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"In some ways Lennon was naive. When he moved to New York, he thought he was coming to the land of the free. He had little idea of the power of the state to come down on those it regarded as enemies. His claim that the FBI had him under surveillance was rejected as the fantasy of an egomaniac, but 300 pages of FBI files, released under freedom of information after his murder, show he was right."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,1974954,00.html?gusrc=rss&feed=27
"The libertarian vote is up for grabs in a way it may have never been before. A compelling case is being made for the economically conservative yet socially liberal libertarians to switch their political allegiances from Republican to Democrat, a trend that has already begun."
http://www.sptimes.com/2006/12/17/News/Call_them_Liberaltari.shtml
"Whenever possible, challenge and confront people speaking for others with questions about their “authority” to do so. Ask them exactly who they speak for and precisely how they came to have that permission. Ask them specifically what they were authorized to say and how long their authorization lasts. You might find their answers very revealing. How they answer will inform you perhaps more than the point they were originally trying to make."
http://www.freeliberal.com/archives/002490.html
"While the Masters of War ready themselves for reinstitution of the draft, all radical libertarians should ready themselves to fight the draft now, before it gains any new foothold. "
http://wconger.blogspot.com/2006/12/fight-draft.html
"As is often the case with policies aimed at curbing the drug supply, civil liberties were one of the first casualties of the meth hysteria. Several cities and states, for example, quickly made it illegal for businesses to sell customers combinations of ingredients that together, are used to make meth, but that are perfectly legal if bought separately."
http://reason.com/news/show/117446.html
"Michael Nifong, the prosecutor handling the Duke lacrosse rape case, may single-handedly cause a reconsideration of ‘absolute prosecutorial immunity,’ the legal doctrine by which certain acts of a prosecuting attorney are literally immune from lawsuits or criminal charges."
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,237608,00.html
"I am not an apologist for Weber or others of his orientation, and I believe the mainstream account of the Jewish Holocaust in Nazi Germany to be true. However, I am always appalled at seeing people scapegoated, shouted down, or persecuted because they hold unpopular beliefs. Of course Weber was not allowed to get a word in edgewise. Virtually every word that left his mouth enraged Horowitz, a man so seething with venom that it seems to be eating him up from the inside even as he spews it on others; and he responded with the frightening vehemence of one possessed by a legion of demons."
http://www.thornwalker.com/ditch/nowicki_weber.htm
"California's medical marijuana movement is under sustained attack by the feds and recalcitrant state and local officials and law enforcement. This year, it seems like barely a week goes by without a new raid by the DEA or unreconstructed drug warriors in one county or another."
http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/466/drug_reforms_biggest_defeats_in_2006
"The state has every incentive to expand its activity into nearly any area that the people will tolerate, regardless of whether such activity makes economic or moral sense. Since it monopolizes conflict resolution — and acting in this capacity is another opportunity to expand its size and reach — the state actually has an interest in fomenting conflict, thereby maximizing its role in society. The more crime and punishment, no matter their effect on the innocent, and the more laws, no matter how outrageous or contradictory, the more business for the state, which, in a supreme conflict of interest, gets to determine what the laws are."
http://www.mises.org/story/2423
"Imagine two groups struggling to win (or, in one case, to retain) public support for their respective, opposing causes. The dominant group has managed to define the other’s name to mean 'violent, uncivilized destroyers of property and enemies of functioning society' in the public mind, despite that definition being the polar opposite of the truth. Still, the slandered group continues using the pejorative name to describe itself. 'We are violent, uncivilized destroyers of property and enemies of functioning society!' proclaim members of the group. 'And we’re proud of it! You’d join us if you only understood us better!' Strangely, the public does not respond in a positive fashion."
http://www.strike-the-root.com/62/allport/allport4.html
"Once the U.N. withdrew, a relative peace developed in Somalia. Crime and violence persisted, but not at the levels seen during the civil war. Various clan elders, warlords, and Islamic courts had power, but none were strong enough to impose themselves as the new government, and most of the fighting stopped. Once this relative peace was achieved, the Somalis began to order their affairs and adapt institutions to provide governance, even though they lacked a government. Most of the order was provided by Somalia’s customary legal code, the Xeer, which was interpreted by clan elders and informally enforced, mainly through ostracism."
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1880
"We anarchists realize that trying to have the government protect your rights is like trying to have the fox guard the henhouse. No matter how noble the fox is, eventually either he, or his children, will succumb to the power and start to eat the hens. This is simply the nature of government—it tends increase its power with no regard for its Constitutional limits."
http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig7/raskin5.html
"Bankers in Iran have complained in recent weeks that it was becoming increasingly difficult to receive Iranian-held money denominated in dollars from European bank accounts. They said that this was because of US pressure on European banking giants not to allow dollar-denominated funds to be sent into, or out of, the Islamic republic. Elham implied the move would apply to oil revenues from the world's number four crude producer, although it would be difficult for Iran to force oil buyers to pay for all of its crude oil in euros."
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20061218/wl_mideast_afp/iranforexbank_061218114517
"Every argument against 'unfettered individualism' boils down to this: 'Government should have the power to fine, imprison, and kill people I don't like or who do things I don't like.' Individualists, on the other hand, believe in fining, imprisoning, or killing only in self-defense, against people who have done tangible harm to others without their consent."
http://independentcountry.blogspot.com/2006/12/individualism-and-selfishness.html
"When residents here in southern mainland China's richest city learned of plans to build an expressway that would cut through the heart of their congested, middle-class neighborhood, they immediately organized a campaign to fight city hall."
http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/12/17/news/shenzhen.php
"Clear evidence that people actually do put their money where their mouth is when it comes to issues that affect them directly. All in all, the land trust approach seems superior to outright government intervention in that it allows local folk to register their preferences without relying on the intermediary of an interest group."
http://www.abetterearth.org/blog/id.3556/news_detail.asp
"Unlike the Nuremberg war-crimes trials of the Nazis, there will be no government officials in the dock, but rather—as detailed in my last column—prisoners against whom the United States has itself committed war crimes under the Geneva Conventions and our own War Crimes act."
http://villagevoice.com/news/0651,hentoff,75320,2.html
"Whatever the government's motives for this ongoing horror, Americans need to wake up and recognize that Guantanamo and the so-called 'War on Terror' have made America--and every one of us Americans--guilty of the most obscene of war crimes."
http://www.counterpunch.org/lindorff12192006.html
"This is a clue to the real misdirection of the ticking bomb scenario. It’s always presented as a 'What would you do?' dilemma, but in truth it has nothing to do with you. The proper question is: 'What should we allow officials embedded in the security bureaucracy to do with impunity? What shall we let their bosses order without legal repercussion?' "
http://reason.com/news/show/117073.html
"While it would be rather amusing to watch the National Review and New York Times attempt to change the meaning of abolitionist into 'violent racists who hate freedom and want to kill you,' they would ultimately be successful in stigmatizing the word for a significant portion of the population. Opportunists will also appropriate it once it amasses some credibility and exposure. ... No word, symbol, or phrase we use will ever be spared this fate. If you want an ongoing example, think of what 'freedom' may now mean to someone who has been tortured, maimed, widowed, or orphaned by the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan."
http://www.strike-the-root.com/62/vechiver/vechiver1.html
"[W]hen it comes to our deluded leaders, who see themselves as world-historical figures, no price is too high to pay for their legacy as conquering heroes. They will see their vision of the world confirmed even if it leads to our utter ruination. If the military is breaking, the people are rebelling, and the country is sliding into bankruptcy, then that's a small price to pay for fulfilling our role as the supreme arbiter of world affairs – isn't it?"
http://www.antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=10194
"Many commentators have called the Democratic victory in the November elections a referendum on the Bush administration’s policy in Iraq. They have also noted that the voting public is concerned by the attacks on civil liberties so loyally defended by nearly all the Republican lawmakers in fighting the war on terror. The Democrats, presumably, now have a mandate to reverse current trends in domestic as well as foreign anti-terror policy."
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1877
"In America these days persons in political life can describe reality only if they are self-employed, with a guaranteed independent income and above 75 years of age. Jimmy Carter and James Baker are two prime examples of this truth. Otherwise fantasy rules in Congress and the press, which has consistently misrepresented the extent of the disaster in Iraq, preferring to promote fatal illusions about a viable central government and fantasies of the US being able to shape a new model army of Iraqis."
http://www.counterpunch.org/cockburn12192006.html
"Let it come down. Force all those who represent us in government declare which side they are on. Let all the pundits and opinion-slingers declare which side they are on. Let the people themselves see clearly and openly the choice that is before them: Do you want a republic of free citizens, or a bastardized autocracy? "
http://www.chris-floyd.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=968&Itemid=135
"Both Aristotelian and Romantic poetics stake their claims on the principle of organic form. But since Darwin we have come to understand that organic form need not be the result of conscious design or pre-planning. Franco Moretti and Gary Saul Morson have led the way in showing how Darwin’s ideas can help us rethink our notion of literary form. ... In the Smith/Darwin model, a system becomes self-regulating through a feedback mechanism. Such a system does not achieve perfection all at once by an act of divine creation; rather it is always striving toward perfection by a process of evolution; it is in effect self-perfecting rather than perfect."
http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig3/cantor4.html
"To celebrate the gift as an institution, then, is not to disparage the moral status of exchanges. Human relations are not debased merely because money is involved. Money is simply a proxy for goods and services. It is a tool that permits us to come to terms in a more efficient way. The problem arises only when the tool (the means) is seen as the end. Indeed, in one sense we might say that exchange is a necessary precondition to the gift. How did the wise men obtain their gifts? They probably purchased them from a merchant. And how did the merchant obtain them? Probably from a small manufacturer who produced them from raw materials. And where did the raw materials come from? They were obtained via the use of other resources. "
http://www.acton.org/ppolicy/comment/article.php?article=358&fromemail
"Technology now makes it possible to live in inhospitable places. Humans have been living and working in the Antarctic for the past 100 years, but most have just been visitors. It is now possible for people to go to Antarctica and colonize a new frontier."
http://www.mises.org/story/2421
"My definition is simply this: Marriage is a social contract between consenting adults. It is religious only insofar as the contracting parties wish it to be. Neither the number or the gender of the contracting parties has any bearing on the fact of marriage. Nor is it any business of any person outside the contracting parties."
http://www.ncc-1776.org/tle2006/tle398-20061217-05.html
"I believe there is some very strong circumstantial evidence suggesting that Mr. Ruttenberg's bar was targeted by the city of Manassas Park because the city had its eye on the property as a possible site for an off-track betting facility for the Colonial Downs horse racing track in New Kent County, [Virginia]."
http://www.theagitator.com/archives/027338.php#027338
"Agronomists agree that, as the essential plant food, more CO2 would enhance growth of crops and forests. Longer growing seasons and fewer frosts would benefit agriculture. Further, ocean warming inevitably increases evaporation and therefore precipitation, raising global supplies of fresh water. In addition, most warming would occur mainly at night in winter at high latitudes. Such warming may delay or even cancel the next ice age, expected to follow the present warm interglacial period."
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1878
"After so many decades of we citizens taking our toilets for granted, well, Congress wandered into the toilet regulation business. And now I'm buying plungers. Back in the '90s, Congress legislated these new-fangled low-flow toilets. And like Congress, these toilets are regularly full of...well, let's just say they...don't get the job done. "
http://www.freeliberal.com/archives/002492.html
"The clear lesson is that if you pay huge amounts of money for what amounts to a Disneyland ride, you end up hurting the average transit rider. And not just transit riders: Portland schools, fire, police, public health, and other essential services have all seen budget squeezes even as the city continues to give huge subsidies to developers along the streetcar line."
http://www.newswithviews.com/O'Toole/randal5.htm
"Once you are in the war, you can’t get out. We couldn’t either. While your commander in chief eats steak in the White House and talks tough, just like a real president, you kill people you have no reason to kill, about whom you know next to nothing—which one day may weigh on your conscience. It does with a lot of guys, but that comes later."
http://fredoneverything.net/BushPuppy.shtml
"Slush funds, oil sheikhs, prostitutes, Swiss banks, kickbacks, blackmail, bagmen, arms deals, war plans, climbdowns, big lies and Dick Cheney – it's a scandal that has it all, corruption and cowardice at the highest levels, a festering canker at the very heart of world politics, where the War on Terror meets the slaughter in Iraq. Yet chances are you've never heard about it – even though it happened just a few days ago. The fog of war profiteering, it seems, is just as thick as the fog of war."
http://www.chris-floyd.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=970&Itemid=135
"With Iraq, Afghanistan, Lebanon, and Palestine already in or sliding toward civil war, one can correctly label the Bush administration’s foreign policy the most incompetent in recent memory. But the problem lies deeper than that. The hyperactive, and often counterproductive, U.S. foreign policy is a bipartisan problem, best illustrated by the sordid U.S. history in Somalia."
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1879
"Bush stated that because FARC and other terrorist groups get their money from the cocaine trade, fighting the drug war and fighting the terrorists are one and the same. But the ironic reason for that connection is the drug war itself. What makes it relatively attractive for coca producers to support FARC is that FARC protects them from the attempts of the Colombian government, egged on by the U.S. government, and from the direct attempts of the U.S. government, to destroy their livelihoods. "
http://www.antiwar.com/henderson/?articleid=10180
"Although geographical factors played a role, the key to western development is to be found in the fact that, while Europe constituted a single civilization — Latin Christendom — it was at the same time radically decentralized. In contrast to other cultures — especially China, India, and the Islamic world — Europe comprised a system of divided and, hence, competing powers and jurisdictions."
http://www.mises.org/story/2404
"Helmut Bunder and Franz Koenig helped lead the Weimar assembly's efforts in 1925 to pass the German National Gun Registration Act, then helped to pass the National Security Act of 1929. The 1929 Act required all Germans, and especially Jews, to turn in all guns or rifles they owned to the authorities. Through their efforts in the Weimar Assembly, these men helped remove all guns owned by German citizens and Jews, thereby helping us make a more secure Germany, a more peaceful Germany. "
http://www.newswithviews.com/Turtel/joel31.htm
"Friedman was ready and willing to tell the people responsible for all the wrong policies of the world what they needed to do to set things right, which meant he had to talk to them, making open assaults on their crimes ill-advised. He tried to move the world in a freer direction from the point reality presented him with."
http://www.reason.com/news/show/117278.html
"To say that something is legal (in the narrow sense) or constitutional is not to say it is moral or proper. If I am right that the income-tax laws satisfy the requirements of the U.S. Constitution, I hope I will not be taken as saying that the income tax is legitimate in the broader sense. To be constitutional and to be legitimate are not the same thing. No libertarian should have to be reminded of this." Link below goes to part one, but the essay also has a part two and three.
http://www.fff.org/freedom/fd0608b.asp
"Concern about America's reputation is legitimate. But it's a bit late to worry about how Washington looks to the world. The mistaken decision to launch an unnecessary war of choice, and the appalling decisions that led to a worsening sectarian war, already have wrecked Washington's image. Indeed, the disaster in Iraq well demonstrates what should have been obvious before: the importance of not frivolously putting America's credibility on the line in a dubious cause. U.S. officials seem incapable of grasping this lesson."
http://www.antiwar.com/bandow/?articleid=10207
"We have made one of the most common military mistakes—believing our own propaganda. Over and over, the U.S. military tells the world and itself, 'No one can defeat us. No one can even fight us. We are the greatest military the world has ever seen!' Unfortunately, like most propaganda, it’s bunk. The U.S. Armed Forces are technically well-trained, lavishly resourced Second-Generation militaries. They are today being fought and beaten by Fourth-Generation opponents in Iraq and Afghanistan. They can also be defeated by Third-Generation opponents who can react faster than America’s process-ridden, PowerPoint-enslaved military headquarters."
http://amconmag.com/2006/2006_12_18/article.html
"[I]t beggars belief to imagine that Blair and Bush (or at least the latter's chief advisers) do not know that they have helped form many of the very militias they now rail against daily.... One can only conclude from this that Bush and Blair have decided that the sectarian war should be played to their own advantage ...: the triumph of a Shiite extremist faction willing to cut an acceptable deal on the all-important 'oil law' and perhaps allow a continued U.S. military presence in the country, if only a few 'lily-pad' skeleton bases. ... [I]t seems increasingly clear that Bush and Blair have decided to wage all-out war on Sadr, with the help of the 'surge' troops now being put together. This will be the 'New Way Forward' that Bush's mouthpieces have been talking about."
http://www.chris-floyd.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=969&Itemid=135
"The strains of the Iraq deployment have forced the military to resort to a backdoor draft. First, deployments have been extended to keep troops in Iraq for longer than their normal rotation. Second, the use of stop-loss orders prevents soldiers from leaving the military when their terms of enlistment expire. Finally, the military is using involuntary recall to force reservists back into active duty. But a backdoor draft may not be enough, particularly since Gen. Schoomaker has called for expanding the Army by 7,000 or more troops a year."
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1876
"Alfred Bester's innovative, ferocious talent has been highly influential upon the science fiction genre. Born in New York City, he entered the field in 1939 with a submission to Thrilling Wonder Stories. His talents were evident from the beginning, and by 1942 his writing displayed the qualities for which he would later be celebrated: cynical, baroque and aggressive, his work evokes hard, bright images in quick succession, and convincingly deals with obsessive states of mind."
http://www.sfhomeworld.org/exhibits/homeworld/scifi_hof.asp?articleID=86
"Hill's career was cemented, however, with his unsentimental, revisionist look at the dying American west in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969). His rapport with Paul Newman and Robert Redford was such that the stars reteamed with Hill for the Oscar -winning caper picture The Sting (1973), which owed much to its clever plot and Tin Pan Alley-inspired score (which Hill had hit upon after overhearing one of his son's records.)"
http://www.amctv.com/article/0,,1098-1--0-9-EST,00.html
From the bio page: "When she landed the role of Glenda Crawford in Down Argentine Way (1940), the public finally took notice of this shining bright star. Stardom came through comedies such as Coney Island (1943) and Sweet Rosie O'Grady (1943). The public was enchanted with Betty. Her famous pin-up pose during World War II adorned barracks all around the world. With that pin-up and as the star of lavish musicals, Betty became the highest-paid star in Hollywood."
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0002107/
"Biko ... founded the South African Students' Organisation (SASO). SASO was involved in providing legal aid and medical clinics, as well as helping to develop cottage industries for disadvantaged black communities."
http://africanhistory.about.com/library/biographies/blbio-stevebiko.htm
"A new era begins in Uncle Warren's life as he produces his first GarageBand podcast. Bert, what do you know about that? Merrrrry Christmas!!!!"
http://unclewarrensattic.libsyn.com/index.php?post_id=164299
"The title of the seventh and final Harry Potter book — and hence, almost certainly the title of the seventh and final Harry Potter movie — has been announced. And it is (drum roll please)…"
http://movies.ign.com/articles/752/752076p1.html
"Although Kuo faithfully served the politicians, the politicians did not reciprocate. To the contrary, he writes, 'For most of the rest of the White House staff, evangelical leaders were people to be tolerated, not people who were truly welcomed. No group was more eye-rolling about Christians than the political affairs shop.' This claim has been sharply criticized, but it almost certainly is true. ... Most books that come out of Washington are dedicated to burnishing the author’s image or smashing the author’s enemies, or both. Tempting Faith is neither. It is a refreshingly honest account of how politics can seduce the best intentioned and the most naïve."
http://amconmag.com/2006/2006_12_18/review.html
"posted by Tom Novak, who sword fights stop-motion skeletons twice a week."
http://tonova.typepad.com/thesuddencurve/2006/12/the_ray_harryha.html
"Anyway, if you haven't bought it already, I strongly advise everyone reading this to log on to leftbehind.com and buy the game. It is the perfect American holiday gift. Celebrate the birth of Jesus by wasting dozens of people at a time, using a provocative variety of Christ-sanctioned weapons! "
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/12895234
"Debate continues over whether U.S. troops should be withdrawn from the Iraqi theater of victory. While some in Congress argue that a withdrawal would force Iraqi leadership to enforce the victory on their own, many military experts say that Iraqi troops remain insufficiently trained and unprepared to handle the daily perils of victory."
http://www.theonion.com/content/node/56628
"These decorations have 'white trash' written all over them. And speaking on behalf of fine white trash everywhere: Your Christmas decorations are giving us a bad name. For future reference, just because they sell a decoration at the drug store doesn’t mean you have to buy it. They sell Trojan Magnums at the drug store, too. I’ll bet you’re not buying those every Christmas."
http://www.freeliberal.com/archives/002503.html
Animated flash cartoon video w/audio
http://www.markfiore.com/animation/twelvetwo.html
"The key distinction among varying kinds of libertarians should be seen as one in principle, not in esthetics. There are libertarians who champion freedom of association, decentralism, individual liberty, unfettered private property and exchange and peace, and then there are 'libertarians' who want to make the government work more efficiently, who grant considerable exceptions to their anti-statism for the state to be used in a host of areas, who compromise on property rights and free association and favor government war."
http://www.lewrockwell.com/gregory/gregory127.html
"Man is the only animal that deals in that atrocity of atrocities, War. He is the only one that gathers his brethren about him and goes forth in cold blood and with calm pulse to exterminate his kind. He is the only animal that for sordid wages will march out, as the Hessians did in our Revolution, and as the boyish Prince Napoleon did in the Zulu war, and help to slaughter strangers of his own species who have done him no harm and with whom he has no quarrel."
http://www.chris-floyd.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=966&Itemid=135
"Machan's vision of natural rights rests on ethical egoism's view that human beings ought to pursue their flourishing and happiness. He observes that natural rights are determined by the fact that a person is a human being who has morally chosen to pursue a good and happy social and political life. From the fact of one's moral responsibility to live a flourishing life and from one's choice to do so in a social context, it follows that he is obligated to respect others' rights. He must do this in order to fulfill his initially chosen responsibility to develop himself to the fullest extent as dictated by his human nature and his individual facticity."
http://www.quebecoislibre.org/06/061217-5.htm
"The God Delusion is not solely a book on the scientific approach to religion; it is also a polemic against religion, and particularly against Christianity. As such, Dawkins does a couple of things you don't usually find in his books. First, he lowered the level of his discourse. ... Second, he has cranked up the rhetoric quite a bit. "
http://www.biorationalinstitute.com/shownews.php?nid=2145
"The politician may claim to have ideals, but they mostly serve as a mask for the desire to exercise power. If you doubt it, look no further than programs such as Social Security and the Iraq War. They continue long after they have obviously failed, because they serve the interests of the politically powerful."
http://www.lewrockwell.com/rockwell/entrepreneurs-socialprogress.html
"We live on a dead-end street, so on any given day, other than dog walkers, we don’t see many pedestrians. Yesterday, one came down the street, smartly dressed, knocking on doors. We didn’t know if he was selling a product or a religion, but we knew we’d eventually find out."
http://www.strike-the-root.com/62/fontana/fontana14.html
"When Time announced its latest 'Person of the Year' as 'You. Yes You,' the nosferatu newsweekly wasn't simply signaling its editorial exhaustion... It was also a call to arms to all of Us--Yes, Us--to pick our own Person of the Year. "
http://www.reason.com/news/show/117486.html
"All Americans have a huge stake in Christianity. Whether or not we are individually believers in Christ, we are beneficiaries of the moral doctrine that has curbed power and protected the weak. Power is the horse ridden by evil. In the 20th century the horse was ridden hard. One hundred million people were exterminated by National Socialists in Germany and by Soviet and Chinese communists simply because they were members of a race or class that had been demonized by intellectuals and political authority. Power that is secularized and cut free of civilizing traditions is not limited by moral and religious scruples."
http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/cgi-bin/roberts.cgi/The_Greatest_Gift_o.html?seemore=y
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