Analytics

Saturday, December 31, 2016

Post #3066 M

Quote of the Day

In my many years I have come to a conclusion that 
one useless man is a shame, 
two is a law firm, and 
three or more is a congress.
John Adams  

Image of the Day



DEAD WRONG: The Draft Helps Bring People Together




Regulation Impedes Economic Growth




Political Cartoon


Courtesy of Lisa Benson via Townhall

Musical Interlude: Christmas Favorites


Guy Lombardo (with the Lombardo Trio), "Auld Lang Syne". I used to watch Guy Lombardo annually on New Year's Eve; I think CBS finally ended the tradition a year or two after the band leader passed. I just loved the smooth, silky arrangement; I think my maternal grandfather had gotten me hooked (he was also big on Lawrence Welk). But one thing missing was the late great poet Robert Burns' memorable lyrics; this version includes them.


Friday, December 30, 2016

Post #3065 M

Quote of the Day

The greater danger for most of us is not that our aim is too high and we miss it, 
but that it is too low and we reach it.
Michelangelo  


Tweet of the Day



Happy New Year From Learn Liberty




Libertarians vs New Year Challenges




Secession and Nullification





Political Cartoon


Courtesy of Gary Varvel via Townhall

Musical Interlude: Christmas Favorites


Gene Autry, "Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer"

Thursday, December 29, 2016

Post #3064 M

Quote of the Day

He that goes a borrowing goes a sorrowing. 
Benjamin Franklin  

Tweet of the Day





Image of the Day


Clips From the Final Stossel

When possible, I use available clips from FBN or Stossel himself. I don't think I've seen them published yet. These are limited samples from the intro/close to the final show and constitute fair use, but like any Youtube video, they can be withdrawn by the publisher or Youtube itself at any time.





Pornography: Open vs Black Markets




Teddy Bear Reunification




Learn Liberty: An Extended Discussion on Immigration



Political Cartoon


Courtesy of Jerry Holbert via Townhall


Musical Interlude: Christmas Favorites


Bing Crosby with the Andrews Sisters, "Jingle Bells"

Wednesday, December 28, 2016

Post #3063 M

Quote of the Day

Ideas are like rabbits. 
You get a couple and learn how to handle them, and 
pretty soon you have a dozen.
John Steinbeck  


Tweet of the Day




Image of the Day


RIP: Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds


Carrie Fisher will always be THE princess of my generation. As for her mom, I love classic musicals, and Debbie's breakthrough performance in "Singin' in the Rain" is memorable. My thoughts and prayers for surviving family members.





DEAD WRONG: The "Progressive" Myth of Fidel Castro




My Favorite Elector: Bill Greene




Trump's Cabinet Likes Ayn Rand? One Can Only Hope

I picked this video to play because I thought it might have been his closing segment of his FBN show's finale. Actually, it's a promo segment for the finale.





Facebook Corner

(National Review). People keep saying "I forgive you," but there's only one way forgiveness is necessary here.
I will never forgive those gullible, delusional Trumpkins who voted a self-serving ill-tempered, unqualified, economically illiterate, unprincipled buffoon into office. #NeverTrump


Aleppo




Political Cartoon

Courtesy of Bob Gorrell via Townhall


Musical Interlude: Christmas Favorites


Jose Feliciano, "Feliz Navidad"

Tuesday, December 27, 2016

Post #3062 M

Quote of the Day

Once you have mastered time, you will understand how true it is that
most people overestimate what they can accomplish in a year and 
underestimate what they can achieve in a decade!
Anthony Robbins  


Tweet of the Day














Climate Policy Fascism





Trade Isn't a Zero-Sum Game





Facebook Corner

One of my pet peeves on Facebook is when my comments get deleted to a post. I don't mind others disagreeing with me and/or posting contrary opinions. But if I'm a "friend" only when I agree with you, that's not much of a friendship. So when I discover a deletion, there are consequences. One of my nephews wrote a post some time back applauding Pope Francis. It's no secret to any familiar readers that I don't care for the pontiff, who has been openly hostile to free markets (which I consider to be responsible for bringing more people out of poverty than any cause in human history) and panders to the left-leaning mainstream media. He quietly deleted my comment. and I discovered it by accident and confronted him (his justification was along the lines of "it's my party and I'll cry if I want to"; he didn't like someone challenging his power of positivity). So I "unfriended" him, not because he disagrees with me on Pope Francis but because of his unacceptable deletion.

Recently I've noticed a lot fewer notifications in Facebook, particularly to my political comments. This is unusual in the sense that I tend to poke bears. I don't go out looking for bears to poke. But let me use National Review as an example. National Review during the recent Presidential campaign went #NeverTrump; the Trumpkins went batshit crazy, cancelling subscriptions, dropping their following, etc., but it was like they were obsessed with NR, and the same old same old comments repeated on numerous subsequent posts. NR wasn't playing Whac-a-Mole, and every once in a while I would push back on the Trumpkins. I used to have a bigger problem with Trumpkins on Twitter. It's died down considerably since the election. (It's not clear why Trumpkins targeted me since I have only a few dozen followers.) In any event, NR soon revisited its position as it recognized the reality of Trump and blinked in the face of a likely Clinton Presidency. Of course, the Trumpkins are rubbing NR's nose in it every chance they get.

I'm usually not obsessed enough to revisit a post to see if anyone agreed with my comment. But I haven't gotten a reaction to a comment for a while, which was not the case a few months back. Is it Facebook censorship, group censorship? Not sure; maybe just coincidental indifference. It really doesn't matter because I don''t have the time or patience to engage in a flame war.

I'm spending less time on social media. There was a long period where I averaged many more tweets and over 1000 impressions a day, most of them non-followers. The initial reason for going into social media had more to do with promoting my blog; my blog readership numbers have improved since then but little evidence social media had anything to do with that. How did I catch my nephew? The post was still in my feed when I stumbled on it a few days later--and noticed my comment wasn't  there..

WAC is a group which I've often referenced, particularly in my Image of the Day segments. To be honest, I've almost always supported their point of view. In this case they were arguing the benefits of free trade when they got heat on immigration. I responded as you see below; I captured the text for today's post, but earlier today I couldn't find my notes and searched for the original post. I couldn't find my comments (which wasn't hard to do with only a couple of dozen or so comments). As I scanned, I found WAC, in multiple cases, expressing sympathy with anti-immigrant fears of being driven from their homes by unrestricted waves of immigrants.

[I just had an exchange with the group moderator; he sent back a snapshot showing my original comment below and said that I'm not the first person who has complained about missing comments. So I've re-followed the group.]

(We Are Capitalists).  I'm concerned that the word "globalization" is being turned into a "bad" word within contemporary politics.
I understand people's apprehension towards blending political ties in a way which might threaten national sovereignty - that much I get, and I generally don't support said efforts - but in addition to that, people also use the word to reference a broadening of global trade markets. And in that regard, people are beginning to use "globalization" as a pejorative. They absolutely shouldn't.
The broadening of global trade has benefited us greatly in terms of reducing consumer expenses, thereby helping to alleviate the constraints of family budgets. That's the big picture. Now to be intellectually honest, I have no issue acknowledging that there also exists a significant negative side to global trade. Don't get me wrong. When people see less competitive American enterprises close down, they're indeed observing specific subsets of individuals experiencing considerable setbacks. What's difficult to communicate, however, is that the benefits to the broader populace offset the negatives experienced by the relatively few.
Proponents of global trade, therefore, aren't pretending that such setbacks don't occur. More importantly, we aren't arguing that they don't matter. Of course negatives occur and of course people losing their jobs matter.
We're merely trying to look at the big picture. The broader populace benefits, and specifically, the purchasing power of low-income families improves the most out of all class groups (low-income, middle class, wealthy). We must be cognizant of these facts before jumping to conclusions and believing that "globalization" is a dirty word.
Under the Trumpkin nationalists, trade deals are seen as self-serving globalist elitist conspiracies. In fact, the anti-competitive status quo reflects concentrated benefits for special interests vs. diffuse costs to consumers. Granted, all we need is for government to get out of the way, not the mercantilistic provisions of trade pacts. But to the extent trade provides competitive alternatives eventually for consumers, it's a win-win proposition.
open trade YES. open borders and the death of national self determination in deference to a murky global order NO. it's unfortunate people are confusing the two.
One cannot consistently be for open trade and be against open migration. Nationalism is the rationalization for domination by the elitist State. You don't have a damn "right" to decide with whom, what or where I do business; similarly, you don't have the right to restrict who comes to visit or work with me. Stop worshiping obscene special-interest WWI-era anti-immigration restrictions which displaced our open immigration legacy.


Political Cartoon

Courtesy of Steve Kelley via Townhall


Musical Interlude: Christmas Favorites


Dean Martin, "Let It Snow!"

Monday, December 26, 2016

Post #3061 M

Quote of the Day

For the skeptic there remains only one consolation: 
if there should be such a thing as superhuman law 
it is administered with subhuman inefficiency.
Eric Ambler  


Tweet of the Day


Image of the Day


Unfortunately, Trump Didn't Select Allison: Yet Another Mistake




The Hubris of Government-Controlled Healthcare





An Excellent Source Summary of Empirical Free Market Studies

I used to follow Being Classically Liberal on Facebook; in fact, I describe myself as a classical liberal (meaning a belief in liberty, including economic liberal). I don't recall "unliking" their page, but I haven't seen their posts in a while. I came across this piece through a related Liberty.me Facebook blurbs. I really haven't read that many scholarly articles on economics but these excerpts are intriguing, and I encourage the interested reader to read the whole piece:

  • Import tariff reductions reduce poverty in India by reducing the cost of living, according to paper in the Journal of Development Economics.
  • Furceri and Karras (2012) find that, in developed countries, “the effect of an increase in taxes on real GDP per capita is negative and persistent: an increase in the total tax rate (measures as the total tax ratio to GDP) by 1% of GDP has a long-run effect on real GDP per capita of –0.5% to –1%.” Results held even after accounting for endogeneity.
  • Kaymak and Poshcke (2015) find that, contrary to popular belief, tax rate reductions among top earners during the last few decades in the US only had a negligible impact on income inequality.
  • Bergh and Henrekson (2011), in a review of the empirical evidence, find that most studies find that countries with larger governments have considerably lower economic growth rates.
  • Dawson and Seater (2013) come to a stunning conclusion: “Federal regulations added over the past fifty years have reduced real output growth by about two percentage points on average over the period 1949-2005. That reduction in the growth rate has led to an accumulated reduction in GDP of about $38.8 trillion as of the end of 2011. That is, GDP at the end of 2011 would have been $53.9 trillion instead of $15.1 trillion if regulation had remained at its 1949 level.” (They used Granger-causality tests to guard against endogeneity.)

Thomas Sowell Has Retired as a Columnist


I originally missed the 86-year-old economist's "Farewell" column about 10 days back; I've generally agreed with him, although he is more interventionist than I am; I own a couple of his textbooks in my personal library (not assigned during my UH coursework). I suspect we haven't heard the last of the great economist, but writing fresh commentaries on a regular basis requires considerable time and effort.

Political Cartoon




Courtesy of Henry Payne via Townhall

Musical Interlude: Christmas Favorites

Bing Crosby, "White Christmas". The #1 best-selling single of all time.

Sunday, December 25, 2016

Post #3060 M Happy Christmas!


Courtesy of the original artist via Pinterest



Quote of the Day

My father taught me to always do more than you get paid for as an investment in your future.
Jim Rohn  

Tweet of the Day






Image of the Day

















RIP, George Michael


There's a lot of confusion about the unexpected death of the brilliant songwriter/performer who fronted the pop duo Wham before going solo in the 1980's, one of the top pop artists of the 80's (besides Michael Jackson, Lionel Richie and Madonna). There was earlier discussion of him dying peacefully with his family nearby (which leads one to wonder if he had some serious illness like cancer), but the word now is that he died of heart failure.

George Michael wrote one of the most brilliant pop singles of all time ("Careless Whisper"), and he would be remembered for that alone. He sang other big hits as well, the enigmatic hit embedded below being my personal favorite; the arrangement and performance are spectacular.





Political Cartoon


Courtesy of the original artist via Liberty.Me


Musical Interlude: Christmas Favorites


Mahalia Jackson, "Go Tell It On the Mountain"

Bad Elephant of the Year 2016

Courtesy of Reuters via Business Insider

Yes, the President-elect is not only a 2-time winner in these annual mock awards, but he's a repeat winner in this category.

I started this category just a few years back, because I didn't like the false allegations that I was some sort of a GOP partisan hack. Whereas it is true I did switch parties as a young professor who had been a conservative Democrat, that had more to do with my disenchantment with "progressive" Democrats dominating party leadership, less to  do with GOP outreach. The GOP was more of a speed bump to economically clueless Democrat statists.

The fact is that I never contributed to the national party, and I had been privately cringing for years, e.g., how the Bush Administration almost doubled the national debt, the response to the economic tsunami, the politically corrupt earmarking, etc. If you look at the early years of the blog, you didn't see me rant against the GOP; in part, this is because I knew however bad the GOP is, I didn't want to give the Dems ammunition; as bad as the GOP is, the Democrats were worse, even more so than when I left the party. I was never happy with the xenophobes but I tried to convince myself that there was a legitimate rule of law concept and wanted to reform the law. I had been attracted to a more libertarian perspective, but I had a Burkean resistance to radical pro-liberty reform. I also felt I would have more influence within the context of a larger party.

There was something Obama's hubris and political opportunism that set me off. Instead of seeking accommodation with a reeling opposition. Obama played hardball forcing an unpopular Senate bill down the House's reluctant throat after Scott Brown's upset win to succeed Ted Kennedy's open Senate seat, which meant the GOP could filibuster a final reconciliation bill. The post-partisan, post-racial America Obama had promised withered away; oh, to be sure, the Dem partisans wanted to point the finger at "obstructionists", even while Obama declared "elections have consequences". I think the hubris really manifested it months before the mid-term election when Dems expressed concerns that the House might go GOP like it did during Clinton's first mid-term; Obama responded something to the effect "I'm not Clinton", i.e., "I'm a better politician." Obama then proceeded to lose the House and two cycles later, the Senate.

Obama's failure went beyond failed partisan leadership. He had paid lip service to the debt ceiling and Bush's deficits; He had criticized our foreign interventions, Bush's record on civil liberties, failed to close Gitmo; the debt is nearly doubled, entitlements are rapidly rushing to a day of reckoning, drone attacks went on steroids; Snowden showed the war on the Fourth Amendment has expanded under the Administration; Gitmo remains open; and Obama, a former Constitutional lecturer, aggressively expanded the Imperial Presidency.

I had high hopes for 2016. I am not going to rehash my critique of Trump in exhaustive detail, but suffice it to say this formerly registered Democrat has said nothing which addresses our deterioration of economic and civil liberty under Obama, no substantive reforms that address the 70% or so and growing of the federal budget constituting entitlements. He rejected decades of past GOP policies favoring a liberalized economy, trade and immigration and introduced a worrisome trend of jawboning companies he disliked for populist/political reasons

He clinched the nomination, and I left the GOP. That by itself is enough to win my mock award. But it was his boorish uncivil behavior that won my utter contempt. This includes, not is not restricted to:

  • the frivolous challenge on top GOP challenger Ted Cruz' American citizenship (Cruz was born in Canada, but his mother was a US citizen by birth who had lived in the US more than the required number of years)
  • the smear on Cruz' dad, implying a connection to the JFK assassination
  • the circulation of an unflattering picture of Cruz' wife compared to Trump's current wife, a former model.
  • stonewalling promised releases of his income tax returns
  • attack on a federal judge (involving the Trump University case) for his ethnic heritage
  • defending the size of his private parts in a GOP Presidential debate
  • bringing up his petty feud with actress/comedienne Rosie O'Donnell  in both the GOP and Presidential debates
  • initially threatening to go after Speaker Paul Ryan's job and/or leadership position when Ryan didn't capitulate as expected to Trump's agenda.

Saturday, December 24, 2016

Post #3058 M Christmas Eve

Quote of the Day

I am not a friend to a very energetic government. It is always oppressive.
Thomas Jefferson  


Tweet of the Day










Image of the Day



Humor: The "Lost" Ending To "It's a Wonderful Life"


To be honest, Potter's theft of Uncle Billy's bank deposit was an unresolved plot line that never made sense.


The Historic Christmas Eve Truce 1914 On the Western Front

This is a clip of  the 2005 film "Joyeux Noel". At the time, I was a Netflix subscriber who put it on my DVD list. I was so blown away I bought my own copy. I have been troubled to hear Trump call for insanely resuming the nuclear arms race; let's us remember that it's not the politicians and the generals who suffer in unnecessary war, but the soldiers, civilians in warzones, and the taxpayers. Make trade, not war!





Political Cartoon

Courtesy of Henry Payne via Townhall


Musical Interlude: Christmas Favorites


A bonus selection for Christmas, including three different versions, including the final version, a tribute to my French-Canadian roots. Familiar readers may recall my personal story with the song. In seventh-grade French, we did a performance of  "Le Jongleur de Notre Dame" and sang Cantique de Noel at the climax. The miracle play of the juggler involves a juggler/monk who has no gift to present the statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary except a demonstration of his juggling skills. His fellow monks are shocked by his blasphemy until the status comes to life and blesses him. ("The Little Drummer Boy" is clearly a variation of this story.) There are multiple versions on Youtube; I provide a briefer cartoon variation at the end of the song clips.

Bing Crosby, "Silent Night"



Josh Groban, "O Holy Night"



Trans-Siberian Orchestra.



Luciano Pavarotti, "Cantique de Noël (Minuit Chretiens)"



Minuit, chrétiens, c'est l'heure solennelle,
Où l'Homme Dieu descendit jusqu'à nous
Pour effacer la tache originelle
Et de Son Père arrêter le courroux.
Le monde entier tressaille d'espérance
En cette nuit qui lui donne un Sauveur.
Peuple à genoux, attends ta délivrance.
Noël, Noël, voici le Rédempteur,
Noël, Noël, voici le Rédempteur!
De notre foi que la lumière ardente
Nous guide tous au berceau de l'Enfant,
Comme autrefois une étoile brillante
Y conduisit les chefs de l'Orient.
Le Roi des rois naît dans une humble crèche:
Puissants du jour, fiers de votre grandeur,
A votre orgueil, c'est de là que Dieu prêche.
Courbez vos fronts devant le Rédempteur.
Courbez vos fronts devant le Rédempteur.
Le Rédempteur a brisé toute entrave:
La terre est libre, et le ciel est ouvert.
Il voit un frère où n'était qu'un esclave,
L'amour unit ceux qu'enchaînait le fer.
Qui lui dira notre reconnaissance,
C'est pour nous tous qu'il naît, qu'il souffre et meurt.
Peuple debout! Chante ta délivrance,
Noël, Noël, chantons le Rédempteur,
Noël, Noël, chantons le Rédempteur!

Jackass of the Year 2016

Kathleen Kane courtesy of the AP/Matt Rourke
Kathleen Kane was the Democrat rising star in Pennsylvania, a rarely elected state attorney in the aftermath of the trial of Jerry Sandusky, the former Penn State assistant football coach, convicted on 45 of 48 sex abuse/molestation charges in mid-2012. Kane was convicted on 9 charges of perjury, obstruction of justice and oppression and sentenced to 10-23 months in jail and 8 years of probation. This was a clear abuse of power undermining the integrity of  her political office; Through a political consultant, Kane had leaked confidential grand jury testimony on Frank Fina, who had declined to file charges in a corruption case before leaving office, and then tried to frame others for the leak.

Kane had tried to divert attention from her own scandal by revelation of a high-profile email scandal involving high-level state officials who had shared pornography and/or made politically incorrect jokes or comments.

No doubt the Sandusky legacy has helped Democrats take over state leadership, including the governor's mansion; US Sen. Toomey (R) barely won reelection, maybe helped by Trump's unexpected victory last month. But Democrat Josh Shapiro, a county commissioner, succeeded Kane and her appointed successor in last month's election as well. This reminds me of how the Democrats have dominated state leadership since the Gov. George Ryan scandal (corruption involving motor licensing during his tenure as Secretary of State) despite the conviction of subsequent two-term Gov. Blagojevich. Other than Topinka and lame duck US Sen. Mark Kirk, the GOP, who had dominated gubernatorial elections since the 1970's, had been shut out until Rauner won a close race for governor a couple of years ago; the post-Ryan Democrat wave included the US Senate election of an obscure state senator, Barack Obama. The Democrats have dominated the state legislature in Illinois for decades including House Speaker Mike Madigan, whose daughter is the state attorney general. (Lisa Madigan would have easily won Obama's seat in the 2010 election: Kirk had announced that he would not file if she did. But she decided to remain AG; I suspect that she eventually intends to run for governor, probably after her dad retires.) Illinois and Minnesota have become the most reliably Democrat states in Middle America.

Friday, December 23, 2016

Post #3056 M

Quote of the Day

Rather than love, than money, than fame, give me truth.
Henry David Thoreau  


Tweet of the Day




Image of the Day


Emerging Political Clusters in American Politics




Is There Religious and Economic Liberty in America Anymore?





Do You Hear What I Hear?






Cronyism




Political Cartoon



Courtesy of Robert Ariail via Townhall


Musical Interlude: Christmas Favorites


Neil Diamond, "Christmas Prayers". My new favorite, good enough for me to purchase the whole (Acoustic Christmas) album.

Thursday, December 22, 2016

Post #3055 M

Quote of the Day

God could not be everywhere, so he created mothers.
Jewish proverb 


Tweet of the Day
Congress vs. Obama Regulation



Exodus From Chicago/Illinois




Is Trump a Socialist?




Facebook Corner

(National Review). President-elect Donald J. Trump has made most of his major cabinet picks, including but not limited to Rex Tillerson, (Sec. of State) James "Mad Dog" Mattis, (Sec. of Def.) Rick Perry (Sec. of Energy) Tom Price (HHS Secretary) and Betsy DeVos. (Sec. of Energy)
Do you approve of his Cabinet picks so far?
 Did anyone else point out that NR listed TWO secretaries of energy? DeVos is heading the Department of Education.
 Question is do you? NR was predicting the end of the world by now if Trump won. I bet your just itching to pounce on the first mistake to somehow prove you were right about Trump all along and restore your butt hurt egos.
National Review was right in the first place. Now, just like the Vichy French make their corrupt bargain with Hitler. the National Review is making its peace with the right-fascist Trump. But in doing so, NR is selling its soul to the devil. You all will be complaining about Trump selling you out soon enough. #NeverTrump

Santa: Signed, Sealed, Delivered




Political Humor: Stein's Unproductive Anti-Trump Recount




Political Cartoon


Courtesy of Gary Varvel via Townhall


Musical Interlude: Christmas Favorites


Nat King Cole, "The Christmas Song". I remember singing this in high school choir.

Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Post #3054 M

Quote of the Day

He who is firm in will molds the world to himself. 
Johann Gottlieb  


Judge Napolitano Is EXACTLY RIGHT About Immigration




Facebook Corner


(Catholic Libertarians). [See above video.] "...To true Thomas Aquinas natural-law-loving libertarians—that our rights come from our humanity—you have the right to travel wherever you want, which includes across a border. So I am unabashedly, unapologetically, an open-borders person. If I want my cousins from Florence to come and live in my home, or if I want to rent an apartment for them to stay here, quite frankly, it's none of the federal government's business..." ~ Judge Andrew Napolitano
All perceived problems with free migration are actually due to the socialist welfare state, foreign intervention, and/or government prohibitions, not from the liberty to travel freely.
Judge Napolitano is spot on--on every point. Note that the same holds true for open trade as well. For legitimate Catholic libertarians, this is the only legitimate standpoint. Mobocracy has no moral authority over individual liberty.
 No. Render unto Caesar what is Caesars. Jesus acknowledged the authority of the state, and the state has the right to manage it's borders. [response to the video, not my comment].
Oh, my God. What a trite and ill-considered comment by a clueless OP. First of all, you completely misunderstand what you are reading in the gospel. He did not say, "Submit to your earthly rulers." In the passage you cite, Jesus is being put to the test; His enemies are hoping to find evidence for insurrection against Rome and/or drive a wedge with followers who hated the Roman occupiers. Jesus never says His followers owe anything to the Romans. He's merely stating if you have Caesar's coat, give it back to him. More importantly, He has brought the Kingdom of God into the equation--not because it is a lesser or equal authority, but a higher authority.

It is true that Jesus specifically disavowed earthly power on several occasions in the New Testament. If you look at the story of the fish and the coin (Mt 17: 24-27), Jesus makes it quite clear He has no obligation to pay taxes to the authority; He does so mainly because He doesn't want a political kerfuffle to distract from His message of salvation. This is hardly an endorsement of the State. Never once does He tell followers, "Make a law so other people have to do what I want." He makes it clear the individual has the free will to respond to God's grace.

I could go on and on about Romans 13 and other text you and other deceivers try to use to justify worshiping the primacy of the State vs. the individual.

And stop misquoting Friedman on immigration. In fact, he specifically says he supports illegal Latino immigration so long as it remains illegal. What does that mean? You have to be "legal" to qualify for social welfare. But you hypocrites only seem to have problems with morally hazardous social welfare to deny the rights of others to migrate. Attack the social welfare net directly for everybody, not just migrants.

On Political Correctness, the First Amendment, and Left-Fascist Authoritarians




Let Us Not Forget the the Victims of War and Abortion






Choose Life: Daddy Kisses His Baby Daughter to Sleep







Political Cartoon


Courtesy of Henry Payne via Townhall


Musical Interlude: Christmas Favorites


Andy Williams, "The Most Wonderful Time of the Year"

Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Post #3053 M

Quote of the Day

A moment's insight is sometimes worth a lifetime's experience.
Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.  

Tweet of the Day












My Home State Texas: A More Libertarian State




Libertarian Wishlist for Xmas


I don't have these...



Choose Life






All in the Family




The Failure of Prohibitionist Policies Against Drugs


Again, I've never used or transacted in drugs, but that's my personal choice (I even threw away most of my pain pills following an outpatient procedure a few years back). The idea of putting people in cages for voluntary transactions not hurting other people or their property is both expensive and insane.



Political Cartoon


Courtesy of Mike Lester via Townhall

Musical Interlude: Christmas Favorites


Judy Garland, "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas"