Thursday, April 12, 2012

Michele And Marcus Bachmann's 'Ex-Gay' Clinic's Practices Described By Undercover Lesbian Filmmaker

Although Marcus Bachmann has continually denied that his Christian counseling clinic practices so-called "pray away the gay" therapy, yet another prominent LGBT activist is testifying to the contrary.

Documentary filmmaker Kristina Lapinski, who is currently at work on "GAY U.S.A. the Movie," went undercover at Bachmann & Associates, the Minnesota-based Christian counseling clinic co-owned by Marcus and Michele Bachmann, and once again captured a staff member conducting what she described as "reparative" therapy.

Lapinski says she played the part of "a confused 24 year old lesbian who had just moved from California to Minnesota to marry her long time male friend, Jake, all to please her Christian parents" while making an appointment. After speaking to counselor Sheila J. Marker about her situation, Lapinski says Marker then pulled out a Bible, informing her that God intended only men and women to come together, and captured the experience on a hidden pen camera.


Read More...

Bachmann proves only that religion is a platform that fails to translate into politics easily. 

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Santorum Drops Out

There is a pretty interesting discussion thread going over at the Mises Institute on the subject of Rick Santorum dropping out and what that means for the other candidates vying for the GOP nomination. There is more cognitive debate going on there than at any political debate I have watched in years.

http://mises.org/Community/forums/p/28793/464172.aspx#464172

Monday, April 9, 2012

CIA stealth drones made hundreds of passes over Iran

More than three years ago, the CIA dispatched a stealth surveillance drone into the skies over Iran. The bat-winged aircraft penetrated more than 600 miles inside the country, captured images of Iran's secret nuclear facility at Qom and then flew home. All the while, analysts at the CIA and other agencies watched carefully for any sign that the craft, dubbed the RQ-170 Sentinel, had been detected by Tehran's air defenses on its maiden voyage. "There was never even a ripple," said a former senior U.S. intelligence official involved in the previously undisclosed mission. CIA stealth drones scoured dozens of sites throughout Iran, making hundreds of passes over suspicious facilities, before a version of the RQ-170 crashed inside Iran's borders in December. The surveillance has been part of what current and former U.S. officials describe as an intelligence surge that is aimed at Iran's nuclear program and that has been gaining momentum since the final years of George W. Bush's administration.

I find irony in that an anti-war democrat can surpass Bush in regards to war efforts against States that pose no threat to our nation. Sad irony. 


Original Page: http://www.sott.net/articles/show/243866-CIA-stealth-drones-made-hundreds-of-passes-over-Iran

White House has diverted $500M to IRS to implement healthcare law

The Obama administration is quietly diverting roughly $500 million to the IRS to help implement the president's healthcare law. The money is only part of the IRS's total implementation spending, and it is being provided outside the normal appropriations process. The tax agency is responsible for several [...]

Legal or not, the Obama administration is only concerned with furthering it's political agenda, rather than debating the Constitutionality of that effort. You would think that a president with a Constitutional teaching position in his resume (okay, it was a short spell as a part time adjunct instructor) would have the sense to justify his efforts against the document our liberties are measured against. 

I'm darting to think that the fact that I have actually read the entire Constitution qualifies me as a Constitutional scholar, since Obama learned so little from it, if he read it and took away anything at all. Calling it a living document is justification to the statists to pervert its intent for their own benefit anyway. He's probably more interested in trying to get on the cover of GQ than law anymore...



Original Page: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/prepperpodcast/flJA/~3/VjjipyJQP7Q/

Obamacare and DOMA

If Obama doesn't want the Supreme Court to overturn a "law passed by a strong majority of a democratically elected Congress," by which, strangely, he means ObamaCare, then what about the Defense of Marriage Act?

It's about political agenda at this point, just as with most politicians, rather than supporting the Constitution or the will of the People. This is the failure of the State to serve the populace through democracy, as only a minority of the population gets their position supported in the best of circumstances. 

Also the impact of political lies and government overreach, as well as another look at the Trayvon Martin case and readers' response to Mark Alexander's Essay.


Original Page: http://patriotpost.us/edition/2012/04/09/brief/

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Obama flunks constitutional law

President attacks Supreme Court in advance of Obamacare ruling

For someone who once taught classes at a law school, President Obama doesn't seem to know much about the powers of the Supreme Court.

At a press conference Monday, Mr. Obama said he did not think the high court would rule that forcing Americans to buy health insurance was unconstitutional. "Ultimately, I am confident that the Supreme Court will not take what would be an unprecedented, extraordinary step of overturning a law that was passed by a strong majority of a democratically elected Congress," he said.

I am not sure if it is more surprising that he thinks forcing citizens to engage in commerce is either moral or Constitutional, or that the Supreme Court is taking this long to determine just that. 

There's plenty of precedent for voiding a law like Obamacare. The top justices have invalidated more than 150 federal laws in part or in whole. Nor would there be anything extraordinary about such a step, as courts frequently make these types of rulings. In fact, it would be unprecedented and extraordinary for it to let stand the unconstitutional aspects of Obamacare.

There's also no truth to the suggestion that Obamacare passed by a "strong majority." The vote was 219 to 212, a razor-thin margin in which 34 members of the president's own party voted no.

That speaks volumes in itself...

The margin of passage has never been a factor in the Supreme Court's review of any law. That's simply not a part of American jurisprudence. In fact, if Mr. Obama believes what he says, he ought to be very satisfied with the validity of the Defense of Marriage Act, which passed in 1996 by a whopping 275 margin in the House and by 71 votes in the Senate.

Mr. Obama even attempted to invoke conservative rhetoric to defend his greatest legislative accomplishment. "For years, what we've heard is the biggest problem on the bench was judicial activism or a lack of judicial restraint, that an unelected group of people would somehow overturn a duly constituted and – and passed law." Here Mr. Obama confuses judicial activism with judicial review. A former law professor – or in his case, a former part-time adjunct instructor – really should know better.

Not much experience to fall back on I guess?

Judicial review is the long-standing right of the courts to assess the constitutionality of state and federal laws and executive actions. It is at the heart of the system of checks and balances. Judicial activism is the exploitation of the powers of the bench to rewrite laws and regulate the executive and legislative branches in ways that the framers of the Constitution never intended. It is the favored approach of liberal justices such as Mr. Obama's two unelected Supreme Court appointees, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan.

If Mr. Obama thinks the Supreme Court is out of line overturning laws passed by large majorities, he should tell us whether he supports the court's decision in the 1954 case Bolling v. Sharpe, which overturned the act of June 22, 1874, that segregated District of Columbia schools. He should be actively campaigning to reverse the Supreme Court's 1990 ruling against the Flag Protection Act, which passed the House 380-38.

Mr. Obama proves that you don't have to be a constitutional scholar to be president. But it would help.

Published originally on The Washington Times, April 3, 2012.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

“Vitriol” against Santorum to blame for expected D.C. loss

Spin.


It's hard to pinpoint exactly when Rick Santorum suddenly ceased to be the viable challenger and began instead to be a candidate in denial. Wisconsin is, as Andrew Malcolm put it, Santorum's "next last chance" and it doesn't look good for the former Pennsylvania senator. Maryland and D.C., where Santorum didn't even make the ballot, [...]

Read this post »

I think that some people thought he was actually viable in the first place, so they are clinging tight to their lack or reality as he fades into the background. 

Saturday, March 31, 2012

Gingrich, Paul and Santorum say yes to Texas debate

The Texas Republican Party is hoping to host a nationally televised Republican debate ahead of the state's May 29 primary. All of the candidates, except Mitt Romney, have agreed to attend.

Original Page: http://austin.ynn.com/content/capital_tonight/283905/gingrich--paul-and-santorum-say-yes-to-texas-debate

Friday, March 30, 2012

Gov. Perry finds new cause — pink slime

A trio of Republican governors, including presidential race dropout Gov. Rick Perry of Texas, toured a Nebraska processing plant that produces "pink slime," later munching hamburgers and decrying media coverage. "Lets call this product what it is, and let 'pink slime' become a term of the past," said Perry, the nation's longest serving governor.

Pink slime, Rick Perry...

Two more things that need to fade into history. 


Original Page: http://blog.seattlepi.com/seattlepolitics/2012/03/30/gov-perry-finds-new-cause-pink-slime/

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Rick Perry's Not Trying to Be President Anymore, Dummy

In a rather salty commentary piece, Austin American-Statesman writer Ken Herman lambastes the American public for not taking the hint: still-Governor Rick Perry isn't trying to be the president anymore. Ironically, the man who slipped countless political gaffes into a brief campaign has pulled in more votes since he left the campaign trail than when he was actively pursuing the presidency, which lends weight to the idea that his presence in the race only hurt him.

The reason for Herman's reaction is the 39,435 votes that have been cast in Perry's name as bid for presidential nominee by Americans after the Texas governor suspended his campaign following disastrous showings in the first two primaries. There have been 17 since. This also comes after he's publicly resigned from the campaign and endorsed (begrudgingly) Newt Gingrich for presidential nominee. According to Herman's diatribe, there are still folks pressing the flesh, campaigning on the ground for Perry.

The fact that Rick Perry's name is still appearing on ballots isn't extraordinary: Michele Bachmann and Jon Huntsman are still appearing on voting ballots (Huntsman has approximately 68,000 votes) and will do so in the upcoming Texas primary in May. The vast tentacles of a presidential nominee race are difficult to wrangle in, accounting for all the extra names on the ballot slip, but there seems to be a gap in time from when a candidate reneges on their ambitions to become president and when their name is no longer presented on the ballot as a viable option.

But forget the fact that thousands of Americans are wasting their vote on a candidate who no longer wants the presidency in one of the closest nomination elections in recent memory. Look on the bright side. If Perry did somehow pull off a nomination after pulling out of the race, he's already got a great campaign slogan: "Oops!"

[...]


http://feeds.gothamistllc.com/click.phdo?i=b6eeabd9f117c249e43e1598e7d46917

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Mitt Romney trying to drag us all back to the Cold War!

Mitt Romney said today that Russia - not Iran or North Korea - is the United States' "number one geopolitical foe," adding that Russia "always stands up for the world's worst actors."

I counter that the US is one of the worst, yet Romney would likely disagree that Russia is not standing up for America, rather rightly opposing the tyrannical state. How often does American humanitarian aid come in the form of bombs and civilian deaths in those nations we claim to be helping?


Original Page: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Intelwar/~3/w-1WCiJGpmc/mitt-romney-says-russia-no-1-geopolitical-foe-214249733--abc-news.html

Straight or Gay, Why Should the State be Involved in Marriage?

Last night, the Human Rights Campaign published National Organization for Marriage memos that, as Zack Ford put it, "explicitly confirm many of the insidious tactics LGBT bloggers have been documenting for years."

We now know, for example, that NOM set out to "[d]rive a wedge between gays and blacks" by couching the fight of marriage in the language of the civil rights movement, as well as "interrupt this process" of Hispanic assimilation "by making support for marriage a key badge of Latino identity."

The GOP has a longstanding history of maintaining the divisions between classes and race to promote policies that keep the populace divided and controlled. 

On this issue, State Intervention in marriage in any way is an overreach of authority and a suppression of individual liberty. The sanctity of marriage is trampled upon the moment anyone outside that bond intervenes and attempts to regulate or control the relationship. 

It will interesting to see if, and how, Mitt Romney responds to these revelations. Last August, Romney — along with Michele Bachmann and Rick Santorum — signed NOM's pledge [pdf] to deny gays and lesbians equal rights under the law, as did Newt Gingrich in December.

This is why gay rights and marriage equality are a civil rights issue, and will eventually be recognized if that effort is taken which gave blacks and women the right to vote. 

In return, NOM's president, Brian Brown, deemed the candidate a "marriage champion." (Romney apparently failed to win the favor of former chairman, Maggie Gallagher.)

In having NOM has an ally, Romney stands to gain considerable financial support. As Buzzfeed noted:

In a "$20 million strategy for victory" keyed to the 2010 midterm elections, the group says its agenda "requires defeating the pro-gay Obama agenda."

I guess there are a few specific positions and policies that I agree with the Left on, but still don't see much overall difference between the two sides in general policy. 

"A pro-marriage president must be elected in 2012," the document says, although Obama has offered tepid opposition to same-sex marriage.

How can one promote a pro-marriage position without recognizing that marriage is an individual choice and right which should never have any State involvement or regulation (or recognition)? 

Gays have as much right to be miserable and end up divorced as straights, since that's what the statistics say. It's hard to defend marriage when it holds reverence for an ever-decreasing population, but should always be separate from State meddling. 

Whether directly or indirectly, Romney is sure to be the beneficiary of these efforts. Will he continue to ally himself with an organization that views African-Americans and Hispanics as pawns?

Left and Right are both wrong. 


Original Page: http://thinkprogress.org/lgbt/2012/03/27/452545/will-romney-denounce-allys-goal-to-drive-a-wedge-between-gays-and-blacks/

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Election fraud in Illinois? ABC posts GOP primary results before vote

Is the fix in in Illinois? Outrage builds as videos and screen grabs circulate online showing results for the Illinois Republican primary hours before voters went to the polls.

Results for the primary election briefly appeared on the ABC 7 Chicago website Monday, March 19, the day before the primary was to take place.

According to screen captures and videos circulating around the internet, the results show Rick Santorum narrowly defeating Mitt Romney, with Newt Gingrich placing third, and Ron Paul a distant fourth.
ABC 7 Chicago denies any election fraud or conspiracy. The network claims the curious screen captures were only a test. Responding to numerous queries, ABC 7 Chicago tweeted the following on Tuesday afternoon:
It was a test. The website results that appeared before polls opened were test results. Actual results will appear after the polls close.
Sure, it was a test, just a little accident. Nothing to see, move along, move along...
While ABC may be being honest, their mistake is nevertheless inexcusable. The appearance of impropriety is often just as bad as actual impropriety. Posting the primary “test results” to their website was negligent and irresponsible.

[...]

Election fraud in Illinois? ABC posts GOP primary results before vote - National Democrat | Examiner.com

"How the hell does SGTreport have election results for a Republican primary in Illinois which has yet to take place? We have long argued that the fix is in but this... um... leaves us speechless.

Posted tonight -- MONDAY, March 19th -- on the web site of Chicago ABC News Affiliate WLS-TV are the following election results, clearly labeled as "Illinois Races, Federal Offices". If we have this wrong, please let us know why this information exists in ANY form. Or, if we are indeed living in a banana republic, copy that. You now have our blessing to move out of the country.

The content in my videos and on the SGTbull07 channel are provided for informational purposes only. Use the information found in my videos as a starting point for conducting your own research and conduct your own due diligence (DD) BEFORE making any significant investing decisions. SGTbull07 assumes all information to be truthful and reliable; however, I cannot and do not warrant or guarantee the accuracy of this information.

Ron Paul reveals benefits of brokered convention

Following Mitt Romney's victory in Illinois, the media buzz on Ron Paul has focused on speculation about him dropping out of the race. According to many sources, his delegate strategy has failed and his fundraising is drying up.

However, Ron Paul seemed as upbeat as ever last night during his appearance on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno. He noted that the delegate counts for many states are still unknown and that a brokered convention becomes more likely every day.

Several media outlets report that Paul has only secured one tenth of the delegates that Romney has secured. This presumably rests upon the assumption that the percentage of delegates each will eventually secure will mirror his percentage of the popular vote.

However, Paul's campaign maintains that they expect to control a majority of the delegates in Iowa, Maine, and possibly several other states

Why the disconnect? Is this evidence of the media treating Paul's campaign unfairly?

Say it ain't so! I don't expect that state media will give in to fair and balanced coverage of anything before it collapses and independent media will take over and thrive without heavy corporate influence. 

Probably not. It is much more likely that most do not fully understand the caucus process. Rachel Maddow admits that she doesn't and suggested that even the Republican Party doesn't know the delegate count for any candidate at this point. She's right.

Abandoning the caucus process (along with the electoral college) would give true democratic representation through a popular vote. 

[...]

http://communities.washin...

read more


Original Page: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/dailypaul/FClq/~3/hz1ELjal4QU/washington-times-tom-mullen-strikes-again-ron-paul-reveals-benefits-of-brokered-convention-on-jay-leno

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

US Mercenary 'Took Part' in Gaddafi Killing; Sent to Assist Syrian opposition

US government officials requested that an American private security firm contact Syrian opposition figures in Turkey to see "how they can help in regime change," the CEO of one of these firms told Stratfor in a company email obtained by WikiLeaks and Al-Akhbar.

James F. Smith, former director of Blackwater, is currently the Chief Executive of SCG International, a private security firm with experience in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya. In what appears to be his first email to Stratfor, Smith stated that his "background is CIA" and his company is comprised of "former DOD [Department of Defense], CIA and former law enforcement personnel."

Of course our elected representatives know what the private mercenaries are doing in the name of America overseas. They employ these "firms" as a way to bypass the accountability required of our own military, what little they seem to still have...

"We provide services for those same groups in the form of training, security and information collection," he explained to Stratfor. (doc-id 5441475)

In a 13 December 2011 email to Stratfor's VP for counter-terrorism Fred Burton, which Burton shared with Stratfor's briefers, Smith claimed that "[he] and Walid Phares were getting air cover from Congresswoman [Sue] Myrick to engage Syrian opposition in Turkey (non-MB and non-Qatari) on a fact finding mission for Congress."

Walid Phares, named by the source as part of the "fact finding team," is a Lebanese-American citizen and currently co-chairs Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney's Middle East advisory group.

In a profile of Walid Phares published in Salon, As'ad AbuKhalil details Phares' history with right-wing militias during the Lebanese civil war.

Sue Myrick, who allegedly was providing "air cover" for the "fact finding team", is a Republican Congresswoman from North Carolina who has a track record of extremist pro-zionist and anti-Islamic views.

Imagine that. A warmonger in congress hiring mercenaries to help overthrow a foreign nation that poses no threat to our own. 

These include leading the charge against Dubai Ports World's attempt to buy major American ports in 2006 – labeling the Islamic Society of North America as a group of "radical jihadists" – and demanding that former President Jimmy Carter's citizenship be revoked for daring to meet with Hamas leaders in 2008.

Currently, Myrick is a member of the United States House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, a congressional committee charged with overseeing the American intelligence community, and is also involved with the Department of Defense and the US military.

With this direct connection to Romney, don't expect him to be an alternative to Obama in terms of foreign policy. The names change, but the game stays the same. 

In his email, the "true mission" for the "fact finding" team, Smith told Burton, was how "they can help in regime change."

[...]

http://www.blacklistednews.com/US_Mercenary_%27Took_Part%27_in_Gaddafi_Killing%3B_Sent_to_Assist_Syrian_opposition/18562/0/0/0/Y/M.html

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Jesse Jackson: It's an 'Honor' to Be 'Food-Stamp President'

WTF!? How can it be an honor to rely on the results of the efforts of the work of others? While there is a place in a society for charity and support for those who come on hard times, it is not charity when it is forced on the populace by the government's monopoly on the use of force, through taxation (argue the counter point with any seriousness) on the ever-decreasing segment of the population that is actually working. That is an unsustainable path. Jackson is so off-base and out of touch with reality. He is not much more than a figurehead, a tool used to maintain the division in the populace.
 
Presidential contender Newt Gingrich has slammed President Barack Obama as a "food-stamp president," but the Rev. Jesse Jackson says that it is an honor, not an insult.
 
When Gingrich labeled Obama "the best food-stamp president in American history," he clearly meant that as a negative. But Jackson, speaking at his regular Saturday service at the Rainbow PUSH headquarters in Chicago, had a different take.
 
"It's an honor to be a food-stamp president. Food stamps feed the hungry. Food stamps feed the children. Food stamps help the farmer," the civil rights leader declared. "Food stamps help the truck driver. Food stamps help the warehouse. Food stamps help the store. Food stamps hire people (really?) and feed people. Food stamps save people from starvation and malnutrition."
 
"Whenever you attack feeding the hungry, you undermine the moral authority of our faith," Jackson said.


http://www.newsmax.com/US/food-stamp-president-jackson/2012/02/28/id/430820

Margret Thatcher said the trouble with socialism is that eventually you run out of other people's money.  Welfare is just that, a socialist effort to take from one population and give to another at threat of force (don't pay your taxes, go to prison). This is why I lean toward classical liberalism and libertarianism; the policy of outright non-violence is a necessity in a free society. As the federal government takes liberties from the individuals, it grows in strengthen and scope, though in direct contrast to the Constitution that authorized it's narrow scope in the first place.

It's hard to take a government, or even a politician (definitely not a statesman) seriously that promotes those proven failed methods to control and divide a populace. The Romans used the term divide et impera (Latin: divide and rule) to separate the populace, keeping the divisions pitted against each other. As long as the division is maintained, the populace is unable to come together and address those methods that are used to manipulate the populace in the first place. Any society that allows itself to follow that path is destined to collapse and fade into history.

Left and Right are both Wrong.

Pelosi: "We Have to Pass the Bill So That You Can Find Out What Is In It" - YouTube

This never gets old, and is a big part of what is wrong with our government, why it is not open or even slightly representative of the populace any longer. It's all about control, not improving society in any way.


Pelosi: "We Have to Pass the Bill So That You Can Find Out What Is In It" - YouTube

Monday, March 19, 2012

Hank Hill vs. the Bureaucrats - Austin White - Mises Daily

Thanks to Adult Swim re-airing King of the Hill five nights a week I recently caught an old episode that has expanded my list of approved politicians to now feature two: Ron Paul and Hank Hill. The episode is "Flush with Power" from season four.

It makes sense that the only politician in American history whose integrity would rival Dr. Paul's is a fictional cartoon character.

In this episode, the Texas town of Arlen is experiencing a severe drought, and the local government has instituted water-rationing policies. Each household is permitted to use only a certain low amount of water each week until rain returns, and an army of bureaucrats has been unleashed to patrol the neighborhoods of Arlen, randomly checking meters and cracking down on those who defy the policy.

Rationing is a very typical measure imposed by central planners ignorant of economics. Much like the saying that a person who has a hammer sees everything as a nail, city managers see every societal problem as something that can only be solved by the exercise of their power. As if they are wizards holding magical wands, they believe each and every trouble in their jurisdiction can be fixed by regulations and policies.

This rationing policy is very bad news for Hank Hill. Hank has a lush lawn he proudly maintains, but this requires a lot of water. In order to stay within the restrictions of the rationing policy and still leave his family with enough water for their needs, Hank has to let his yard suffer.

If, instead of rationing, the Arlen city government allowed the price of water to freely fluctuate according to supply and demand, people like Hank would be much better off. The price of water would rise, which would result in people who don't value water as much reducing their consumption. This would leave more water left over for those who value the water more and are willing to pay the higher price. With rationing and price ceilings, yes, the price is lower, but the supply is extinguished much faster.

An even better solution would be for the city mangers of Arlen to completely demunicipalize water distribution and let the market handle it. Entrepreneurs would compete with each other over who can offer the highest-quality water services for the lowest price, and the victor would be awarded with the highest profits. This profit motive would make new innovations in water distribution much more likely. One entrepreneur might buy the rights to a water source in another well-hydrated territory and pipe it into Arlen. Another might invent a new, cheap way to desalinize the ocean water surrounding Texas.

Another, more pitiful solution the city managers of Arlen offer is the promotion of inefficient low-flow toilets being issued for "free" (at the expense of the taxpayers being forced to pay for them). This too is a typical response of the central planners: reduce your quality of life by using lower-quality products, citizens, and shut up. Rather than owning up to the problem being the result of foolish government management, the bureaucrats place the blame on the citizens for using the "wrong" toilets. We not only see this with the American government's present policy on toilets, but also with light bulbs and cars.

In the market you never hear entrepreneurs blaming their customers for problems. The customer is always right, and entrepreneurs slavishly have to find ways to continue pleasing the customer. If an entrepreneur held a press conference and told his customers that they need to quit complaining and learn to accept lower-quality products, he would go bankrupt overnight; but with government it is always about making the tax-slave citizens sacrifice and suffer, and about using violent force against those who refuse.

Hank, desperate to have water for maintaining his lawn, breaks down and gets a low-flow toilet.

Thanks to Adult Swim re-airing King of the Hill five nights a week I recently caught an old episode that has expanded my list of approved politicians to now feature two: Ron Paul and Hank Hill. The episode is "Flush with Power" from season four.

It makes sense that the only politician in American history whose integrity would rival Dr. Paul's is a fictional cartoon character.

In this episode, the Texas town of Arlen is experiencing a severe drought, and the local government has instituted water-rationing policies. Each household is permitted to use only a certain low amount of water each week until rain returns, and an army of bureaucrats has been unleashed to patrol the neighborhoods of Arlen, randomly checking meters and cracking down on those who defy the policy.

Rationing is a very typical measure imposed by central planners ignorant of economics. Much like the saying that a person who has a hammer sees everything as a nail, city managers see every societal problem as something that can only be solved by the exercise of their power. As if they are wizards holding magical wands, they believe each and every trouble in their jurisdiction can be fixed by regulations and policies.

This rationing policy is very bad news for Hank Hill. Hank has a lush lawn he proudly maintains, but this requires a lot of water. In order to stay within the restrictions of the rationing policy and still leave his family with enough water for their needs, Hank has to let his yard suffer.

If, instead of rationing, the Arlen city government allowed the price of water to freely fluctuate according to supply and demand, people like Hank would be much better off. The price of water would rise, which would result in people who don't value water as much reducing their consumption. This would leave more water left over for those who value the water more and are willing to pay the higher price. With rationing and price ceilings, yes, the price is lower, but the supply is extinguished much faster.

An even better solution would be for the city mangers of Arlen to completely demunicipalize water distribution and let the market handle it. Entrepreneurs would compete with each other over who can offer the highest-quality water services for the lowest price, and the victor would be awarded with the highest profits. This profit motive would make new innovations in water distribution much more likely. One entrepreneur might buy the rights to a water source in another well-hydrated territory and pipe it into Arlen. Another might invent a new, cheap way to desalinize the ocean water surrounding Texas.

Another, more pitiful solution the city managers of Arlen offer is the promotion of inefficient low-flow toilets being issued for "free" (at the expense of the taxpayers being forced to pay for them). This too is a typical response of the central planners: reduce your quality of life by using lower-quality products, citizens, and shut up. Rather than owning up to the problem being the result of foolish government management, the bureaucrats place the blame on the citizens for using the "wrong" toilets. We not only see this with the American government's present policy on toilets, but also with light bulbs and cars.

In the market you never hear entrepreneurs blaming their customers for problems. The customer is always right, and entrepreneurs slavishly have to find ways to continue pleasing the customer. If an entrepreneur held a press conference and told his customers that they need to quit complaining and learn to accept lower-quality products, he would go bankrupt overnight; but with government it is always about making the tax-slave citizens sacrifice and suffer, and about using violent force against those who refuse.

Hank, desperate to have water for maintaining his lawn, breaks down and gets a low-flow toilet.

The toilets are immediately revealed to be inferior products — requiring many more flushes to dispose of waste than normal toilets. This is a typical result of the government's remedies: not only are they usually unsuccessful, but they also exacerbate the problems they were allegedly intended to solve.

[...]


Thursday, March 15, 2012

Santorum Declares War on Porn

Internet pornography could conceivably become a thing of the past if Rick Santorum is elected president.

The problem here is that one must search for porn. It's an active choice. It does not arrive at the front door wrapped in a big red bow. 

Would he differentiate between porn and art? Doubtful. 

The unapologetic social conservative, currently in second place behind Mitt Romney for the GOP nomination, has promised to crack down on the distribution of pornography if elected.

Santorum is an enemy of the freedom of choice, free markets, and freedom of (an from) religion. Make a choice for individual liberty over state control; vote libertarian. 

Santorum says in a statement posted to his website, "The Obama Administration has turned a blind eye to those who wish to preserve our culture from the scourge of pornography and has refused to enforce obscenity laws."

Sanatorium is the obscene part here, much more than nudie photos or movies. 

Read more: http://dailycaller.com/2012/03/14/vigoro...z1pDWJnRiC

What's Wrong with the GDP?

 

Since its introduction during World War II as a measure of wartime production capacity, the Gross National Product (now routinely measured as Gross Domestic Product—GDP) has become the nation's foremost indicator of economic progress. It is now widely used by policymakers, economists, international agencies and the media as the primary scorecard of a nation's economic health and well-being.

Yet the GDP was never intended for this role. It is merely a gross tally of products and services bought and sold, with no distinctions between transactions that add to well-being, and those that diminish it. Instead of separating costs from benefits, and productive activities from destructive ones, the GDP assumes that every monetary transaction adds to well-being, by definition. It is as if a business tried to assess its financial condition by simply adding up all "business activity," thereby lumping together income and expenses, assets and liabilities.

On top of this, the GDP ignores everything that happens outside the realm of monetized exchange, regardless of its importance to well-being. The crucial economic functions performed in the household and volunteer sectors go entirely ignored. The contributions of the natural habitat in providing the resources that sustain us go unreckoned as well. As a result, the GDP not only masks the breakdown of the social structure and natural habitat; worse, it actually portrays such breakdown as economic gain.

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http://www.jayhanson.us/page11.htm

Progress heads slowly south, indicating that despite the peachy outlook by the current administration, though GDP is likely more driven up by the endless and increasing spending by government and the inflation/devaluation of the dollar by the banking system.

Does anyone else notice that the GPI starts is downhill slide just after the early 1970s when M. King Hubbert predicted that we would hit Peak Oil?