Freedom or Totalitarianism

Freedom or Totalitarianism
Liberty or Death

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Liberty Pen: Christopher Hitchens- 'In Defense Of Unpopular Speech'

Source:Liberty Pen- British Socialist columnist Christopher Hitchens, actually making a great case for free speech. Not your typical Socialist. (To put it mildly)
Source:Real Life Journal

"Popular speech does not need Constitutional protection. Liberty Pen." 

From Liberty Pen 

I don't agree with the late great writer Christopher Hitchens all the time. I'm a Liberal, he's more of a Democratic Socialist, a bit left to me on economic policy (to put it mildly) but we do tend to agree on some of these key social issues, like civil liberties, War on Drugs, and yes, free speech. 

But Freedom of Speech is exactly that: the freedom to speak, to go along with our property rights, are the most important freedoms and constitutional rights that we have in America. The freedom to speak is exactly that: the right to speak whether it's popular or not.

Since we are a liberal democracy, we've decided long ago, that we are good enough and intelligent enough as a nation, that we can have good intelligent tolerant thinkers. But that we can also have haters and ignorant people as well, because we are a good and intelligent enough as a people to figure out what's hate and what's not and what should be taken seriously and what shouldn't be. That we don't need big government to make these decisions for us. What we should and be able to listen to and what we shouldn't listen to. 

This is something that Liberals, Conservatives and Libertarians figured out a long time ago, but that today's so-called Progressives (Socialists, in actuality) so-called and Christian-Conservatives (but what are they conserving and they Bible are they reading) have never grasped, who believe government needs to be strong enough to be able to protect its people, even at times from themselves.

The Islamic film, that was perceived very negatively a few weeks ago by Muslims and so-called Progressives (Socialists, in actuality) but of course Christian-Nationalists view the film as free speech, because they like and agree with the film (but thats a different story) is a perfect example of what free speech is designed to protect: the right for people to be able to speak their mind, even as small as their minds and intelligence level may be. As long as they are not labeling people, threatening people, or inciting violence. 

What this anti-Muslim movie essentially does, is layout what the creators of this movie feel: "Islam is bad and so-forth, that Muhammad was a bad person and so-forth." But it wasn't calling for Muslims to be killed and beat up and so-forth. It was a negative if not bigoted view of Islam, but not calling for violence on Muslims. And thats the difference between free speech and threatening speech. Something we don't put up with as a nation. 

Reason Magazine: Gene Epstein- 'Too Big To Regulate: Dodd-Frank'

Source:Reason Magazine- Economist Gene Epstein.
"The reason there is no mention of Fannie (Mae) and Freddie (Mac) in the bill, is because it's named after two of their puppets: Dodd and Frank."

Barron's Economics Editor Gene Epstein lays into the hypocrisy of the aforementioned Dodd-Frank bill at a Freedomfest 2012 panel titled "Too Big to Regulate," hosted by the Reason Foundation's Director of Economic Research Anthony Randazzo.

The panel focused on problems with overregulation in the financial services industry, with a specific focus on the Dodd-Frank legislation.

Held each July in Las Vegas, FreedomFest is attended by around 2,000 limited-government enthusiasts and libertarians a year. ReasonTV spoke with over two dozen speakers and attendees and will be releasing interviews over the coming weeks. For an ever-growing playlist, go here now." 

Source:Reason Magazine

"Too big To regulate", is generally a phrase that so-called Progressives (Democratic Socialists, in actuality) use to make their case that big banks and the health insurance industry are too big to make work well, in their minds. That we might as well just nationalize them and turn them into new Federal agencies, including Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. To go along with Bank of America. (To use as an example)

But what Gene Epstein seems to be arguing in this talk, that the Dodd-Frank bill of 2010, the Wall Street reform bill is, too big to regulate, that it's impossible to understand. I disagree with that, but I would argue that Fannie and Freddie are too big to regulate and that they need to be broken up, not nationalize. But broken up into like 200 companies each and regulated as non-profit lenders and insurers of mortgages and perhaps other loans. 

But the fact is they are both still "too big to fail". And can't remain that way, while they are receiving tax dollars and are such a large part of the economy.

Saturday, September 29, 2012

The Phil Donahue Show: Ayn Rand Interview (1979)

Source:Phil Donahue Show- Author Ayn Rand, being interviewed by Phil Donahue in 1979.
Source:Real Life Journal

"Ayn Rand Phil Donahue Interview"

From the Phil Donahue Show

This is a classic interview, because you had two very intelligent people with lots of followers, who both had a message to deliver. But came from very different sides of the political spectrum. Ayn Rand, being a Libertarian/Objectivist and Phil Donahue being a Progressive/Socialist even. Two people with very different beliefs on what the role of government is. Especially the role of the Federal Government. Ayn, whose see government’s role as basically doing nothing more, than to basically protecting our freedom and constitutional rights. And Phil Donahue, believing that government should be doing a lot for its people. That there’s only so much we can expect that the private enterprise can do for the people.

The Phil Donahue belief I guess, is when people have a lot of economic freedom, we see too much income inequality, that we should tolerate in a democracy. And that we need a strong Federal Government to provide the human services, that we shouldn’t trust private enterprise to do for the people. And if that means having high taxes to pay for these human services, so be it. If that means we get good public services from all of these taxes. So this was a discussion between two people, who have very different views in what the role of government is and what it should be doing for its people. But two people who are very intelligent and can make their case very well in how they look at the world ideologically.

The best thing that I could probably compare this interview with today, it would be like Ralph Nader interviewing Ron Paul, or vice-versa. Two men that are actually pretty similar when it comes to social freedom and civil liberties. But are very different in what they see the role for the Federal Government as it relates to the economy. Ron Paul basically believing that people should be able to keep and spend as much money as they make and be able to spend it as they see it, as long as they aren’t spending that money hurting people. Ordering hits and that sort of thing. And Ralph Nader, believing that a country is a community and to be a member of this community, we should all have to pay a price for it. To make this community as strong as it can be. Similar to Rand-Donahue.

Friday, September 28, 2012

CNBC: Closing Bell- America's Lowest Earners Spend Twice Their Incomes'




The reason why low-income workers are able to spend twice as much as they take in (if they live in poverty) is because the money they earn from working, is not their entire income. They also collect public assistance to help them get by: 

Food Assistance, public and private, 

Public Housing for their housing (obviously) 

Earned Income Tax Credit so they don't have to pay the Federal income tax  

All of this income they take in to go along with the money they make working, sometimes 2-3 jobs. And this is the way it has to be, as long as we have people making such little income from working. 

What we need to do is to empower our low-income people, whether they are working or not, to get themselves a good job, so they don't have to collect so much from public Assistance and can make enough money to pay their bills, because they have a good enough job that allows them to live at least a fairly comfortable lifestyle, out of poverty and into the working middle class. 

This is how you move people out of poverty, not by increasing their income from public assistance, but by empowering them to increase their own income, by having a good job, where they can afford their own home, whether it's a house or an apartment, but where they are able to pay for their own housing, own a car if they need it and so-forth.

We have experience from this from the 1990s in moving people out of poverty with a similar approach. We moved away from that in the last decade, as we saw millions of people who were once in the middle class, finding themselves out-of-work and collecting public assistance. And the Great Recession has only made things worse. And what we should be doing as we get the economy going again, that leads to strong economic and job growth, is be investing in things that move people out of poverty: education, job training and job placement, into good jobs that moves them out of poverty, as they collect their public assistance in the short term. Which is what we were doing in the 1990s.

The Atlantic: Conor Friedersdorf- 'Why I Refuse to Vote For Barack Obama'


Source:The Atlantic- President Barack H. Obama (Democrat, Illinois) 44th President of the United States.

"Tell certain liberals and progressives that you can't bring yourself to vote for a candidate who opposes gay rights, or who doesn't believe in Darwinian evolution, and they'll nod along. Say that you'd never vote for a politician caught using the 'n'-word, even if you agreed with him on more policy issues than his opponent, and the vast majority of left-leaning Americans would understand. But these same people cannot conceive of how anyone can discern Mitt Romney's flaws, which I've chronicled in the course of the campaign, and still not vote for Obama. 

Don't they see that Obama's transgressions are worse than any I've mentioned?

I don't see how anyone who confronts Obama's record with clear eyes can enthusiastically support him. I do understand how they might concluded that he is the lesser of two evils, and back him reluctantly, but I'd have thought more people on the left would regard a sustained assault on civil liberties and the ongoing, needless killing of innocent kids as deal-breakers." 


The case to vote against Barack Obama, even if you prefer him over Mitt Romney, is because he's not far enough to the left for you politically for you, so you are either going to stay home or vote for some third-party Socialist (take Jill Stein, to use as an example) and then look real hard for someone else to blame when Mitt Romney is elected President in 2012, with a united, Tea Party led, Republican Congress, is like saying your going to starve yourself because you don't like what available to eat. It's self-defeating, at best. 

You care about health care, you want to preserve the Affordable Care Act and if anything improve it, you care about who the next appointments to the Supreme Court are going to be,  you like Social Security and Medicare, our civil rights law, etc, everything that so-called Progressives (who are really just Democratic Socialists) claim to care about, you better not only vote for President Obama, but feel grateful when he's elected President of the United States. 

The choice for President of the United States is not a choice between the perfect versus the incompetent. It's a choice of good versus bad. I'm sure Mitt Romney is a fine man, but with a Republican Congress he'll be a very bad President. But, if Barack Obama is elected President, you have a shot at least of Democrats holding the Senate, at least, and at least picking up seats in the House. And protecting all those priorities that American leftists claim to care about. 

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

David Kelley: ‘Ayn Rand and the Rebirth of Liberty From (1991)’



Source:Libertarianism.Org- author David Kelley talking about Objectivist philosopher Ayn Rand, in 1991.

“David Kelley is a political philosopher, writer, and the executive director of the Atlas Society. Kelley is a strong proponent of Objectivism and has published a wide range of literature including A Life of One’s Own (1998) and The Contested Legacy of Ayn Rand (2000).

In this lecture, which was given at the International Society for Individual Liberty’s 1991 conference, Kelley talks about Ayn Rand’s contribution to the free-market individualist movement. He says that as Aristotle defined metaphysical individualism, the Austrian economists defined methodological individualism, and John Locke and other Enlightenment philosophers defined political individualism, Ayn Rand defined ethical individualism and cognitive individualism through her philosophy, Objectivism. Kelley also answers an extensive list of questions from the audience about everything from epistemology to metaphysics.”


If your definition of individualism is a philosophy based on individuals and that individuals should not only act in their self-interest, but that there’s nothing immoral about that and that selfishness is actually a good thing and that people should believe in one’s self and hold that to their highest value (I get that this is a long definition) then Ayn Rand was perhaps the most individualist of individualists that we’ve ever had.

I’m willing to bet that most Americans are individualists at least to some extent (including Socialists and religious fundamentalists, at least privately) but what separates Ayn Rand and her followers from let’s say your everyday individualist, is that Randians take their individualism take it a step further. And argue that selfishness should always rule over everything else. And that selfishness is always a good thing and people who act in someone else’s interest, even at their own expense, is showing weakness.

I believe your everyday American tends to believe that self-sacrifice (at least up to a point) are actually good things. Which is why most Americans aren’t Randians or Libertarians, but people who believe in both the individual, as well as the greater good. 

You can also see this post on WordPress.

Liberty Pen: The Open Mind With Richard Heffner- Jeffrey Rosen: 'The Destruction Of Privacy (2000)'


Source:Liberty Pen- author Jeffrey Rosen, on The Open Mind With Richard Heffner.

"Do Americans really care about privacy?  Jeffrey Rosen, author of "The Unwanted Gaze" in a highly thought provoking interview regarding the systematic destruction of privacy in America. (2000) Liberty Pen." 

From Liberty Pen

Some of our privacy rights and perhaps even property rights eroding, can be blamed on the information age, that started in the early 1990s, with email and everything coming around. Where people and organizations could get the access of individuals email address's, without their permission. But government also has a role here in the last ten years, as it relates to laws like the so-called Patriot Act and indefinite detention. As well as states trying to ban homosexuality and pornography.

Professor Friedrich Hayek: 'Private Property Made Wealth Creation Possible'


Source:Christian Patriarchy- Economics Professor Friedrich Hayek. No idea when this photo was taken.

"PRIVATE PROPERTY ASURES MAN OF A PRIVATE LIFE" 

A short video to this, but what I believe Professor Friedrich Hayek was arguing here is that there is no other economic system in the world that has produced more wealth, for more people, than the system based around property rights and the freedom of individuals to move around freely and to earn a good living for themselves and then to live off the wealth of their labor and production. Not his words, exactly, but he's making the case for private enterprise and capitalism.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Reason Magazine: Kennedy- 'Boob Over Bottle: Mike Bloomberg's Latest Nanny State Dictate'

Source:Reason Magazine- New York City/Nanny State Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
"New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg, a two-time Nanny of the Month and 2009's Nanny of the Year, is back to save us from ourselves yet again!

In order to promote breastfeeding, Bloomberg has ordered all public city hospitals to lock up free samples of baby formula. New mothers who are unable to breastfeed - or simply choose not to - can still get formula, but only after enduring a lecture from a hospital employee on the benefits of the boob over the bottle.

Reason TV's Kennedy spoke with Susan Burger, a certified lactation consultant, who supports the mayor's initiative on the grounds that "the real intent of that law is to protect breastfeeding mothers [and] their freedom of choice to breastfeed."

From Reason Magazine

I got an idea, let's ban freedom and choice all together, no really why do we need freedom, when we got. New York Mayor Mike Bloomberg here to protect us from ourselves. We could have an agency or department, called the US Department or Agency of Self Protection, designed to protect us from ourselves.

We could have agents all over the place monitoring places that we eat at or where we may drive or ride a bike, buy alcohol or tobacco or junk food, there to stop us from making bad choices. And if we refuse, they arrest us for attempting to be unhealthy. And if they catch doing unhealthy things, they'll arrest us and send us to jail where we would get to eat food thats even worse for us and junk we probably end up vomiting, if we are not harden criminals use to eating that, lets say garbage before Mayor Bloomberg attempts to fine me for using foul language in public.

If you are a Socialist or a Christian-Conservative and you just read this, I know you are thinking, yeah! Damn straight, who needs freedom when we can protect each other from making bad choices and live in a safe peaceful world, where mistakes aren't made and people can't stay awake because of the pure boredom in a society like this but I have news for you, I'm just kidding.

My advice for Mayor Bloomberg not that he would ever take it, I believe in individual freedom, he believes in state protection. Is that before he tries to save people from themselves, why don't he first save himself by making sure he's living as safe and as dull of a life as possible that he apparently wants the rest of the country to live or at least the 8M people living in NYC. And then after he accomplishes all of that, get a life man, we live in a liberal democracy, not an authoritarian state.

We are free to live our own lives and yes what comes from freedom also, comes mistakes, thats part of being human. Something I'm not sure that Mayor Bloomberg has ever figured out but what also comes with freedom, is people making a lot of good choices as well, because all the info is out there for them to make those good choices. Thats what living in liberal democracy is all about.

President John F. Kennedy: Cuban Missile Crisis (1962)



Source:JFK Library- President John F. Kennedy (Democrat, Massachusetts) and some of his generals during the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis.

“President John F. Kennedy stands with the Joint Chiefs of Staff in the West Wing Colonnade of the White House, Washington, D.C. Left to right: Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force, General Curtis E. LeMay; Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Lyman L. Lemnitzer; President Kennedy; Chief of Staff of the United States Army, General George H. Decker; Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral George W. Anderson, Jr.; Commandant of the United States Marine Corps, General David M. Shoup.”

From the JFK Library

“October 19, 1962: The president met with the Joint Chiefs to reveal, not to consult about, his decision to begin with a naval blockade around Cuba rather than bombing and/or invasion. If the U.S. attacked the island, he explained patiently, it would give the Soviets “a clear line to take Berlin.” The U.S. would then be regarded by the NATO allies, since “they think we’ve got this fixation about Cuba anyway,” as “the Americans who lost Berlin. . . . [because] we didn’t have the guts to endure a situation in Cuba. After all, Cuba is five or six thousand miles from them. They don’t give a damn about Cuba. But they do care about Berlin and about their own security. . . . I must say, I think it’s a very satisfactory position from their point of view.” A quick air strike might neutralize the missiles, but if the Soviets take Berlin in response, that “leaves me only one alternative, which is to fire nuclear weapons—which is a hell of an alternative.”

Source:History News Network- President John F. Kennedy (Democrat, Massachusetts) and some of his generals during the Cuban Missile Crisis.

From the History News Network 

"It was the height of the Cuban Missile Crisis and the nation was supposed to be pulling together.

But John F Kennedy’s top generals were actually bad-mouthing him behind his back - whilst standing in the White House.

When the former US President left the room Marine Corps Commandant General David Shoup said that Mr Kennedy was doing things ‘piecemeal’ and needed a talking to." 

Source: Daily Mail- President JFK & The NSC.
From the Daily Mail

It’s clear that the generals on President John F. Kennedy’s National Security Council didn’t respect him much as President. They saw him as a kid from the Ivy League, who represented a new school and generation of thinking, who weren’t stuck in the 1920s culturally and politically as far as what it meant to be a patriotic American.

With crisis’s comes opportunities for people to prove themselves and show the doubters that they’re serious, capable people who can step up to any challenge and show people how to lead. Which is exactly what happened with President John F. Kennedy during the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis. Russia and Cuba (both Communist States) underestimated President Kennedy and thought they could walk over him, not expecting the President to be able to step up the the challenge and they were wrong. 

You can also see this post on WordPress

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Professor Friedrich Hayek: On Socialism


Source:Malthus- Professor Friedrich Hayek talking about socialism. I don't know the year or who he's talking to.

"Friedrich Hayek talks about socialism. For all major works on economic calculation see here:Google." 

From Malthus 

"Throughout his life Hayek criticized socialism, often contrasting it with a system of free markets. Although his earlier critiques were based on economic grounds, he later drew upon political, ethical, and other arguments in making his case.

His economic arguments themselves had many dimensions. Hayek noted, for example, that market prices, which reflect the appraisal of millions of market participants, are essential for entrepreneurial calculation; they allow firm owners to choose the most affordable combinations of technologically feasible inputs. Hayek asserted that in a world of constant change—in which every change of price causes market participants to change their demand and supply, which lead to other adjustments, ad infinitum—no constructed system can match the ability of the market process to adjust continually to the changes. He argued that the market system itself constitutes a “discovery procedure,” in that it provides incentives for the discovery of new products and processes while also disseminating information to market participants (e.g., consumers). This occurs because entrepreneurs have incentives to be alert to and to exploit newly discovered or created knowledge. Hayek maintained that a market system aids in the coordination of plans and the correction of errors in a world in which knowledge is dispersed, tacit, and specific to time and place and in which individual beliefs may be wrong. Obversely, price-fixing hinders coordination; attempts to gather knowledge centrally do not permit the best use of localized and tacit knowledge; and no system provides as much feedback and incentives for the correction of errors in perception as does a market system." 

From Britanica

I think Professor Friedrich Hayek's basic critique of socialism (democratic or otherwise) is that it assumes as a philosophy and Socialists assume as a political faction, that all of society's (free or otherwise) problems and ills can be solved through a large, centralized, national government. That all you need to do is centralize all of the society's resources, into this one, large, national authority. And then the national government will see to it that everyone is taken care of and that no one has to go with out or have too much. 

Professor Hayek's main problem with socialism, is also my main problem with socialism,  that it oversimplifies individuals and has too much confidence in what government can do for the people. And worries too much about what individuals can do for themselves, if only given the opportunity and knowledge to manage their own affairs for themselves. 

Reuters: 'Hip-Hop Hugo Chavez Tries to Show Youth Vote He’s Fly'


"Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is in a tight race against a much younger opponent: enter a sleek and very hip campaign aimed at appealing to young voters. Reuters’ Daniel Wallis reports." 

From Reuters

President Chavez could impress the youth vote by giving them more freedom and stop governing like a dictator. Let them be individuals, instead of forcing them to live like collectivists.

Saturday, September 22, 2012

ESPN: Behind The Fights Documentary- Buster Douglas vs Mike Tyson- February, 1990

Source:Telegraph- Iron Mike vs Buster Douglas
Source:Real Life Journal

I saw the James Douglas-Mike Tyson World Heavyweight Championship fight as a fourteen year old in junior high on HBO in February, 1990. Actually I saw the replay of it, after I heard the shocking news that James Buster Douglas defeated Iron Mike Tyson for the World Heavyweight Championship. It was shocking, because Mike Tyson look unbeatable for about five years from 1985 until 1990. Holding the WHC for about four years. He just didn't look unbeatable, but he was destroying his opponents.

Beating former world champions, but not just beating them, but destroying them. Like Frank Bruno, Mike Spinks, Larry Holmes, Tony Tucker, James Smith and others. All guys who were world champions before and in Larry Holmes case one of the top 2-3 heavyweights and world champions of all- time. He's right there with Muhammad Ali and you could argue either way, but with Buster Douglas, you had a very talented fighter. Tall, big, strong, accurate, with excellent boxing skills, but wasn't very disciplined. He was the perfect fighter to beat someone like Mike Tyson, because of his awesome size. And the ability to use it, he was able to keep Tyson off of him, by hitting him hard enough to keep him off and go to work on him.

Going into this fight, of course James Douglas beating Mike Tyson is not only one of the biggest upsets of the 1990s, but of all-time. But looking back at it now, James Douglas was simply good enough to beat Tyson. He had the skills and size to do it, as well as the training. Most of Iron Mike's opponents went at Tyson by trying to tie him up, to prevent Mike from throwing Mike's bombs at you. But what Buster did was a different strategy. He figured out the best way to keep Iron Mike off of you was by hitting him hard with a big jab, going on offense forcing Mike to take punishment as well, which set up Buster's other punches.
ESPN: Mike Tyson vs Buster Douglas



Friday, September 21, 2012

The Open Mind With Richard Heffner: Milton Friedman: 'Your Boss Doesn't Pay Your Social Security Tax (1975)'

Source:PBS- Professor Milton Friedman, talking to Richard Heffner, on The Open Mind in 1975.
"Nobel Laureate economist Milton Friedman explains how both halves of the Social Security tax are borne by the employee. From PBS's The Open Mind (December 7, 1975)"

From  Wide World of Wisdom

Milton Friedman is correct in this sense about Social Security, that employees pay the whole thing. Because employers calculate the costs of employees, to when they decide how much to charge their customers, they take it in account. They know they are going to have to pay for half of the payroll tax, as well as half of the Unemployment Insurance tax.

So what employers do is have their customers make up the difference for what they have to compensate their employees as far as Social Security and Unemployment. So in theory, when business is doing well and companies can afford it with their prices, they don't have to pay the payroll tax at all. At least not long-term, because they get back based on how much they sell and charge customers extra to cover their share of SS and UI to make up the difference. While employees get stuck paying for their share of SS and UI, as well as Medicare. But also have to pay for other employees as well, when they buy products.

It's one example of why the payroll and UI taxes are regressive. But the problem with Professor Friedman's argument is that you could say that about anything that business's pay for. Everything they spend money on as a cost of doing business gets passed down to their customers. Including their employees compensation and benefits. 

Thursday, September 20, 2012

John Stossel: Governor Gary Johnson- 'A Libertarian For President'

Source:Fox News- Governor Gary Johnson (Libertarian, New Mexico) on John Stossel.

"Libertarian Presidential Candidate Gary Johnson on his efforts to make it to 1600 Pennsylvania Ave." 


Source:Fox News- John Stossel.
If Gary Johnson's definition of Libertarian, which is fiscally responsible and socially tolerant, was the official definition of Libertarian, then I think there wouldn't be any need or market for a Libertarian Party today. Because maybe 40% of the country believes that America should be fiscally responsible, meaning that the government pays its bills and doesn't try to do things that the states and localities should be doing or could be done in the private sector. 

Gary Johnson's definition of Libertarian used to be what it meant to be a Republican and not just a Center-Right Conservative Republican. And is probably why Johnson was a Republican for so long before he joined the Libertarian Party was even elected Governor of New Mexico as a Republican in the 1990s. But now Republicans are seen as socially intolerant, as well as borrow and spenders (thanks to the Republican Party of the 2000s) and Democrats are seen as tax and spenders, so Johnson would obviously never be a Democrat. 

But the fact is Governor Johnson's definition of Libertarian, is not how the Libertarian Party is seen. They're see as essentially antigovernment hippies, who don't want government doing anything, including prosecuting criminal predators and perhaps don't even want a government military, as well as seen as right-wing conspiracy theorists. Which is why they struggle to just 5% of the vote, let alone 10%.

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Liberty Pen: 'A Story Of Enterprise (1955)'

Source:Liberty Pen- from the 1955 Story of Enterprise film
Source:Real Life Journal

“Is success in business largely a matter of luck? Do real economic opportunities still exist? Those questions were being asked in 1955, stimulating the production of, “A Story Of Enterprise.” Clifton L. Ganus Jr. Liberty Pen." 

From Liberty Pen 

This is clearly a propaganda film from people who believe in American capitalism and private enterprise. But the message is correct that people themselves are better off working and producing things and seeing what they can do for themselves, based on hard work and production. And not relying on government to do it for them.

The more people you have working and paying their own bills, the more tax revenue that you’ll have for people who go through rough times and need public assistance that so-called Progressives (Socialists, in actuality) speak so highly of, to help them out.

But the fewer people you have working, or not making enough money to support themselves, the smaller the economy will be and the less revenue that you’ll have for people who aren’t physically and mentally able to at least work full-time and able to support themselves. Which is why you need the largest workforce possible with the largest middle class possible. So you have the fewest people possible who are either unemployed, or undereducated and not able to get themselves a good job that will allow for them to be self-sufficient. And then you’ll have more money to help people who truly need it.

Private enterprise and capitalism are great things and I’m big fans of them. But they can only be as successful as their workforce will allow for them to be and be as good as their workforce. You need a good infrastructure system, good education, good workers and a good and efficient regulatory state, for your economy to be as strong as possible, to have the largest middle class possible. As many people as possible who are doing very well and even able to put money away and enjoy the luxuries in life. And for the people who fall through the cracks of system, an insurance system to help them out. But have that population be as small as possible.  

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Basic Economics: Milton Friedman- 'Tyranny of The Status Quo'

Source:Basic Economics- David Brooks is now a conservative columnist for The New York Times.

"Milton Friedman - Tyranny of the Status Quo - Part 1 - Beneficiaries w/ David Brooks"

Source:Basic Economics  

"Analyzes the failure of the Reagan Administration's attempts to greatly reduce taxes, regulations, and government spending and suggests practical changes." 

Source:Amazon- Professor Milton Friedman's 1984 book.

From Amazon

From the early 1930s with FDR and the New Deal till the mid or late 1970s, when high taxes became unpopular, perhaps starting in California with the tax revolt that started there in 1977-78, sort of like the 20th Century version of the Tea Party movement, big government, democratic socialism  (as I call it) was considered popular in the United States. Not as popular as it's in Canada or Europe, but probably the most popular in American history. And high taxes were considered a necessary evil, or perhaps not even evil at all, to fund all of the Federal social insurances that became popular. 

Americans expected to have all of these social insurances to benefit them and even take care of them. America was probably the closest to becoming a social democracy that's common in Europe then we'll probably ever be. 

But what happened in the mid and late 1970s, was the economy tanked and Americans were unemployed as a result that didn't want to be unemployed and found themselves collecting the programs that they didn't mind paying into. And a different philosophy that had always been around gained prominence in America. That was about low taxes and more economic freedom for individuals. And people who were unemployed that were once middle class, found this message appealing.

In 1979-80 Ronald Reagan a Conservative Republican and who was actually the real thing, an actual Conservative Republican (unlike Rick Santorum) who ran for President and ran on telling Americans how bad the economy was and he had a message to turn the economy around. That was based on lower taxes, lower regulations and more economic freedom. That government's job wasn't to take care of people, but that the people should have the freedom to take care of themselves. 

President Reagan was successful in a couple of fronts. He did cut taxes and regulations and the economy did take off in the 1980s, but government didn't become a smaller factor in Americans lives in this period. But if anything a larger factor, with the increases of the deficit, debt, the expansion of the War on Drugs and so-forth. 

It wasn't that the Federal Government wasn't spending less money during the Reagan Administration, but that it was taxing less, which is a big difference. It's hard to change the status quo when the status quo is popular and the status quo has lobbyists and interest groups, that are in the business to protect the status quo. This is something that every reformer left or right that has become President of the United States has ran into. And why changing things in Washington is so difficult.

New American: Laurence M. Vance- 'When a Flat Tax Is Still a Progressive Tax'


Source:New American Magazine- and the Internal Revenue Service.

"The U.S. tax code is a complex and burdensome maze of rates, exemptions, exclusions, credits, deductions, phase-out levels, and exceptions. People may not agree on anything else, but the nature of the tax code is certainly something that anyone of any political persuasion would agree on.

But with the expiration of the so-called Bush tax cuts looming on the horizon, the usual cries for reforming the tax code have been temporarily muted while attention is focused on renewing or extending the tax cuts; that is, keeping taxes from increasing on January 1, 2013.

If the Bush tax cuts are not extended, the current six tax brackets of 10, 15, 25, 28, 33, and 35 percent will decrease to five, with the rates increasing to 15, 28, 31, 36, and 39.6 percent, the child tax credit will decrease from $1,000 to $500, the maximum long-term capital gains rate will increase from 15 to 20 percent, qualified dividend income will be taxed as ordinary income rather than at the lower long-term capital gains rate, the section 179 expense deduction will decrease from a maximum of $250,000 to only $25,000, and the estate tax will increase with a vengeance.

But maintaining the status quo just averts a tax increase; it still leaves us with all the problems of the tax code.

The usual tax-reform idea, and the one that has been around the longest in a variety of incarnations, is the flat tax. Under a flat tax, there are no tax brackets and few or no tax deductions. The late economist Milton Friedman first proposed a flat tax back in 1962 when the highest marginal tax rate was 91 percent. The idea was resurrected in the 1980s by Hoover Institution economists Robert Hall and Alvin Rabushka, pushed by House Majority Leader Dick Armey in the 1990s, and then in the 2000s by former Republican presidential candidate Steve Forbes.

The Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank, thinks it has an improvement over traditional flat tax plans. In Saving the American Dream: The Heritage Plan to Fix the Debt, Cut Spending, and Restore Prosperity, it proposes a “unified single tax rate” tax reform plan that “is far more comprehensive than previous well-known tax reform proposals.” Under the Heritage plan, the current system would be transformed into “a modern flat tax that taxes individual income only once and replaces all federal income taxes, all payroll taxes, the death tax, and virtually all excises.” A new flat-rate tax would be applied to income “after deducting all savings.”

What makes this flat-tax plan so unique is that it “folds today’s federal payroll taxes financing Social Security and Medicare into the new system.” Up until now, this was only suggested by the FairTax proposal for a national sales tax. Americans currently pay Social Security taxes of 10.4 percent (4.2 percent on employees & 6.2 percent on employers) on the first $110,100 of income plus Medicare taxes of 2.9 percent (split between employees and employers) on all income earned. But even though payroll taxes would be eliminated, “the revenues they would have raised are credited appropriately to the Social Security and Medicare trust funds.” Income tax withholding would continue as now.

The new Heritage tax system “is designed to raise a permanent revenue stream of up to 18.5 percent of the economy as measured by GDP.” To meet this target, Heritage estimates that “the statutory individual and business tax rates will likely be between 25 and about 28 percent under traditional scoring methods.”

The Heritage tax plan “ends the existing tax exclusion for employee compensation in the form of employer-sponsored health insurance. This means that the value of employer-paid health insurance premiums is included in the employee’s total taxable compensation.” The plan also includes as income not only all labor compensation, but “all net borrowings.”

Under the Heritage plan, there are only three available deductions or credits: higher education (up to the average annual cost at a four-year public college or university), charitable donations and other gifts, and home mortgage interest. To encourage seniors to stay in the workforce longer (as if that were a proper function of government), “the first $10,000 of a senior’s wages and salary is excluded from tax.” (There is also a “senior-specific” feature called a “senior’s standard exclusion” that would only apply during the transition period in the Saving the American Dream proposal to save and reform Social Security and Medicare.)

The Heritage intention of a tax rate between 25 and 28 percent for everyone is fiction, and not just because the deductions for education expenses, charitable giving, and mortgage interest will only be taken by select taxpayers.

The Heritage flat tax plan is a highly progressive tax plan just like our current Marxist tax code that punishes “the rich.” Who said progressivity requires graduated tax rates? And who said it is just Democrats that are obsessed with making “the rich” pay their “fair share”?

According to IRS figures for tax year 2009, the top 1 percent of taxpayers (in terms of adjusted gross income) paid 36.73 percent of all federal income taxes. The top 5 percent of taxpayers paid 58.66 percent. The top 10 percent of taxpayers paid 70.47. The top 25 percent of taxpayers paid 87.3 percent of the taxes, and the top 50 percent paid a whopping 97.75 percent. 

Nothing in the Heritage plan will change this disparity because it includes “protections for low-income working households.” Even though, as mentioned previously, “the value of employer-paid health insurance premiums is included in the employee’s total taxable compensation” (which primarily hurts middle and upper income taxpayers), taxable income “excludes all other cash and noncash benefits provided by the federal government through its anti-poverty programs, such as food stamps” (which primarily helps lower income taxpayers). The Heritage tax plan includes the Earned Income Credit (EIC) “as part of the overall system of financial support for low-income Americans.” There is no mention of what the amount of the EIC will be under the Heritage plan. Currently, for tax year 2012, the maximum amount is $5,891 (for three or more children) and the maximum income level is $45,060 ($50,270 for married filing jointly).

And then there is the new health insurance tax credit. Under the Heritage plan, there would be a credit of $2,000 for individuals and $3,500 for families used to “offset the cost of coverage offered through the workplace or to buy insurance outside the workplace.” However, “for upper-income households, the new credit is typically less and is reduced as income rises.” The phase-out range is from $50,000 to $90,000 for an individual and from $100,000 to $170,000 for a family. But what if a household has no tax liability? Never fear, “Financial assistance for purchasing insurance, equivalent to the tax credit, is made available to households with no tax liability and prorated to those households with a tax liability less than the value of the available credit.”

And is gets even worse for “the rich” who are on Social Security or Medicare. Under the Saving the American Dream proposal to save and reform Social Security, benefits are means tested. Those making between $55,000 and $110,000 ($110,000 and $165,000 for married couples) will receive a reduced benefit amount. Those making more than the income ceiling “will receive no Social Security payments.” The figures are the same for Medicare. Yet, because the Heritage plan “folds today’s federal payroll taxes financing Social Security and Medicare into the new system,” those who receive no Social Security or Medicare benefits will still pay the same 25 to 28 percent tax rate as those who don’t.

The government forcing “the rich” to pay more because of their ability and subsidizing “the poor” because of their need is simply putting into the practice the Marxist dictum: “From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs.”

If you want an example of a real flat tax, look no further than the 2.9 percent Medicare tax. Everyone pays 2.9 percent (split between employer and employee), on every dollar earned, no matter one’s marital status, number of dependents, or income level. Any flat tax not structured like this is still a progressive tax.

The progressive U.S. income tax system is a vast income redistribution and social engineering scheme. In his powerful pamphlet Common Sense, Thomas Paine remarked: “Government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil; in its worst state, an intolerable one.” Although the federal government in the early years of the American republic may not have been government at its best state, the federal government as it exists today is certainly an intolerable one. It is intolerable because it embodies the role of government as described by Voltaire: “The art of government is to make two-thirds of a nation pay all it possibly can pay for the benefit of the other third.”

But of course, if government spending were strictly limited to only what is constitutionally authorized, there would be no need for an income tax in the first place, progressive or otherwise." 


What Laurence Vance is talking about is a proposal by the Washington based, right-wing think tank/populist political action group, known as The Heritage Foundation. And no, their flat proposal (assuming Vance is correct) is not progressive either. If you are in the the bottom tax rates today. you are looking at 100-300% income tax hike. 

If your definition of a progressive income tax is an income tax based on one's ability to pay income taxes, there's nothing progressive about the Heritage Foundation flat tax plan, because of the huge tax increases on low and middle-income workers in America.

Dr. Joseph Mercola: 'Mounting Evidence Suggests Coffee May Actually Have Therapeutic Health Benefits'


Source:Facebook- Dr. Jospeh Mercola.

"Recently by Joseph Mercola: Astaxanthin for Heart Health and Chronic Pain

Story at-a-glance

Many studies have recently been published suggesting coffee is not the health-damaging beverage it's been portrayed to be; research now suggests coffee can lower your risk for type 2 diabetes, Parkinson's disease, dementia, stroke, and cancers of the liver, kidney and prostate
Coffee lowers your blood glucose level and may even increase the metabolic activity and/or numbers of Bifidobacteria in your gastrointestinal tract, which are beneficial
Fresh coffee from organic, whole beans that are pesticide-free can help keep your brain and muscle tissue young. Adding commercial milk or creamer, and worse yet sugar, will tend to diminish the value you receive from coffee
You should consume coffee in moderation prior to exercising, without sugar, cream or flavorings in order to maximize health benefits; dark roast coffee beans are richer in beneficial compounds and lower in caffeine than lighter roasts
If you are caffeine sensitive or have an adverse reaction to coffee, you might not have the same reaction to a different brand of coffee, a different type of bean, or a different brewing method
This is a Flash-based video and may not be viewable on mobile devices.

Visit the Mercola Video Library

For years, physicians have been warning about the negative health effects of drinking coffee. You may have been told that coffee will raise your blood pressure, lead to heart disease, give you an ulcer or make you diabetic. But studies continue to roll in that caste doubt on this “common wisdom.”

Certainly, like anything, coffee should not be used in excess. However, study after study has failed to prove that moderate coffee consumption increases your risk for cardiovascular disease or any other serious illness.

In fact, it’s beginning to look like coffee – at least in moderation – may have a number of unrecognized health-promoting properties. As a result of the rather impressive list of therapeutic benefits, I’ve changed my recommendations about coffee.

One of the latest studies, published in April 2012 in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition1, confirms earlier studies that coffee may actually reduce your risk for developing type 2 diabetes.

Regardless of traditionally ominous warnings that coffee should be avoided, it’s being consumed in massive quantities worldwide. Although it’s inarguable now that coffee does have therapeutic benefits, if you are dousing your cup of Joe in creamer, sugar, and other sweeteners and flavorings, you are missing out on the therapeutic benefits and potentially harming your health.

Please understand that I am not changing my position to justify a “bad” habit. I personally have never enjoyed the taste of coffee and have had less than five cups my entire life and those were used therapeutically to compensate for jet lag.

Could Coffee Really be GOOD for You?

My understanding of coffee’s virtues was greatly enhanced by my interview with Ori Hofmekler, author of The Warrior Diet and Unlocking the Muscle Gene, who has researched coffee extensively. Ori explained how coffee, when consumed in the right way, can be used effectively as part of your overall health and fitness plan.

Although organic coffee as a whole food may be therapeutic, caffeine in isolation can be quite toxic. The natural blend of polyphenol antioxidants (including chlorogenic acids), bioflavonoids, vitamins and minerals in coffee beans all work together to help neutralize the harsher effects of the caffeine2. There are literally thousands of different natural chemical compounds in your brew, and science now suggests the synergy between them can pack a nice nutritional punch.

With all of these compounds, you might wonder if there are any that have undesirable health effects. Yes, there are. But as I mentioned earlier, these are more concerning if ingested in isolation, as opposed to being consumed as part of the whole food.

What about the Caffeine?

Caffeine is the most widely used drug in the world and can be helpful or harmful, depending on how it’s used. Caffeine provides a “lift” by blocking the normal action of adenosine. Adenosine normally slows down your brain’s activity and induces sleepiness. Some people are caffeine sensitive and don’t tolerate it well, or have problems sleeping if they have caffeine too late in the day.

Caffeine levels vary depending on type of bean, roast, grind, and brewing method. Contrary to popular belief, darker roasts typically contain less caffeine than lighter roasts due to the prolonged heat breaking down more of the caffeine molecules. Bean species also differ widely in their naturally occurring concentrations of caffeine. Additionally, drip coffee actually has more caffeine than espresso because the brew time is much longer. And in general, the finer the grind, the higher the caffeine in the coffee. So, you might want to vary some of these factors if you experience a reaction, like switching from drip coffee to espresso, or changing brands.

If you have an issue with decreased adrenal function, use coffee with care, as it can be hard on your adrenal glands. Coffee also has a diuretic effect, so if you have problems with electrolyte imbalance, you might want to avoid it.

If you have any negative reactions to coffee, caffeine isn’t always the culprit. You could be sensitive to some of the burnt sugars or oils produced during the roasting of the beans, rather than the caffeine. People experience symptoms such as stomach cramping, heart palpitations and other autonomic symptoms, and these symptoms are usually interpreted as caffeine sensitivity when they are actually more of a food intolerance. There is also the possibility of mold or other contaminants triggering an allergy (as coffee is a dried food), so you want to make sure your coffee is of the highest quality and meticulously produced.

But as a whole, if you’re healthy, coffee is pretty well tolerated and the positive effects seem to outweigh the negative ones for most people. Please note that I still recommend women completely avoid using caffeine while pregnant.

The List is Growing of Health Benefits from Coffee." 


I don't doubt that there are positive aspects from drinking coffee everyday and perhaps multiple times a day, morning, afternoon, night even. But that's not the point of my post here. 

If so-called Progressives (who are really just leftist-Socialist in actuality) are supposed to be the coolest (oh, I'm sorry awesome) people in the room generally leftists in America are also hipsters, then you would think coffee would be one of the last drinks that they would try to outlaw, simply because it would go against their hipster culture and way of life. 

If the coffee house is supposed to be one of the coolest (or most awesome) places to hang out at, leftists tend to dominate those places, along with new technology stores, and independent bookstores. Coffee is supposed to be for hipsters, so why would leftists want to outlaw it. 

You could understand salt, sugar, meat, but coffee, especially caffeinated coffee, would be self-defeating for the hipster-leftist way of life, even if they think individuals are generally too dumb to make their own personal, as well as economic decisions and need big government to do that for them. Which leftists generally believe. 

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Professor Milton Friedman: 'On Tides of Political Thought in Modern History (1999)'

Source:Libertarianism.Org- Economics Professor Milton Friedman in 1999.

"In this 1999 video from an International Society for Individual Liberty conference in Costa Rica, economist and Nobel laureate Milton Friedman delivers a live lecture to the audience through a teleconferencing system. Friedman speaks about various "tides" of economic and political ideas throughout the modern era, beginning with the lassiez-faire influence of the Adam Smith tide in the 1700s, progressing through the Fabian tide of big government authoritarianism during the greater portion of the 20th century, and concluding with the contemporaneous Hayek tide and the resurgence of classical liberal ideas following the collapse of some of the world's largest and most restrictive authoritarian states.

Milton Friedman (1912-2006) was one of the most recognizable and influential proponents of liberty and markets in the 20th century, and leader of the Chicago School of economics. Read more about Milton Friedman's life and watch other videos featuring him at:Libertarianism.Org." 

By 1999 big government socialism (or social democracy, if you prefer)  was already out of style in the United States. People were tired of high taxes, deficit spending and wanted more economic freedom to live their own lives. But this started in the mid and late 1970s and with Ronald Reagan in 1980, people were given more economic freedom with across the board tax cuts and regulations. 

But government didn't get smaller in 198. Under President Reagan, it just taxed a lot less, which is a big difference and which is why the debt and deficits went up the way they did in the 1980s. The cuts in regulations actually started in the late 1970s under President Carter when he deregulated the airlines and other industries and America started developing other energy industries, like wind and solar. 

Big government statism was already out of style. That is big government coming from the right, what you see from Christian-Populists in America as well.  It's just taken Democrats longer to beat big government Republicans, then it's taken Republicans to beat big government Democrats. But big government from the right and left has lost a lot of ground for the last thirty years.