook her head before taking a question from another reporter.

Her office later replied to a follow up email, with a reference to a press release entitled, “Health Insurance Reform, Daily Mythbuster: ‘Constitutionality of Health Insurance Reform.’” which states that Congress has “broad power to regulate activities that have an effect on interstate commerce. Congress has used this authority to regulate many aspects of American life, from labor relations to education to health care to agricultural production.”


Steny Hoyer, majority leader of the House of non-Representatives hinted on just what power he thought he didn't have, when asked the same question, answered with reference to the proregressives other favorite interpretation of open candy store clause, the General Welfare clause,

"House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) said that the individual health insurance mandates included in every health reform bill, which require Americans to have insurance, were “like paying taxes.” He added that Congress has “broad authority” to force Americans to purchase other things as well, so long as it was trying to promote “the general welfare.”

Here are the Founders understanding, key documents that informed their understanding, and early relevant Supreme Court commentaries on the Interstate commerce clause, Article I, Section 8, Clauses One (General Welfare),

"The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States;"

and Three ,

"To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes;"

pay special attention to James Madison to Professor Davis, and Joseph Stories commentary), and the General welfare clause, or Madison's recounting of the writing of the section during the Constitutional Convention,

"...That the terms in question were not suspected in the Convention which formed the Constitution of any such meaning as has been constructively applied to them, may be pronounced with entire confidence; for it exceeds the possibility of belief, that the known advocates in the Convention for a jealous grant and cautious definition of Federal powers should have silently permitted the introduction of words or phrases in a sense rendering fruitless the restrictions and definitions elaborated by them.

Consider for a moment the immeasurable difference between the Constitution limited in its powers to the enumerated objects, and expounded as it would be by the import claimed for the phraseology in question. The difference is equivalent to two Constitutions, of characters essentially contrasted with each other--the one possessing powers confined to certain specified cases, the other extended to all cases whatsoever; for what is the case that would not be embraced by a general power to raise money, a power to provide for the general welfare, and a power to pass all laws necessary and proper to carry these powers into execution; all such provisions and laws superseding, at the same time, all local laws and constitutions at variance with them? Can less be said, with the evidence before us furnished by the journal of the Convention itself, than that it is impossible that such a Constitution as the latter would have been recommended to the States by all the members of that body whose names were subscribed to the instrument?

Passing from this view of the sense in which the terms common defence and general welfare were used by the framers of the Constitution, let us look for that in which they must have been understood by the Convention, or, rather, by the people, who, through their Conventions, accepted and ratified it. And here the evidence is, if possible, still more irresistible, that the terms could not have been regarded as giving a scope to Federal legislation infinitely more objectionable than any of the specified powers which produced such strenuous opposition, and calls for amendments which might be safeguards against the dangers apprehended from them...."


See if you can spin those original meanings, into their modern meaning. Betcha Kant.

The greatest observer of American mind and practices, was de Tocqueville, his observations are such that they can, and are, often used by democrat, republican & (classical) liberal, but generally speaking, if you read a quote from him that sounds optimistic, it was probably taken out of context. In this, from Democracy in America Pt 1, he makes an observation about the American tendency to manage problems they face, one mode stems from the ground up (Tempting to mention 'Tea Parties'), the other from the top down Statist mode,

"...The partisans of centralization in Europe are wont to maintain that the Government directs the affairs of each locality better than the citizens could do it for themselves; this may be true when the central power is enlightened, and when the local districts are ignorant; when it is as alert as they are slow; when it is accustomed to act, and they to obey. Indeed, it is evident that this double tendency must augment with the increase of centralization, and that the readiness of the one and the incapacity of the others must become more and more prominent. But I deny that such is the case when the people is as enlightened, as awake to its interests, and as accustomed to reflect on them, as the Americans are. I am persuaded, on the contrary, that in this case the collective strength of the citizens will always conduce more efficaciously to the public welfare than the authority of the Government. It is difficult to point out with certainty the means of arousing a sleeping population, and of giving it passions and knowledge which it does not possess; it is, I am well aware, an arduous task to persuade men to busy themselves about their own affairs; and it would frequently be easier to interest them in the punctilios of court etiquette than in the repairs of their common dwelling. But whenever a central administration affects to supersede the persons most interested, I am inclined to suppose that it is either misled or desirous to mislead. However enlightened and however skilful a central power may be, it cannot of itself embrace all the details of the existence of a great nation. Such vigilance exceeds the powers of man. And when it attempts to create and set in motion so many complicated springs, it must submit to a very imperfect result, or consume itself in bootless efforts...."

de Tocqueville did such a good job observing not only the America of his time, but the nature of it, what it required and meant,

"It is not, then, merely to satisfy a legitimate curiosity that I have examined America; my wish has been to find instruction by which we may ourselves profit. Whoever should imagine that I have intended to write a panegyric will perceive that such was not my design; nor has it been my object to advocate any form of government in particular, for I am of opinion that absolute excellence is rarely to be found in any legislation; I have not even affected to discuss whether the social revolution, which I believe to be irresistible, is advantageous or prejudicial to mankind; I have acknowledged this revolution as a fact already accomplished or on the eve of its accomplishment; and I have selected the nation, from amongst those which have undergone it, in which its development has been the most peaceful and the most complete, in order to discern its natural consequences, and, if it be possible, to distinguish the means by which it may be rendered profitable. I confess that in America I saw more than America; I sought the image of democracy itself, with its inclinations, its character, its prejudices, and its passions, in order to learn what we have to fear or to hope from its progress. "

"If America ceases to be good..."
There's a quote that's attributed to de Tocqueville, "America is great because she is good. If America ever ceases to be good, America will cease to be great.", which I was surprised to find he didn't actually say. It doesn't appear in Democracy in America, or in his letters - I could swear I'd read it as well. But while those words don't appear, it is interesting that the gist of it does, between, from his letters

"According to continental notions, a nation which cannot raise as many troops as its wants require, loses our respect. It ceases, according to our notions, to be great or even to be patriotic. "

And from Democracy in America,

"It is no doubt of importance to the welfare of nations that they should be governed by men of talents and virtue; but it is perhaps still more important that the interests of those men should not differ from the interests of the community at large; for, if such were the case, virtues of a high order might become useless, and talents might be turned to a bad account. "

together with this observation (which also calls up an earlier discussion here about Authority) from Chapter XIV, in the section on 'Notion Of Rights In The United States',

"No great people without a notion of rights-... After the idea of virtue, I know no higher principle than that of right; or, to speak more accurately, these two ideas are commingled in one. The idea of right is simply that of virtue introduced into the political world. It is the idea of right which enabled men to define anarchy and tyranny; and which taught them to remain independent without arrogance, as well as to obey without servility. The man who submits to violence is debased by his compliance; but when he obeys the mandate of one who possesses that right of authority which he acknowledges in a fellow-creature, he rises in some measure above the person who delivers the command. There are no great men without virtue, and there are no great nations—it may almost be added that there would be no society—without the notion of rights; for what is the condition of a mass of rational and intelligent beings who are only united together by the bond of force?

...The same thing occurs in the political world. In America the lowest classes have conceived a very high notion of political rights, because they exercise those rights; and they refrain from attacking those of other people, in order to ensure their own from attack. Whilst in Europe the same classes sometimes recalcitrate even against the supreme power, the American submits without a murmur to the authority of the pettiest magistrate. "


, which boils down to that quote - in short, if he didn't say it, he should have!
And again, he was also impressed by our ability to "Tea Party", to spontaneously form associations amongst ourselves in order to resolve a situation, he noted that,

"In no country in the world has the principle of association been more successfully used, or more unsparingly applied to a multitude of different objects, than in America. Besides the permanent associations which are established by law under the names of townships, cities, and counties, a vast number of others are formed and maintained by the agency of private individuals.

The citizen of the United States is taught from his earliest infancy to rely upon his own exertions in order to resist the evils and the difficulties of life; he looks upon social authority with an eye of mistrust and anxiety, and he only claims its assistance when he is quite unable to shift without it. This habit may even be traced in the schools of the rising generation, where the children in their games are wont to submit to rules which they have themselves established, and to punish misdemeanors which they have themselves defined. The same spirit pervades every act of social life. If a stoppage occurs in a thoroughfare, and the circulation of the public is hindered, the neighbors immediately constitute a deliberative body; and this extemporaneous assembly gives rise to an executive power which remedies the inconvenience before anybody has thought of recurring to an authority superior to that of the persons immediately concerned. If the public pleasures are concerned, an association is formed to provide for the splendor and the regularity of the entertainment. Societies are formed to resist enemies which are exclusively of a moral nature, and to diminish the vice of intemperance: in the United States associations are established to promote public order, commerce, industry, morality, and religion; for there is no end which the human will, seconded by the collective exertions of individuals, despairs of attaining."


A Founding Father Speaks To Us Still
All of which is the exposition of the summing phrase that been attributed to him,
"America is great because she is good. If America ever ceases to be good, America will cease to be great.",
and the heart of which, long before de Tocqueville made his observations, John Adams explained why it was so, and how it would become so. A Defence of the Constitutions of Government of the United States of America. In this he examines the following line,

“The people never think of usurping over other men’s rights.”

What can this mean? Does it mean that the people never unanimously think of usurping over other men’s rights? This would be trifling; for there would, by the supposition, be no other men’s rights to usurp. But if the people never, jointly nor severally, think of usurping the rights of others, what occasion can there be for any government at all? Are there no robberies, burglaries, murders, adulteries, thefts, nor cheats? Is not every crime a usurpation over other men’s rights? Is not a great part, I will not say the greatest part, of men detected every day in some disposition or other, stronger or weaker, more or less, to usurp over other men’s rights? There are some few, indeed, whose whole lives and conversations show that, in every thought, word, and action, they conscientiously respect the rights of others. There is a larger body still, who, in the general tenor of their thoughts and actions, discover similar principles and feelings, yet frequently err. If we should extend our candor so far as to own, that the majority of men are generally under the dominion of benevolence and good intentions, yet, it must be confessed, that a vast majority frequently transgress; and, what is more directly to the point, not only a majority, but almost all, confine their benevolence to their families, relations, personal friends, parish, village, city, county, province, and that very few, indeed, extend it impartially to the whole community. Now, grant but this truth, and the question is decided. If a majority are capable of preferring their own private interest, or that of their families, counties, and party, to that of the nation collectively, some provision must be made in the constitution, in favor of justice, to compel all to respect the common right, the public good, the universal law, in preference to all private and partial considerations.

The proposition of our author, then, should be reversed, and it should have been said, that they mind so much their own, that they never think enough of others. Suppose a nation, rich and poor, high and low, ten millions in number, all assembled together; not more than one or two millions will have lands, houses, or any personal property; if we take into the account the women and children, or even if we leave them out of the question, a great majority of every nation is wholly destitute of property, except a small quantity of clothes, and a few trifles of other movables. Would Mr. Nedham be responsible that, if all were to be decided by a vote of the majority, the eight or nine millions who have no property, would not think of usurping over the rights of the one or two millions who have? Property is surely a right of mankind as really as liberty. Perhaps, at first, prejudice, habit, shame or fear, principle or religion, would restrain the poor from attacking the rich, and the idle from usurping on the industrious; but the time would not be long before courage and enterprise would come, and pretexts be invented by degrees, to countenance the majority in dividing all the property among them, or at least, in sharing it equally with its present possessors. Debts would be abolished first; taxes laid heavy on the rich, and not at all on the others; and at last a downright equal division of every thing be demanded, and voted. What would be the consequence of this? The idle, the vicious, the intemperate, would rush into the utmost extravagance of debauchery, sell and spend all their share, and then demand a new division of those who purchased from them. The moment the idea is admitted into society, that property is not as sacred as the laws of God, and that there is not a force of law and public justice to protect it, anarchy and tyranny commence. If “Thou shalt not covet,” and “Thou shalt not steal,” were not commandments of Heaven, they must be made inviolable precepts in every society, before it can be civilized or made free.

If the first part of the proposition, namely, that “the people never think of usurping over other men’s rights,” cannot be admitted, is the second, namely, “they mind which way to preserve their own,” better founded?"

And the answer is no, it cannot. All of our Rights, rest upon our Right to our Property, it is the foundation of all of our political rights, and it is a very great mistake to consider it as being a ‘economic right’.

Just as the current assault of government healthcontrol has nothing whatsoever to do with Healthcare, but with the enabling of government to control more of our lives, it is being done so in precisely the manner that control of the internet is being taken, and in which Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution have been misused - they operate solely on the basis of obfuscating, infringing upon and downright destroying your Right to hold and dispense of your Property as you see fit - none of the Statists plans can be accomplished without that, and even more fundamentally, it denies your right to make the choices you deem necessary and desirable for, and in, your own life.

The internet has grown and spread at the phenomenal rate it has, precisely because it has been free of government regulation and control. The range of opinion and content available on the internet already includes every conceivable viewpoint, and more still, and it is in no need of government aid or assistance.

The same can be said of America itself. Freedom will not be aided by weighing it down with government controls, regulations or any other forms of 'assistance'. As Calvin Coolidge said,

“…About the Declaration there is a finality that is exceedingly restful. It is often asserted that the world has made a great deal of progress since 1776, that we have had new thoughts and new experiences which have given us a great advance over the people of that day, and that we may therefore very well discard their conclusions for something more modern. But that reasoning can not be applied to this great charter. If all men are created equal, that is final. If they are endowed with inalienable rights, that is final. If governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed, that is final. No advance, no progress can be made beyond these propositions. If anyone wishes to deny their truth or their soundness, the only direction in which he can proceed historically is not forward, but backward toward the time when there was no equality, no rights of the individual, no rule of the people. Those who wish to proceed in that direction can not lay claim to progress. They are reactionary. Their ideas are not more modern, but more ancient, than those of the Revolutionary fathers….”

Such ideas are not of progress, but of regress, from freedom and down to tyranny. Despite the silliness of statists such as Copps, this is not a gamble at all, it is a case of the house doing its best to fix the tables in favor of the House.

It must not be allowed to stand. Please, in one of the very few worthwhile French phrases: "Laissez-faire", leave us alone!

Talk to your neighbors; interrupt comments and jokes that support trading liberties for goodies. Contact your Senators and Representatives. Make yourself heard, and assure them you will do the same come 2010.

Monday, October 19, 2009

White House: Conservative Ideas are Untermensch -Updated

White House Urges Other Networks to Disregard Fox News

I suspect that whether or not this little cartoon of mine is seen as being over the top, depends upon whether you are looking at this now... or at some point of time in the future. I'll be thrilled if 10 years from now, this is snickered and laughed at.

But in the near future, there's a Net Neutrality vote coming up this Thursday... there are more Healthcontrol votes coming very soon after... there are FCC diversity in broadcasting 'guidelines' in the works by Mark Lloyd, Cap and Trade taxation plans and other Global Warming initiatives... all of these are MAJOR issues, with huge implications, and threats, to our Individual Rights, our Liberty, and Freedom.

Such issues require, and demand, a free, unrestrained debate. When the government publicly announces, as a matter of policy, that you and your ideas, 'the opposition', are less worthy than those whom they favor... a line is in the process of being crossed.

Whether or not they are able to cross that line, and if so, how far they are allowed to cross over that line, or whether they are pushed back to the right side of the line - or whether they step right over it and never look back - depends upon the reaction of the public, We The People. Let's hope that this becomes the norm as far as reactions and characterizations of such comments by those in power, "Obama's dumb war with Fox News"... we'll see.

Just keep in mind, that telling each other that "Oh, don't worry, they don't really mean anything by it... they won't really hurt anybody..." has a poor track record of working out well. Add to that, a government drive to act on progressivist faux scientific agenda's... and we should all have a queasy feeling in our stomachs.

There were others who were proud to think of themselves as being members of a forward thinking democracy, until suddenly It Was Too Late,

"What no one seemed to notice," said a colleague of mine, a philologist, "was the ever widening gap, after [THE YEAR DOESN'T MATTER], between the government and the people. Just think how very wide this gap was to begin with, here in [THE NAME OF THE COUNTRY DOESN'T MATTER]. And it became always wider. You know, it doesn’t make people close to their government to be told that this is a people’s government, a true democracy, or to be enrolled in civilian defense, or even to vote. All this has little, really nothing, to do with knowing one is governing.

"What happened here was the gradual habituation of the people, little by little, to being governed by surprise; to receiving decisions deliberated in secret; to believing that the situation was so complicated that the government had to act on information which the people could not understand, or so dangerous that, even if the people could not understand it, it could not be released because of national security. And their sense of identification with [THE LEADERS NAME DOESN'T MATTER], their trust in him, made it easier to widen this gap and reassured those who would otherwise have worried about it."

..."The dictatorship, and the whole process of its coming into being, was above all diverting. It provided an excuse not to think for people who did not want to think anyway. I do not speak of your ‘little men,’ your baker and so on; I speak of my colleagues and myself, learned men, mind you. Most of us did not want to think about fundamental things and never had. There was no need to. [THE NAME OF THE PARTY DOESN'T MATTER]. gave us some dreadful, fundamental things to think about—we were decent people—and kept us so busy with continuous changes and ‘crises’ and so fascinated, yes, fascinated, by the machinations of the ‘national enemies,’ without and within, that we had no time to think about these dreadful things that were growing, little by little, all around us. Unconsciously, I suppose, we were grateful. Who wants to think?

"To live in this process is absolutely not to be able to notice it—please try to believe me—unless one has a much greater degree of political awareness, acuity, than most of us had ever had occasion to develop. Each step was so small, so inconsequential, so well explained or, on occasion, ‘regretted,’ that, unless one were detached from the whole process from the beginning, unless one understood what the whole thing was in principle, what all these ‘little measures’ that no ‘patriotic [THE NAME OF THE NATION DOESN'T MATTER]’ could resent must some day lead to, one no more saw it developing from day to day than a farmer in his field sees the corn growing. One day it is over his head.

"How is this to be avoided, among ordinary men, even highly educated ordinary men? Frankly, I do not know. I do not see, even now. Many, many times since it all happened I have pondered that pair of great maxims, Principiis obsta and Finem respice—‘Resist the beginnings’ and ‘Consider the end.’ But one must foresee the end in order to resist, or even see, the beginnings. One must foresee the end clearly and certainly and how is this to be done, by ordinary men or even by extraordinary men? Things might have. And everyone counts on that might.


(Read the full excerpt from "They Thought They Were Free", The Germans, 1933-45 by Milton Mayer - remember, history doesn't repeat, it rhymes... repeatedly)

The IDEAS matter, the methods they use to implement them matter, the way they deal with their critics matters, the respect they show the Rights and Property Rights of Individuals matters, the willingness to 'allow' or override your ability to make your own choices for your own life, MATTERS.

And more than all of that, the way you respond at the first sign of trouble matters.

Have you responded to your elected officials? Have you responded at all?

Yes, IT MATTERS.
*********************Update**********************
In a comment I made at the Gunslinger's, I said I'm not hurling the nazi charge at the left, but I am pointing out that the tactics are very much similar, and that the lesson needs to be learned... not that anyone today are the equivalent of the nazi's, but that the tactics of a party urgently pushing hurried crisis legislation, incrementally assuming more powers to the govt to handle more and more decisions in business and culture that would not normally be allowed to govt, or would be acceptable if it did, are very similar.

We need to swat away the 'you're saying they're nazi's!' comments and begin noticing that the tactics are common to any govt moving towards tyranny, and they are not at all confined to 1930's Germany.

Our Constitution and Bill of Rights didn't enshrine free speech, freedom of the press, freedom of association, sanctity of contract, takings clause, gun rights, etc, because they were the most important and valuable of our individual rights, but because those were the most politically important rights, which if kept secure, would prevent a tyrant from successfully taking power and extinguishing all of our rights. With bailouts, business takeovers, proposed net neutrality acts, defacto 'fairness doctrine' measures, and targeting of an unapproved press... that is arguably the road being paved for us to walk down... will we go down it?

There was no Tea Party movement in Germany, and that may make all the difference for us... may....

Well there was a hopeful occurance yesterday, when the network bureau chiefs of the Washington D.C. halted the Obama administrations attempt to exclude Fox news from an interview with its pay czar.
Obama White House Rebuffed, As Other Networks Stand Up for 1st Amendment, Fox News "The White House said Feinberg would give interviews to members of the White House TV pool – with the exception of Fox News. The other members of the cost-sharing pool – CNN, ABC, NBC, and CBS -- objected."


And that is good news... but noting the fact that that is in itself NEWS... where else but Fox, CNSNews... and a few blogs... do you see it? Not at the New York Times... not at CNN... not at MSNBC... not at ABC News... this wasn't a "This is Wrong!" moment, but more of a "Oh... we can't get away with That" moment.


"May" is still very much the operative word.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Louis L'Amour: Laconic Law - From Cicero to Blackstone to You



During vacation last week I made a point of trying to 'keep it light'.

I'd just finished Cicero's works 'The Republic' (treatise on the Commonwealth) and 'Laws', and Seneca's 'On the shortness of life/Life is long if you know how to use it', and for the first time in many a moon, I was looking to read something that didn't have a weighty nature. Boethius's 'Consolation of Philosophy' kept tugging at me through my PocketPC, so when we were going through a store, I looked for some light reading, and picked up Louis L'Amour's "Sackett", it has been decades since I've read a Western, and thought that'd be nice, safe, harmless shoot 'em up fun.

Louis L'amour fans are probably chuckling right about now.

While Sackett mostly sticks with a 'simple' action story of Good vs Bad, the laconic hero, William Tell Sackett, in between brushes with bad guys, picks up a book at his brother's house and draws meaning and order from it, into his life. Tell, while not a strong reader, is drawn to this particular book, and a favorite of mine, Blackstone's commentaries on the Law. He thumbs the pages and locks in on a passage that is part of,


"...And this is what we mean by the original contract of society; which, though perhaps in no instance it has ever been formally expressed at the first institution of a state, yet in nature and reason must always be understood and implied, in the very act of associating together: namely, that the whole should protect all its parts, and that every part should pay obedience to the will of the whole, or, in other words, that the community should guard the rights of each individual member, and that (in return for this protection) each individual should submit to the laws of the community; without which submission of all it was impossible that protection should be certainly extended to any...."


Tell says to himself,


"It took me a spell, working that out in my mind, to get the sense of it. Yet somehow it stayed with me, and in the days to come I thought it over a good bit."


, and this short action Western, is the 'simple' working out of that passage into everyday life by a man facing the option of living outside of, or within, the Law - and discovering where The Law truly lives. He comes into conflict with the women of his dreams who is repelled by his shooting of two men he knew to be villains intending to kill him, and in response to her angry "Do you believe in killing people?", he responds,


"No, ma'am, not as a practice. Trouble is, if a body gets trouble out here he can't call the sheriff... there isn't any sheriff. He can't have his case judged by the law, because there aren't any judges. He can't appeal to anybody or anything except his own sense of what's just and right.
There's folks around believe they can do anything they're big enough to do, no matter how it tromples on other folks' rights. That I don't favor."


That I don't favor. I'll second that. He continues,


"Some people you can arbitrate with... you can reason a thing out and settle it fair and square. There's others will understand nothing but force."


She responds "You have no authority for such actions!" and Tell replies,



"Yes, ma'am , I do. The ideas I have are principles that men have had for many a year. I've been reading about that. When a man enters into society - that's living with other folks - he agrees to abide by the rules of that society, and when he crosses those rules he becomes liable to judgment, and if he continues to cross them, then he becomes an outlaw.
In wild country like this a man has no appeal but to that consideration, and when he fights against force and brutality, he must use the weapons he has."

I had to laugh. I ran from Cicero and Seneca and into Louis L'amour and right smack dab into taking their high falluting ideas and bringing them down to how they work out in the real world... and if any of you think that "In wild country like this..." applies any more to the lawless western wilderness, than to modern America in which laws are seen to be flexible and of no fixed meaning... I'll put it to you that you are very much mistaken. L'amour, through his character of William Tell Sackett, shows clearly how the Law exists, not in books, codes and regulations, but in people's understanding of what is right and what is wrong, and refusing to stand by as other's seek to use their power, their ability to do what they want "no matter how it tromples on other folks' rights."

And I tell you too, that I don't favor.

Let me see if I can distill Tell Sackett's laconic understanding of Blackstone's Law (which, btw, was central to our Founding Father's concept of Law), a little further, because I think we desperately need to let loose of our high fallutin' words and terms - they are doing far more to shield from our eyes what they mean, than revealing their meaning to us.


Choices, Zombies and Westerns
There is... a bit too much of a fixation on names and terms today for my taste. 'Capitalism', 'Socialism', 'Fascism', 'Statism'....add to it that the names and terms have so many alternate or even competing definitions, that little or no actual meaning is any longer being conveyed through them. More to the point, and to each of our concerns, is what each of these names and terms seek to accomplish in the end, and it is central to what L'amour's 'simple' Western tale deliberates upon - Choices.

People's simple, day to day, situational, moment to moment, choices. And what someone does in seeking to compel another to act as They see fit, is that they are substituting your ability to make a choice, with the choice that they have pre-selected for you.

Your life is made, formed, deformed, reformed - for better or for worse - through an unending succession of choices which you make. Choices are that point where You lean out from the confines of your skin, and intersect with reality, by making a choice to act in one way or another. As govt power grows bigger and stronger, able to remove more and more actions from your ability to choose them (whether for, against or other doesn't matter), there is less of You in your life.

The more choices that are made for you, or removed from your ability to make any choice at all - the less Life you have to actually Live. The more choices you have available to you, which we call Liberty, the more You are involved in living your life. The more choices that are removed or restricted from you, or made by someone else for you, which we call Tyranny, the less you are present and living in your own life.

If You aren't actively living your own life... who is? Is that life that is lived according to the disembodied, predetermined choices selected by distant legislators and functionaries... Life?

Zombies and Westerns are far less fictional than we like to think.

Intelligence or Stupidity, Life or Death - your Choice to make
Also, consider something probably witnessed first hand by most of us - who hasn't seen the difference between when people 'in the field' are allowed latitude in making decisions - or when decisions are sent down through the chain of command via bureaucratic policy (whether corporate, sales, military, govt is immaterial), who among us hasn't shaken their heads at the 'stupid' things their company, manager, commander, superiors, have done?

The closer to the facts, to their full context, a decision maker is, the more likely it is that an intelligent choice is may be made. The further removed from the relevant facts and context of the actual situation a person is, the less likely it is than an intelligent choice will, or even can, be made. Don't we all understand this? Don't we all see this in our daily lives? The difference between making your own choices and being compelled to follow predetermined 'choices', is the difference between potentially making intelligent decisions, or having to carry out enforced stupidity.

Not for nothing was East Germany under the USSR described as a grey, lifeless city.

Google up one of the satellite images of South Korea and North Korea at night - better illustrations of making your own choices or having choices made for you, are hard to find.

Call it what you will Capitalism, free market, socialism, fascism, statism... it comes down to intelligence or stupidity, life or death - That is the very real choice we are in the process of facing. And it is your responsibility, as a civilized person, someone who is a Law Abiding citizen, to understand the Law and give it a place to abide, and act from and through. L'amour has his character William Tell Sackett again sum up the situation admirably,


"Only, the way I figure, no man has the right to be ignorant. In a country like this, ignorance is a crime. If a man is going to vote, if he is going to take a part in his country and its government, then it's up to him to understand."

The Truth of the Law, whispered down the ages, from Cicero, to Seneca, to Blackstone, to the Founding Fathers, to a 'fictional' American Cowboy's lips... to you - will you take heed of it? Will you give the Law a place to abide?

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Free At Last! Free at... well... free agent anyway

My follow up project was cancelled and I'm free of a job again...woo-hoo!











Ah well, we took our vacation anyway and spent a week on the beach at Gulf Shores Alabama, away from the news, away from laptops and internet connections (I snuck along my PocketPC of course, but no news browsing), and did some fishing with the family, built some awesome sand castles and got pleasantly sunburned.






Ahhh... that was nice.







Well, time to use some 'free time' to reassess things, maybe take a new tack and start over again, again.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Capitalism - B.S. Words can never hurt us! The ugly truth about the left

I've been thinking about the subject of Words again recently, and the notion that they can’t hurt us – what a friggin crock o’ crap that is! The manipulation and redefinition of reality through words, has nearly destroyed the system of the most powerful nation on earth. A Nation founded upon Liberty and Freedom, founded through the ideas of Classical Liberalism, merely by the shaving and spinning of words by dishonest people who wish to bury reality and all that is good and beautiful and true.

Our Founding Fathers were THE Classical Liberals, devoted to the free and independent soul of Man, and the belief that a free and virtuous people would be a prosperous light unto themselves and to the world.

They, and we, are now routinely smeared, reviled and apologized for by an un… no… Anti-American President of the United States of America, belittling our history and our principles, and abandoning our allies, to an audience of thugs, murderers and dictators at the U.N..

We’ve allowed our message of freedom and liberty to be stolen, STOLEN, by a bunch of God Damned ignorant fools and/or demagogues, intent on swindling the American people, and by extension the world, of their Individual Rights, in exchange for trinkets and pittances tossed at their needs.

How in the hell have we allowed this to happen?

How did we allow the focus to be taken off of what was truly important, taken off of the core of our message, and put instead upon an incidental by-product, ‘capital’? We now confine ourselves to talk about political parties, talk about business practices and policies, we talk about money and it's management- and in the process freedom and liberty are lost in the shuffle.

Karl Marx tagged us with the name "Capitalism", and we took it, and they ran(t) with it.

This has been bugging me for awhile, and it came to a head recently in some discussions on One Cosmos and The Gunslinger, last night especially after skimming back through Jean Baptiste Say's A Catechism of Political Economy and his "A Treatise on Political Economy", which focuses as it does on the decisions and choices of free people, such as this:

"No one, however, has ever denied that the writings of the economists have uniformly been favourable to the strictest morality, and to the liberty which every human being ought to possess, of disposing of his person, fortune, and talents, according to the bent of his inclination; without which, indeed, individual happiness and national prosperity are but empty and unmeaning sounds. These opinions alone entitle their authors to universal gratitude and esteem. I do not, moreover, believe that a dishonest man or bad citizen can be found among their number...

and,

...The best mode of retaining and attracting mankind is, to treat them with justice and benevolence; to protect every one in the enjoyment of the rights he regards with the highest reverence; to allow the free disposition of person and property, the liberty of continuing or changing his residence, of speaking, reading, and writing in perfect security."


This, our world changing movement, from the very beginning, was the argument from and for our side, the side of mankind, and it seems to me that if we ever want to regain our rightful position in the argument between freedom and tyranny, our argument needs to come again from where it began - standing shoulder to shoulder with people like Jean Baptiste Say, Frederic Bastiat, Richard Cobden, John Bright, Frederick Douglass... these were people who passionately fought for liberty, people devoted to freedom, activists for Individual Rights and against the arbitrary, dehumanizing power of illiberal govt ... that is the true heart and soul of 'Capitalism'... Classical Liberalism was highly focused upon liberty and morality and the prosperity and happiness they could and would foster - how stupid are we to allow not only the name, but the issue of true freedom to get redefined out from under our intellectual feet.

Leftists at root, as I have argued over and again in the past, from its modern roots in Descartes, is a philosophy of assertions, attempts to redefine reality as they wishes it were. They have NO arguments that are rooted in reality, the closest, and last honest attempt (though completely in error) was Hume's, whose argument was that we could not know reality!

THIS IS THE PITIFUL QUALITY OF OUR ENEMIES! AND YET WE CEDE THE ARGUMENT... TO THEM!?

WTF!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I for one am damn sick of it, and not the least reason why, is that they are unable and unworthy to win any reasoned argument with us!

You will not find a single leftist who will argue their positions back down to that issues roots in reality. They will first attempt to equivocate on terms such as ‘freedom’, ‘equality’, ‘a hungry man is not free’ and the like. As you call them on that, they will come back by with further attempts at conflating ‘Needs’ with ‘Rights’, as FDR attempted to overshadow our Bill of Rights, with his warm bowl of crap ‘economic bill of rights’ - nothing but slavery all dolled up in a pretence of manners. And that is just about the end of their possible zigs and zags, because when you ask them to define what Rights are, they are fully self disarmed - they have nothing, no Reasoning whatsoever with which they can answer.

Supplying sound Reasons for Individual Rights, requires a sound basis in and reference to Reality and the nature of Man, and a firm disallowing of the arbitrary; Americanism - Classical Liberalism - is firmly rooted in the concept that reality is real, and that we can know it, and that Truth is discovered through our knowledge and understanding of what is real, and it will always end up with Political Rights rooted in Property Rights.

The only possible way to propose ‘Needs’ as being equal to or superior to Individual Rights, is through a series of bald faced, arbitrary assertions and equivocations, and a denial of our ever being able to know reality… and forcing that admission out of them will not come easy.

Before you ever hear them admit their intellectual and moral bankruptcy, you will first receive a full ration of belittling insults and slurs. You will be called an idiot, a fool, a pawn of the rich, racist, a bigot, a cold hearted meanie who just hates the poor and the minorities.

For the moderns, Reality isn't knowable and 'truth' is negotiable (Kant gave this position respectability... nothing true in his tomes, but he gave explanations so long and convoluted that everyone agreed to agree on what he said they meant, so that other people wouldn't think you were too stupid to understand him).

Any pressing argument with a leftist (democrat or republican (yeah, John McCain, Teddy Roosevelt, Mit Romney (B.S. he's a conservative), etc) must end in assertions and insults on their part, because they have no way to tie their arguments back to reality - Reality was not their starting point!

Their starting point is what they thought sounded pretty, and your challenging them on it sounds no different to them than calling them ugly (which their thoughts are, but that's beside the point) - their opinions are noting but opinion. They have no reasoning behind them, and when cornered by Reason they respond as does any unreasoning creature - by attacking.

It is the source of our modern plague of xspurts - the Proregressives version of an aristocracy -, people who think their conclusions are so purty, they just must be true, and true everywhere, regardless of silly considerations such as the context of a situation. Rather than discover and apply principles, which enable each person to consistently determine the best course of action in each situation, and be free to choose it, they prefer to force everyone to apply their prefabricated conclusions to every conceivable situation.

A prime example from the above comments at The Gunslingers, "Guns are dangerous? Well... then... only experts and professionals should be allowed to have or use them! Yep, I 'very clearly and distinctly conceive that must be true, so it MUST be! ", and another proregressive platform is born.

The proregressive leftist will always assert Conclusions over Principles - top down enforced stupidity, it is the leftist way.

The Ugly Truth
Our meekly having gone along with Marx's stamping of Liberalism as "Capitalism", and the proregressives later absconding of the name 'liberalism' after the embarrassment of Woodrow Wilson's proregressive distopia... enabled them to dehumanize us right off the bat. It took the emphasis off of living a full and prosperous life, and allowed it to be set on the material. On money, on business practices, mgmt policies... we gave up the fight before it was even engaged.

We deserve to be slapped... and worse... WE have let Freedom and Liberty down.

It is high time to fight back, and start with not allowing words to be misused, treat political correctness as the assault on reality, on truth and beauty, that it is. If you are a janitor, and some metrosexual calls you a 'Sanitation Engineer', slap them for the insult it was, and for the violence they did to reality.

When a leftist thug asserts that they are for more freedom through schemes such as healthcontrol, remind them of Calvin Coolidge's speech on the meaning of the Declaration of Independence, during his efforts at cleaning up Wilson's mess,

"About the Declaration there is a finality that is exceedingly restful. It is often asserted that the world has made a great deal of progress since 1776, that we have had new thoughts and new experiences which have given us a great advance over the people of that day, and that we may therefore very well discard their conclusions for something more modern. But that reasoning can not be applied to this great charter. If all men are created equal, that is final. If they are endowed with inalienable rights, that is final. If governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed, that is final. No advance, no progress can be made beyond these propositions. If anyone wishes to deny their truth or their soundness, the only direction in which he can proceed historically is not forward, but backward toward the time when there was no equality, no rights of the individual, no rule of the people. Those who wish to proceed in that direction can not lay claim to progress. They are reactionary. Their ideas are not more modern, but more ancient, than those of the Revolutionary fathers."

Words must not be allowed to be misused, Words must not be allowed to distort reality, for they can most definitely hurt you – forbid it in your presence!

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Nothing but FCC approved Nuts on the NET?!!!

As they say, the leftist hand you see is only the one they are distracting you with. What the UN, global warming, even Cap & Trade, etc, does is insignificant compared to this, from the American Spectator

"SO LONG, FREEDOM
Federal Communications Commission Chairman Julius Genachowski will announce today his intent to put in place rules that would allow the federal government to regulate the Internet. In a coordinated move to highlight the decision, and to take credit with the left-wing supporters of the policy, known as "net neutrality," FCC sources say, President Obama will make remarks after Genachowski's remarks, endorsing the FCC chairman's decision.

"We couldn't give them a Guantanamo shut down, or ending the Patriot Act, so this is the immediate payoff to MoveOn and Free Press and the those guys who worked so hard for us during the campaign," says a White House source. "Getting 'net neutrality' codified and under out control was at the top of their list of things for us to do."
"

Net 'Nutrality' Must be stopped! Where does anyone think the Tea Party movement would be, let alone Gateway Pundit or any of the other Blogs with freedom badges,with Govt deciding what sites warranted bandwidth, and which sites didn't?!

IMHO the "Fairness Doctrine" or any mutation of it, pales in comparison to this. AM radio is mostly one way info, it doesn't enable people to communicate and organize - only the Internet could make possible the Tea Party movements and their effects DC is so furious at.

THIS is war, and they know it!

As the Spectator article goes on to say,

""For them to say that this isn't government regulation, that this is just about fairness and giving everyone the same thing, is just not true," says a Republican Energy and Commerce staffer, who has been working on the issue of "net neutrality" for several years. "Someone has to be monitoring all those networks, all that activity to make sure the networks remain 'neutral.' Who is that going to be? Free Press? George Soros?"

In fact, a representative of the left-wing organization known as Free Press will be present at the Genachowski speech. Free Press, which continues to stand by former White House Obama adviser Van Jones, who served its board, shares its roots with the MoveOn organization, and has received funds from George Soros and funds from senior Google executives, actually wrote large portions of the Markey-Eshoo net neutrality bill, which was introduced in Congress just before the summer recess in August.
"

Seriously, we lose this and... if we don't lose it all soon after, it'll be pure luck.

I was shocked that neither our local Tea Party coalition, nor Gateway Pundit has anything up on this... IT IS HUGE!!!

Call your congressmen & senators, call the radio shows, raise a ruckus!

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Net Neutrality: Internet Control to InterNet Loss


"...The U.S. government plans to propose broad new rules Monday that would force Internet providers to treat all Web traffic equally..." (Hat Tip to "The Gunslinger")


The proposals for 'Net Neutrality' will soon after mean Net control, and eventually a Net loss - this is potentially Far worse than a new A.M. Radio Fairness Doctrine (which, btw, is next in the obama hopper of "to be implemented by other means" items).
Without the Internet, Talk Radio may have raised a ruckus over healthcontrol, but there would have been no sustained Tea Party movement as we have today - and proregressive regulators know it.

There doesn't need to be a law made to outlaw dissent. All that needs to be done, is to cause the chief forum for dissent to collapse, and there will be no more effective dissent - and that is what this measure (and those which would soon follow, 'improving' it) is guaranteed to accomplish.

Forget about the supposed details and distractions, forget about who is supporting it and who is opposing it. If you want to see how it works out when the Govt steps in to make a 'fairer' distribution of traffic and access, of what happens to the industry as a whole, take a look at how the 'help' they gave to the railroad industry worked out.

Don't fool yourself into thinking that Airlines ended railroad travel, they capitalized on the mess which ended up with a Govt subsidized Amtrak being all that remains of a once vibrant industry and service (and with poetic justice, they were targeted by regulators next - like to complain about airline service? Send the thanks to your Govt - you listening O'Reilly?).

Or if you want a single demonstration and explanation of what it will be, and how it will work, read Atlas Shrugged. The joke of the book, is that all the regulations and directives by Govt thugs to 'aid' the railroad industry... they were fiction in name only! They mirror actual laws, regulations & agencies actually put into place to more fairly distribute rail traffic, and reduced it to having its only business being essentially heavy transport alone.

This bill is no different in it's planned inception, or what will be guaranteed to follow in it's footsteps.

If you value the Internet, SAVE it from the threat of Govt Help! Contact your Congressmen and contact your Senators!

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Birthdate of Liberty: Preserving the Right to Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness


Tomorrow, Sept 17th, 1787, is the birth date of the Constitution of the United States of America, which was designed, and amended, to provide a framework for governing a free and moral people, who for the first time in history, were to be able to live as human beings - free.


Today, Sept 16th, 2009, Senator Baucus released his healthcontrol plan for the Govt takeover of the healthcare industry, and by extension, nearly every personal choice remaining to us in our lives (I haven't been able to make a detailed examination of it yet, but download the .pdf and run searches for "prohibit", "contribut" (most cases 'contribute' and 'contribution' can be read as PC for Tax or Fee) - and you'll begin to get a view nearly as chilling as the House Bill which I dug into here), and which would spell the effective end of "Government of the people, by the people and for the people".

Today, the misshapen descendants of our Founding Fathers, who they would have recognized as their oft dreaded and foretold "Debased Posterity", are busy churning out plans to extend - like candy to children - a new 'right' to health care, in order to rob us of our rights - and worse.

Yesteryear, our Founding Fathers designed a sound framework for governing, and then after lengthy debate, available to us in the greatest extended political discussion in the history of mankind, The Federalist Papers, and the Anti-Federalist Papers, the Constitution was accepted, with the proviso that certain vital amendments were to be written and submitted to ratification by the states, to protect vital rights of the people.

One question: Why was a vital 'right' such as Health care, not included in those first 10 amendments known as The Bill of Rights?

Why were obviously more vital 'rights' such as food, shelter, clothing, jobs... why weren't they included in those amendments?

Of all the many Rights included under the concept of Individual Rights, why were only a few selected? And why were the ones that were selected, selected, and not the others?

The Right to political free speech, the right to practice (or not) your own religion as you saw fit, the right to peaceably assemble, the right to bare arms, , to be secure in your home and possessions and to be free from unlawful search and seizure, the right to due process, to be safe from double jeopardy and self incrimination, trial by jury under objective laws, to be free from the imposition of excessive bail, fines and cruel and unusual punishment... and why list a right that did nothing but say there were other rights not listed that can't be denied or disparaged... and though unnamed, were retained by the people??? Or again, that there were other unnamed rights, which were reserved to the States, and to the people again? What was that about?

Why list add the amendments listing those rights, and then add the Ninth and Tenth amendments, which essentially list other rights by not naming them, and claim these unnamed rights belonged to the states and to the people? Why do all that, and yet not list any of the the 'rights' so important to proregressive leftists, such as the (abominable) 'economic bill of rights', and 'rights' to health care, ala FDR, Obama... & Baucus?
First off, of course, not being children, they didn't mistake needs for Rights, and I won't say anything further about such idiocies on this day.
Secondly, because these were men who understood history, who had a working knowledge of philosophy and law and first hand experience with tyranny. They knew Rights were not bestowed by Govt, but were already possessed by man in his nature as man, that we were "Endowed by our Creator" with these inalienable Rights, and that all men were all created equally with these rights.

The Founding Fathers, benefiting from not being burdened by over a century of public education and over a half century of Main (yellow) Stream Media, they were not deluded into thinking that Govt had ANYTHING to do with bestowing 'Rights'... the Bill Of Rights were designed to protect those particular Rights because they knew that no Tyrant could ever make a successfull rise to power, while they were still safely retained by We The People.

This is the 'secret' that has been chipped away at by over a century of assertions of a 'living constitution' and 'economic bill of rights' and other schemes by proregressive leftist demagogues seeking power at the cost of your precious individual rights, rights which you possess in your bones, and which the Constitution and its amendments were designed to see that you retained.

President Obama, Senator Harry Reid, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, and nearly all of the 535 Senators & Representatives, as well as much of the Judiciary and regulatory bureaucracy are trying their damnedest to trade you a lolly pop of specious 'benefits', in exchange for your rights and liberty, as the political perverts they truly are.

Fight them! Stand up for your Constitution! Men and Women far better than most of us, pledged their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor to make it possible, for the first time in history, for a people to live as human beings were meant to live - Free! Millions of young men and women have died in our battles and wars defending your right to keep predatory govt's - foreign and domestic - at arms length from your precious Rights.
Remember most of all that these Rights are not merely the dry, dusty chits of academics and politicians to be used in their contests. These Rights are vital not only to your Liberty and Freedom, but to your very soul.

Stand up for them in the only way you really can - by learning what they are and what they mean and how they Must be defended - and do it!

Monday, September 14, 2009

One lump or two? What next as the Tea Party brew strengthens


What's next?

Well I asked/pondered this after the 4/15 Tea Party in St. Louis,

"...maybe it’s best left in its natural decentralized structures as they are now, each ‘chapter’ communicating, debating, but putting their own public pressure on their local pol’s… kind of a new situation we need to give some thought to.

We shouldn’t lose sight of the fact that we have had many, many political parties, and presidents elected under them… Whigs, Federalists, Democratic-Republican, Know Nothings (!)… but in this current political climate, I just can’t see it being helpful or successful – better to have people who are united on principles, though not necessarily on their application (remember Madison & Hamilton agreed on principles, but violently disagreed on applying them), finding, screening and nailing or promoting, candidates through the existing parties..."

and I think those initial thoughts are still the lines along which it needs to go. No new Party is necessary, needed or wise - as the Who said, that just ends up as 'Meet the new boss, same as the old boss'. And I don't think it needs to push candidates in the GOP, or the Dems for that matter.

What I think, is that it needs to remain it's own, non-affiliated (though obviously 'conservative' in the constitutional sense), 'Voice of the people', of those who usually don't bother to speak up and make nuisances of themselves. A sustained grass roots voice of 'We The People' which will target idiotic corruptions of our government, weak knee'd or hypocritical legislators, judges and bureaucrats, and bring the focus of Govt back down to the ground of Individual Rights, Property Rights and objective, Constitutional Law.

Something else to note about the Tea Party movement, it has been noted that patriotism caught fire after 9/11 - for a time, and now again with the Bush/Obama abuses of bailouts, tax and spend and healthcontrol issues... as if those events somehow manufactured responses from a cross section of America, in and of themselves. I disagree.

These events didn't generate responses in the people at all. These events were only those rare moments when something on the national level reflected the existing ideals and convictions of the vast majority of Americans; and thrilled to see one of these rare moments when the MSM took note of their values, their in every way normal responses, widespread across America, were visible, and the MSM could not ignore it.

These are the people who normally don't want to be bothered with public issues, the people who'd just assume turn their backs and walk away when the local blowhards and loudmouths begin spouting off. But this time, they are beginning to realize that the blowhards can't be ignored any longer, that they are actually doing damage to the nation and principles which they value.
With the WWW, the people are no longer reliant upon the MSM's momentary interest in an event, in order to be seen. Now, they can communicate and organize across the nation, and boy oh boy are they doing that! Check out 'Moderate in the Middle' and 'Gateway Pundit', estimates ranging from 1 to 2 million Tea Partier's gathering in Washington D.C. alone, not to mention hundreds of thousands more across the nation. Gateway Pundit also points out that Conservatives seem to be a lot neater than the lefties. The MSM is flabbergasted, because they are no longer able to end their visibility, now that their fickle attention and interests in novelty has tried to turn elsewhere.
People ask 'what happened to the 9/12 feeling', my answer is that nothing happened to it, it is and has always been there - even before 9/12 - in the past, it just had relied upon a MSM to take note of it, to be seen. That is no longer the case.


For the first time in history, the Remnant is able to communicate, to know that, as Glenn Beck put it earlier this year, 'We surround them'. For the first time in history, the Remnant may be able to turn the tide before they do become an actual remnant.

We'll see.

I caught Glenn Beck Saturday, and that seems to be the direction he is going in, pressing Rep and Dem alike to show some backbone and reject any legislation that isn't classically constitutional. That I like very much. But he's also got some fixation upon 56 new Founders to re-establish the ideas of the nation... not so sure what's up with the '56', other than that there were originally 56 signers of the Declaration of Independence, but of what significance is the number? Maybe he'll clear it up soon and it'll make sense... seems odd at the moment.

I watched a bit of CNN coverage of the 9/12 DC event, some metro-sexual named Don Lemon, and a couple leftie pundits, and all they could do was claim it was veiled racism. That the only thing that brought out these people to travel across the country, or to their local Tea Parties, was an inability to tolerate a heavier than normal melanin content in the White house.

That is the level of their intellectual depth. That really is all they've got. They have no arguments, they have no reasoning behind their positions, other than 'they just want it!' and that of course Conservatives are just a big bunch of meanies who hate minorities and poor people. That and that they are so sure that there are more of them than us, and they won and intend to force healthcontrol, and the other statist policies through, not because they are right, but because they can.

Infuriating, yes, but hopeful too. Very hopeful.

They have no argument. None whatsoever.

And for a political party in a nation founded upon an Idea, that is a fatal disease.
Again, don't make the mistake of thinking this is about tax dollars, as I said in April,
"Do not make the mistake of thinking these Tea Parties are about the amount of money being taxed - This is NOT a tax revolt, any more than it was for the generation of our Founding Fathers. This is an issue of whether individuals should be secure in their property and so free to live their lives in liberty and in the pursuit of happiness, or whether Government should have first claim to their property, in order to set the boundaries of their lives, distributing favors and benefits as needed, to keep them in order and happy.
The Tea Party revolt is about whether the government serves you, or whether you serve the government.
In 1773 our Founding Father’s – YOUR Founding Fathers, whether your family have been citizens here for over two centuries or two months – YOUR Founding Fathers came to the most radical of political decisions ever proposed, that Individuals had minds and souls of their own, and that they should have the liberty to exercise them in their pursuit of happiness, and that no one had the right to rob them of the rights necessary to those ends.

In 1787, those Founding Fathers, sobered by revolution and the specter of political dissolution and potential tyrannies, created the first moral government in the history of the world, one which upheld Individuals Rights to use their own minds to live their lives, free from the dictates of tyrants.
It has come to us to reaffirm those founding principles, and stake our claim to Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness. "
The politicians who don't grasp that idea, the idea this nation was founded upon... their time may well be up... if we just keep the heat on, the Tea brewing and the whistle blowing.

Friday, September 11, 2009

Remember September 11, 2001.


We should remember. We should reflect. The only service we should concern ourselves with today, are those who are serving our nation in the military services, Army, Air Force, Navy, Marines, Coast Guard.





Screw healing.



We should pick at the wound, keep it burning. Remember the parents on the plane heading in to strike the Towers, their child sitting next to them... remember the people in the Tower on the phone to 911, crying, scared, burning from the heat, and then screaming as the impossible happened, the tower collapsed beneath them into nothingness. Remember the wives, husbands, children, of those who just went to work that day, and had their lives and world stolen from them by islambie thugs.


Remember that no matter what idiot politician or educationista prattles... we are a people who have known, and still know freedom and liberty and law, a people who believe it is good to live a moral life and pursue our happiness where we see fit to choose to. Remember that there are alleged human beings who wish noting more than to destroy that possibility.


Remember Sept. 11, 2001. Be angry, feel hatred, seek the destruction of those who seek yours. It is altogether fitting and proper that we do so, and remember that those who lost their lives, and those who have since given their lives in this cause, have hallowed this day far beyond and above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note nor long remember what we say today, but it will remember what happened, and it will take note of whether or not we remember.


It will take note of whether or not we take note of those who had taken, and those who have given, the last full measure of devotion -- and it will judge whether or not we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain; whether or not this nation, shall continue to give birth to, and stand up for and defend freedom, and it shall judge from that, whether or not government of the people by the people for the people, shall, or shall not perish from the earth.

And it will judge and act accordingly.

Remember September 11, 2001.










Thursday, September 10, 2009

Listen to what a Liar Doesn't tell you

In Obama's government health control speech last night (Powerline gives it a thorough going over), he said,

"I am not the first president to take up this cause, but I am determined to be the last."

Well, that's one statement I can really get behind. I'd very much like to see that prove true - it began with our first proregressive president, Teddy Roosevelt, I'd be thrilled to see Obama be our last proregressive president - oh, and of course, with notions of govt health control fading away into discarded memories as well.

One hundred years of anti-American ideals in our presidents is quite enough, thank you very much.

Thomas Sowell has a very good column on how to listen to a liar, by comparing his words and his actions. I'd like to emphasise that you shouldn't listen to what he does say, but to what he is avoiding saying - which is the reason for the lie.

"Our collective failure to meet this challenge year after year, decade after decade, has led us to the breaking point."

What Obama didn't say here, was that it has been because of the measures that govt has passed, year after year, decade after decade, interfering in licensing, educating, mandating insurance, mandating policies, making a free market in health insurance illegal, foisting a nearly discarded medical care method, HMO's, upon us, PPO's, and so forth - all of govt's actions to 'Help us', have served only to bring us to the point that they can say we are in a crisis, and need more govt help.

This is the Modis Operandi of govt, and it can be seen in every area it has had no business whatsoever having gone into, and has worsened that market because of its presence: Education, Food & Drug, Banking, Savings, Securities, Corporate independence, Railroads... all of these industries have been either ruined, or brought to the brink of it - because of the incremental, creeping death of govt intervention... little by little making honest thought and free choice - illegal.

Is that going overboard? You tell me, between Fed, State and Local Govt, if I'd like to become a teacher tomorrow, that would be illegal, a Real Estate agent? - illegal, if I'd like to start a school tomorrow, that would be illegal, buy a gun, open most any business, drain a swamp ('wetland') from your property and build anything upon it without appeasing several layers of bureaucracy first... all of that would be illegal.

When my father was a boy, there were no drivers licenses, HIS father determined whether or not he could drive and at what age - govt is everywhere removing you, and your relevance, from your own life, by gainsaying or overriding, or disallowing you to make your own choices.

And now Obama and his statist cronies, are slavering over their next actions - if we don't stop them - they will end this Nation - they will remove it from being a nation founded upon the ideal that men should be free to live their own lives and pursue their happiness, without tyrannical intervention from the Govt.

Don't be distracted by the irrelevant issues:
- rising costs
- pre-existing conditions
- rising taxes
- worsening economy,

all of those and more are mere sideshow theatrics. The real issue is the assault on the sanctity of private property, the sanctity of contract (which means your ability to make an agreement with another), upon your right to choose your own actions, to live Your Life, they are what is under assault from all levels of govt.

When listening to a liar, don't bother trying to listen to his words to figure out what he is saying - he's a liar! The truth, is what his words are meant to conceal. You need to listen to what a liar is not saying, to figure out what the truth is that he is trying to keep from you.

It is what the liar doesn't say, that tells you what they are hoping you won't hear. Take this gem for instance:

"First, if you are among the hundreds of millions of Americans who already have health insurance through your job, or Medicare, or Medicaid, or the V.A., nothing in this plan will require you or your employer to change the coverage or the doctor you have."

He says the bill won't require you to change coverage - so you know that statement isn't worth looking at, what is he not saying? What he does not say, is that it does make requirements that will put either your employer, or your existing insurance plan, out of business if they don't comply with what the govt does require.

Here's what it does say, on pg 149 Lines 16-24 ANY Employer with a payroll 400k & above who does not provide a public option, will pay an additional 8% tax on all of their payroll, and together with other 'language' on pg 24, the GOVT is the one which decides what will be acceptable to be offered.

Here's how John David Lewis at Classical Ideals makes the case for this and other key claims,



"Here is what it requires, for businesses with payrolls greater than $400,000 per year. (The bill uses “contribution” to refer to mandatory payments to the government plan.) Pages 149-150, SEC. 313, EMPLOYER CONTRIBUTIONS IN LIEU OF COVERAGE

(a) IN GENERAL.—A contribution is made in accordance with this section with respect to an employee if such contribution is equal to an amount equal to 8 percent of the average wages paid by the employer during the period of enrollment (determined by taking into account all employees of the employer and in such manner as the Commissioner provides, including rules providing for the appropriate aggregation of related employers). Any such contribution—

(1) shall be paid to the Health Choices Commissioner for deposit into the Health Insurance Exchange Trust Fund, and

(2) shall not be applied against the premium of the employee under the Exchange-participating health benefits plan in which the employee is enrolled.

(The bill then includes a sliding scale of payments for business with less than $400,000 in annual payroll.)

The Bill also reserves, for the government, the power to determine an acceptable benefits plan: page 24, SEC. 115. ENSURING ADEQUACY OF PROVIDER NETWORKS.

5 (a) IN GENERAL.—A qualified health benefits plan that uses a provider network for items and services shall meet such standards respecting provider networks as the Commissioner may establish to assure the adequacy of such networks in ensuring enrollee access to such items and services and transparency in the cost-sharing differentials between in-network coverage and out-of-network coverage.

EVALUATION OF THE PASSAGES:

1. The bill does not prohibit a person from buying private insurance.

2. Small businesses—with say 8-10 employees—will either have to provide insurance to federal standards, or pay an 8% payroll tax. Business costs for health care are higher than this, especially considering administrative costs. Any competitive business that tries to stay with a private plan will face a payroll disadvantage against competitors who go with the government “option.”

3. The pressure for business owners to terminate the private plans will be enormous.

4. With employers ending plans, millions of Americans will lose their private coverage, and fewer companies will offer it.

5. The Commissioner (meaning, always, the bureaucrats) will determine whether a particular network of physicians, hospitals and insurance is acceptable.

6. With private insurance starved, many people enrolled in the government “option” will have no place else to go
"
As one congressmen, perhaps inartfully burst out, Obama is a liar. Pay attention to what he does not say, remember, it is what the liar doesn't say, that tells you what they are hoping you won't hear. Will you hear what he and his fellow govt health control statists are trying so hard not to say?

video

"You see, our predecessors understood that government could not, and should not, solve every problem. They understood that there are instances when the gains in security from government action are not worth the added constraints on our freedom."

Sounds great... because it is meant to reassure you, keep you from seeing the lie it conceals. Find me one scrap of your life, your freedom, that this, or one of their other proposals, from Americore to Education to the Arts, from a little Acorn, to full govt Health Control; where is there is one shred of independent life they intend to leave untouched?!

What they are not saying, is that little by little, govt is inserting itself into your life, inserting itself into areas of your life that should be your own, private, principal concern, slowly but surely they are excluding you from your own life.

Fight IT!

Friday, September 04, 2009

Seniors Bill of Rights - GOP Stuck on Stupid

What part of their being stupid did the GOP feel we didn't know well enough about them? Any doubts I had about the intensity of the GOP's stupidity, has been done away with, with their latest promotion "Seniors’ Health Care Bill Of Rights".

What is the modern root of the welfare and entitlement state?

FDR's 'Economic Bill of Rights' - which not only negated the concept of property rights, but claimed that citizens had a right to demand that other citizens serve them, which is the negation of ALL of our rights. Social Security was the first sizable implementation of that socialistic plan, Medicare was the second measure to cement the leftist immoral, anti-individual rights, anti-American policies - and the GOP just validated them.

Their latest effort to complete the destruction of the concept of Rights, starts off with "PROTECT MEDICARE AND NOT CUT IT IN THE NAME OF HEALTH CARE REFORM".

The major battle conservatives who are actually conservatives, seeking to conserve the ideas of classical liberalism as expressed in the U.S. Constitution, has been to overcome the notion so popularized by leftists, that virtually enslaving your fellow man to serve your failings and shortcomings through the force of law, was a proper role of government. And here comes the GOP officially tossing in the towel and declaring Medicare to be a RIGHT of seniors.

They didn't feel the line item was sufficient, so they elaborated,
"President Obama and Congressional Democrats are promoting a government-run health care experiment that will cut over $500 billion from Medicare to be used to pay for their plan. Medicare should not be raided to pay for another entitlement."

Why would they do it? Principles being something they have none of, no doubt they calculated it to be a clever marketing ploy. At best this is a disingenuous tactic to con those who have bought into anti-American leftist values, into thinking that the GOP would support keeping one of the chief programs which conservatives would love to see done away with. At worst - they actually believe it.

Either way, they are stuck on stupid - and they disgust the hell out of me. I don't have time to get longwinded on this one, so I'll leave it there... for now.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Ted Kennedy - What a Piece of Work is Man

I was watching a TIVO'd C-SPAN Booknotes episode ("Economics does not lie", on Gagdad Bob's buy list, looks very interesting and is soon to be in my library), and as it ended the news was on, and it was smack dab in the midst of the Memorial service for Teddy Kennedy, mid way into son Joseph's speech.

I have no remaining fondness for Ted Kennedy, my early hero worship of JFK & RFK long since eroded by understanding the meaning of their actions, they retain no aura to shelter him with in my thoughts, and he has generated a deep, deep guilt of wrong doings, political and personal, all his own. The words "Good riddance" comes tantalizingly to mind.

But.

It brought home to me again, the importance of remembering that the principles you grasp, are not necessarily all of the principles involved; the facts you plainly perceive, are not necessarily all of the facts involved; nor is your perception - right though it maybe in its context - the only perception available and justified (though his son Patrick's sailing anecdote about his Dad's pursuit of the details of rules as a way around a rule, sums up my perspective of him, his party, and much more).

I doubt I have any need to detail the many, many points of disagreement, if not downright revulsion, I have for the figure I know of as Ted Kennedy, but it seems likely and proper to remind myself, and us all, that though he can properly be roundly condemned for his actions, he was a person, something which is captured neither well nor fully, in a profiles portrait, or in any series of pictures.

Watching the service, it is obivous that his children and family obviously saw something much more than we did.

(Ugh... Obama is on now... trying to get through without the TOTUS... reminding me of both what I dislike about him... and, yes, the point of this post at the same time.)

Because someone is obviously wrong, does not mean that they willfully turn away from the truth. Because someone does evil, does not mean that they recognize the evil they are doing. Because someone hurts and wrongs people horribly, does not mean that they did not also treat others with deep love and affection.

People are amazingly Deep creatures, capable of an infinite number of facets... and our philosophies will never thoroughly plumb those depths. A single misperception, unwitting or self deceptive, can mis-draw the world and what is Right and True, into an elaborate and seeming real cognitive illusion, every bit as apparently true, though actually false, as any mere optical illusion you could produce.

We are well justified condemning a person and calling them on accounts for deeds they've done, delivering whatever punishments are justified by their actions. We have no need to leaven our condemnation of him for those actions we are so well aware of.

But.

But we are foolish, we deceive ourselves, when we think that we know all that there is, or needs to be known, about someone we know only from a distance - or even close at hand.

Truly, "What a piece of work is a man".

HAMLET

I will tell you why; so shall my anticipation
prevent your discovery, and your secrecy to the king
and queen moult no feather. I have of late--but
wherefore I know not--lost all my mirth, forgone all
custom of exercises; and indeed it goes so heavily
with my disposition that this goodly frame, the
earth, seems to me a sterile promontory, this most
excellent canopy, the air, look you, this brave
o'erhanging firmament, this majestical roof fretted
with golden fire, why, it appears no other thing to
me than a foul and pestilent congregation of vapours.
What a piece of work is a man! how noble in reason!
how infinite in faculty! in form and moving how
express and admirable! in action how like an angel!
in apprehension how like a god! the beauty of the
world! the paragon of animals! And yet, to me,
what is this quintessence of dust? man delights not
me: no, nor woman neither, though by your smiling
you seem to say so.

ROSENCRANTZ

My lord, there was no such stuff in my thoughts.

HAMLET

Why did you laugh then, when I said 'man delights not me'?

ROSENCRANTZ

To think, my lord, if you delight not in man, what
lenten entertainment the players shall receive from
you: we coted them on the way; and hither are they
coming, to offer you service.

HAMLET

He that plays the king shall be welcome; his majesty
shall have tribute of me; the adventurous knight
shall use his foil and target; the lover shall not
sigh gratis; the humourous man shall end his part
in peace; the clown shall make those laugh whose
lungs are tickled o' the sere; and the lady shall
say her mind freely, or the blank verse shall halt
for't. What players are they?

ROSENCRANTZ

Even those you were wont to take delight in, the
tragedians of the city.

HAMLET

How chances it they travel? their residence, both
in reputation and profit, was better both ways.

ROSENCRANTZ

I think their inhibition comes by the means of the
late innovation.

HAMLET

Do they hold the same estimation they did when I was
in the city? are they so followed?

ROSENCRANTZ

No, indeed, are they not.

HAMLET

How comes it? do they grow rusty?

ROSENCRANTZ

Nay, their endeavour keeps in the wonted pace: but
there is, sir, an aery of children, little eyases,
that cry out on the top of question, and are most
tyrannically clapped for't: these are now the
fashion, and so berattle the common stages--so they
call them--that many wearing rapiers are afraid of
goose-quills and dare scarce come thither.

HAMLET

What, are they children? who maintains 'em? how are
they escoted? Will they pursue the quality no
longer than they can sing? will they not say
afterwards, if they should grow themselves to common
players--as it is most like, if their means are no
better--their writers do them wrong, to make them
exclaim against their own succession?

ROSENCRANTZ

'Faith, there has been much to do on both sides; and
the nation holds it no sin to tarre them to
controversy: there was, for a while, no money bid
for argument, unless the poet and the player went to
cuffs in the question.

HAMLET

Is't possible?

GUILDENSTERN

O, there has been much throwing about of brains.

HAMLET

Do the boys carry it away?

ROSENCRANTZ

Ay, that they do, my lord; Hercules and his load too.

HAMLET

It is not very strange; for mine uncle is king of
Denmark, and those that would make mows at him while
my father lived, give twenty, forty, fifty, an
hundred ducats a-piece for his picture in little.
'Sblood, there is something in this more than
natural, if philosophy could find it out.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Our Shame, Our Blame, Our Responsibility To Right Our Times Wrongs

"It is our shame, and our fault. We are the malfeasant ones. We are to blame."

From an excellent post by The Gunslinger, and Yes, it is our fault and we are to blame for the chaos enveloping us.

We The People gave it up, grandparents, parents and definitely ourselves, bit by bit, thinking we were getting something for nothing, free education (but 'educated' into ignorance of what was worth knowing and vitally important to be known), for govt provided services and care (but at the expense of our right to our lives and property and self responsibility), for govt stepping in and making us behave civilly (but at the expense of our no longer understanding what the meaning and requirements of civil behavior are)... but there is no free Free.

As dire as things are in the face of Obamacare's threat of total governmental control of our lives, there is a bright light, people are finally beginning to wake up across this country, finally beginning to see the peril we've let gain power over us... and that spreading awareness, if we will each work to keep it burning bright, we can turn it around.

Yes! We! Can!

As to the oft heard plaints "But the constitution says govt has the power to provide for the general welfare of the United States ...", the Preamble NEVER meant what it has been twisted into, a blank check for doing anything any petty politician pines for. If you have doubts of that, or are unsure of how to argue against such notions, read the Preamble here, and then scroll down and read what ideas informed the Founders, what understanding and concerns they had, and how such liberality was argued against before the Supreme Court, and particularly how an outstanding early Supreme Court Justice, Joseph Story, dealt with it, such as:

"§ 462. And, here, we must guard ourselves against an error, which is too often allowed to creep into the discussions upon this subject. The preamble never can be resorted to, to enlarge the powers confided to the general government, or any of its departments. It cannot confer any power per se; it can never amount, by implication, to an enlargement of any power expressly given. It can never be the legitimate source of any implied power, when otherwise withdrawn from the constitution. Its true office is to expound the nature, and extent, and application of the powers actually conferred by the constitution, and not substantively to create them. . . ."
Or the link from President Monroe,

"...The people, the highest authority known to our system, from whom all our institutions spring and on whom they depend, formed it. Had the people of the several States thought proper to incorporate themselves into one community, under one government, they might have done it. They had the power, and there was nothing then nor is there anything now, should they be so disposed, to prevent it. They wisely stopped, however, ..."

And the Commerce Clause NEVER was meant to allow govt to take control of all commerce related activities within the Nation, it was in response to the chaotic recriminations between one state and another in the original Confederacy (which brought several to the brink of war) which the Constitution corrected and replaced. As Madison stated,


"... separate attempts to raise revenue by duties on imports, soon appeared in Representations from her Merchts., that the commerce of the State was banished by them into other channels, especially of Maryd., where imports were less burdened than in Virginia. (See do. 1786).

Such a tendency of separate regulations was indeed too manifest to escape anticipation. Among the projects prompted by the want of a federal authy. over Comerce, was that of a concert, first proposed on the part of Maryd. for a uniformity of regulations between the 2 States, and commissioners were appointed for that purpose. It was soon perceived however that the concurrence of Pena. was as necessy. to Maryd. as of Maryd. to Virga., and the concurrence of Pennsylvania was accordingly invited. But Pa. could no more concur witht. N. Y. than Md. witht. Pa. nor N. Y. witht. the concurrence of Boston &c.

These projects were superseded for the moment by that of the Convention at Annapolis in 1786, and forever by the Convn at Pha in 1787, and the Consn. which was the fruit of it."
There Is No More Vital Action that you can take, now, today, than to read, study and come to understand our Constitution, and then talk to others about it, demand that YOUR elected officials explain how and why they don't understand it, or if they do, then demand of them to explain their acting contrary to it.

We're already seeing the destruction which change for changes sake can do, now it is time to put some effort into understanding what real change requires, and is required of us.

Leftist ideas are attacking our Liberty and Freedom, it is only the ideas of our Founding Fathers which can defend us against them. Learn what the Constitution of the United States of America means. Learn it and spread your understanding. America is the only nation ever formed upon Ideas, and the field of Ideas is the ONLY battleground upon which we can fight to can save it from destruction.


Can win this fight? Yes! We! Can!

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Govt Healthcontrol? Anyone Remember HMO's?


Obamacare? Hello America, this is Cassandra calling...
Anyone recall the brouhaha over the one time dreaded HMO's? Remember how, this was what, the early 90's? Where everyone wanted to be sure that their insurance plan did not restrict them to HMO's? Remember how if you couldn't afford a plan that gave you the ability to pick your own Dr's (what a concept), we at least wanted to have PPO's instead?

Don't you remember why?

Oh yes, it was the early 90's... as a matter of fact, it was about '93 when the fear that Hillarycare was going to look like an HMO which sunk Clinton's national healthcare proposal during that go around.

Anyone remember WHY the HMO's were so dreaded at that time? If you don't remember, there were lawsuits and biter complaints flying right and left over things like:

  • malpractice suits,
  • hours and hours of waiting in crowded (seated lines) in doctors offices,
  • an inability to get the more effective treatments and medications,
  • bottom of the barrel physicians - even in many cases incompetent,
Why?

What brought those issues about? It's a simple, and there is a simple answer.

Because Doctors were not free to practice Medicine in the way the Doctor's would choose to practice it! And at that time, this was mostly due to private rules - imagine how things will be when they are being told what to do by Federally mandated rules! Here's a summary of what takes place in the physicians mind (and here a much fuller explanation of not only the issues, but of the immorality behind them) who is not free to make his own decisions,
"Today, in one form or another, the following also has to enter that brain: 'The DRG administrator [in effect, the hospital or HMO man trying to control costs] will raise hell if I operate, but the malpractice attorney will have a field day if I don't -- and my rival down the street, who heads the local PRO [Peer Review Organization], favors a CAT scan in these cases, I can't afford to antagonize him, but the CON boys disagree and they won't authorize a CAT scanner for our hospital -- and besides the FDA prohibits the drug I should be prescribing, even though it is widely used in Europe, and the IRS might not allow the patient a tax deduction for it, anyhow, and I can't get a specialist's advice because the latest Medicare rules prohibit a consultation with this diagnosis, and maybe I shouldn't even take this patient, he's so sick -- after all, some doctors are manipulating their slate of patients, they accept only the healthiest ones, so their average costs are coming in lower than mine, and it looks bad for my staff privileges.' ..."

In part, the uproar over HMO's (and the fear of hyper-HMO's that Hillarycare would've mandated (which pales in comparison to Obamacare)) was due to what the:

Insurance companies policies and existing govt regulations,

  • would and wouldn't allow their Dr's to do or offer,
  • the hours they shecheduled them to work,
  • the time they'd allow per patient visit,
  • the 'allowed' diagnosis' and tests they would pay for

Or as one of the Insurance companies sites today that is promoting both HMO's and PPO's describes some HMO considerations as,
"That means your costs stay lower - but there will be restrictions on how you receive your care....HMOs and PPOs differ in two main ways: cost and access... The tradeoff for these low costs is that your HMO plan comes with restrictions on when you can receive care - and who you can receive it from."

What seems to slip peoples awareness, is that these factors came about in an environment where there were free market 'controls' of consumer choice (also called competition) in effect.

Ok, anyone remember where HMO's came from? Or why? Did they come from the free market? Well ... sort of... at one time. Originally HMO's were little different from company co-ops, a pooling of patients for lower costs from Dr's willing to systemize there fee's onto a schedule of limited services. They weren't all that popular, and had pretty much died out in the free market for lack of interest, on the party of either party, due to general dissatisfaction in both receiving AND giving care.

Almost dissappeared. Why not completely? Well....

Along came something called the "Health Maintenance Organization Act of 1973", a govt plan to keep pesky medical care costs from rising (at which point of course they rose even faster), and it was signed into law by the proregressive republican President Richard Nixon. Passed in typical little 'r' washington republican fashion, as a 'moderate' way of countering a leftist's proposal that 'we put a gun to our heads and pull the trigger', with an offer for a less extreme compromise of 'how about we inject ourselves with a slow acting poison instead'?

Oh, and guess who the 'gun to the head' option was sponsored by? Oh, come on, guess!

Correct! Sen. Ted Kennedy. I just can't wait to receive both barrels of his wisdom, fermented now for 36 years!

It bears all the hallmarks of proregressive, leftist, policy making: Experts create panels of experts to lay out the most 'scientifically' sensible plans for managing (always a key term) all potential issues beforehand, which expert 'healthcare professionals' aka bureaucrats, can then use to direct and manage the healthcare process, smoothly, efficiently, and for lower costs.

What was the predictable result of this proregressive leftist washington wisdom?
  • patient dissatisfaction,
  • doctor dissatisfaction,
  • rising malpractice suits,
  • hours and hours of waiting in crowded (seated lines) in doctors offices,
  • an inability to get the more effective treatments and medications,
  • bottom of the barrel physicians - even in many cases incompetent,
  • a shortages of doctors able to cover the hours they shecheduled them to work,
  • rationed time allowed per patient visit,
  • inflexible and often inappropriate 'allowed' diagnosis' and tests they would pay for

Sounds like I've heard those warnings somewhere before (... oh, hello there Cassandra)

Ladies and Gentlemen, HMO's were the creation of the federal government, created to FIX THE HEALTHCARE SYSTEM that was working far better then, than it was after the FIX was applied.

I don't know about you, but I can easily foresee what will happen when the entire healthcare system becomes one big HMO, when the 'Insurance policies' are written by the govt and are immune to any pesky concerns over competition or 'consumer' complaints.

Does anyone have any reason, any evidence, any track record to hearken to, in order to believe that the Federal Government, this time, will make things better, instead of worse?

Anybody?

Anyone interested in some info that doesn't reak of the current conflict of today? If so, might want to take a look at what USS Ben has to say on current matters (VA, etc).

Not enought? How about a little recollection on previous promises of how things would turn out, things like,

Income Tax was promised to be - a temporary tax for current (circa WWI) defense related costs, that's all , what it was promised it would never exceed "1 percent tax on net personal incomes above $3,000 with a 6 percent surtax on incomes of more than $500,000", and who it would NEVER apply to - only one-half percent of Americans would EVER pay taxes, only the richest people would ever be taxed! Ever! How'd that bit of hope and change work out for ya?

Social Security - was promised to be only a tax of 1% each on the employer and the employee, on the first $3,000 of earnings, and originally, Social Security benefits were not taxable income, it was sold as an "Insurance Plan", a 'Trust Fund' but was from the very start a 'pay as you go' ponzi type scheme.

Medicare - When passed in 1965, it was confidently forecast that it would cost only 9 Billion in 1990. As is typical of Govt forecasts, that was a bit shy of the mark, it was 66 Billion in 1990 (don't ask, it's projected to become insolvent by 2017).

People - COMPARE THE HISTORY OF FEDERAL PROMISES AND ACTUAL FACTS!!!
Perhaps a few reminders from the past might yet help us keep Cassandra at bay:
1996
1999
2000
2003
2003
2004
2004

Two videos on the key issue, far more important than ANY consideration of costs,
Health Care Is Not a Right By Leonard Peikoff

Anyone interested in an indepth balanced (meaning much of it rankles me)
Overview, from Duke Univ. Law Journal

Saturday, August 08, 2009

Obama Care? I 'Dis' his 'information' (Updated page links)

I recently received an email from a friend of mine (you know, one of those biter clingers, bent on manufacturing astroturf, without pay, and only to be malicious and promote extremism) that listed several disturbing aspects of congress's healthcare proposal. Today this article in politico was brought to my attention, it noted that:

"President Barack Obama is warning Americans not to believe “rumors” that the health reform initiative he’s pushing will lead to a government-run health care system or push Medicare recipients to die rather than running up a hefty tab for medical services. "
, and I heartily concur. Don't believe rumors, check them out. See for yourself whether or not they are true.

Here's one rumor that needs quashing right off the bat, coincidentally it is one begun by da prez himself:

"Let me start by dispelling the outlandish rumors that reform will promote euthanasia, or cut Medicaid, or bring about a government takeover of health care. That's simply not true," Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address released Saturday morning."

Simply Outlandish! How can he say such a thing?

Well, if his positions on healthcare reform are anything like his positions on economic reform, the answer is simple: He's a Marxist. He cares nothing for facts, let alone principles. His concern is solely for advancing his agenda, which boils down to: what he wants to be true, he demands that we accept as being true. He knows nothing of the principles of economics (let alone of liberty), or of the massive economic disruptions that are caused by govt interfering in peoples choices, or the stifling effects to real freedom and liberty that follows from such actions by an interventionist government.

He knows not, and he cares not (for a truly revealing look at the full meaning of nObama Care, see this from my local St. Louis Tea Party and summed up by Gateway Pundit here).

He knows even less about that 1/7th portion of our economy (which, btw, 'economy' refers to the decisions and actions of free people making choices in their lives, within a free market - aka Liberty and Freedom) which is referred to as Healthcare.

Now, actual facts are abundantly available, as are the principles which elucidate them, principles which brings the seeming random cacophony of disintegrated data into intelligent relief (See Bastiat's "What is seen and what is not seen" or Adam Smith and many more), he knows nothing of the real facts of European (see Theodore Dalrymple's recent "Is there a 'Right' to Healthcare" for the euro-perspective of a 'healthcare' provider) and Canadian (Krugman dis's himself) healthcare which clearly point to the results he here denies as 'outlandish'.

He no's only what he wants to believe. He is, in fact, one of those modern children of Descartes I referred to earlier who see conspiracies everywhere, who thinks that what he believes deeply and sincerely, must obviously be true, as he could imagine it being no other way.




Øbama said "This isn’t about putting government in charge of your health insurance; it’s about putting you in charge of your health insurance. Under the reforms we seek, if you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor. If you like your health care plan, you can keep your health care plan,” Obama insisted."
Uh-huh. Perhaps if he actually read some of the reform bill he supports he wouldn't be so quick to 'behave stupidly'.

Let's make sure we don't fall into the same trap, ya with me? Ok then, let's refer him to those pages in 'his' healthcare bill which refute his platitudes in the lingo of governmentalese black 'n white, shall we?

First from my friends hit parade of citations:

""Pg 30 Sec 123 of HC bill - THERE WILL BE A GOVT COMMITTEE that decides what treatments/benefits you get"

When we look at that page (linked to above), we find the following text:






"SEC. 123. HEALTH BENEFITS ADVISORY COMMITTEE.
12 (a) ESTABLISHMENT.—
13 (1) IN GENERAL.—There is established a pri
14 vate-public advisory committee which shall be a
15 panel of medical and other experts to be known as
16 the Health Benefits Advisory Committee to rec
17 ommend covered benefits and essential, enhanced,
18 and premium plans."

It then goes on to list the numbers of people who will either be Federal Employees, or not Fed employees, but appointed by the President or the Comptroller, or other functionaries of the Federal Government. Nice useful distinction there, don't you think? I somehow miss out on the 'Private' decision making nature of that apparatus.

No matter, reading a bit further on, down at the bottom of
Pg 31, and carrying over to the next page, we find this section describing what sort of people these non-federal employees, who are appointed by federal employees, are to be:

"(5) PARTICIPATION.—The membership of the
24 Health Benefits Advisory Committee shall at least
25 reflect providers, consumer representatives, employ-

1 ers, labor, health insurance issuers, experts in health
2 care financing and delivery, experts in racial and
3 ethnic disparities, experts in care for those with dis
4 abilities, representatives of relevant governmental
5 agencies. and at least one practicing physician or
6 other health professional and an expert on children’s
7 health and shall represent a balance among various
8 sectors of the health care system so that no single
9 sector unduly influences the recommendations of
10 such Committee."
My oh my, I don't know about you, but my concerns about a govt committee deciding what is best for me, about it ceasing to remain a private decision, are fully alleviated by the portion that says "...and at least one practicing physician or other health professional and an expert on children’s health and shall represent a balance among various sectors of the health care system...", isn't that comforting!? At least One Practicing Physician (... OR...) health professional (you might want to look up just what is meant by a 'health professional'... unless you have an aversion to administrators and bureaucrats being involved in your health care, that is) will certainly balance out any undue influence caused by those pesky non-federal employees, who are appointed by federal employees.

And don't you just love the inclusion of "...experts in racial and ethnic disparities..."? Isn't it comforting to know that Gov't Committee's on the make up of healthcare services will be sure to move beyond any chance of acting stupidly and letting issues of race or ethnicity, become involved in our healthcare concerns? I just feel warm and tingly all over.

A little further down, we find this,




"11 (b) DUTIES.—
12 (1) RECOMMENDATIONS ON BENEFIT STAND
13 ARDS.—The Health Benefits Advisory Committee
14 shall recommend to the Secretary of Health and
15 Human Services (in this subtitle referred to as the
16 ‘‘Secretary’’) benefit standards (as defined in para
17 graph (4)), and periodic updates to such standards.
18 In developing such recommendations, the Committee
19 shall take into account innovation in health care and
20 consider how such standards could reduce health dis
21 parities."
Ladies & Gents, this "...shall take into account innovation in health care and consider how such standards could reduce..." should strike fear into your hearts. If not, pull your head out of your ... er... the sand... and look at the long and pitiful history of govt 'helping' any portion of any industry to innovate and reduce its problems.

You should seriously be beginning to flag in your mind whenever seeing the word "Healthcare" to consciously begin seeing the word "Healthcontrol", because that is what will be done, every aspect of will fall under govt standards and controls, and what always results from such measures, will assuredly result in your declining health.

Some things that should pop into peoples minds are the other things gov't has done to care for other sectors of the economy - remember telephone 'service' under the governmental 'one provider' policy of Ma Bell? Remember the wage and price controls of Richard Nixon? Remember the gas station lines of Jimmy Carter?

Or how about this, in the 1930's, gov't mandated regulations to improve the security of banks, peoples access to them, and their reliability. The results? There were huge numbers of panicked runs on banks, and thousands of U.S. Banks collapsed along with their patrons assets. Across the border in Canada, which had no such 'govt help' and attention in their banking system during the same worldwide economic crisis? Zero bank runs, and zero bank collapses (See: FDR's Folly: How Roosevelt and His New Deal Prolonged the Great Depression).

You had better get busy forecasting the same lesson being applied to healthcare. Thomas Sowell points out in a recent article:




"An old advertising slogan said, "Progress is our most important product." With politicians, confusion is their most important product. They confuse bringing down the price of medical care with bringing down the cost. And they confuse medical care with health care.

Nothing is easier than for governments to impose price controls. They have been doing this, off an on, for thousands of years-- repeatedly resulting in (1) shortages, (2) quality deterioration and (3) black markets. Why would anyone want any of those things when it comes to medical care?

Refusing to pay the costs is not the same as bringing down the cost. That is why price controls create these problems. When developing a new pharmaceutical drug costs roughly a billion dollars, you are either going to pay the billion dollars or cause people to stop spending a billion dollars to develop new drugs."

If you still have access to some cash, get yourself a copy of Thomas Sowell's Applied Economics: Thinking Beyond Stage One,

"When we are talking about applied economic policies, we are no longer talking about pure economic principles, but about the interactions of politics and economics. The principles of economics remain the same, but the liklihood of those principles being applied unchanged is considerable reduced, because politics has its own principles and imperatives."

If anyone thinks that they will be able to separate their govt aided health and medical care from the state of our govt aided economic care, I submit that you are mortally mistaken. Buy Sowell's book, pay particular attention to Chp. 3 "The Economics of Mecidal Care", or at least take a gander at his article "Alice in Obama Medical Care Land".

For myself, I hereby willingly and knowingly 'dis' Obama's healthcare information.

I'll leave it up to your own judgment whether or not you should do the same. Here are some helpful study guides for you, passed along from my friend David. Do yourself, and our future, a favor - read them - if even 1% of them mean what it seems they mean, and they are passed, we are doomed.

This is not a healthcare bill, it is a lifecontrol bill.

This is not a bill to argue on the merits of whether it will accomplish this or that at more or less cost, this is a bill to be identified and fought on moral grounds of Right and Wrong. The govt has no right to intrude into and control our lives in such ways.

This thing means evil to our lives and liberties, pure and simple. Read it. Identify it. Fight it.

As David would say Make a Difference!

***UPDATED***
Congressmen/Physician lays out "... a charade that will destroy healthcare in America":


(all links are to that page in the actual house bill).

22 of the HC Bill MANDATES the Govt will audit books of ALL EMPLOYERS that self insure!!

30 Sec 123 of HC bill - THERE WILL BE A GOVT COMMITTEE that decides what treatments/benefits you get

29 lines 4-16 in the HC bill - YOUR HEALTHCARE IS RATIONED!!! You can only get so much "care" per year

42 of HC Bill - The Health Choices Commissioner will choose your HC Benefits 4 you. You have no choice!

50 Section 152 in HC bill - HC will be provided to ALL non US citizens, illegal or otherwise

58HC Bill - Govt will have real-time access to individs finances & a National ID Healthcard will be issued!

59 HC Bill lines 21-24 Govt will have direct access 2 your banks accts for elective funds transfer

65 Sec 164 is a payoff subsidized plan for retirees and their families in Unions & community orgs (ACORN).

72 Lines 8-14 Govt is creating an HC Exchange to bring private HC plans under Govt control.

84 Sec 203 HC bill - Govt mandates ALL benefit pkgs for private HC plans in the Exchange

85 Line 7 HC Bill - Specs for Benefit Levels for Plans = The Govt will ration your Healthcare!

91 Lines 4-7 HC Bill - Govt mandates linguistic appropriate services..... Example - Translation for illegal aliens

95 HC Bill Lines 8-18 The Govt will use groups i.e., ACORN & Americorps to sign up individually for Govt HC plan

85 Line 7 HC Bill - Specs of Benefit Levels for Plans. #AARP members - your Health care WILL be rationed

-
102 Lines 12-18 HC Bill - Medicaid Eligible Indiv. will be automat.enrolled in Medicaid. No choice

124 lines 24-25 HC No company can sue GOVT on price fixing. No "judicial review" against Govt Monopoly

127 Lines 1-16 HC Bill - Doctors/ #AMA - The Govt will tell YOU what you can make.

145 Line 15-17 An Employer MUST auto enroll employees into public opt plan. NO CHOICE

126 Lines 22-25 Employers MUST pay for HC for part time employees AND their families.

149 Lines 16-24 ANY Emplyr w payroll 400k & above who does not prov. pub opt. pays 8% tax on all payroll

150 Lines 9-13 Biz w payroll between 251k & 400k who doesnt prov. pub. opt pays 2-6% tax on all payroll

167 Lines 18-23 ANY individual who doesnt have acceptable HC accrdng to Govt will be taxed 2.5%

170 Lines 1-3 HC Bill Any NONRESIDENT Alien is exempt from individual taxes. (You and I will pay for them)

195 HC Bill -officers & employees of HC Admin (GOVT) will have access to ALL Americans financial/personal recds

203 Line 14-15 HC - "The tax imposed under this section shall not be treated as tax" Yes, it says that

239 Line 14-24 HC Bill Govt will reduce physician services for Medicaid. Seniors, low income, poor will be very affected

241 Line 6-8 HC Bill - Doctors, doesnt matter what specialty you have, you'll all be paid the same

253 Line 10-18 Govt sets value of Dr's time, professional judgments, etc. Literally value of humans.

265 Sec 1131Govt mandates & controls productivity for private HC industries

268 Sec 1141 Fed Govt regulates rental & purchase of power driven wheelchairs

272 SEC. 1145. TREATMENT OF CERTAIN CANCER HOSPITALS - Cancer patients - welcome to rationing!

Page 280 Sec 1151 The Govt will penalize hospitals for what Govt deems preventable readmissions.

317 L 13-20 OMG!! PROHIBITION on ownership/investment. Govt tells Drs. what/how much they can own.

317-318 lines 21-25,1-3 PROHIBITION on expansion- Govt is mandating hospitals cannot expand

321 2-13 Hospitals have oppt to apply for exception BUT community input required. Can you say ACORN?!!
Pg335 L 16-25

341 Lines 3-9 Govt has authority to disqualify Medicare Adv Plans, HMOs, etc. Forcing all into Govt HC plan

354 Sec 1177 - Govt will RESTRICT enrollment of Special needs

379 Sec 1191 Govt creates more bureaucracy - Telehealth Advisory Cmtte. Can you say HC by phone?

425 Lines 4-12 Govt mandates Advance Care Planning Consult. Think Senior Citizens end of life. Seniors will be interviewed every year for health issues and decisions made as to what care they can or can't receive (This was even too much for the Washington Post:"If Section 1233 is innocuous, why would "strategists" want to tip-toe around the subject? Perhaps because, at least as I read it, Section 1233 is not totally innocuous.")

425 Lines 17-19 Govt will instruct & consult regarding living wills, durable powers of atty. Mandatory!

425 Lines 22-25, 426 Lines 1-3 Govt provides apprvd list of end of life resources, guiding you in death

427 Lines 15-24 Govt mandates program for orders for end of life. The Govt has a say in how your life ends

429 Lines 1-9 An "adv. care planning consult" will be used frequently as patients health deteriorates

429 Lines 10-12 "adv. care consultation" may include an ORDER for end of life plans. AN ORDER from GOV

429 Lines 13-25 - The govt will specify which Doctors can write an end of life order.

430 Lines 11-15 The Govt will decide what level of treatment you will have at end of life

469 - Community Based Home Medical Services=Non profit orgs. Hello, ACORN Medical Services here!!?
Page 472 Lines 14-17 PAYMENT TO COMMUNITY-BASED ORG. 1 monthly payment to a community-based org. Like ACORN?

489 Sec 1308 The Govt will cover Marriage & Family therapy. Which means they will insert Govt into your marriage

494-498 Govt will cover Mental Health Svcs including defining, creating, rationing those services

838 - sections 440 and 1904 "Dirty secret No. 1 in Obamacare is about the government's coming into homes and usurping parental rights over child care and development."(Editorial online)




Thursday, July 23, 2009

nObama Healthcare plan - what's so confusing about it?

People think nobama care is confusing... Au contraire, I think it is very self explanatory. But first a quick review.

We started off with a 'healthcare system' that consisted of

  1. You on one side.

  2. Your Doctor on the other side.

  3. A bill that followed along afterwards.

This was soon followed by the system we have currently, that has been jiggered around by various helpful Govt initiatives to consist at this point of,


  1. You on one side.

  2. Your Doctor on the other side.

  3. Some form of insurance company and assorted regulations in between, for which you pay year around, if you should choose to be involved in it.

Now, nObama is proposing a remarkable solution to that 'problem', and in a show of bi-partisanship, the GOP has even provided a handy-dandy picture of it, which is useful, a picture being worth a thousand words and all... and thousands of words are needed to describe this thing, here it is:



(Blogger's being a pain, won't let me update the pic, full size image here - thanks Alan)

, whereby they propose that,

  1. On one side, there is You, in need of medical attention.

  2. On the other side is your Doct... oh, sorry, 'Health care provider'.

  3. In between you and your Doctor, is the entire bureaucratic structure of the federal government, with all their many, many, many bureaucrats, and their rules, regulations and continuing efforts to either get power, maintain power, or use their power... oh, sorry, I mean 'help you'.
Like I said self explanatory.

Insane... sure... but self explanatory.

Ok, this much I get,
1 - People want more access to medical care, with the same or better quality of care, at a lower cost or even at no cost.

I Got it. Understandable.

It's the second part that I don't get.
2- They want, and expect, the government to be able to accomplish that for them, by replacing the 'private' insurance fiasco they've already mandated for us, with one entirely designed and run by... the Govt?

Has anyone in this entire nation ever repeated those two sentences to themselves, back to back? And still said "Yeah, sounds good to me"?

Baffling, horrifying, and amazing, all at the same time.

And something which The Gunslinger clarified, our true Rights involve being left free to do or say something ourselves, they don't presume a Right TO something of someone else's.

These numerous leftist 'Rights', such as healthcare, involve having a Right TO something, which means that someone else MUST provide it to you, which means that they don't have the Right to choose to offer you some thing or service, but MUST provide it for you.

Didn't we fight a Civil War that revolved around such an issue?

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Unknown Conspiracies – You don’t think, therefore, they are

“Watch what people are cynical about, and one can often discover what they lack.” General George S. Patton

A cynical, mercenary, demagogic press will in time produce a people as base as itself." Joseph Pulitzer

So much talk of conspiracies today... quite alarming, the talk, not the conspiracies - if there are any of the back room variety seeking to pull the levers of power, then they are at best feeble and foolish.


The best Conspiracies don't require their conspirators to conspire with each other. I’d go as far as to say that intentional conspiracies are but T-Ball league push over’s in the game of life.

My apologies to the Bilderbergers, 9/11 Truthers, Goldman-Sachs and all the rest, but if you even have to make such wide and far reaching plans, your conspiracy is severely limited and handicapped right off of the bat. If it requires a person, or even a committee, to organize, to exert control, to check up on and to call the shots from above - continuously and flawlessly... anyone who attempts that in any facet or degree of life is going to be condemned to the amateur hour on the world stage, and will likely reap embarrassing screw ups and jail time, or worse, in fairly short order.

Hell, that can’t even be done out in the open, which is one of the reasons why a command economy fails every time.

A successful conspiracy, like a successful free market, relies on no one person or group of people, it relies upon individuals, screwy as they may be, doing what they see as the best thing for them to do to advance their interests, independently and unawares of other peoples similar efforts. This achieves not only efficiency, but also a sort of widely distributed secrecy... everyone is acting upon their own choices... towards a common goal, without the need to consciously direct or coordinate each others efforts.

How?

Through Philosophy... which makes unwitting conspirators of us all.

It is with fundamental ideas, in and of their own motive power, which ensures that those who buy into them, that their thoughts, decisions and actions, will fall into line... and with that in place, no Mr. Big need bother with hiring muscle or offering a better benefits package than does KAOS or CONTROL.

But everywhere we hear people muttering about conspiracies, the FED, the bailouts, Tarp funds, fired CEO's and executive bonuses, glowbull warming and illiterate, mathematically challenged masses as China overtakes us and islambies submerge Europe... surely there are conspiracies afoot! How can there not be?

Well, as I mentioned above, there may be small groups with plots and stratagems, but national and globally saturating conspiracies overpowering all of our fates?

Nope. At least not as most think of them. If you want to think about 'conspiracies' which control every facet of the lives and actions of millions, billions even, if you're looking for people purposefully controlling them... you're looking in the wrong places for them.

The only human power capable of manipulating entire populations, are ideas; and not just any ideas, I'm afraid "Every day is Earth Day!" isn't going to cut it (though I do like my "Exploit the earth, or Die!").

But slogans are not ideas.

If you want to know what fundamental idea has driven the greatest conspiracy in modernity, driven millions, if not billions, of people to act in opposition to what is good, beautiful and true (IOW in service to darkness), I can sum it up in the few words which first summed it up and set it loose.

Ready?

"Cogito Ergo Sum”, or in English “I think, therefore, I am."

There you go. You don’t come across many sentences capable of destroying an entire civilization. Talk about the Pen being mightier than the sword!



René Descartes - Philosopher and Civilization Slayer31 March 1596 – 11 February 1650


What does it mean? Well, here’s a snippet of what Descartes himself had to say about his little philosophical ditty,

“I thought it necessary that I reject as absolutely false everything in which I could imagine the least doubt, so as to see whether, after this process, anything in my set of beliefs remains that is absolutely indubitable.”

Hmmm… does that sound… bad?

Professor Alan Charles Kors summarized Descartes conclusions this way:

“Cogito, ergo sum: I think, therefore I am. It cannot be doubted. There is no hypothesis whatsoever, not even the evil demon hypothesis, that can overcome the indubitability of I think, therefore I am. Now, I don’t know if anything else is true, but I know that I exist as a thinking being. I may not have a body; that might be all illusion. There might not be a world out there; that might be all illusion. But I exist; because I think, therefore I am.”
What that all means in its core and practice, is that if you can doubt it, for any reason, you cannot confidently say it is true, and if you can’t doubt it, then it must be true! In his Discourse on Method, Descartes says,


"After this I inquired in general into what is essential I to the truth and certainty of a proposition; for since I had discovered one which I knew to be true, I thought that I must likewise be able to discover the ground of this certitude. And as I observed that in the words I think, therefore I am, there is nothing at all which gives me assurance of their truth beyond this, that I see very clearly that in order to think it is necessary to exist, I concluded that I might take, as a general rule, the principle, that all the things which we very clearly and distinctly conceive are true, only observing, however, that there is some difficulty in rightly determining the objects which we distinctly conceive. "
Oh go on, admit it… doesn’t that seem sensible? Enticing even? Doubt what seems doubtful, be certain of what you can’t doubt… you are the judge of what’s what, not taking anything on heresay… seems sensible? Even responsible, right?

No Slippery Slope – You’re Either Standing Or You've Fallen

Be careful though, don't let it fool you, look closer, but beee careful... not too close... the edges are slathered with grease and there is no slippery slope here, take just one step along that path and you are suddenly at the bottom.

I’ve been fretting about, trying to find the best, and briefest, approach to getting a good view of Descartes, without pitching over the edge into him … and believe me, there are many ways we could dig into his philosophy, his “Rules for Thinking”, his Discourses, Meditations, his Objections (against those who objected to those)… any one of which I could churn out 30-40 pages easily. But wanting to spare you and me both from that, I’m going to set in on two core points, what unites his famous dualism, doubt, and Cogito, in thought destructive power.

So, let’s have a look - … here we go,

“I see very clearly that in order to think it is necessary to exist…” eh… well sure… ok… “I concluded that I might take, as a general rule, the principle, that all the things which we very clearly and distinctly conceive are true, ” all things I distinctly conceive… are true? Because I distinctly conceive them? But…didn’t people distinctly conceive that the sun revolved around the earth? That slavery was the natural order? ”… only observing, however, that there is some difficulty in rightly determining the objects which we distinctly conceive.” … something’s out of order here…can’t quite put the finger on it….

Be careful now, because he does not say, that in order to establish truth, you will examine the facts and basis for your ideas, check your ideas against reality, and in looking for contradictions between what is, and what is proposed, that you will examine, test and verify as best as you can whether they are true or not while working towards a clearer and clearer conception of what is True, no no no nooo… what it does say, is that you, within the confines of your own little isolated mind, checking only against your own notions of how things seem to you, those notions are sufficient to decide whether something measures up to your notions… or not.. without reference to reality, and reality is then officially pronounced to be, as you clearly and distinctly imagine it to be.

Now wait, you might say, what about “I see very clearly that in order to think it is necessary to exist” that’s saying reality comes first, isn’t it? Nope. What it says, is that because he can’t imagine thinking without existing, he must exist, which turns the evidentiary tree, and reality itself, on it’s head. It puts the conclusion first, and spins a plausible story to support it. He rationalizes existence as existing, in order to prop up his conclusion that to in order be thinking, he must exist.

There is much dithering and dissembling on this matter and about what he really meant, but that IS what it means. Pay attention to the rest of what he said, and what is necessarily implied by what he said, and you will see that that is what, what he said, means. Furthermore, if you pay attention to what has developed out of it over the centuries, you’ll see that not only is the Cartesian method of critical doubt in opposition to reality, but it attempts to raise the whims of the doubter over reality and give those doubts and assertions the standing of truth. Examine it for yourself… it is… critical that you do, because these days most of the ideas you are presented with to try on for size, have been cut from that inverted cloth. A deductive thinking process, begun in an area where there is no inferential structure and understanding, is doomed to a trajectory of self delusion and failure.

It is this aspect of Descartes method which is what I’m going to flog to death here, because it, more than anything else, is the common factor in all of his philosophy and also because the method most often used by those following in his wake and applying his methods.

If you want to know how a President of the United States of America can swear an oath to uphold the Constitution, while publicly working to destroy it (what makes you think I mean Obama? TR? Wilson? FDR? These would fit just as well), or in a nation of laws, not men, nominates a justice to the SCOTUS who desires its opposite in empathetic women applying laws over men (what makes you think I mean Sotamayor? Could be Ruth “Buzzy” Ginsberg as well, even on off days, O’Connor… ok, I do mean Sotamayor… but still….); to understand all of that you need to understand what is meant by “Cogito Ergo Sum – I think, therefore, I am” and, more importantly, the patterns of thought operating behind it.

This isn’t mere drawing room banter, it is of life or death importance, it is the weapon being used to destroy us and to destroy you. Today. Right now.

Dualism – A diagnosis that spreads the disease

Dualism is the typical identification and criticism of The Cartesian Method, and although true, it is IMHO, only an effect of it, not a cause or definition of his philosophical method; and in fact, it is a typical result of having bought into the real problem of his Method of Doubt: that reality must prove itself to your satisfaction, not the other way around. That, and that inconsistencies do not need to be discovered from the inside out and bottom up from actual observations which didn’t add up, but are sufficiently declared to exist because it seemed possible for them to be doubtful (not sure how… but… maaayyybbeeee sooo…. mayyybeee the Super Bowl is rigged… mayyybeee JFK was killed by the military/industrial complex… mayyybeee the oil companies are keeping water powered cars from us….), maybe there’s an inaccuracy or maybe something isn’t provable, and since it seems likely, it’s ok to declare it from the top down and outside in, by assertion, fear and doubt.

The Dualism of Descartes centers on the idea that man is divided between the material meat of the body, and a separate immaterial soul, separate and distinct, and implied is that the first is real, and the later is unreal, unworthy, and a drag upon the first; seeming instances of integration, of ‘happiness’ are unenlightened delusions.

Dualism wipes away all evidence of joy, accomplishment, life, love; wipes away any unity or relation between them, merely on the shallow perception that “I think, my thumb doesn’t, therefore the two are separate and opposed”.

However, body and mind are not opposed, they are one, integrated unit. That doesn’t mean that different portions don’t have different functions, or even that some distillation of the whole might not proceed on, leaving the rest behind (or just as easily, I suppose, perish together), that still doesn’t imply wholly separate and distinct ‘dualism’ of body vs mind. Dualism is a position resulting from the shallow thinking of doubt as the legitimate method of establishing and criticizing all theories. But it’s real toxicity lies in the fact that most people who criticize it, do so only after implicitly using and accepting its methods. They’ve already accepted his starting point as the basis for critical thinking.

This example is typical of people analyzing Descartes’ Discourse on Method, that it


“…establishes two key elements of Descartes' theory of knowledge. The first is his radical separation of the thinking ego, the "I," the soul, from the physical realm of the body and nature. The world, given this metaphor, is fundamentally dualistic, with a spiritual and thinking part within human beings separated from an inert, mechanical world of non-human nature (more about this later). And the second is that a certainty like that provided by mathematic axioms and the deductions of geometry will be the criterion by which we assess what we know. …”

This is taken as a legitimate conclusion, mechanical body vs imprisoned mind, based upon… what exactly?

Now think about what Descartes has stated as a respectable premise and position, that maybe you could have no body, or world, and still think…! Such a thing cannot be said, while retaining the knowledge of what the words mean! If he’d said “Jalepeno’s are hot and burn in the mouth, so chewing Jalepeno’s and then spitting in your gas tank may enable you to run your car, and if that is true, then we can solve the energy crisis through more Mexican food and Salsa”, would you allow him to complete his next sentence? Would you listen to a professor who considered that meaningful?

Thinkers thinking thoughts through Descartes’ Method of Doubt, will be drawn into reducing concepts to the shallowest of statements (such as thinking without a body), and then while supposing that consciousness comes prior to, and that ideas are even primary over, reality, to what IS. “I think, therefore I am”, is a metaphysical distillation of the ultimate foundations of mans reality, and as its starting point from a metaphysical void, it first writes upon the clean slate of the cosmos: “I think…”; it doesn’t start with any form of existence, no light or firmament, or prime mover (though by implication it lets you play God while politely helping you to hide that from yourself… or at least from others) or other first causes, or things thought of, no, it begins with “I”, me me me meee… and ‘think’. Your internal thoughts, unintegrated suppositions, propositions, whims, desires, these shallow thoughts bereft of depth, or any relation to referents in reality, are put forth as being satisfactory starting points, and sufficient proof that you exist, and through your intellectual existence your incarnation follows, first comes thought, then follows reality. It is all nested within this philosophic ditty and there is sooo much more implied in that simple phrase, the Cogito, I assure you, a cautious reading of not only intellectual history from that day to this will prove it so, but even everyday “common sense” attributions (will look at later), will provide abundant evidence of what I am saying.

Take a look at the incidental suppositions Descartes has made, most of which is presented as pure matter of course examples, particularly this from Part IV of his Discourse on Method,


“In the next place, I attentively examined what I was and as I observed that I could suppose that I had no body, and that there was no world nor any place in which I might be; but that I could not therefore suppose that I was not; and that, on the contrary, from the very circumstance that I thought to doubt of the truth of other things, it most clearly and certainly followed that I was; while, on the other hand, if I had only ceased to think, although all the other objects which I had ever imagined had been in reality existent, I would have had no reason to believe that I existed; I thence concluded that I was a substance whose whole essence or nature consists only in thinking, and which, that it may exist, has need of no place, nor is dependent on any material thing; so that "I," that is to say, the mind by which I am what I am [there are very few literate Christians of his time who wouldn’t notice the resemblance to God’s response when Moses asked the burning bush ‘who are you?’], is wholly distinct from the body, and is even more easily known than the latter, and is such, that although the latter were not, it would still continue to be all that it is.
”[emphasis mine]

When he casually says “I observed that I could suppose that I had no body” or even “that there was no world nor any place in which I might be” , you really must think of the enormity of what he dismisses in that supposition, and does so as the basis for imagining that he is thinking! Not the least of which is, without a body, without a life, not only should you wonder how you would possibly think, but WHY would you be thinking?! Of what use or purpose would philosophy be, without a life to be enhanced by it!? The secret answer to this is, that such philosophy has nothing to do with human life, and in all of its fundamentals, is opposed to it; and unless you are very careful, allowing these disintegrated (and disintegrating) suppositions into your mind, imports the whole of this destructive pattern of thinking into your own thoughts.

This is the border crossing coyote with which he smuggles the entirety of his philosophy into your own method of thinking. How can you possibly say these things, except by ejecting all of experience and all of your personal observations and daily interactions with reality, all that you know to be true, all knowledge you have of the world, of life, of reality… with that simple phrase he undermines the very foundations of the human method of understanding, knowledge and of reasoning… just jettisons them out the window as something to be credibly assumed, not even part of his actual argument. You just posit whatever the hell you arbitrarily want to, and continue on from there.

Reasoning to Death – The First anti-human philosophy

The Critical Method of Doubt sets up a reoccurring pattern of thought that has been picked up and run with by those who have followed it, where you propose something flat out impossible, and accept it a ‘plausable’ and then proceed ‘as if’ it could be true, letting all that results from it as being considered worthy of thought (take a look at the standard ‘necessary’ vs. ‘contingent’ propositions routinely offered in college classes). It involves no observations to give support to the suspicion that you ever could have no body, and presupposes the evasion of all knowledge you have to the contrary… no evidence, no support for such an outlandish suspicion, he offers no reasonable basis for the ‘doubt’, and this is key, there is not only no reason for the doubt, but the doubt itself is in every way possible, anti-reasoning. This philosophy is at best a form of philosophical taxidermy; it takes concepts, vivisects them, guts them of their depth of meaning, preserves their appearances and arranges them in ‘lifelike’ scenarios, as if they still had any relation to human life and thought.

It is anti-reason and anti-human, and the resulting affects of it are too abundant to note here, just a glance at modern art, or the painted but empty teens congregating in the halls and lots of a shopping malls on Friday night, will serve up an abundance of evidence for this. That which gives rise to dualism, and the cogito, necessarily is a full and complete rejection of Reason, because it not only admits the arbitrary (a reason killer all itself – see logic 101), but does so as a matter of course, while substituting mere floating calculations in its place, calculations aping reason with logic chopping and disintegrated notions, result in the proverbial Garbage In – Garbage Out.

That which gives rise to Dualism and the Cogito, is necessarily anti-reason because it not only admits the arbitrary (a reason killer all itself), but actually does so as a matter of course. The substitution of mere floating calculations in the place, calculations aping reason with logic chopping and disintegrated

It is only possible to a mind that has first bought into the notion that there is a possible anti-concept, of analytic and synthetic truths – that form and function can be separate, that theory and practice can exist in contradictory forms – then you are believing that A can be both A and not A, at the same time, and so ultimately unknowable – which brings you into the windowless room of skepticism, and once in, Descartes locks the door behind you, letting you determine what reality should consist of, by virtue of your deformed certainty. Of course, it doesn’t take long to realize that you can’t be certain of anything, you could be just a brain in a vat after all (see his evil demon hypothesis), and so soon you even doubt that you are, and especially that you are thinking. See Dennett and Dawkins for examples of this.

Titanic Folly

Reason works with integrating both the immediate and extended associations of concepts, towards a united, non-contradictory whole. It deals not only with the surface appearances, but with the 2/3+ that floats below the surface, ever mindful that those extended associations and their integrations, are there, not to be ignored. Doubt, on the other hand, discards all of a concepts larger meaning without a glance, it operates on the shallowest two dimensional surface perceptions of thoughts, and presumes to arrange and cram them together wherever they wish, blind to any deeper and more substantial meaning they have. Like a captain who attempts to navigate through icebergs while paying attention only to what he sees floating above the water… his journey is not going to end well. Such a captain is Descartes, and his Critical Method of Doubt is the Titanic of philosophy, and it will suck you down with it when those ignored lower 2/3’s rips its hull open, and cold reality rushes in.

Such a doubt as to whether or not you need a body to think, is just proposed out of arbitrary imagination, and this is used to give support for the substance of a major philosophical premise, and not as part of the premise itself, but worse, as part of the accepted steps for gathering ‘evidence’ for its key premise… steps which are then repeated by nearly everyone in either supporting or refuting it… and in the process they HAVE accepted the core of his philosophy, hook, line and sinker. To say such a thing is to drop, as a matter of course, all depth of meaning, abandon the integrated reality developed through human reason in favor of the flat world of appearances which the animal nature cannot penetrate beyond – it is to abandon Reason in favor of surface fears, and hospitable to any and all assertions, defenseless before them, where you will be ‘free’ to propose new realities in your own image.

That is the true structure of his philosophy - “dualism” and the Cogito itself, are only the front door and knob of his philosophical house of cards. People wind up arguing about the style of the door and knob, but never even stop to quibble over having bought the entire house on a loan they can not ever, ever, pay for. Not only do intellectual and spiritual bankruptcy follow in its wake, but it provides no shelter from the coming storm… which it itself summons!

The true foundation of the Critical Method, is that you just propose whatever seems useful or interesting to you, just assert it… after all you can distinctly and clearly conceive it, and then rationalize an intellectual alibi to support it. But if the better lessons of psychology have taught us anything in its explanations of neurosis and other disorders, your mind is not fooled by what you don’t want to admit, it is aware that there is no intellectual support for such ideas, no connective or integrative substance for such ideas … and that evaded knowledge breeds real doubts, deep seated self doubts, and a distrusting cynicism which corrodes all claims of truth, both within and without you.

The consequences, are far reaching and leveling, and that my friends, is one of the greatest Trojan Horse-like Philosophical Viruses ever engineered, and it HAS damn near destroyed Western Civilization, and it will complete the task, if it is not identified, uprooted, and undone.

If you buy into this alluring philosophical phrase, and you do so simply by using its trappings of arbitrary doubts being given reasonable respect, do this and attempt to mine it for 'sensible' ideas, you will be subtly drawn into an alternate universe, one in which you will imagine yourself invested with absolute power… (and we all know what absolute power does to you.) What “I think therefore I am” means in its being practiced, what the ‘therefore’ signifies and accomplishes, is that your arbitrary thoughts are sufficient to prove existence, to establish a basis for your doubts and fears. If it seems true for you, it must be true.



"Of all tyrannies a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victim may be the most oppressive. It may be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron’s cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated, but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience." CS Lewis

The Geometry of Nothingness

As the Stanford review noted above mentions, Descartes uses mathematical analogies, such as values equal to the same must be equal to each other, as with 5-2 is equal to 1 + 2 , we can clearly conceive that so it is true.

But do you see that to arrive at his view of Numbers, he has already first dropped an, now unseen, third from that field of our intellectual context, and left us with only his two?

This missing third context, is one that is typical of mathematicians and rationalists, when they stop to consider that ‘number’ is some distinct and separate entity within and apart from the instances of reality they aid in quantifying.

There is an extraordinarily deep conceptual structure that is cast aside with that assertion of “Number” as existing apart from the human mind, rather than Number being a higher process of human conceptualization with which we intellectually lift ourselves up by the bootstraps of particular instances. This is how we raise perceptual instances of individual things, into quantities of something. and still further up from there into higher concepts of that Quality such as Number where we deal with the quantities of any thing; but then treating Number as a mysterious disembodied instance itself, which exists separate from our minds in a realm of Forms, is a process which soon serves to negate all qualities, and impoverishes our intellectual lives as a result.

Numbers do not exist in the world, apart from our minds which conceptualized them, anymore than a Defensive Line exists apart from a mind in the NFL. Numbers are not “Whats”, they are not physical or even immaterial things, but instead are “How’s” – They don’t exist! They are distinctly human methods of conceptually grasping what exists, and pretending otherwise, treating How’s as if they are What’s, will begin to short-circuit your minds ability to grasp and use them properly. Ask any American student taught into mathematical illiteracy, what such treatment does to your ability to even learn math. Numbers and other higher concepts, are the product of our distinct method of perceiving and understanding reality, and because they are true perceptions and perspectives of what is real, they are applicable and useful in nearly all we experience and conceive… and even though we clearly and distinctly use them, they do not exist separately from our minds using them to grasp what IS real. I’ve gone over this all before,


“So called mysterious Ideas such as those of mathematics, all began directly through our conscious interaction with reality. It began with some Geico caveman’s fuzzy awareness that these (holding up three fingers) rocks, somehow have something in common with these (holding up three fingers) spears... and with focused consideration, and not a little bit of imagination, came a grasping of the abstraction of 'Quantity', that these were the same in some way other than in their own features, they had a commonality grasped through a highly abstract view of two sets of things stripped of all their particulars of size, shape, length, color, texture, all set aside in order to reduce them to only ‘things’, and in so doing, exposing what they had in common – quantity.


… after following on the heels of grasping quantity, came the abstraction of 'Number', that a word could stand for a particular quantity of things, and that these words could apply to the same quantity of any ‘things’ you might have in mind, and following on that would be the idea that particular numbers, could be conveyed across time and place, and could be used to combine or separate ‘amounts’ of things… and these numbers could extend even beyond just matching quantities to the digits of all of your fingers and toes.


… What mathematicians do, or attempt to do with their theories, is a clear example of our ability to directly and accurately perceive and know Reality as it is, lifting us to a position high up in the conceptual ether. By taking a perceptual instance of this thing (holding up a pebble) and then abstracting upwards from that direct experience into the conceptual realm, we quickly advance several layers away from the original perceptual level, with quantities, numbers, theorems and formulas; ideas so far removed from that initial perceptual instance as to make one dizzy, but nevertheless, they all are, unless flawed or invalid, ultimately firmly rooted in reality, and through that power it gives us, has given us, the ability to harness the immense power of the immensely minute atom, and extend the reach of our senses even beyond our solar system.


Rationalism, often associated with mathematics and mathematicians, is an example of letting go of those perceptual roots, and attempting to use baseless theories, as if they had roots, or could develop them if watered well (Keynesianism is an example of this in the economic realm, Descartes, Kant & Hegel in the philosophic, but once severed from reality, they will not lead back to reality, and the persistent attempt to force such theories to take root will usually result in attempting to water such theories with blood, ala the 20th century).


No matter how abstract or impressive the formula, proof, theorem or whathaveyou, it is all traceable back, and utterly dependent upon, the very concrete, perceptual ideas abstracted into ‘things’, abstracted to quantities, and abstracted further up to the concept of 'number' standing for a particular quantity of some entity being quantified, and from there it’s off to the races.”



Numbers are nothing but reusable conceptual patterns for perceiving reality 1, 10, 100, 1000 of anything, but when used those anything’s must be filled by some thing’s.… just as a song like ‘On top of old Smokey’ is a reusable pattern of musical notes, and any child can insert any words with the right amount of syllables into it about their friends or someone they’re teasing or disliked teachers, and they can hum it with or without words, but no one makes the mistake of thinking that the tune exists apart from the person humming it, in some strange realm of the universe.

Dropping that conceptual depth while attempting to retain its result as an free standing entity itself, is the same error that criticizes Cartesian thought with “a spiritual and thinking part within human beings separated from an inert, mechanical world” of the accusation of dualism. In stating them, and discussing them as stated, they have bought into their separation and alienation. They will go on discussing these as if they are separate and distinct concepts, which they assume do stand on their own, though they may quibble with particular details of how they got that way.

Using such concepts as if they had substance apart from the mind, whether you are talking about Number, or Mind vs. Body, sucks you into an artificial world, and one reduced from Object/Subject/Unity, into one of merely Object and Subject, and I guarandamntee you, that what follows from that, one whose object will only be Subject, Subjectivism and Relativism, from there on out.

Just look around at where we’ve come to!

There is a reason why the left is authoritarian in nature, it excludes human reasoning from it’s philosophy. Kant did the same and by the same method, with his Noumena, he substituted a “What” for a “How”, a world of apperceptions for the process of perceiving.

In such a tenured world, everything you confront will become but empty strawmen for realities you’ve stopped perceiving and partaking in. (Recall Ray’s square root of -1 foolishness). In Descartes’ world of “if you can’t doubt it, it must be true”, that ‘must’ is a loaded word which ejects the inductive method of dymanically forming concepts based upon perceived instances of reality – that process excludes reasoning which performs the unifying dance of subject and object into a higher unity of both, and leaves you with only a flattened two dimensional world which the human mind has no place and no business being imprisoned within; as philosophies are (and were) built up around the ‘Cogito’, it has not only behaved as an ipxe dixit, it becomes an (un)reality factory… if you think it is real, then reality will be presumed to match… and it will be without any true understanding on your part – you will be excluded from participating in life.

To be fair to Descartes, I don’t think he intended much of what has followed from his thoughts, I think he thought his unnoticed error led him to think that he’d actually hit on a new truth and I think he would have been appalled by Rousseau, let alone Hume, Kant, Fichte, Dewey, Marx, etc, etc, etc; but follow from his thoughts they did – an idea does not lay cold and dead on the table, it grows and develops, and under the influence of the Cogito and Descartes’ Method of Doubt, it couldn’t have done otherwise, given the starting point he established. The soundness of the house is in its foundation – or lack of One.

The Popular Spread of Doubt – Conspiracies Take Root

With that little ditty at the root of all modern 'thought', people unwittingly begin from a position of incompleteness and error, and deepen their blindness with every decision and conclusion made in conformance to it, from there on out.

Kant’s use of it excluded reason from morality, so he had to posit his categorical imperatives “Never Lie”, no matter what, never, the context, etc. He declared his imperatives to be something which could not ever be imagined being wrong, so they must be true and followed always!” … you do hear Descartes doubtful echo in that, right?

More and more what is physically in front of your face, is taken to be the limit of your thoughts, and it is this slipstream through which Descartes ditty penetrates and sways, shapes and misshapes entire populations. Concepts deteriorate to appearances and actions (hello pragmatism) alone, and under this influence Happiness fades to pleasures and they descend into ever more dopamine and adrenaline soaked thrills. Worse, it leads you to seek after positions that appear to work “as if!” they were proper.

In taking the primacy of Doubt seriously, or worse, just assuming it, as has become the default thinking pattern for the West, there is no foolishness or idiocy which people cannot 'honestly' delude them selves into believing. Such positions rest on interpretations, not facts, which necessarily puts them into the position of fearing others doubting your positions... which requires that they hold their beliefs fervently, and loudly; it is after all 'your thought' and assertions, which determines 'what is' because 'I think, therefore I am' then means 'what I say, is what is so!” always accompanied by a surreptitious under the breath muttering of “eh... you say the same thing too... right...?! Ok, good!” ... and this is as it must be.

Don’t Doubt It!

Doubting is not questioning. Properly, doubt is a feeling which alerts you through a largely unconscious wider picture analysis which tells you ‘something isn’t right’ about something which you already know a great deal about, like a sensor alerting you that something doesn’t add up. It is a secondary advisor which tells you to be careful, there’s something here you are missing, but it is not suitable to be used as a primary method of thought – that is the role reserved for questioning.

Using doubt as a method, it necessarily becomes a process of breaking down and discarding that which does not fit your assumptions of what is valid and true, it simply is not a process of apprehending, resolving and building up towards valid conceptions of what is True, that is the province of Reasoning. As a result of doubting instead of reasoning, what is ventured to be opined is put forth without a well reasoned foundation of thought, and so it must be asserted, and done so either with, or over, the thoughts of others, and that requires an assessment of whether or not you can trounce them if they are opposed to you. It is this outlook that continually seeks after ‘consensus’ in thought, desperately and cravenly seeking after more and more people you can link up with who will 'agree with' you. Valid positions are those where you succeed in out posturing others in behaving as if your version of reality is real, and prior to finding a group ‘friendly’ to your position, you are in danger of a fight when venturing your opinions.

The problem with Sonia Sotormayor’s “Latina” comment isn’t that it’s racial, but that in seeing reasoning human beings, as defined by their genes, excludes character and reasoning, to say nothing of Constitutional reasoning (which IS her and their point) from the matter altogether.

Doubt requires assertions, loud ones, and the demand that those assertions be regarded as real, even when that may be… er… doubtful.

Say Hello to in, politics, collectivism, in Spirit, to the 'new atheism', and in Art, an art that is not artistic, idols who are not admirable, philosophies which are unwise and even anti-wise, and people across the world pursuing insane agendas which reflect what they've found themselves not thinking, but calculating, what their crippled view of reality should be.

And here’s the final fruit of Cartesian Doubt and skeptical cynicism, ready?

Conspiracy Theories. The conviction (clearly and distinctly held) that some malevolent power or cabal is responsible when the fact is that we, having bought into the notion that ideas need have no relation to reality, find ourselves unable to be helped by our grand ideologies, and that they, while promising freedom, delivers us into force and slavery.

Archimedes’ world moving lever has nothing on Cogito, he merely imagined that with a lever large enough, he could move the world – Descartes doesn’t bother with moving it, he reduces, reforms and reshapes it with 5 simple words… 3, if you go with the Latin (“Cogito, ergo sum”).

Doubting the Value of Freedom


Ironically for the ‘free thinkers’, those freed from the constraints of mere reality, through the magic of “I think, therefore….”, such as the French Philosophes’, Rousseau, Condorcet, they who first proposed ‘Liberté, égalité, fraternité!’ (which ended in mass death, destruction and tyranny, of course), found freedom and liberty to be the first casualties of their own Deterministic philosophies. They, such as Rousseau, Condorcet and Godwin (and all those who followed in their train), soon concluded that free will, including your own ability to choose to think such thoughts, was illusory at best (for the elites) and non existent 'in fact'(such as for regular Joe's and other plumbers), and as a result of their denial of Free Will, Freedom itself quickly becomes a casualty of their rationalistic 'free thinking'.


I kid you not, the ‘Free Thinking’ of the Philosophes’, promptly eliminates Freedom. Investigate the progression of notions following form those who bought into Descartes.

Those who bought into the first waves of the Cartesian Method, soon found themselves needing to contemplate the remaking of society and mankind too, as befit their own image of how mankind necessarily should be, according to what they conceived as being ‘very clearly and distinctly’ so... as well as ordering the nature of reality to accommodate their fascinating 'new' ideas. One of the reasons such ideas spread so quickly, is that their immediate payoff for those thinking them, is not only a heady sense of metaphysical power, but a get out of jail free card for those who don't want to be bound by real life (Hello again Mr. Rousseau… please… pull your pants up, stop confessing, sit down). Talk to a college kid if you don't believe me... or their less mature counterparts, the professors who teach them.

The Cogito’s godlike power to re-order reality to suit your pet notions and the heady burst of free thinking radicalism it inspires, almost immediately leads to the idea that people and society must respond to the external forces and events set loose by your ideas. This is at the very root of determinism. Rousseau and Godwin put it forth as necessatarianism… that what necessarily must occur will (“I think, therefore….”), and after Kant and Hegel pure Determinism followed suit. Read Wundt. Fichte. Mill. Dewey. James. In their thought, you will see the progressive excising of free will, choice and freedom, from the intellectual vocabulary, and the remnants of the human soul. People to them are pinball cattle and must be directed, influenced, molded, into doing what is best for them, and for society – and lets have none of that damned ‘individualist’ stuff! Please! The collective is responsible for all, and any rogue individuals would alter society and harm the good only unity can bestow (Hello Mr. Dewey, go to the front of the class).

Buy into the Cogito, and you will soon, as did Descartes, consider your 'independent' judgment, to be the first and last word in judging all ideas and propositions... and not just ideas, but the metaphysical structure which gives rise to them. For this is not just an idea, it is a blueprint for your metaphysical relationship to reality, it turns the real reality on its head, and the ‘Free Thinking’ it inspired in its offspring, soon set the world on fire… in many cases, quite literally, as with the fruits of one of his progeny, Rousseau, which were plucked and eaten by one of His progeny, Robespierre, and the fruits of his application of Cartesian/Rousseauian thought, was the first modern rise of Fascism and the bloodbath of the Terror of the French Revolution.

One of the first results of giving doubt primacy in your mind, is that you will soon doubt that your senses are really telling you about reality as it is, or can tell you anything about reality at all… after all… you, your consciousness is the starting point, and can easily be separated from or tricked about what is ‘outside’ you. Hello (Mr. Hume).

If Doubt Leads Your Thoughts, All Is Doubtful

If you can't determine, on your own, whether or not something is valid, then you really must consider it to be either untrue, or as yet unproved, and as such you will find that doubt, not questioning mind you (which is constructive, integrative), but Doubt (which is inherently destructive and disintegrating) will become your soul intellectual system, motivation and compass. Those who doubt all... eventually come to realize (there is some deep humor in that), that they really know, and can know... nothing.

Another problem with doubt is that it isn’t a cognitive tool. When you feel doubt, you feel a vague “ehhh… something doesn’t add up”, but it involves no identification of what, precisely, doesn’t add up. Doubt is a reaction, when you listen to someone’s explanation and say “I suppose it could be, but I doubt it…” it indicates only an unsatisfying, unconscious evaluation, like an emotional response – but for all you know it is based upon the fact that the speaker is wearing the same shoes as someone you don’t like. It tells you something is unsatisfying but nothing more, to find anything substantially amiss, you’ve got to examine what they said, you’ve got to question the premises and facts, you’ve got to make comparisons and evaluations, before you can say that there is a true and rational basis for your doubt. If you don’t ensure that there is a rational basis for your doubt, irrational doubt will lead you around by the nose.

Descartes proposes nothing of the sort is his use of doubt. You could not seriously say “I can imagine thinking without having a body” and claim any allegiance to the facts as you know them about reality. When philosophers use words without basis in reality, doom will follow. There’s the proverb “Without vision, the people will perish” True, but if they have vision, lots of it, but their vision is delusional, the people are royally screwed.

Once you begin the intellectual habit of asserting the arbitrary… on what basis do you claim the validity of anything? You cannot. As stated long ago, by Aristotle I think, the only proper response to the arbitrary is silence.

If you don’t see that “I can imagine thinking without a body” is arbitrary, I can’t help you out.

Such a system of Cartesian Doubt once insinuated into your thinking, not only prevents you from ever taking seriously anything you don't absolutely know to be true (and the fear of being wrong, the embarrassment of being caught believing something which others doubt, ensures that NOTHING can or will ever be accepted as absolutely true by you), but it cuts you off not only from the accumulated knowledge and wisdom of your culture (and reality), and limits your potential understanding to only that which one person can personally grasp and learn first hand... which is doomed to be a pitiful pittance of disintegrated trivia… this is the reality which the primacy of consciousness and the method of doubt will deliver unto you - and do to you. See Theodore Dalrymple’s “In Praise of Prejudice” for an excellent examination of this.

"I think therefore I am", puts you in direct evasion of, and opposition to, reality. Period. It’s very premise discards the depth of what is real, in favor of your representation of it. There’s another problem with doubt as a first principle of philosophy – it isn’t a cognitive tool! It is a mental response, a reaction to an unsatisfying, unconscious evaluation, like an emotional response – but for all you know it is based on the fact that the speaker is wearing the same shoes as someone you don’t like. You don’t know why you doubt something, you only have a feeling that something isn’t right. It tells you something is unsatisfying, but nothing more. If you don’t ensure that there is a rational basis for your doubts, to understand and validate, or invalidate, those doubts will gain more and more power over your rational mind… unintended doubt will break an ambush by the nose. It means that YOU come first, and reality must seek to approach your bench, it must plead its case to you, and if it meets with your approval, then you can declare it to be true (as long as it keeps in mind that it is you who are in charge.)

That little philosophical ditty soon lead towards a skepticism of doubting not only all that you know (remember “I may not have a body; that might be all illusion. There might not be a world out there; that might be all illusion. But I exist; because I think, therefore….” ) - but your ability to know anything at all (Hello Mr. Hume, right this way… hmmm? Oh, yes we can seat you far from Mr. Rousseau’s table, yes, we understand….). This state of mind will soon be followed by a willingness and desire to dictate to all those who will listen, how reality must be (and those in fear of Mr. Hume’s termite holes in their beliefs will listen, in order to avoid falling through their philosophical floor), in conformance to what YOU have determined it should be (Messrs Rousseau, Godwin, Bentham, Mill… take a bow).

Those who walk down its paths will soon discover that their own pet preferences become disarmed before others assertions or doubts, and in defense critical doubt will lead them to spin indecipherable, convoluted assertional shams dressed up in stylish pretenses in order to prevail over the less nimble minds of others (Hello Mr. Kant, will Mr. Hegel be joining you today? Ah. A table for one then), those ‘metaphysicians’ who, as Nietzsche said of them 'muddy the waters in order to make them appear deep'.

Soon after the water of philosophy has become clouded and undrinkable, those seeking its guidance but turning away from its odor, will reject the tools of proper philosophy, principle will be discarded in favor of what seems sensible right now (hello to the pragmatic Mr. Peirce, table for… eh?...yes you can just mingle and eat their food….), as long as you can be enthusiastically certain that they are clearly and distinctly conceived as being true.

For instance, take a look at this from one of Descartes' Replies to questions about his Meditations,"

First of all, as soon as we think we correctly perceive something, we’re spontaneously convinced that it is true. Now if this conviction is so firm that it is impossible for us ever to have any reason for doubting what we are convinced of, then there are no further questions for us to ask: we have everything that we could reasonably want. What is it to us that someone may make out that the perception whose truth we are so firmly convinced of may appear false to God or an angel, i.e. that it is, absolutely speaking, false? What do we care about this ‘absolute falsity’, since we don’t believe in it or have even the smallest suspicion of it? For the sort of case that is in question here is one involving a conviction so firm that it is quite incapable of being destroyed; and such a conviction is clearly the same as the most perfect certainty..."


The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy formulated one view of his thoughts this way,


“It is not inconsistent to hold that we're pursuing the truth, even succeeding in establishing the truth, and yet to construe the conditions of success wholly in terms of certainty; that is, to maintain that to establish a proposition just is to perceive it with certainty. Note again that Descartes says, of the perfect certainty he seeks, that it provides “everything that we could reasonably want,”… [referencing the above passage]:

On one reading of this remark, Descartes is explicitly embracing the consequence of having defined knowledge wholly in terms of unshakable conviction: he's conceding that achieving the brand of knowledge he seeks is compatible with being—“absolutely speaking”—in error. If this is the correct reading, the interesting upshot is that Descartes' ultimate aspiration is not absolute truth, but absolute certainty. Of course, it should not be ignored (on this reading) that these same remarks imply that achieving this perfect certainty entails being unshakably convinced that we're not in error, absolutely speaking. ”[emphasis mine]



Know any truthers who are unshakably convinced they are right, and uninterested in any facts which prove them wrong? Yeah, me too. And as those blinkered enthusiasms lead them into one blind alley and brick wall after another, then cynicism and hedonism will be all that remains for you to live by (hello modernity).

Doubting The Value Of Doubt


Doubt does not expose errors, it is through deeper consideration and questions born of fuller understanding, which will uncover contradictions. A quest for knowledge and understanding which begins with “I can’t even be certain I have a body”, is one which soon finds itself in doubt that its senses are telling it the truth about the world “out there”, and doubting your own senses as a given, as Hume declared for us, it is a very short step to be convinced that ‘others’ are keeping information from you as well. It is in fact the default mode of conviction.


The enshrinement of Doubt as your fundamental source of knowing, engenders a suspicion that there are Conspiracies afoot and controlling your life. Doubt does not breed knowledge, or wise detachment, it breeds uncertainty, and it breeds fear, and it breeds the suspicion that others are in on information that you don’t know and that they are keeping you from knowing. The doubt that you can’t really know anything for certain, fosters’ the suspicion that other’s DO know more than you, and that they are keeping it secret from you… in a mind that doubts knowledge, and so also discredits the existence of virtue, it presupposes that people have malevolent purposes, so logically they must be keeping secrets from you … and you can certainly imagine, clearly and distinctly, all sorts of nasty reasons why they would do so, couldn’t you?

With Doubt in the drivers seat, the purpose of thinking becomes doubting all thoughts.

But the purpose of thought, is to discover your relation to reality. The result of Descartes thought, is that you wind up seeking to establish realities relation, if any, to you, who are not constrained by it. There be dragons. One thing more, and it is an itty bitty thing, from the earlier quote by Descartes,


“…And as I observed that in the words I think, therefore I am, there is nothing at all which gives me assurance of their truth beyond thi…”


Do you see it? It is an itty bitty thing, but it leads to the destruction of all things… once in the habit of doubting, it is necessary that you doubt any and all… before being fooled.

Take another look, “…in the words I think, therefore I am, there is nothing at all which gives me assurance of their truth beyond thi…” nothing at all that gives assurance of their truth, beyond what he can see… for Descartes, for someone who doubts, words no longer properly have meaning, there is no depth to them, if you can’t see it in the same way a dog sees it, it can’t be trusted to exist. In the very formulation of his philosophy, skepticism and cynicism are born into modernity, they needed only the midwifery of Rousseau and Hume to extract them and spank them to draw breath, and my oh my, what monsters they have grown into.

Have you noticed that the left is forever going on about what you cannot, should not, believe in? God? Goodness? Founding Fathers? Hero’s? Parents? Family? Faithfulness? Trust? Seriously, look at common leftie talking points. Higher concepts, and those who represent them, are discredited, even derided. That you must trade such nebulous things as “Rights”(snicker), for guaranteed goodies from Govt. Goodies, things you find desirable (they’ll tell you), things the Govt says are good for you (has anyone ever stopped to consider what a life designed by Govt would look like?), especially things ‘others’ have ‘kept from you’ which some or all of those derided higher stand-ins owe you, pensions, unemployment, minimum wage, healthcare, etc, etc, etc.

What weeds grow in the fertile fields of this philosophy, are self deluded, grandiose, eccentricsm (hello again Mr. Rousseau), exalted as being truer expressions of their (meaning 'this is MY eccentricity! Go get your own quirks!') truest revealed nature! Do you wish to find the father of the modern epidemic of self centered, self important narcissists? Here is a very good starting point.

And here Descartes philosophical ditty achieves it’s final, very logical, ends. Where the Aristotelian view holds that knowledge will enable you to grasp the Truth which will set you free, the Cartesian Critical Method of Doubt destroys knowledge and ultimately will enslave you to your fears.

Now Descartes himself tried to avoid that by propping up his world with his proofs of God, which, IMHO, were feeble at best, and centered around Descartes not being able to imagine God not only not being, but not being as Descartes imagined him to be… and that his ideal God wouldn’t allow him to make an error, and so as long as he thought correctly, which meant of course, distinctly and clearly, then clearly what he thought must be true, would be true.


"… the first place even the principle which I have already taken as a rule, viz., that all the things which we clearly and distinctly conceive are true, is certain only because God is or exists and because he is a Perfect Being, and because all that we possess is derived from him: whence it follows that our ideas or notions, which to the extent of their clearness and distinctness are real, and proceed from God, must to that extent be true … "


Nothing problematic about that. Especially if you’re looking for an intellectual footing for pushing self serving (and self deluding) positions.

And Gods ways, and your ways, conveniently all amounted to the same, as long as you could conceive it clearly and distinctly, without doubt, then – viola! - they must be true! It is important not to confuse this, as he does, with the fact that that which IS True, when correctly perceived, conceived and understood, will be clear and distinct because of its Truth, or that all error is in some sense a misperception of what is True. Clear? No? It is the difference between judging a book by its cover, on the basis of the blurbs, title, jacket picture and author’s photograph; or on the basis of actually reading the book and evaluating its worth against reality. Doubting is observing un-integrated and (perhaps) non-essentials, and deciding on that basis alone, that its value is doubtful. Rather than starting from a position of building up to the Truth, with observations, understandings, the resolution of initial misperceptions (earth or sun centric solar system. Check out Descartes attempts at Physics for how bizarre his universe would be), Descartes seeks to destroy all that which cannot withstand the gaze of his own preconceptions – in a word, Doubt.

And every instance doesn’t have to be, nor is it, profound philosophical constructs, in fact the more evident evidence of it spreading as it has, are ‘trite’ instances such as the following, from popular impressions, to common implementations:

“It may be good in theory, but not in practice”,

“A new untruth is better than an old truth. “ and “Controversy equalizes fools and wise men - and the fools know it. “, from an enemy of old truths, one of our more destructive Supreme Court Justices, Oliver Wendell Holmes .

Or From "The Picture of Dorian Gray", which not only sums up the end result of Descartes cogitations, but how such things become regarded by those unwittingly poisoned by it:


"What nonsense people talk about happy marriages!" exclaimed Lord Henry. "A man can be happy with any woman, as long as he does not love her."

"Ah! what a cynic you are!" cried the old lady, pushing back her chair and nodding to Lady Ruxton. "You must come and dine with me soon again. You are really an admirable tonic, much better than what Sir Andrew prescribes for me. You must tell me what people you would like to meet, though. I want it to be a delightful gathering."



An example of how these notions are put into practice by those under its influence, is in how opinions are attempted to be popularly stated. Have you heard the phrase,


“Perception Is Everything!” or even ‘Perception is reality!”


, or this quote is typical of peoples comments “The more I explore the Law of Attraction the more I come to see that what I call reality is nothing more than my perception of what is happening around me.” , or typical of magazine articles, “Perception Is Reality: A corporate social responsibility plan in place might keep consumer backlashes at bay. ”, or typical of political commentary is this from Bill O’Reilly: “Politics is all about perception. Right now, the Republican Party is perceived to be the domain of rich, white guys. Of course, that's not entirely true, but very often perception trumps reality.”, or from The New Positioning "All politics is perception, posturing, and positioning... Given the endless polling that goes on in politics, no other business spends as much money and time crawling around in people's minds."

Where do you think all that stems from? I can tell you where it doesn’t come from, it doesn’t come from realizing that reality is the only valid basis for your ideas, this becomes possible through the development of “I think, therefore ___” fill in your blank as needed for reality to conform to what you think.

People have long written such drivel off as overblown fears, taking things to seriously or literally, they don’t really mean that (which may be true, and even worse), but if you look at the progression of this view over time, you see something very different. Try doing something like going to Gutenberg.org, and picking out a few magazines, leaf through the articles from early 1800’s, early 1900’s, and today. What you’ll see, is that somethings which were utterly unthinkable at the start of that progression, are commonplace today.

Such as? Well… Witness this,




"Evan Thomas:'...Obama is ‘we are above that now.’ We're not just parochial, we're not just chauvinistic, we're not just provincial. We stand for something – I mean in a way Obama’s standing above the country, above – above the world, he’s sort of God. He’s-'

MATTHEWS: Yeah."



Oh. My. God.

The alternative?

First Things First

Reality comes first, it IS.

What exists, exists as something, it is what it is and cannot be something else, in the same context, at the same time.

It is only in perceiving what is, that you become aware that you are, and that there is something to become aware of, ‘It IS, in perceiving what it is, that I at the same time become aware of myself’.

Things are what they are. Existence exists. Our words reflect our minds grasp of reality, and to the extent they do so accurately, they serve us well. From the first direct correlations – hot, cold, up, down, Mommy, Daddy, to the next level composite or higher level concepts which combine lower concepts, motion, temperature, family, hunger on up to the much higher level concepts which guide our actions in the world around us and in relations to other people as well; our perceptions, our words, our concepts and our use of them, enable us to partake in reality, both physically and socially, and help us to determine the sensible, proper, ethical, actions we should take in relation to them.

It is through our experience and understanding of reality, from the ground up – which is how we discover and learn about reality as children, and only after which do we, as young children, first discover ourselves – is accomplished through our perceptions, words and conceptions which are all part of our method of experiencing, living in, and partaking of Life, of Reality, and it is through our choices of how we use them, or abuse them, how well we have sought to ensure that they are honest reflections of the reality they help us to understand, which determines how honest, energetic and alive our lives will be.

We really do have to judge and choose for ourselves, carefully, and no matter how much some of us wish to avoid such choices, or regiment such choices out of our power to reason and choose. Descartes foolishness aside, IT - the world, the cosmos - IS, and in perceiving what it is, we become aware of ourselves, and within our awareness of what is, and our relationship to it, we also must choose how we are to act. That act of choosing, is our central point of activity in our lives, everything flows from it, and from our neglect of it.

The choice is free, and you must will yourself to make it, and there is no avoiding that.

It is really not avoidable… but it sure is funny to watch people pretend they have no free will … or… or… that they aren’t sure whether or not they dooo!

Far from the Legislators being the highest form of man there is (see Rousseau… or any politician in Washington D.C.), to the extent he seeks to force actions, prevent choices, blur, evade or fake reality, he is in fact the lowest, most dehumanizing creature to walk the earth. Witness the Judges who seek to legislate from the bench, invalidating the choices of entire populations, they impose their decisions from on high, overturning the choices, both of the moment, and those developed through a long and sustained purpose over the course of years and even entire lives (Hello Sonia Sotomayor, your bench has been prepared for you).

The idea that Justice, can be imposed from on high, of displacing and overriding an individuals own choices for and in their lives, is...Hideous... it is the attempt to exclude people from their own lives. An examination of such notions of Justice (which will have to wait for a later post), will show that it has very little to do with Justice (which develops only from the antithesis of Doubt), but from applying notions of Fairness, which amounts to being what someone has decided is Fair, meaning that which they distinctly and clearly cannot doubt as being Fair. And having come to that Cartesian, rationalistic, conclusion of what is Fair, and so ‘Just’, it must be imposed on the public, so that they will more clearly and distinctly become what you have determined must be right and true.

The substitution of what is Fair for what is Just – the very same doubtful notions which allows someone to say ‘maybe I don’t need a body to think’ enables them to ignore deeps structures of experience and conceptions of reality in favor of a whim of what they ‘clearly and distinctly imagine to be true’ - requires the extinguishing of free will, and of freedom itself, and by implication, individual judgment.

Collectivism is a requirement for a ‘free thinkers’ society. Individualism cannot exist within it.

The moments where we experience actively living our lives, the point where the soul within makes contact with the world without – these are moments which should help us perceive our Unity, not a cowardly Cartesian duality – these moments where you exercise life, are those moments of making our choices, freely made, right or wrong, wise or foolish, nothing is more sacred and necessary to liberty and freedom... than the right to exercise your free will in your pursuit of happiness.

The exercise of your free will is an issue so critical, not even an all powerful God felt it would be proper for him to make those choices for us, but left it to humanity to choose to abide by his laws... or not.

The materialist’s life, the leftist’s ideal life, would require that we be mindless, fleshbots... preprogrammed and resynched with the central cpu on a regular basis (… and they are trying for it aren't they?), and the hallmark of the statist in general and the leftist in particular, is to exclude you from your own life, regulating you out of the choices that make you, you, truly attempting to shove you out of your own life.

Where you would, in a free country, have exercised your free will, engaged and lived your life, made your choices... you are prevented from doing so... even if you would have made the choice as the state would have preferred you to... they've already made the choice for you... effectively zombifying you in those moments.

And the number of those regulated moments have been multiplying more and more and more every day, till we’ve now reached that point where, as Einstein was startled by compound interest, we are about to enter into compound regulatory tyranny, and our freedoms and rights and the wealth which results only from them, will be extinguished.

Do any of them ever ask why East Germany looked like a living graveyard in comparison to the West? Why is it that a night view satellite image of of North and South Korea, shows the north to be situated beyond a line of utter darkness?

The leftist, the statist does see this, and they do seek this for us as well, that is their dirty little secret, because they are themselves darkness within... even in the light of day. As General Patton said of cynics, “Watch what people are cynical about, and one can often discover what they lack.”, so true, and what they are cynical about, is what is Good, what is Beautiful and what is True.

Zombie movies aren't just for sci-fi anymore, I have it on good authority, I conceive it clearly and distinctly… you should run… fast … but there’s nowhere to run to anymore… better yet, stand and fight, and shoot them right between the eyes, with words of Truth, with resolve, and with integrity. And worse yet, from their point of view - laugh at them. Ridicule them. Oh... it burns-sss!


That is the only way to kill them again. And again, and again. The price of liberty is eternal vigilance against zombies and the undead zombie kings. And speaking of zombie kings… look....


...The Gangs All Here!

So here we’ve got the whole gang together in this shadowy back room, the true scheming figures of modern history, the Mr. Big’s of the mother of all conspiracies, that of modernity. Descartes, Hume, Rousseau, Mill, Godwin, Kant, Hegel, Peirce, Marx, Dewey… few of them knew each other, and few of them liked or agreed with each other, and fewer of us even know of them, but together they have worked down through the centuries, hand in glove, unmaking the civilization that had sheltered them, and shelters us, and which is still our last best hope.

Take a bow guys… and you out there, you too, you may need to take a bow as well. If you are unaware of these old undead white guys, you’ve helped spread their unspoken conspiracies. If you know of them, and have given respect their names and those who instill their ideas without having read and understood their zombifying spells, you too should take a bow, because you’ve all had active hands in bringing about the present destruction of Western Civilization.


You can still redeem yourself however... just don't give these undead liars a place to rest.

Friday, July 03, 2009

The Inspiration of the Declaration of Independence - Silent Cal


I'd planned a somewhat gloomy post, reviewing our current situation, popular options, and how we got there... and then thought -Ptooey! It's the Fourth of July, Dammnit! Shortly afterwards I came across this speech - which hits it out of the park on so many levels - from silent Calvin Coolidge, 30th President of the United States of America, and (with apologies to Reagan) arguably the best President of the 20th century, because he was the only one who consistently understood and applied the original founding principles - probably owing to his being the last with a classical education.
----

Enough of me, here's Cal -

The Inspiration of the Declaration of Independence
July 5, 1926

We meet to celebrate the birthday of America. The coming of a new life always excites our interest. Although we know in the case of the individual that it has been an infinite repetition reaching back beyond our vision, that only makes it the more wonderful. But how our interest and wonder increase when we behold the miracle of the birth of a new nation. It is to pay our tribute of reverence and respect to those who participated in such a mighty event that we annually observe the fourth day of July. Whatever may have been the impression created by the news which went out from this city on that summer day in 1776, there can be no doubt as to the estimate which is now placed upon it. At the end of 150 years the four corners of the earth unite in coming to Philadelphia as to a holy shrine in grateful acknowledgment of a service so great, which a few inspired men here rendered to humanity, that it is still the preeminent support of free government throughout the world.

Although a century and a half measured in comparison with the length of human
experience is but a short time, yet measured in the life of governments and nations it ranks as a very respectable period. Certainly enough time has elapsed to demonstrate with a great deal of thoroughness the value of our institutions and their dependability as rules for the regulation of human conduct and the advancement of civilization. They have been in existence long enough to become very well seasoned. They have met, and met successfully, the test of experience.

It is not so much then for the purpose of undertaking to proclaim new theories and principles that this annual celebration is maintained, but rather to reaffirm and reestablish those old theories and principles which time and the unerring logic of events have demonstrated to be sound. Amid all the clash of conflicting interests, amid all the welter of partisan politics, every American can turn for solace and consolation to the Declaration of independence and the Constitution of the United States with the assurance and confidence that those two great charters of freedom and justice remain firm and unshaken. Whatever perils appear, whatever dangers threaten, the Nation remains secure in the knowledge that the ultimate application of the law of the land will provide an adequate defense and protection.

It is little wonder that people at home and abroad consider Independence Hall as hallowed ground and revere the Liberty Bell as a sacred relic. That pile of bricks and mortar, that mass of metal, might appear to the uninstructed as only the outgrown meeting place and the shattered bell of a former time, useless now because of more modern conveniences, but to those who know they have become consecrated by the use which men have made of them. They have long been identified with a great cause. They are the framework of a spiritual event. The world looks upon them, because of their associations of one hundred and fifty years ago, as it looks upon the Holy Land because of what took place there nineteen hundred years ago. Through use for a righteous purpose they have become sanctified.

It is not here necessary to examine in detail the causes which led to the American Revolution. In their immediate occasion they were largely economic. The colonists objected to the navigation laws which interfered with their trade, they denied the power of Parliament to impose taxes which they were obliged to pay, and they therefore resisted the royal governors and the royal forces which were sent to secure obedience to these laws. But the conviction is inescapable that a new civilization had come, a new spirit had arisen on this side of the Atlantic more advanced and more developed in its regard for the rights of the individual than that which characterized the Old World. Life in a new and open country had aspirations which could not be realized in any subordinate position. A separate establishment was ultimately inevitable. It had been decreed by the very laws of human nature. Man everywhere has an unconquerable desire to be the master of his own destiny.

We are obliged to conclude that the Declaration of Independence represented the movement of a people. It was not, of course, a movement from the top. Revolutions do not come from that direction. It was not without the support of many of the most respectable people in the Colonies, who were entitled to all the consideration that is given to breeding, education, and possessions. It had the support of another element of great significance and importance to which I shall later refer. But the preponderance of all those who occupied a position which took on the aspect of aristocracy did not approve of the Revolution and held toward it an attitude either of neutrality or open hostility. It was in no sense a rising of the oppressed and downtrodden. It brought no scum to the surface, for the reason that colonial society had developed no scum. The great body of the people were accustomed to privations, but they were free from depravity. If they had poverty, it was not of the hopeless kind that afflicts great cities, but the inspiring kind that marks the spirit of the pioneer. The American Revolution represented the informed and mature convictions of a great mass of independent, liberty-loving, God-fearing people who knew their rights, and possessed the courage to dare to maintain them. The Continental Congress was not only composed of great men, but it represented a great people. While its members did not fail to exercise a remarkable leadership, they were equally observant of their representative capacity. They were industrious in encouraging their constituents to instruct them to support independence. But until such instructions were given they were inclined to withhold action.

While North Carolina has the honor of first authorizing its delegates to concur with other Colonies in declaring independence, it was quickly followed by South Carolina and Georgia, which also gave general instructions broad enough to include such action. But the first instructions which unconditionally directed its delegates to declare for independence came from the great Commonwealth of Virginia. These were immediately followed by Rhode Island and Massachusetts, while the other Colonies, with the exception of New York, soon adopted a like course.

This obedience of the delegates to the wishes of their constituents, which in some cases caused them to modify their previous positions, is a matter of great significance. It reveals an orderly process of government in the first place; but more than that, it demonstrates that the Declaration of Independence was the result of the seasoned and deliberate thought of the dominant portion of the people of the Colonies. Adopted after long discussion and as the result of the duly authorized expression of the preponderance of public opinion, it did not partake of dark intrigue or hidden conspiracy. It was well advised. It had about it nothing of the lawless and disordered nature of a riotous insurrection. It was maintained on a plane which rises above the ordinary conception of rebellion. It was in no sense a radical movement but took on the dignity of a resistance to illegal usurpations. It was conservative and represented the action of the colonists to maintain their constitutional rights which from time immemorial had been guaranteed to them under the law of the land.

When we come to examine the action of the Continental Congress in adopting the Declaration of Independence in the light of what was set out in that great document and in the light of succeeding events, we can not escape the conclusion that it had a much broader and deeper significance than a mere secession of territory and the establishment of a new nation. Events of that nature have been taking place since the dawn of history. One empire after another has arisen, only to crumble away as its constituent parts separated from each other and set up independent governments of their own. Such actions long ago became commonplace. They have occurred too often to hold the attention of the world and command the admiration and reverence of humanity. There is something beyond the establishment of a new nation, great as that event would be, in the Declaration of Independence which has ever since caused it to be regarded as one of the great charters that not only was to liberate America but was everywhere to ennoble humanity.

It was not because it was proposed to establish a new nation, but because it was proposed to establish a nation on new principles, that July 4, 1776, has come to be regarded as one of the greatest days in history. Great ideas do not burst upon the world unannounced. They are reached by a gradual development over a length of time usually proportionate to their importance. This is especially true of the principles laid down in the Declaration of Independence. Three very definite propositions were set out in its preamble regarding the nature of mankind and therefore of government. These were the doctrine that all men are created equal, that they are endowed with certain inalienable rights, and that therefore the source of the just powers of government must be derived from the consent of the governed.

If no one is to be accounted as born into a superior station, if there is to be no ruling class, and if all possess rights which can neither be bartered away nor taken from them by any earthly power, it follows as a matter of course that the practical authority of the Government has to rest on the consent of the governed. While these principles were not altogether new in political action, and were very far from new in political speculation, they had never been assembled before and declared in such a combination. But remarkable as this may be, it is not the chief distinction of the Declaration of Independence. The importance of political speculation is not to be under-estimated, as I shall presently disclose. Until the idea is developed and the plan made there can be no action.

It was the fact that our Declaration of Independence containing these immortal truths was the political action of a duly authorized and constituted representative public body in its sovereign capacity, supported by the force of general opinion and by the armies of Washington already in the field, which makes it the most important civil document in the world. It was not only the principles declared, but the fact that therewith a new nation was born which was to be founded upon those principles and which from that time forth in its development has actually maintained those principles, that makes this pronouncement an incomparable event in the history of government. It was an assertion that a people had arisen determined to make every necessary sacrifice for the support of these truths and by their practical application bring the War of Independence to a successful conclusion and adopt the Constitution of the United States with all that it has meant to civilization.

The idea that the people have a right to choose their own rulers was not new in political history. It was the foundation of every popular attempt to depose an undesirable king. This right was set out with a good deal of detail by the Dutch when as early as July 26, 1581, they declared their independence of Philip of Spain. In their long struggle with the Stuarts the British people asserted the same principles, which finally culminated in the Bill of Rights deposing the last of that house and placing William and Mary on the throne. In each of these cases sovereignty through divine right was displaced by sovereignty through the consent of the people. Running through the same documents, though expressed in different terms, is the clear inference of inalienable rights. But we should search these charters in vain for an assertion of the doctrine of equality. This principle had not before appeared as an official political declaration of any nation. It was profoundly revolutionary. It is one of the corner stones of American institutions.

But if these truths to which the declaration refers have not before been adopted in their combined entirety by national authority, it is a fact that they had been long pondered and often expressed in political speculation. It is generally assumed that French thought had some effect upon our public mind during Revolutionary days. This may have been true. But the principles of our declaration had been under discussion in the Colonies for nearly two generations before the advent of the French political philosophy that characterized the middle of the eighteenth century. In fact, they come from an earlier date. A very positive echo of what the Dutch had done in 1581, and what the English were preparing to do, appears in the assertion of the Rev. Thomas Hooker of Connecticut as early as 1638, when he said in a sermon before the General Court that:

The foundation of authority is laid in the free consent of the people
The choice of public magistrates belongs unto the people by God's own allowance.

This doctrine found wide acceptance among the nonconformist clergy who later made up the Congregational Church. The great apostle of this movement was the Rev. John Wise, of Massachusetts. He was one of the leaders of the revolt against the royal governor Andros in 1687, for which he suffered imprisonment. He was a liberal in ecclesiastical controversies. He appears to have been familiar with the writings of the political scientist, Samuel Pufendorf, who was born in Saxony in 1632. Wise published a treatise, entitled "The Church's Quarrel Espoused," in 1710 which was amplified in another publication in 1717. In it he dealt with the principles of civil government. His works were reprinted in 1772 and have been declared to have been nothing less than a textbook of liberty for our Revolutionary fathers.

While the written word was the foundation, it is apparent that the spoken word was the vehicle for convincing the people. This came with great force and wide range from the successors of Hooker and Wise, It was carried on with a missionary spirit which did not fail to reach the Scotch Irish of North Carolina, showing its influence by significantly making that Colony the first to give instructions to its delegates looking to independence. This preaching reached the neighborhood of Thomas Jefferson, who acknowledged that his "best ideas of democracy" had been secured at church meetings.

That these ideas were prevalent in Virginia is further revealed by the Declaration of Rights, which was prepared by George Mason and presented to the general assembly on May 27, 1776. This document asserted popular sovereignty and inherent natural rights, but confined the doctrine of equality to the assertion that "All men are created equally free and independent". It can scarcely be imagined that Jefferson was unacquainted with what had been done in his own Commonwealth of Virginia when he took up the task of drafting the Declaration of Independence. But these thoughts can very largely be traced back to what John Wise was writing in 1710. He said, "Every man must be acknowledged equal to every man". Again, "The end of all good government is to cultivate humanity and promote the happiness of all and the good of every man in all his rights, his life, liberty, estate, honor, and so forth . . . ." And again, "For as they have a power every man in his natural state, so upon combination they can and do bequeath this power to others and settle it according as their united discretion shall determine". And still again, "Democracy is Christ's government in church and state". Here was the doctrine of equality, popular sovereignty, and the substance of the theory of inalienable rights clearly asserted by Wise at the opening of the eighteenth century, just as we have the principle of the consent of the governed stated by Hooker as early as 1638.

When we take all these circumstances into consideration, it is but natural that the first paragraph of the Declaration of Independence should open with a reference to Nature's God and should close in the final paragraphs with an appeal to the Supreme Judge of the world and an assertion of a firm reliance on Divine Providence. Coming from these sources, having as it did this background, it is no wonder that Samuel Adams could say "The people seem to recognize this resolution as though it were a decree promulgated from heaven."

No one can examine this record and escape the conclusion that in the great outline of its principles the Declaration was the result of the religious teachings of the preceding period. The profound philosophy which Jonathan Edwards applied to theology, the popular preaching of George Whitefield, had aroused the thought and stirred the people of the Colonies in preparation for this great event. No doubt the speculations which had been going on in England, and especially on the Continent, lent their influence to the general sentiment of the times. Of course, the world is always influenced by all the experience and all the thought of the past. But when we come to a contemplation of the immediate conception of the principles of human relationship which went into the Declaration of Independence we are not required to extend our search beyond our own shores. They are found in the texts, the sermons, and the writings of the early colonial clergy who were earnestly undertaking to instruct their congregations in the great mystery of how to live. They preached equality because they believed in the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man. They justified freedom by the text that we are all created in the divine image, all partakers of the divine spirit.

Placing every man on a plane where he acknowledged no superiors, where no one possessed any right to rule over him, he must inevitably choose his own rulers through a system of self-government. This was their theory of democracy. In those days such doctrines would scarcely have been permitted to flourish and spread in any other country. This was the purpose which the fathers cherished. In order that they might have freedom to express these thoughts and opportunity to put them into action, whole congregations with their pastors had migrated to the colonies. These great truths were in the air that our people breathed. Whatever else we may say of it, the Declaration of Independence was profoundly American.

If this apprehension of the facts be correct, and the documentary evidence would appear to verify it, then certain conclusions are bound to follow. A spring will cease to flow if its source be dried up; a tree will wither if its roots be destroyed. In its main features the Declaration of Independence is a great spiritual document. It is a declaration not of material but of spiritual conceptions. Equality, liberty, popular sovereignty, the rights of man these are not elements which we can see and touch. They are ideals. They have their source and their roots in the religious convictions. They belong to the unseen world. Unless the faith of the American people in these religious convictions is to endure, the principles of our Declaration will perish. We can not continue to enjoy the result if we neglect and abandon the cause.

We are too prone to overlook another conclusion. Governments do not make ideals, but ideals make governments. This is both historically and logically true. Of course the government can help to sustain ideals and can create institutions through which they can be the better observed, but their source by their very nature is in the people. The people have to bear their own responsibilities. There is no method by which that burden can be shifted to the government. It is not the enactment, but the observance of laws, that creates the character of a nation.

About the Declaration there is a finality that is exceedingly restful. It is often asserted that the world has made a great deal of progress since 1776, that we have had new thoughts and new experiences which have given us a great advance over the people of that day, and that we may therefore very well discard their conclusions for something more modern. But that reasoning can not be applied to this great charter. If all men are created equal, that is final. If they are endowed with inalienable rights, that is final. If governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed, that is final. No advance, no progress can be made beyond these propositions. If anyone wishes to deny their truth or their soundness, the only direction in which he can proceed historically is not forward, but backward toward the time when there was no equality, no rights of the individual, no rule of the people. Those who wish to proceed in that direction can not lay claim to progress. They are reactionary. Their ideas are not more modern, but more ancient, than those of the Revolutionary fathers.

In the development of its institutions America can fairly claim that it has remained true to the principles which were declared 150 years ago. In all the essentials we have achieved an equality which was never possessed by any other people. Even in the less important matter of material possessions we have secured a wider and wider distribution of wealth. The rights of the individual are held sacred and protected by constitutional guaranties, which even the Government itself is bound not to violate. If there is any one thing among us that is established beyond question, it is self government; the right of the people to rule. If there is any failure in respect to any of these principles, it is because there is a failure on the part of individuals to observe them. We hold that the duly authorized expression of the will of the people has a divine sanction. But even in that we come back to the theory of John Wise that "Democracy is Christ's government". The ultimate sanction of law rests on the righteous authority of the Almighty.

On an occasion like this a great temptation exists to present evidence of the practical success of our form of democratic republic at home and the ever broadening acceptance it is securing abroad. Although these things are well known, their frequent consideration is an encouragement and an inspiration. But it is not results and effects so much as sources and causes that I believe it is even more necessary constantly to contemplate. Ours is a government of the people. It represents their will. Its officers may sometimes go astray, but that is not a reason for criticizing the principles of our institutions. The real heart of the American Government depends upon the heart of the people. It is from that source that we must look for all genuine reform. It is to that cause that we must ascribe all our results.

It was in the contemplation of these truths that the fathers made their declaration and adopted their Constitution. It was to establish a free government, which must not be permitted to degenerate into the unrestrained authority of a mere majority or the unbridled weight of a mere influential few. They undertook the balance these interests against each other and provide the three separate independent branches, the executive, the legislative, and the judicial departments of the Government, with checks against each other in order that neither one might encroach upon the other. These are our guaranties of liberty. As a result of these methods enterprise has been duly protected from confiscation, the people have been free from oppression, and there has been an ever broadening and deepening of the humanities of life.

Under a system of popular government there will always be those who will seek for political preferment by clamoring for reform. While there is very little of this which is not sincere, there is a large portion that is not well informed. In my opinion very little of just criticism can attach to the theories and principles of our institutions. There is far more danger of harm than there is hope of good in any radical changes. We do need a better understanding and comprehension of them and a better knowledge of the foundations of government in general. Our forefathers came to certain conclusions and decided upon certain courses of action which have been a great blessing to the world. Before we can understand their conclusions we must go back and review the course which they followed. We must think the thoughts which they thought. Their intellectual life centered around the meeting-house. They were intent upon religious worship. While there were always among them men of deep learning, and later those who had comparatively large possessions, the mind of the people was not so much engrossed in how much they knew, or how much they had, as in how they were going to live. While scantily provided with other literature, there was a wide acquaintance with the Scriptures. Over a period as great as that which measures the existence of our independence they were subject to this discipline not only in their religious life and educational training, but also in their political thought. They were a people who came under the influence of a great spiritual development and acquired a great moral power.

No other theory is adequate to explain or comprehend the Declaration of Independence. It is the product of the spiritual insight of the people. We live in an age of science and of abounding accumulation of material things. These did not create our Declaration. Our Declaration created them. The things of the spirit come first. Unless we cling to that, all our material prosperity, overwhelming though it may appear, will turn to a barren scepter in our grasp. If we are to maintain the great heritage which has been bequeathed to us, we must be like minded as the fathers who created it. We must not sink into a pagan materialism. We must cultivate the reverence which they had for the things that are holy. We must follow the spiritual and moral leadership which they showed. We must keep replenished, that they may glow with a more compelling flame, the altar fires before which they worshipped.

Monday, June 29, 2009

I Have No Need Of Monsters - Reality Is Frightening Enough For Me

I have no need of monsters - reality is terrifying enough for me

I have no need of monsters. I do not need Obama to be the most narcissistic narcissist since man first heard the echo of his own voice - his creating the 'seal of the office of the president-elect', suffices rather well for me. I do not need him to be the anti-Christ, his putting his long held disdain for the that document which he has never shown any glimpse of understanding - the U.S. Constitution - into destructive practice (see his past and forthcoming legislative efforts), is terrifying enough for me.

I do not need Bildeburghers or black helicopters, the actions of Paulson, Geitner and House and Senate who feel no need to read legislation before voting on it, and Serv.Gov have me quaking in my boots enough already.

I have no need for elaborate monsters, there are real ones afoot here and now. Like the movie makers of the 30's & 40's understood, the monster you don't see is far more real than the one you do. Our monsters are non-corporeal Ideas, and they animate the bodies of ordinary people in such a way, that, even more so than sci-fi Pod People, they horrify me today. They horrify me because they are living breathing people, here among us, living next door or even with you in your own home. They are made far more monstrous than any CGI or movie make-up by what they uncomprehendingly believe, than any fictional ghoul could ever conjure up... and what makes them more dangerous than any magical talisman or spell - they believe they are right - without understanding what they believe - they believe they are right.

Hitler was no monster. Portraying him so only makes him only safer to our sensibilities, and as a consequence even more of a threat. Hitler was worse than a monster, he was a human being who believed that his sophistic estimations and deductions which he "clearly and distinctly" imagined to be true, were correct.

Some of the most celebrated minds in 19th & 20th century America thought it perfectly right and proper to use the Govt to allow and disallow who could, and who could not, marry. They felt themselves perfectly in the right, and competent to, judge who was worth allowing to have children, and who should be prevented from ever doing so.

As Progressives, in both the Democrat and Republican parties, there were large numbers who were for eugenic programs, including Oliver Wendell Holmes on the bench of the U.S. Supreme Court. And they put those ideas into law.

I've no need of monsters, we've had real people, otherwise kind and sensible people, willing to do monstrous things because, without understanding what they believed, and content with that, they thought they were right.

I've no need of conspiracies, we've had individuals perfectly willing to act in the open to destroy our way of life, because they didn't understand what they were doing, and they were self satisfied in thinking that they were right to do so.

We've had Truman attempting to nationalize the steel industry, we've had Nixon decreeing wage and price controls. We've had congress passing legislation forcing businesses to compromise with, and allow a say in their decisions to those who wish them ruin, labor unions. We've had two Presidents and Secretaries willing to nationalize financial and industrial institutions... to destroy the free market 'in order to save the free market'. We have people seriously thinking about the sensibility of states seceding from the union. We've had... we've had much worse than that.

There has been worse, and I've no doubt that there is worse coming.

And it is coming, and it is able to come, because something worse than an evil sorcerer has been at work; a well intentioned philosopher, centuries ago, made it possible for people to publicly, and with intellectual respectability, to advance the most spurious nonsense based on the proposition that it could be true, and if that could be true, then this must be true, and therefore these X things must be done.... And part and parcel of that, his ideas made it nearly impossible for those who innocently read his thoughts, to detect errors in their own thoughts, or even feel the need to do so.

That long ago foolish philosopher was Descartes, and because he didn't think, we're doomed - unless we learn to spot and avoid his errors, but that would require doing away with our schools - but people believe our schools are good, even though they are bad... we may indeed be doomed, doomed to apply his errors, to our lives.

And he was followed by many other philosophers who consciously, and unconsciously, have done much worse.

And the result is that today we have no need of monsters... we have people, willing to do what they are pleased to say is right, and 'for our own good'.

Horrifying.

To be continued soon....

Sunday, June 21, 2009

The Ongoing Meltdown - Economic only? Don't you wish

Many people have expressed surprise at our current 'economic meltdown. If anything, I've been surprised that the meltdown has taken this long to happen. I very much agree with an article "Why the meltdown should have surprised no one" written by Peter Schiff (recently referred to by Scipio in his post "Have A Bad Day"), that the economic meltdown should have been no surprise to anybody. Schiff is apparently of the Austrian school of economics, most widely associated with Ludwig von Mises. The Austrian's are far and away the best of the recognized 'economic schools' out there, I think they still miss the mark in some areas, especially as they move away from von Mises original ideas, but not but not by much, especially in comparison with their competition.

The worst part of all this discussion of the economy and the economic meltdown however, is that people seem to think that the economy is some separate machinery which operates independently of 'we the people', and that it can be tinkered with, adjusted, 'reset' without such actions affecting or having anything to do with those who make the economy run - you and me.

Talk about fantasy.

Sidestepping all of the economic schools and the issues which divide them, I can give a short summary of an economy, as being dependent upon three factors:

1 - A moral, rational people,
2 - at liberty to make their own decisions (economic and otherwise),
3 - under a government of objective written laws, directed towards preserving their liberty and property

Add those 3 factors together, and the result will be productivity - economic and otherwise.

Such a system and such a people are able to unleash previously undreamt of wealth from the same nature that all the world has experienced nearly unchanged over all of human history. But only because they are able to command nature to obey them, because they obey it, they are in conformance to reality, to truth, externally and internally; and the industrial, technological fruits of the last 200 years are a testament to that.

However, any interference or contamination in any one of those three factors, will dilute and disrupt the other two, reducing productivity - economically and otherwise. Such actions introduce a disconnect between the people and reality and their ability to be in conformance with what is true, and then more and more so, error becomes the product produced.

Such interferences are introduced, in economic terms, through abandoning tangible values such as Gold from the currency(see Richard Salsman's "Can fiat money be managed effectifely?"); in political terms, by moving away from the principle of being a nation of laws, towards being a nation of men; and in societal terms, by moving away from the importance of integrity and character, towards a therapeutic concern for compassion towards flaws and a demand for fairness in outcomes.

The 'Error' such an economy produces, is referred to in economic terms, as inefficiency, waste; political terms, a loss of rights and freedoms moving towards tyranny, and in societal terms, immorality, sin and even evil.

Willingly or unwittingly, their ability to act rationally is reduced. Even those who still try to be moral and rational, are working with contaminated goods, information and tools, and so their output cannot be in accordance with reality, and the system becomes unbalanced.

Each attempt at correcting such a situation by adding more and more counter balances instead of by finding and removing the accreted errors, only makes the situation worse, the vibration intensifies, and eventually the entire machinery will all come to a crashing halt.

I have zero faith that any solution will be found by any party - if it involves anything less than removing the gunk that has caused us to wobble off into such a violently unbalanced situation as we find ourselves in at this time.

But that gunk is not just in Washington D.C., it is in us, in, as that article so well points out, in our unwillingness to perceive what is real. Of those three factors of the economy I mentioned above, the first, a rational and moral people, is the most necessary, and as long as we discard that, or seek to evade that (which amounts to the same), it will all come to a crashing halt, unable to make a proper connection to reality, to truth, and all that will be produced is error - inefficiency, waste, a loss of rights and freedoms, tyranny, immorality, sin, or in a word: Evil.

As a result, all that is good and all that is beautiful, and all that is true, will we remain unproduced, and the 'market' will be flooded with nothing but shoddy knock-off substitutes... and the world will have to wait until another people comes along able to be moral and rational and able to perceive what is real, and what is true and what is good and what is beautiful; and being willing and able to see and respect them, is once again able to produce them.

Even if our constitution were purged tomorrow of all of the progressive accretions slopped onto it by the progressives since the late 1800's... it would still be a long and slow process of purging our own minds and souls of those same accretions, before we are again able to interact, unimpeded, with reality and what is true.

Such a legislative and judicial purge would certainly help, it would at least be a start. But unless we intellectually, and spiritually degunk as well, a cleaned up constitution would only be ignored - as indeed our non-representing-representatives in Washington D.C. have recently discovered they are to do at will right now.

There is no existing law giving the president or congress the ability to do any part of what they are doing, right now.

They are just doing it.

They are doing it, because they know that the people have willingly allowed themselves to be no longer concerned with what is real and what is true - everyone is quite content playing make believe. This video is a prime example of this,



We look at the utter insanity rehearsed in this video, and in disbelief, we shake our heads "It can't be real, they can't be serious", well it's true, it can't be real - not in the sense that it could ever be successfuly implemented in a nation expecting to remain a nation, undivided or otherwise - and yes, they are serious.

It is a game they play with the utmost sincerity. Not because it can be possible, but because they want it to be, which is easily done, if you aren't too concerned with reality in the first place.

The source of our pervasive willingness to play make believe with reality, will be the subject of my next post, looking at Descartes and the philosophic game of rationalism, which with the introduction of his "Cogito Ergo Sum" and his Critical Method of Doubt, we've been using to play games with reality ever since.

The game will soon be up however. There can be only so much rampant error before a system experiences a massive crash. And after such a crash, you have two choices, fix the problem, or ignore it and pretend it can't get even worse.

I'm not seeing many of those attending to the crash that are paying much attention to reality.

I'll make my own prediction here, our current mess, and cleaning it up, will not remain confined to mere economic matters, and recovering from both the mess, and the blinkered attempts to clean it up, will be... very... very... messy.

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Memorial Day, for those who said "If I don’t do it, then who will?"

From American Battle Monuments Commision,

"The Commission administers, operates, and maintains 24 permanent American burial grounds on foreign soil. Presently there are 124,909 U.S. war dead interred at these cemeteries, 30,921 of World War I, 93,238 of World War II and 750 of the Mexican War. Additionally 6,177 American veterans and others are interred in the Mexico City and Corozal American Cemeteries. We sort of live by the motto of our first chairman, Gen. John J. Pershing, who said,




'Time will not dim the glory of their deeds'"



Neither will time diminish our debt to them, rather, it magnifies that debt with each passing day we are able to enjoy the freedoms they fought for.


And this photo brings home the true meaning of what they did, and amid all that they've given us, reminds us of what their loss truly means...,




Mary McHugh, lying on the grave of her fiance, Army Sgt. James John Regan, at Arlington National Cemetery. He was a star lacrosse player in college, and Instead of taking a scholarship to law school or a financial services job, Regan followed a calling to the military, where he became an Army Ranger and served two tours of duty in Afghanistan and two in Iraq...


"He said, 'If I don't do it, then who will do it?'" said Regan's fiancee, Mary McHugh, a medical student at Emory University who, like scores of others at the Park Avenue house yesterday, wore Regan's high school graduation photo clipped to her shirt. "He recognized it as an option and he couldn't not do it."

For Memorial Day, I'll let others do the rest of the, sobering, talking. Beginning with a few comments by presidents who not only knew how to be Presidential, but who understood what this day memorializes. A few words from George Washington, starting with his "Prayer for the Nation" written at Newburg, June 8, 1783, and sent to the governors of all the states,

Almighty God, we make our earnest prayer that Thou wilt keep the United States in Thy Holy protection: that Thou wilt incline the hearts of the citizens to cultivate a spirit of subordination and obedience to government and entertain a brotherly affection and love for one another and for their fellow citizens of the United States at large. And finally, that Thou wilt most graciously be pleased to dispose us all to do justice, to love mercy, and to demean ourselves with that charity, humility, and pacific temper of mind which were the characteristics of the Divine Author of our blessed religion, without a humble imitation of whose example in these things we can never hope to be a happy nation. Grant our supplication, we beseech Thee, through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Amen.
... and, at the request of that Congress which had passed the Bill of Rights, proclaimed a day of "Public prayer, to be observed by acknowledging with grateful hearts the many and single favors of Almighty God".

Keeping in mind that while I'm not technically religious, I recognize that what Washington and the other Founders were speaking about, aiming towards, was what I do think and feel to be very, very real, and criticaly important to our lives and our nation... and I can tell you it has very little to do with 'talking snake stories'. Washington also noted,

"It is rightly impossible to govern the world without God and the Bible."

Was he speaking of the printed words, or their meaning? And with so few, if any, able to distinguish between the two, is there any wisdom in trying?

What did he mean when he said,

"No people can be bound to acknowledge and adore the invisible hand which conducts the invisible affairs of men more than the people of the United States. Every step by which they have advanced to the character of an independent nation seems to have been distinguished by some token of providential agency.... We ought to be no less persuaded that the propitious smiles of heaven cannot be expected on a nation that disregards the eternal rules of order and right, which heaven itself has ordained."
The full measure of his meaning was taken and given by those we honor on this, and every, Memorial Day... spend some time giving thought to what their words and deeds meant and continue to mean.

It is perhaps not improper to close out with Lincoln's Gettysburg Address:

"Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.
Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation, so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field, as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this.

But, in a larger sense, we can not dedicate... we can not consecrate... we can not hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us—that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion—that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain—that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom—and that government : of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth."
This Memorial Day, remember....

Saturday, May 02, 2009

Spread the Light and Light the Fire

In the Comments section, the wise Scipio of "The Return of Scipio" mentioned,

"The rise of Obama is our nation is an indicator of how great has been our decline as a people..."

It is a very tempting thought, an enticing fear.

And very logical.

But I've got to respectfully quibble with that. Because ya know, what you know, and what I know, about what is happening to us "as a people", comes mostly from those who have visibly declined as a people - the relatively small amount of people who are pleased to call themselves 'the elites'.

But ask yourselves something, who among us hasn't had the sensation of seeing the NEWS and then looking around them and saying..."What?! Where is that happening...?"

Looking no further than myself (looking at TV shows, News, etc), I often shake my head and despair. But I began to notice a few years ago, especially among my kids friends… that I see very little of this all consuming decay - at least nothing on the scale which popular conceptions would have us believe. This has been very disorienting to my pretensions of philosophical crystal ball gazing. Hear me out on this, I know it is a tenuous thought that I've been thinking, and I don't have the time or space to flesh it out much more now, but give it a whirl about the cranium and see if it doesn't have some brightness to it – after all, the alternative is complete darkness.

"How great has been our decline as a people" rests on the tried and true 'the snake dies from the head down' theory of political philosophy. Chop off the head of the snake, and the whole snake dies.

It's certainly not a difficult progression to imagine, and historically it has been replayed over and again throughout history - it practically IS history. A united civilization rises, prospers, even conquers, and then in leisure and wealth, begins to contemplate, and then to question all the beliefs of their ancestors. Not being able to find satisfactory answers to fundamental questions, their questioning makes a subtle change into doubting. In short order, what began with questions of “Why does God (or The Gods) allow this…” become “Why would God (or The Gods) allow this ?!” and the moral truths and practices of their ancestors become reduced to ‘talking snake stories’, which are ridiculed, and fresh with the belief that they are smarter than their ancestors, they discard such ‘superstitions’ and focus upon things, pleasures and vices as goals and ends in themselves.

Personally I don’t believe that leisure and wealth and prosperity are problems, not in and of themselves… but wealth does allow a distancing from interacting with reality. As the prosperous are distanced from the unforgiving corrections of nature and reality, they begin to substitute preferences and whims for Reason. I’ve gone over this elsewhere, where Voltaire artfully thanked Rousseau for the gift of his ‘Social Contract’, saying


"I have received your new book against the human race, and thank you for it. Never was such cleverness used in the design of making us all stupid. One longs, in reading your book, to walk on all fours. But as I have lost that habit for more than sixty years, I feel unhappily the impossibility of resuming it. Nor can I embark in search of the savages in Canada, because the maladies to which I am condemned render a European surgeon necessary to me; because war is going on in those regions; and because the example of our actions
has made the savages nearly as bad as ourselves."
Our founders were too steeped in reality and morality to take Rousseau’s offer either. Our Founders still had the memory of their founders, who had tried to live the communist/socialist dream, and were nearly destroyed by it – but here in America, with no deluded populace to depend (leach) upon to enable them to become distanced from reality... communism nearly killed them, but Gov. Bradford returned private property to the colony, and the puritan work ethic was born.

This land was unique in history, in having to deal with reality without a supply of conquered and pliant victims to prey upon. Every other peoples, as their elites lost contact with reality, they eventually sickened and died, because their bad ideas had nothing and no one to correct them. Bad ideas kill. Immorality, is but rebelling against truth for pleasure's sake - the baddest of bad ideas.

Our elites would very much like to reenact the ancient dance of metals, with men of gold, falling to silver, then bronze, then lead and being wiped out by another taking their place. They of course, believe that they know better and can ‘re-form’ man and history. The motivating conceit of progressives, from Rousseau on (I could include Plato too, but I really hate blaming him), has been that there needs to be an expert put in power to direct everything from personal hygiene, to how 'the people' should live, work, the thoughts they should be allowed to think... but of course as their thinking has become progressively more detached from reality, it becomes apparent that the snakes head is dying, and once the head of the snake dies, the civilization dies. Chop off the head of the snake, and the whole snake dies, and of course, from the progressives perspective, the snake can't live, move or eat, without a head to tell it what to do.

But.

But in every other civilization in history, the elites were the society, they were the only ones, the only ones, to think, and plan, and act, and they controlled the rest of the population. That is not our world! That is not a Free Market, that is not Capitalism, that is not a world of Law and Order - which of course is why our elites keep trying to do away with the Free Market, Capitalism and Law and Order based upon, and governed by, a written Constitution.

America, from the beginning, no matter the proregressives flaming conceit, America has been not a lifeless beast to be led by its head, as are kingdoms and empires, but a people who are alive and thinking in place for themselves - each person, each family, each neighborhood, does it's own thinking and living, themselves. They still attend church, they still revere truth and reality... yes, certainly we have degraded from even a century ago, but even at our current levels, we are a greater manifestation of moral, thinking, productive people, than the world has ever, ever, known.

We, as was mentioned above, despite 50 years of propaganda and govt coercion, do not yet fear guns. The head of the snake is indeed diseased, gangrenous even, but for the first time in history, in the place of what traditionally had been little more than the thoughtless body of the snake, is instead, a living, truth revering, independent people, and even more importantly, we are not isolated from communicating and organizing amongst each other, once we finally realize that merely shaking our heads at the decadent head, is no longer a sufficient response.

This is the real historical novelty we possess, and which the progressive elite fear more than anything else. We are not dependent upon them. And we still think for ourselves.

Every other culture in history, once those in power decayed, the people had no other access to history, no other access to information about what was Beautiful and True and Good, but what the dead head of the snake told them, and consequently no other options but to follow them into dissolution and destruction.

The 'Tea Parties' springing up around the country, are instances of the people recognizing that the 'plans' they are being told to follow, don't measure up, and they are organizing, and beginning to think on their own, and thinking of how best to act to correct this situation, On. Their. Own.

This IS unprecedented.

It remains to be seen of course, whether or not ‘We The People’ can disinfect or discard the head and/or generate a new one.

We'll see.

But Truth is a powerful disinfectant.

Ask Lazarus.

Don’t give up on U.S. people, if we talk to each other, if we, with reflection and reason and respect for what is The Good, The Beautiful and The True, make the effort to not just do something, but do what is needed… well… amazing things just may be possible still. As Samuel Adams said about seemingly darker times,

It does not require a majority to prevail, but rather an irate, tireless minority keen to set brush fires in people's minds.”

Don’t hide your fire under a bushel people. Take this occasion of the Tea Party movements, and make them become something good and effective. Spread the light and light the fire. It is my contention that blogs like Scipio's, and One Cosmos, and mine, are helping to do just that, and if we give just a bit of action to our words… well, then we’ll see what we’ll see.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

A Bit More Context

In my last post, I looked at the immediate context of the "CIA Torture Memo’s”, but as was recently pointed out to me, there is an even wider context which should be included as well. That the conclusion that harsh interrogation methods needs to be resorted to, let alone torture, is an admission of your own widespread lack of intelligence, and an act of desperation.

If we were talking about a lone deranged individual, this could be forgiven, but we are not. We are talking about a group of fanatical, theocratic, fascist, thugs and murderers who prefer to use terrorist actions in order to impose their plans on others.

We knew they were out there.

We've known that they’ve been wanting to not just hurt us, but bring us down, for 50 years.

They were a known and gathering threat, strengthening and spreading out over the globe and publicly taking credit for attacking the west in general and America in particular, for over thirty years.

We not only did little or nothing to stop them, we did little or nothing to infiltrate them. We looked at their pitiful size and in classic hubristic mode, snickered, swore, swatted and looked away.

We unintelligently declined to put gathering intelligence on them as a low, or no, priority issue.

With that additional context in place, 9/11 happened, we were caught demonstrating our lack of intelligence (in several more ways than one) on a movement of people who had publicly declared hatred and who had repeatedly declared war upon us decades ago, and on 9/11 we suddenly realized to our own horror, that their pitiful non-aligned size, far from being an insurmountable weakness, it was in fact a huge weapon against us, and with it they could indeed hurt
Us, very, very badly.

We found ourselves in desperate circumstances, and we had no intelligent option but to resort to desperate measures to illuminate our self sustained blindness. Governments have in the past (al queda, Imperial Japan, etc), and will again, fail to realize or properly respond to real and growing threats, either out of hubris or for purely political reasons. Their failure may not only increase the danger to the nation from the original threat, but it may also put those who are governing, into a state of desperation (whether actually or politically doesn't matter, they do not distinguish between them), potentially making them into a threat to those they govern.

This is an extremely important context to keep in mind.

We should also keep in mind, at the risk of humoring the moonbats, that in the hands of Govt, what is considered extreme one day, can easily become routine after a number of days.

I am satisfied that our Govt did go to great lengths to minimize the possibility of such harsh measures from being irresponsibly used, and to prevent them from becoming routine, but there is one word that should be emphasized when saying that,

But.

Never forget that Govt is ruled by those with power, and it always tends towards desiring more power.

What we know was done in non-civil scenarios, in a time of war, and which we take as a vital and primary principle of that context... will be the fulcrum which those who habitually drop contexts, may someday seek to use to pry their way into civil scenarios, via spin, when they feel that their power is being threatened.

Here's a quote from George Washington that should always be kept first and foremost in mind, regarding government:

"Government is not reason, it is not eloquence, it is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a troublesome master. Never for a moment should it be left to irresponsible action."

The use and pursuit of power, impedes the operations of intelligent thought, for the most recent example, see the idiotic 'mission' of having Air Force One strafe downtown New York.



Look at the people on the ground, running in fear, thinking that 9/11 was occurring once again. This decision was made in order to get a photo-op… and their thinking and concern for possible unexpected results, for how it might affect an entire city to see a jetliner flying low towards the cityscape… well the best that can be said is that we hope the thought didn’t occur to them.

That decision is what passes for thinking by self satisfied bureaucrats, wanting to aggrandize themselves, and their superiors. Imagine what may pass for thinking when other bureaucrats, no better or worse than the ‘fool’ who signed off on that, become desperate.

And remember, the powerful will always feel that they find themselves in desperate circumstances.

That is a context that should always be of heightened concern.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

The Contextualy Tortured Thoughts of Man Caused Disasters

Here's a scenario for you,

“Did you blow his head off?”,
“Well… yes, but…”,
“Sorry, no but’s, Sarge, string him up!”,
“But he broke into our house while we were sleeping! He was robbing us and trying to rape my daughter! He grabbed his gun and was pointing it…”,
“Hush you murderer! Quick Sarge, hang him so we don’t have to hear his stupid excuses, string him up!”


Keep that in mind, we'll come back to it in a few minutes.

Is the latest outrage from Washington D.C. (take your pick, releasing CIA memo’s, taking over banks, firing CEO’s… so many to choose from) merely a result of our experiencing a ‘bounce back’ from the previous administrations, which will produce a ‘bounce back’ as well? Like pinball’s in a pinball game?

Lance asked on the previous post, “I do feel and I have written this before that the election of Obama was a direct response a bounce back away from the policies of Bush and in four years there will be another bounce back the opposite way. I just hope the ball ends a little more in the middle and with a little better understanding of fiscal responsibility and the idea that if a company fails due to the nature of finance that isn't the end of the world.”

I don’t mean to criticize Lance directly, but the comment it seems to me reflects a certain view of the world that is common… and rather dangerous… all that bouncing back and forth, is not only very deterministic, but seeks to do something (required of determinism in general and leftism in particular), it seeks to drop the wider, and more relevant, context of what is happening in our lives.

For instance, by ‘bounce back’ one could mean that the uproar over the release of CIA Memo’s, could be a bounce back against demagogues such as Nancy Pelosi(D), who knowing full well about interrogation methods, and approving them – which is the only thing someone in the position of representing the people is doing when presented with information about actions to be taken, and does not speak out against it – she gave her voice, representative of all the people she represents, in at the very least non opposition, and implicit approval of those methods and actions – and then with unbounded cynical and pragmatic pandering to the most dangerously passionately uninformed among us, preyed on their stupidity in order to whip up political opposition (and power… primarily Power, for her benefit) to those who, because of secrecy, could not expose her perfidy (a little aerobic run on sentencing to get the day going).

This unhealthy, passionate, ignorance and shallow thought, which Nancy Pelosi, and Harry Reid, and John Kerry, and all the rest, preyed upon, preyed upon the weak thinking of the leftist multitudes in order to gain political power, while knowingly hindering, hurting, and opposing the interests of their country in a time of war.

I don’t need much prodding to pronounce that as being, if not legally, then morally, treasonous. But, at least in my case, I don’t regard that as ‘bouncing back’, I regard it as an open eyed examination of the issues, and with consideration, I render judgment. Bounce back… doesn’t really fit in with that process.

Do I think they really wanted to cause America harm? Did they really want to get American soldiers killed (look at what happened after the fictional Koran flushing)? No, I don’t think so, I think they merely wanted to take advantage of the situation, gain some power, I doubt they thought it’d really cause any harm, after all, responsible people would ‘do something’ to keep things going as they should. Just like with Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac, they didn’t really think that their forcing banks to make unwise loans, surely those in charge would just ‘do something’ to compensate… to bounce things back in line. After all, things aren’t really integrated or dependent upon each other, what’s true for one situation isn’t necessarily true for another, all things are relative… if you chuck the context, that is.

If we do want to consider it deterministically, where does the ball bounce back to from here? If it only rebounds from one passionately uninformed position to another… what results from that? I can tell you this, it won’t be good.

I too have been alarmed over the last… lets confine it to Bush admin for brevity's sake… 8 years, but probably for other reasons than most. I was alarmed that Bush signed, rather than vetoed, McCain/Feingold, a horrible assault upon free speech and the Constitution, into law. Probably he felt he could confidently pass the buck to the Supreme Court to strike it down. I termed that, then and now, as negligence and opportunism and a betrayal of principles. It was also, for anyone who had been watching the doings of the Supreme Court, stupid.

It also has opened the door for the current administration to carefully examine dangerous right wing extremists at the DHS.

On another front, Enron was a financial calamity of poor business leadership and short sighted opportunism for quick buck payoffs, it was an example of shoddy thinking and criminal behavior – in other words, typical human failings which people in general, and investors in particular, need to be sharply on the look out for. For the people who put their life savings into a company, trusting others to look out for them and to keep them safe from incompetents and criminals and save them the burden of responsibly looking into where their life savings was put… and lost everything… they get some sympathy from me, for their condition, if not how they got there, they got what they deserved. BTW, if you trusted the Gov’t to look out for you… for the SEC to do your due diligence and thinking for you, or a broker you don’t even know beyond a phone call to put your long term interests above his commission tallies, then you got what you deserved. If you sought to escape examining the wider context of issues and requirements for security… that puts you into another context, which you cannot escape from either.

There is a risk involved in investing your money in the Stock Market, and the risk increases the more you delegate the necessary oversight to others, and exponentially so when you trust Gov’t regulations and regulators to do so for you. But their plight is not where my concerns lay, where my concerns are focused, are on egregious cases of governmental overreach into private lives and businesses, through such ‘legislation’ such as Sarbanes-Oxley. If you want to trace our falling standing in the world financial community (not speaking of our current troubles – it’s a part of it, but not a principle portion), the point where the financial capital of the world ceased to rest securely in New York, and began to float towards London and elsewhere, that heinous bill which extends governmental interference into day to day management decisions, will be found at its root.

You can’t separate the urge of politicians to “Do Something!” from the results that will result from what they do. That also is an issue of context.

Bush began many things well, then let them peter out in cancerously moderate fashion. He began by saying no to Kyoto, but gave moral courage and comfort to the global warming hucksters by granting them the status of having reasonable concerns. He began by identifying states that support terrorism as being the enemies of freedom and liberty… and then in short order, offered diplomatic dialog, fresh starts, and ‘opportunities’ to ‘join the world community’. He began by seeking to solve the immigration issue… by ignoring the context of why it is an issue, of why we have borders, and of why they are particularly important in a time of war… and by ignoring the obvious anger of the public over the issue of amnesty – ignoring existing laws - twice. That too has laid the groundwork for congress to ram its stimulus package down our nations collective throat. Bush began by seeking to end Social Security, but tried to do so on efficient grounds (“This govt backed program will be better than that because it involves profit” – yeah, good selling point to leftists), instead of qualitative moral grounds – such as it is wrong for Government to operate a Ponzi scheme, to misrepresent a transfer of wealth from those creating it now to those only consuming it, as if it were an insurance or investment program; but far more importantly, it ignores, and condones the fact, that it is wrong for Government to be involved in the private actions and finances of its citizens – it tramples upon property rights, and by extension all other rights. At that critical point in our history, perhaps the last feasible point in time, when it was possible to identify the issue in its real terms, he didn’t, and compounded it immeasurably, by destroying the free market in order to save it, or as he put it “I’ve abandoned free-market principles to save the free market system”.

Very Kantian, that last… “I’ve found it necessary to destroy knowledge, in order to save faith”.

Not surprising, not at all, keeping in mind that he attended both Yale and Harvard – what can you expect?

While I obviously disapproved of most of Bush’s policies, why do I not revile the man? Because I am not a leftist. I do not make the ‘100 percentalistic’ error of the fraudulent application of principles, demanding that any deviation be devalued and destroyed. I do not make the hubristic error of assuming that because I have identified a principle involved in a situation, that I have identified all of the principles bearing on the situation. For all of Bush’s errors, and they are many, I don’t believe he intended harm to the Constitution or the Nation, and for his efforts in the ‘War on man caused disasters’ (ahem), flawed though they were, he deserves and receives, my heart felt gratitude.

But.

His comment about “I’ve abandoned free-market principles to save the free market system” is sooo telling, it is consistent with (gotta laugh at that) the mixture of leftist, pragmatic, Kantianistic, slop, which is taught in our system of education. It teaches anti-conceptual, anti-contextual methods of… not of reasoning, but of calculating. And it has consequences.

This brings me to our latest bout of public turmoil over the leftists attempting to destroy our knowledge, in very Kantian fashion, in order to impose their faith - the brouhaha over ‘we don’t torture’.

It is, at its core, an attempt to destroy knowledge of what is right and what is wrong, and to substitute paper thin decrees in the place were reasoned, morally active thought, should be. Which is at the heart and deadened-soul of the left.

Thinking and applying laws and moral reasoning, requires a careful examination of context and principles, sorting and sifting away the chaff from the wheat, the mud from the gold, the relevant essentials form the irrelevant particulars. If that were not the case, we would not have, and would have no need for, Judges – it would be sufficient to write down a law, post it in the public square, and punish those who violated it. No deliberation would be needed, just:

“Did you blow his head off?”,
“Well… yes, but…”,
“Sorry, no but’s, Sarge, string him up!”,
“But he broke into our house while we were sleeping! He was robbing us and trying to rape my daughter! He grabbed his gun and was pointing it…”,
“Hush you murderer! Quick Sarge, hang him so we don’t have to hear his stupid excuses, string him up!”

Most leftists hyping the interrogations methods as torture, are quite happy with just that level of consideration. Others, having some nagging notion of there once being such a thing as morality… at one time or another… but which they’ve conveniently relativised, will ask “but what of “Thou shalt not kill”?”

Well, if you believe that that is all there is to it (leaving aside the fact that the original Hebrew was closer to ‘Thou shalt not murder’… and that they considered them to be more like the ‘Ten Categories’ of commandments, rather than stand alone commandments… and what need for the volumes and volumes of the Talmud, if ‘It is written!’ was enough?), then you are either a literalistic fundamentalist, a leftist and/or an atheist of the deterministic creed.

But you are not a Reasoning person to whom morality is truly important (‘positions’ I’m sure they have loads of, and which they’ll fervently claim to be morally righteous, but such declarations can hardly be considered moral; at best, they are political), and are unlikely to exhibit even a whiff of wisdom.

Leftists, determinist's and Kantians (which is an extended redundancy) would like to have you believe that you can have faith in ‘Kantian categorical imperative’, flat line commandments which require no context or consideration to follow, but that is only something which only the most crudely inept of computer programs can adhere to (which is btw their ideal of man), but is an evil of untold proportions to teach as being a Moral ideal.

As my scenario demonstrates above, context is not only critically important, the full context is what really actually occurred, attempting to ignore any portion of the relevant context, is to dispense with a full grasp of reality.

For instance. I got into an argument once with a relative who was proposing govt health care, and she attempted a hypothetical argument “If your neighbor had in their home, the only antidote in the world which could save your wife and children from dying from a horrible disease, and refused to sell it to you, would you break in and steal it?”

One of the chief evils of hypothetical’s, especially in the hands of professors and those who have been distorted by them (as she was), is that they are usually used in an attempt to dispense with reality. They attempt to discard all context, all that is real and true, lock you into their one dimensional scenario, and then try to apply your deeply dimensional concepts (in this case Property Rights) to their little hell, in such a fashion as to make you discard your ability to reason – which is what you do when you ignore contextual issues. Like trying to shove a package through a mail slot, it won’t work, one or the other will be destroyed in the process, and they are banking on it being your package of contexts, rather than their narrow slot in the wall of flatland views, which will break.

In her hypothetical, she attempted to dispense with everything which would have made the development and attainment of some precious antidote possible in the first place: Reason, Medical Science, a Pharmaceutical industry, peaceful law abiding neighborhoods with homes that are not and do not need to be surrounded with defensive moats, and a free market which would make all of that possible – all of which is dependent upon a lawful defense of property rights, she attempted to discard that entire deeply contextual and integrated world view - in favor of a scenario of the basest of lifeboat ethics, a situation which requires immediate action and where reasoned thought and debate is not possible – a situation antithetical to ethical consideration and thought – and in that flattened context of nightmarish impossibilities which would still be dependent upon property rights in order to even conceive of, she attempts to force me to ‘admit’ that property rights are of no real value in the real world.

Again, the context matters, in most normal situations, a simple reference will suffice, you don’t steal, someone who doesn’t, gets punished.

Truth be told, most libertarians (of the Murray Rothbard variety) fall into this same trap, when they declare that all taxation is theft, that the government can have no right to their money. But just as my relative sought to construct a hypothetical which required property rights to exist, in order to attack them, the anarcho-libertarians attempt to use the concept of rights, which are reliant upon a proper government to uphold and defend them, in order to attack government for violating them. But you can have no political right to weaken or do away with that which makes political rights possible (more on this when I get to the end of my posts on Justice).

Where was this ramble rambling towards… oh yes, in the context of a group of fanatically violent theocratic anarchists, who are waging the most savage and uncivilized of wars upon the west in general, and upon America in particular, and having just slaughtered 3,000 civilians engaged in no aggressive behavior towards them, and planning more such attacks; in that context one of the creatures was captured, and with a sizable amount of evidence to indicate this filth bucket had information which might help prevent another imminent and horrific attack upon our people, into that context the aclu-Pelosi generated moonbat leftists wanted to uphold and defend the man-caused-disaster-generators right to constitutional privileges, and conventional legal respects and regards due to any other civilized person.

That’s a huge load of context dropping.

On top of that, the leftists want to ignore or discount the extensive measures that our government took, carefully examining legal obligations and treaties and constitutional law, in order to discern whether or not we could interrogate such a terrorist with a degree of roughness which would be unthinkable in normal situations. They want to ignore the limitations and restraints the Bush Administration determined would be necessary for that creatures ‘rights’ and safety, in order to remain within our law, and which would require the President of the United States of America to individually authorize particular instances which required the use of those methods. They also want to ignore the huge outcry and debate which has been raised among We The People once we heard what was happening – they want to ignore all of this – drop all of the relevant context – in order to draw an equivalence between the monstrous actions which are eagerly indulged in by the islambies (and I might mention, by many of those ‘appalled’ world leaders so loudly criticizing our actions, who routinely indulge in as much by their local police dept’s, not to mention what their secret police do to their own people, at their own discretion and pleasure… China anybody? Russia? FRANCE? )… is … just… asstounding.

And Horrifying.

And it is all the inevitable result of a pervasive leftist philosophy which rests upon, and depends upon, the discarding of context which such things as Kantian categorical imperative require.

They, and the left in general, are fundamentally anti-conceptual, anti-reason, and anti-American.

Period (contextually speaking).

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Post Tea Party Talk



Ok, now that the Tea Parties have kicked things off… it’s time to reflect upon just what it is that we are working on kicking off.

Hopefully we’re not just blowing off steam.

I think I’ll have to continue this in the next couple posts, but for now, in taking an assessment of ourselves, and what we are fighting against, it might be instructive to take a look at how we are characterized by those whom we are opposed by, for it can tell us much about not only how they perceive the world, and us, but how common notions many of us may hold, have been poisoning us for decades.


“It’s funded by right wing billionaires”, “They are being organized by the GOP”, “They are right wing extremist hate mongers in league with the GOP”
It's worth taking a closer look at that, for there is much there to be seen.
  • They do not believe that anything could happen nationwide, without it being coordinated, instigated, and funded, by a central power from above.



  • They do not believe that individuals nationwide would see issues of principle which concerned them, and choose to take action to resolve them.



  • They do not believe that normal individuals would contribute their time and money without an immediate and direct payoff for them.


Take a long slow look at these beliefs, which of course can be heard and verified on CNN, NBC, New York Times, Democrat Party, etc, and demonstrated so well by this CNNette, they describe exactly what they think of us, and why. The underlying beliefs behind these assumptions, are consistent with the core philosophy of Proreregressives, and indicates why they think along Marxist, Socialist and Fascist lines, and why they are necessarily in concerted opposition to Individual Rights, to Property Rights, and to the Free Market, as they are.

The Free Market is based upon the understanding, that Individuals making decisions in the course of their own lives and businesses, will result in a highly productive, prosperous and efficient economy, and will do so not only without experts advising and ordering their actions, but BECAUSE there are not ‘experts’ advising them from on high, but BECAUSE they are not giving them step by step orders countermanding their own best judgments, the Free Market is so productive BECAUSE individuals are free to use their own minds and make decisions about their own interests, in their own lives, for their own purposes.

They do not believe in the Free Market, because they do not believe in the ability or advisability of allowing individuals to use their own minds to live their own lives!

These people who opposed our Tea Parties, mostly leftists of course, but many on the ‘right’ as well, do not believe that individuals can be expected to do anything in any significant numbers, or to accomplish anything, without being organized and guided by experts, and they do not believe that society can prosper and progress without the directions of experts in positions of power organizing society in accordance with ‘rational’ plans. And they really cannot believe that we would bother to rouse ourselves to fight for principles which might materially benefit “the rich”, more so than ourselves.

This cannot be said enough – it is core to the fight we are facing -




  • They Do Not Believe in Individual Rights, they believe instead in power and coercion, and that it is perfectly appropriate to use power and coercion to force individuals to serve their estimation of “the greater good”.


  • They do not believe in your ability to live your life in a way that meets their ‘expert’ expectations, and in any conflict between the two, they believe that their expert expectations trump yours.


  • They believe that your decisions will damage how they have determined it would be best for you to live.


  • They do not believe in Free Will.


  • They oppose the United States Constitution because it complicates their ability to do to you what THEY have decided is best for you.


  • They believe that experts in the government should control and organize society as only they are equipped to determine it should be.




    Who are ‘They’?

    They are 'progressives', they are statists, and they are found on the Left AND the Right, and in every fundamental principle and issue the progressives in the Democrat AND Republican party, ARE Anti-American.

    Some of the changes which the Proregressives have imposed upon this nation, and imperiled our liberty through, are:





    1. Mandatory public schooling using government approved curriculum taught by teachers certified through government approved colleges


    2. The FED, which gives the government control over the lifeblood of our economy


    3. The FDA, SEC, EPA and a myriad other alphabet agencies of unelected bureaucrats, with no defined terms, writing regulations over our lives and businesses, which have the force of law


    4. The soft slavery of the Income Tax through the 16th amendment, through which the government has first claim to all that you earn, and only through its generosity, are you allowed to retain whatever percentage of income it sees fit to dole back to you, or as Walter E. Williams once defined slavery: as “…a set of circumstances whereby one person is forcibly used to serve the purposes of another person and has no legal claim to the fruits of his labor” – if you don’t think that describes your circumstance, I’d like to hear how and why not


    5. The corruption of the Senate through the 17th amendment, which reduced the Senate from a deliberative body thrice removed from the heat of the demos – who the Representatives are representatives of, and who the Senate was designed to cool and balance - to nothing but a simmering body tied directly to the ups and downs of public opinion, but with a guaranteed triple term – the Founders worst nightmare.


    6. Devaluing and destabilizing our money through abandoning the Gold Standard, giving government to ability to change the value of paper money to suit their purposes, at our expense


    7. A constant and continual attack upon property rights, because all of your rights depend upon an inviolate defense of property rights – and an oppressive government is almost inconceivable without gaining control over that which all of your material well being rests upon - your property


    Do not make the mistake of thinking these Tea Parties are about the amount of money being taxed - This is NOT a tax revolt, any more than it was for the generation of our Founding Fathers. This is an issue of whether individuals should be secure in their property and so free to live their lives in liberty and in the pursuit of happiness, or whether Government should have first claim to their property, in order to set the boundaries of their lives, distributing favors and benefits as needed, to keep them in order and happy.

    The Tea Party revolt is about whether the government serves you, or whether you serve the government.

    In 1773 our Founding Father’s – YOUR Founding Fathers, whether your family have been citizens here for over two centuries or two months – YOUR Founding Fathers came to the most radical of political decisions ever proposed, that Individuals had minds and souls of their own, and that they should have the liberty to exercise them in their pursuit of happiness, and that no one had the right to rob them of the rights necessary to those ends.

    In 1787, those Founding Fathers, sobered by revolution and the specter of political dissolution and potential tyrannies, created the first moral government in the history of the world, one which upheld Individuals Rights to use their own minds to live their lives, free from the dictates of tyrants.

    It has come to us to reaffirm those founding principles, and stake our claim to Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness.

    Wednesday, April 15, 2009

    What I saw at the Tea Party


    A fine time was had this evening in the Show Me state. 8,000 to 10,000 Missourians came together to ask for someone to show me where in the U.S. Constitution it says that our Govt can,
    take all our money,
    ... and our grandkid's money
    ... and print even more,
    ... and nationalize our industries,
    ... and even penalize particular executives or fire others!
    Just a couple pictures for now, and off to bed,

    Thanks to Bill Hennesy at St. Louis Tea Party.com as his fellow organizer Dana Loesch from 97.1 FM (great speech btw) and Jim Hoft at GatewayPundit, and Kevin Jackson at the Black Sphere for MC'ing and all for organizing and pulling this off ... and without the 'benefit' of national personalities or politicians. 8,000 to 10,000 ain't a bad tally for a couple local bloggers!

    Awfully darn good to see level headed, polite, informed people gathering together to support the Constitution which protects our freedoms and supports the Republic which makes our liberty possible.







    While this is just a start, and will require much follow through, not to mention actual plans... it is still an excellent start... and nationwide!