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Maggie's FarmWe are a commune of inquiring, skeptical, politically centrist, capitalist, anglophile, traditionalist New England Yankee humans, humanoids, and animals with many interests beyond and above politics. Each of us has had a high-school education (or GED), but all had ADD so didn't pay attention very well, especially the dogs. Each one of us does "try my best to be just like I am," and none of us enjoys working for others, including for Maggie, from whom we receive neither a nickel nor a dime. Freedom from nags, cranks, government, do-gooders, control-freaks and idiots is all that we ask for. |
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Sunday, July 4. 2010Honor, marijuana, etc.From Washington Reb's excellent, quick run-thru of political science and moral education:
Wednesday, June 30. 2010FreedomFrom Reason (h/t Insty): Will Elena Kagan Allow Books to be Banned - Understanding the Supreme Court nominee’s chilling argument in Citizens United. Each Supreme nomination provides an opportunity for education about the Constitution. Tuesday, June 29. 2010More thoughts on the gun case
And from Somin at Volokh: (fixed)
Also, meet Otis McDonald, the guy behind the McDonald decision (h/t Moonbattery)
Monday, June 28. 2010Prager on AmericaIncomes on the moveIncome mobility in America is remarkably high due to our (still) free market economy. That is a good thing. The permanently poor are as unusual as the permanently rich, from an income standpoint. People move up and down the income scale. The study of income mobility in the US is here. (h/t, Tigerhawk's link dump)
Saturday, June 26. 2010AGW: The "In case you were wondering" Edition
Since ClimateGate, blog sites such as Pajamas, Townhall and Hot Air have moved on to other, juicier topics, such as heartily endorsing 'attack journalism' of distinguished senators as they casually stroll to their car on a Sunday afternoon, vilifying and excoriating a 90-year-old woman because she dared to venture her opinion on a sensitive subject, and citing The National Enquirer as a definitive news source for a 2-year-old story that everyone at the time agreed was completely bogus. You know. Juicy stuff. Well, in the interim, the juggernaut has not been idle. The energy bill is alive and well, and even if it doesn't get passed this year, there's still the EPA and its impending mandates. We're basically screwed, blued and tattooed every which way from Sunday. One thing is true: The people in charge of the (delicate cough) "science" sites, such as Nature, Scientific American, Popular Science, Popular Mechanics and Live Science, never, ever, read the comments in their AGW articles. Ever. Because, if they did, they'd be aghast at how mocked and ridiculed the majority of their AGW articles are, and something would change. At least there'd occasionally be an article expressing "some doubt" over the current (another delicate cough) AGW "facts", but there haven't been. Not a one. The mighty machine rolls on. The good news is, it's amazing how few comments some of them get. For supposedly popular sites, it wouldn't be surprising to see their latest "Global Warming Alters Orbit Of Planet" article only receive five or six comments, most of them of the mocking variety. So, the good news is, at least they're (hopefully) not reaching a whole ton of people with the continuing barrage of garbage they spew. Exhibit A: From the current home page of Popular Science:
And the juggernaut mercilessly inches forward. Friday, June 25. 2010Who said this?"The Liberals, with their emphasis on collectivism and conformity, and their willingness to use compulsion to achieve their ends, are actually suggesting a course of action which thoughtful men have rejected throughout history. The reason man must be treated as an individual is because he has an individual immortal soul. Thus, his freedom comes from God -- as do all of his rights. In the scheme of things, government's only proper role is in the protection of man's God-given freedoms and rights." [All emphases again are -----'s own.] Answer below the fold - Continue reading "Who said this?"
Posted by The Barrister
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Thursday, June 24. 2010Summer Reading for incoming freshmen
Friday, June 18. 2010Political Quote du JourFrom a post at Coyote:
Thursday, June 17. 2010Blockbuster Study: How Government Lobbies To Increase ItselfTaxpayer funds are redistributed to other levels of government and to private organizations that use the funds to lobby for more, and more. The Pacific Research Institute just completed a 92-page study of such "State-Level Lobbying and Taxpayers." The study delved into lobbying disclosure laws in all the states, finding that on average the states scored a “D”, 59.3%, on disclosure. Little wonder. Using the example of
The study points out, “A shocking 44 states provide specific exemptions in their lobbying laws for public agencies and public officials.” Why? The study continues:
A similar self-serving dynamic operates at the federal level: Continue reading "Blockbuster Study: How Government Lobbies To Increase Itself" Wednesday, June 16. 2010What is enough?More on Voegli's important new book, Never Enough: America's Limitless Welfare State, at Powerline. One quote:
Friday, June 11. 2010A main course and a dessert- Washington Reb is working on getting past a sound-bite conservatism, with Russell Kirk at his side. - Steyn on "We are the ones we've been waiting for." (I would never wait for myself. In general, I tend to be annoyed with myself.) Is American medicine subject to market forces?Very good brief history of medical insurance at National Affairs: Health Care and the Profit Motive. One quote:
Thursday, June 10. 2010OzWe posted our morning links last night. Just this for now, from Henninger:
Wednesday, June 9. 2010Hayek Festival today1. From Insty,
2. From Vanderleun, The Road to Serfdom as a Comic Book Tuesday, June 8. 2010Look for the union labelFat union guy bussed in to Arkansas to make phone calls, from Powerline's Hey, union man: Another look: From Am Thinker, How to Fight Back against Public Unions: A Primer. He begins:
In my view, public unions should be illegal due to conflict of interest. Economic IlliteracySelf-identified liberals and Democrats do badly on questions of basic economics. No kidding. You can't even try to discuss economic issues with them. I call it "Fairy-tale Economics." Exceptions to the rule? Plenty of them, mainly the Wall Streeter limousine Libs who dominate the upper levels of finance in America. Friday, June 4. 2010The Cloward-Pliven Administration
Don't be fooled by Obama's incompetence. It's a feature, not a bug.
Wednesday, June 2. 2010It's one of the questions we are always asking: How much is enough for the Welfare State?Goldberg: In a welfare state, how much is 'enough'? A quote:
That's what the Greeks thought until Mr. Reality in the form of the Bond Market appeared to them. There is no such thing as "enough" as long as there is one more vote to be bought. Tuesday, June 1. 2010Oil spills and other messes: Are there contradictions?Conservatives claim that government is incompetent, inefficient, and intrinsically corrupt (eg vote buying), and therefore can be trusted to do very little. Libs and Lefties seem to believe that government is smarter and possessed of superior motives to those of the private sector. When governments fail to demonstrate effectiveness (as in the IRS' failure to make money on a Nevada whorehouse, or the oil spill, or managing money, or border control, or Fannie and Freddie, or...), many Conservatives complain that government isn't doing its job with all our dough. Libs and Lefties complain that the failure will damage the notion of big government's omni-competence and virtue and thus their claim to our hard-earned dollars and pennies. Readers know my view: Much of government is a legal racket, a special interest in itself devoted to its own interests of power and money and ego. Government has limited power against reality, and disproportionately more power over people's lives. Obama can no more control the oil spill than he can legislate the weather or the economy. I am entirely in agreement with Steyn who we quoted this morning, "Almost every problem we face today arises from the vanity of Big Government." I do not blame Obama for the oil (or the weather). I never rush to blame anybody for anything. Shit happens. However, government worshippers like Obama cannot say so because it would undermine the vision, which they market, of governmental godlike omnicompetence and virtue leading towards Progress and Worry-Free Life and General Wonderfulness. The Achilles' Heel of taking that position is that you must accept blame for almost anything that goes wrong. Reality is relentless. Even if you control the media, reality wins in the end.
Posted by The Barrister
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Monday, May 31. 2010The real AmericaA good read from David Warren (h/t, Vanderleun). One quote:
Posted by The Barrister
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Thursday, May 27. 2010Insatiable GovernmentFrom a review of Never Enough: America’s Limitless Welfare State, by William Voegeli. One quote:
In my view, never. It's a vote-buying game built on the childish wish-fulfillment fantasies of voters. Long ago, when Mario Cuomo had a short-lived radio talk show, I called in and asked him what the end point was of Progressivism. The gabby Cuomo became instantly tongue-tied when I asked him about government auto insurance. Another quote from this excellent review:
Well said. Funny how many folks do not wish to be perfected by their betters, and prefer to be left alone. I guess most Americans aren't Euroweenies at heart, and prefer to be citizens, not subjects. Tuesday, May 25. 2010Political quote of the dayEvery murderous totalitarian government of the 20th century began with some insulated group of faux-intellectuals congratulating each other on how smart they are, and fantasizing about how, if they could just install a dictatorship-for-a-day, they could right all the wrongs in the world. Ed Driscoll, in The New York Times: Forever Trapped in 1917 Ed: Woops. Quote is from Anchoress, via Driscoll. Sorry, Anchoress. Wednesday, May 19. 2010Freedom sucksFreedom gets in the way of Progress. We need enlightened dictators, Plato's Philosopher-Kings. Perfectly fine with me as long as I get to be the Philosopher-King and not you. I am an elite and would make a fine, plump Mandarin - except that I don't like to hold power. Plus I don't believe in the notion of Progress either (except in the most trivial sense), but that's another topic. Harsanyi discusses in Enlightened tyrants - Is freedom getting in the way of "progress"? Wednesday, May 12. 2010Liberty in EnglandVia a Washington Reb post on mature vs immature liberty, quoted from History of American Congregationalism:
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