• Feed RSS
There was an error in this gadget
0

All of us mourn the passing of Leroy Selmon here tonight.  He was a true football great, and such a humanitarian here in the Tampa Bay Community.
 
Our thoughts and prayers are with him and his family,  Leroy will be missed.
 
 

--
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum
 
* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls.
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.

The lie that began the endless war on Iraq
September 4, 2011 by Jeffrey Tucker

Wikileaks confirms everything.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rGKEnwhcScg&feature=player_embedded
0

Grand Old Peaceniks
Will austerity turn Republicans away from war?
By W. James Antle III | August 31, 2011

Fairly or not, Mitt Romney's approach to national security during the 2008 presidential race can be captured by a single phrase: "Double Guantanamo." When asked about the U.S. prison camp for terror suspects, the eager-to-please former Massachusetts governor's first instinct was to propose super-sizing it like a McDonald's value meal for hungry Republican primary voters.

That was when Romney was trying to compete with John McCain and Rudy Giuliani, both more natural national-security hawks than he. But even as he launched his second campaign in 2010 with the release of his book No Apology: The Case for American Greatness, Romney endorsed in its pages what William Kristol and Robert Kagan described in a 1996 Foreign Affairs essay as "benevolent global hegemony"­the idea that if the United States is not the world's dominant military and ideological power, the void will be filled by countries advancing values that are much worse for peace and human freedom.

So it was surprising when at a June GOP candidates' debate in New Hampshire, Romney said of the war in Afghanistan, "It's time for to us bring our troops home as soon as we possibly can." With this pale imitation of "Come home, America," Romney found himself drawn into a critique by his former rival McCain and other hawks that the Republican Party was becoming too "isolationist."

"There's always been an isolation strain in the Republican Party, that Pat Buchanan wing of our party," McCain lamented, irritated by Republican diffidence over Afghanistan and Libya. "But now it seems to have moved more center stage, so to speak."

McCain's ally, South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham, concurred. He worried to the Hill that it "doesn't take long before the [GOP] finds a war-weary nation and exploits it." He fretted about an alliance between Ron Paul on the "far right" and Dennis Kucinich on the "far left," though he was apparently unbothered by a left-right interventionist coalition consisting of himself, McCain, John Kerry, and Hillary Clinton.

Some of this was overblown, even by McCain and Graham's characteristically elastic definition of isolationism. The Weekly Standard's Stephen Hayes admitted on Fox News that Romney's mild Afghanistan comment "had Republican hawks, policy analysts emailing one another, what does he mean? Is he calling for immediate withdrawal?" But Hayes reassured viewers at home, "I talked to people who are familiar with his thinking. And they said no, look, he misspoke. That's not what he intended to say."

The Washington Post's Jennifer Rubin, quick to spy "unseriousness" in the form of incipient dovishness upon the part of Republican aspirants­like such notorious McGovernites as Mitch Daniels and Haley Barbour­absolved Romney of any foreign-policy heterodoxy. While Rubin was initially concerned that "the entire GOP field was now hopping on the isolationist bandwagon in some odd attempt to scrounge votes from the Ron Paul contingent," Romney and Tim Pawlenty ultimately passed her "strong foreign policy" test. (As later did Michele Bachmann, who "firmly planted herself at the grown-ups' table" by telling the Weekly Standard we must "stay the course" in Afghanistan.)

Pawlenty had taken to lecturing the rest of the Republican field about their disturbing "move more towards isolationism," as he told Politico. Meanwhile, Romney foreign-policy adviser Mitchell Reiss was quick to tell Rubin that Romney felt the United States was "under-investing" in national defense.

It is nevertheless significant that Romney, his finger ever in search of the primary voter's pulse, has had to defend himself against the charge of isolationism. Much of his double-Gitmo chest-beating last time around was overcompensating for the perception that he wasn't as gung-ho as the other candidates for George W. Bush's foreign policy. At the time, conservative journalist David Freddoso pointed out that Romney "is unique among the serious Republican presidential contenders because he has never said he would do [the Iraq War] all over again, and they all have."

In one debate, Romney twice refused to answer when asked if the Iraq invasion was a mistake. He called the question "an unreasonable hypothetical," a "non-sequitur," and even a "null set," as if it simply did not compute. At another debate he drew McCain's harsh rebuke for saying the surge was "apparently" working. "Governor, the surge is working," McCain snarled. When Romney protested that was what he had just said, McCain shot back, "Not apparently. It's working."

In the New Republic, Eli Lake has reported that Romney's foreign-policy advisers are divided. Lake described Reiss­who ironically was the man dispatched to convince Jennifer Rubin of Romney's hawkishness­as a surge skeptic, while Dan Senor, a former spokesman for the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq who later sent a distress signal to Republican hawks about the dovishness of senate candidate Rand Paul, was pro-surge. Reiss and Senor still advise Romney today and are similarly at odds over Afghanistan.

Yet Reiss's doubts about Hamid Karzai's Afghan government are a far cry from mythical isolationism, or even real-world non-interventionism. Other than Ron Paul and fellow libertarian Gary Johnson, Jon Huntsman is the only Republican presidential candidate who has come close to calling for a fundamental reevaluation of American foreign policy. But as Lake notes, "the penny-pinching mood among Republicans" has made GOP leaders "less inclined to sound the kinds of grandiose and expensive notes about foreign policy that were considered par for the course in 2008."

Nowhere was that clearer than in this summer's debt-ceiling battle. In their eagerness to identify spending reductions that would offset an increase in the federal debt limit, congressional Republican leaders were willing to put the Pentagon on the chopping block. House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan had long been a skeptic of trimming the defense budget, preferring to reinvest any savings from eliminating waste or from procurement reform in other military expenditures. But Ryan included former Defense Secretary Robert Gates's requested defense cuts in the official Republican budget for fiscal 2012, reinvesting some of the savings and applying the rest to deficit reduction.

The eventual debt ceiling compromise­which passed the House with more Republican than Democratic votes­caps security spending at $684 billion, about $4.5 billion below the enacted 2011 amount. The law also sets up a joint "super committee" tasked with finding another $1.5 trillion in deficit reduction for the next decade. If the committee flunks its assignment or Congress fails to pass its recommendations, another $600 billion in cuts to defense and other security spending kick in. Romney, Pawlenty, and Bachmann all cited the defense cuts in their opposition to the legislation, with Bachmann saying the armed forces "will be the ones who take the biggest, most severe haircut."

McCain, ever on the watch for isolationism, swallowed hard and supported the deal. So did House Armed Services Committee Chairman Buck McKeon, despite warning, "Our senior military commanders have been unanimous in their concerns that deeper cuts could break the force." Yet fiscal conservatives like Sen. Tom Coburn were willing to contemplate $1 trillion in defense cuts. Coburn argued that knocking defense spending back to levels seen before the surge in Iraq was hardly isolationism.

Penny-pinching is one thing. Rethinking the projection of American military power is another. Republicans didn't want to pay for the wars launched under President Bush either, but barely a handful voted against waging them. Yet a large number of Republicans opposed President Obama's war in Libya, going so far as to vote for defunding it and invoking the War Powers Resolution to question its legality­the latter move putting 87 House Republicans on the same page as left-wing Ohio Democrat Dennis Kucinich.

This would have been unthinkable under Bush. The Wall Street Journal editorialized that it should still be unthinkable now, predictably decrying an "isolationist turn" in the GOP and designating those 87 "the Kucinich Republicans"­which included Bachmann and other Tea Party favorites.

In many ways, this is a replay of the 1990s. With the Cold War over, the Republican foreign-policy consensus shattered. And with Bill Clinton in the White House pursuing humanitarian military interventions, the Republican temptation to resist what Bob Dole memorably called "Democrat wars" grew. Pat Buchanan's presidential campaigns, like Ron Paul's today, also revived interest in an older, less militaristic conservative tradition.

All of which had the neoconservatives hopping mad. For throwing out some red meat against Bill Clinton's Kosovo War­like Obama's Libya adventure, totally unauthorized by Congress­in a speech to the Heritage Foundation, the New York Post editorial page accused Texas Republican Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison of "Kay Bailey Isolationism." Hutchison, a fairly conventional Republican, was supposed to be dragging the party into the "fever swamps" of Buchanan and the "era of Robert A. Taft."

In a similar vein, the Weekly Standard's opinion editor urged Republican officeholders to ignore the "conservative street"­a play on the phrase "Arab street"­and its opposition to military involvement in the Balkans. This lack of Republican unanimity on foreign policy was what prompted Kristol and Kagan to write their Foreign Affairs essay calling for "neo-Reaganite" benevolent global hegemony.

Much of the GOP's 1990s antiwar shift turned out to be partisanship. But it took a terrorist attack on U.S. soil that killed 3,000 Americans to push many Republicans­including George W. Bush, who had famously campaigned on a "humble foreign policy"­in a warlike direction. The aftermath of 9/11 elicited a considerably different mood from the conservative street a decade after the Cold War's "peace dividend" failed to produce peace.

Moreover, during the 1990s conservatism had trended in a libertarian direction. Increasing skepticism about government at home reinforced doubts about Uncle Sam's capacity for complex nation-building projects abroad. A more statist tide swept conservatism in the Bush years, as compassionate conservatism at home traveled with the "freedom agenda" overseas. But with their emphasis on balanced budgets and limited government, Republicans and conservatives today seem to have regained that 1990s feeling.

Here is where Republican penny-pinching could have an enduring influence on the party's foreign policy. The federal government's rapidly deteriorating financial condition is putting the expensive foreign policy favored by the neoconservatives and other hawks on a collision course with the anti-tax stance of many fiscal conservatives. This will not change the next time a Republican president takes the oath of office.

When the super committee mandated by the debt-ceiling agreement meets, there will be tremendous pressure on Republicans to compromise on either taxes or defense spending. Grover Norquist, who holds 234 House members and 40 senators to an ironclad pledge not to raise taxes, has made clear which he prefers. Before long other Republican and conservative leaders will make their preferences known too. In a fragile economy, the choice may be easier than the hawks would like.

The only responsible way to cut defense spending is to reassess existing military commitments and adopt stricter criteria for when the use of force is necessary. Pairing defense cuts with interventionism conspicuously failed in the 1990s and would be even more disastrous in an age of austerity. But that doesn't mean a readjustment will come easily to the upper echelons of the Republican Party, if it comes at all.

While Romney's foreign-policy advisers may not agree on everything, those who are known to the public stretch from the respectable Republican continuum of Condoleezza Rice-style semi-realism to full-throated neoconservatism. Texas Gov. Rick Perry is taking cues from former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and former Under Secretary of Defense Douglas Feith. Bachmann the Kucinich Republican is close to Frank Gaffney, who is hawkish but not a neoconservative. Doves have no measurable presence in these campaigns.

And no matter who is advising the candidates now, neoconservatives remain a large part of the foreign-policy establishment that will wind up staffing any future Republican administration. When it comes to war and military spending, the strongest contrary voices will probably not belong to the quasi-realists and the non-interventionists. It will be the fiscal conservatives who doubt that doubling Gitmo is such a hot bargain.

W. James Antle III is associate editor of The American Spectator.

http://www.amconmag.com/blog/grand-old-peaceniks/
0

Cursed Be Unconditional Obedience
by Laurence M. Vance

"Like all members of the military profession I never had an original thought until I left the service. My mental faculties remained in suspended animation while I obeyed the orders of higher-ups. This is typical with everyone in the military service." -- Major General Smedley Butler

"If soldiers were to begin to think, not one of them would remain in the army." -- Frederick the Great

"I find in existence a . . . dangerous concept that the members of the armed forces owe their primary allegiance and loyalty to those who temporarily exercise the authority of the executive branch of the Government, rather than to the country and its Constitution they are sworn to defend. No proposition could be more dangerous." -- General Douglas MacArthur

"There is one thing in the world more wicked than the desire to command, and that is the will to obey." -- W. K. Clifford, mathematician and philosopher

After almost ten years of fighting in Afghanistan, the deadliest day for U.S. forces was just a few weeks ago on Saturday, August 6. On that day thirty U.S. military personnel were killed when their helicopter was shot down. The majority of those killed were said to be elite Navy Seals from the same unit that killed Osama bin Laden.

The question that was never asked about this event by any major news media outlet is a question that I (and a few others) have been asking since the war in Afghanistan began: What is the U.S. military doing in Afghanistan?

The ones who bear the most responsibility for the 9/11 attacks are the pilots who flew the planes, none of whom were from Afghanistan. No American was ever harmed by anyone in Afghanistan until the U.S. military invaded and occupied that country. The United States even supported the Muslim insurgents and Afghan militants when they were freedom-fighting Mujahideen fighting against the Soviets when they invaded Afghanistan.

Tens of thousands of Afghans are now dead who had never threatened America and had nothing to do with 9/11. Over 1,700 American soldiers are also dead, and many thousands more have life-altering injuries.

So, what is the U.S. military doing in Afghanistan?

The purpose of the U.S. military should be limited to defending the United States, securing its borders, guarding its shores, patrolling its coasts, and enforcing a no-fly zone over its skies. Period. To do otherwise is to pervert the purpose of the military.

This means the purpose of the U.S. military should never be to defend other countries, secure their borders, guard their shores, patrol their coasts, and enforce no-fly zones over their skies.

This also means that the purpose of the U.S. military should never be to provide disaster relief, dispense humanitarian aid, supply peacekeepers, enforce UN resolutions, spread goodwill, rebuild infrastructure, establish democracy, nation build, change regimes, eradicate drugs, contain communism, open markets, keep oil pipelines flowing, revive public services, build schools, or train armies in any foreign country.

This also means that the purpose of the U.S. military should never be to remedy oppression, human rights violations, sectarian violence, ill treatment of women, forced labor, child labor, religious or political persecution, poverty, genocide, famine, or injustice in any foreign country.

And it certainly also means that the purpose of the U.S. military should never be to launch preemptive strikes in foreign countries, fight wars in foreign countries, drop bombs on foreign countries, assassinate people in foreign countries, torture people in foreign countries, takes sides in a civil war in foreign countries, station troops in foreign countries, maintain bases in foreign countries, attack foreign countries, invade foreign countries, occupy foreign countries, or unleash civil unrest in foreign countries.

Clearly, no U.S. soldier, sailor, or marine had any business stepping foot in Afghanistan in 2001 or flying a helicopter there in 2011. Those who returned in a coffin (if enough of their body parts could be found) died unnecessarily , duped, in vain, and for a lie.

So again I ask: What is the U.S. military doing in Afghanistan?

The only answer is unconditional obedience. Although some U.S. soldiers, because of misguided zeal, may have wanted to go to Afghanistan after 9/11, few would choose to go now if it were their decision to make. But soldiers were told to go and they went, and soldiers are still being told to go.

They didn't consider the history of Afghanistan. They didn't consider the purpose of the military. They didn't consider U.S. foreign policy. They didn't consider Chalmers Johnson. They didn't consider the wisdom of the Founding Fathers. They didn't consider the Constitution. They didn't consider the Soviet Union's failed attempt to subdue Afghanistan. They didn't consider their families. They didn't consider the cost to U.S. taxpayers. They didn't consider their own mental and physical health. They didn't consider the thousands of dead or maimed Afghan civilians.

Even worse, those that did consider some or all of these things went to Afghanistan anyway. They may not have even bought in the baloney about fighting for our freedoms or fighting them "over there" so we don't have to fight them "over here," but they went anyway.

Unconditional obedience.

If you want to see a perfect example of unconditional obedience on display, then just look at the recent interview on the Diane Rehm show about " Navy Seals and U.S. Strategy in Afghanistan."

After announcing that U.S. forces were continuing their investigation into the shooting down of the helicopter in Afghanistan, Diane introduced her guests in the studio, Thom Shanker, the Pentagon correspondent for the New York Times and Paul Pillar of the Center for Peace and Security Studies at Georgetown University, and by phone from Plymouth, Massachusetts, former Navy SEAL lieutenant commander Anthony O'Brien. Joining the panel later by phone was Lawrence Korb, senior fellow at the Center for American Progress and former assistant secretary of defense in the Reagan administration.

The second caller to the show was someone named Don, who made this comment:

I just wanted to comment real quick. Any time you have generals on the air and they're pressured to give some reasons why we're in this war in Afghanistan, they always fall back to a main reason being women's rights, so girls can go to school, you know, for all the Taliban oppression. And I was just wondering if your panelists thought that that was really a legitimate reason, that we should have our military spending billions of dollars a year in this country to fight for women's rights.

Diane referred the caller to Anthony O'Brien, who gave this reply:

I agree with the caller's premise. The primary reason why you engage the military at the strategic level is for the national security interest of the United States of America. And as much as I'm a fighter for the rights of women, it is – it's not our duty in the military, primarily, to protect the women or stop drug trades, et cetera. However, the president is the boss, and he calls the shots. And if – whether it be President Bush or President Obama, when they tell us where to go and when, we give a snappy salute, and we do what we're told.

Diane then sought a comment from Thom Shanker.

Well, I just want to give Anthony a snappy salute 'cause his answer is perfect. I mean, we hear so often these conversations among civilians: why are we there, I don't want us there or the opposite, we should be there. The military does not assign itself these missions. They follow the orders of the elected civilian leadership who are representing, Diane, your caller and everybody else. So that is where the responsibility for these decisions resides at the end of the day.

My only comment is simply this: Only God deserves unconditional obedience.

Unconditional obedience is why Nazis killed Jews in concentration camps, Japanese pilots bombed Pearl Harbor, East German border guards killed their fellow citizens fleeing over the Berlin Wall to the West, and Soviet soldiers invaded Afghanistan before U.S. soldiers did.

Cursed be unconditional obedience.

http://lewrockwell.com/vance/vance255.html
0

Unessential Air Service Program
by Laurence M. Vance, August 30, 2011

During the Great Depression, the New Deal program known as the Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) paid certain farmers not to grow corn, wheat, cotton, rice, peanuts, and tobacco in order to control their supply and drive up their prices. The money paid to farmers came from a tax imposed on processors of farm products. In the Soviet Union that was called central planning; in the United States it was called giving farmers "parity."

In the case of United States v. Butler (1936), the Supreme Court ended this nonsense by declaring the AAA unconstitutional. Said Justice Owen Roberts in the majority opinion he authored,
The act invades the reserved rights of the states. It is a statutory plan to regulate and control agricultural production, a matter beyond the powers delegated to the federal government. The tax, the appropriation of the funds raised, and the direction for their disbursement, are but parts of the plan. They are but means to an unconstitutional end.

Nevertheless, today, under the Conservation Reserve program, the federal government still pays farmers not to farm their fields.

But paying farmers not to plant crops is not the only thing the government pays for and gets nothing in return. On some days, the pilots with Great Lakes Airlines fly out of the Ely, Nevada, airport for Las Vegas without any passengers and the government pays them to do it.

The Ely airport is one of the rural communities where airlines get subsidies from the Essential Air Service program. According to the federal statistics reviewed by The Associated Press, only 227 passengers flew out of the Ely airport last year, paying just $70 to $90 for a one-way ticket. The cost to taxpayers for each ticket amounted to more than $4,000.

Because the airlines get paid per flight instead of per passenger, planes sometimes take off from Ely and other rural airports, such as the one serving Jackson, Tennessee, without any passengers.

The Essential Air Services program was created after airlines were "deregulated" in 1978 in order to ensure service on less-profitable routes to remote communities. Like any other federal program, it has grown in size and cost. Ten years ago, only 89 rural areas received the subsidies (68 in the continental United States, 20 in Alaska, and 1 in Hawaii) at a cost to taxpayers of about $50 million a year. The number of airports is now up to 153 and the cost to taxpayers is now about $200 million a year. About a dozen airlines receive subsidies.

In the recent bill ( H.R.2553) that authorized another short-term extension of funding for the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), Congress revised the eligibility requirements to limit service to airports (except in Alaska) that are "located at least 90 miles from the nearest medium or large hub airport" and "had an average subsidy per passenger of less than $1,000 during the most recent fiscal year." Thirteen airports will be affected.

However, the bill also gives the secretary of Transportation the authority ­ at his discretion ­ to waive such requirements for a particular location if its "geographic characteristics result in undue difficulty in accessing the nearest medium or large hub airport." It should come as no surprise that Department of Transportation officials say that Secretary Ray LaHood will use his authority, essentially negating the cutbacks.

Only six Republicans in the House voted against the bill. It was approved by unanimous consent in the Senate.

House Democrats generally opposed the bill because of the minuscule and potential cuts it made to the Essential Air Service program. But the overwhelming Republican support for the bill does not mean that they are opposed to the subsidies of the program.

Representative Glenn Thompson (R Penn.), whose district includes two airports to be cut out of the program, maintains that "he's as fiscally conservative as anyone," but he "insists these subsidies give taxpayers a good return on the investment." Added Thompson, "If you believe that the federal government has a role in interstate transportation, that's not just roads; that's also air travel. So I obviously disagree with the individuals who do not support rural America, and do not support rural airports. Under their philosophy, maybe we shouldn't even be paving roads in rural America, because there are fewer people that drive on them."

Representative David McKinley (R W. Va.), who was elected with the help of the Tea Party, describes himself as "a small-government, free-market-focused owner of a small business," but said airports that receive subsidies "serve as crucial engines of job creation for many small towns and rural areas."

This shows once again that Republicans are not opposed in principle to government subsidies and unconstitutional federal spending. It just has to be the subsidies and spending that they want. If Republicans were really serious about gutting the Essential Air Service program instead of making some symbolic cuts, they had more than four years to do it when they controlled the House, the Senate, and the White House when George W. Bush was president.

Should the government have "deregulated" the airlines in 1978? Of course. Should it have instituted the Essential Air Service Program? Of course not.

The Airline Deregulation Act of 1978 removed government control over airline fares, routes, and market entry of new airlines and phased out the regulatory authority of the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), which had regulated all domestic interstate flights since 1937 by setting fares and approving routes and schedules. The elimination of the CAB is one of the few examples in U.S. history of a federal agency's actually being abolished. The government had no business regulating the airline industry in the first place ­ just as it had no business regulating the railroad industry, the trucking industry, or any other industry. And just as it has no business regulating baby cribs, food, or football helmets.

Government subsidies of any kind to any business, industry, or individual for any reason infringe upon the principle of limited government and are a blatant violation of the Constitution. (Subsidies should not be confused with tax credits.) It is simply not the purpose of government to subsidize anything. It is nothing more than the forced transfer of income from one segment of society to another.

If an airline can't turn a profit flying in and out of a rural airport, then it should cancel service to that particular airport. If someone lives in a rural area without an airport, then he should drive to an airport in the nearest city.

There is nothing inherently different about the airline industry that justifies government subsidies. If Home Depot can't make a profit by opening a store in some small town, then that town's residents will have to drive to a larger town if they want to shop at Home Depot. There is no right to live in a rural area or small town and have access to every type of product, service, store, business, and industry that one finds in a city or major metropolitan area.

And if the government should subsidize flights at rural airports, then why should it not also subsidize the availability of lobster, sports stadiums, Cadillac dealers, and fine French wine in every small town? And how do government bureaucrats know which rural airports to subsidize, how much the subsidies should be, who should get the subsidies, what conditions should be attached to the subsidies, and how long the subsidies should last? The process is always political in nature.

The Essential Air Service program is unessential.

http://www.fff.org/comment/com1108z.asp
0
"They characterize libertarianism in this way: "While there are competing definitions of what 'libertarian' means, the simplest understanding attaches to people who believe that government is less efficient than the private sector, that people should be left alone as much as possible to lead their own lives, and that tolerance is the most important social value."(p.34) This very much differs from the conception of libertarianism defended over a lifetime by Murray Rothbard. As Rothbard saw matters, libertarians are committed only to defining the permissible use of force. They are free to adopt whatever attitudes they wish towards people's lifestyles, so long as they respect rights. They are emphatically not required to be "social liberals". Though Rothbard indisputably ranks as a towering figure of the modern libertarian movement, his name nowhere appears in the book."

What Is Libertarianism?
by David Gordon

The Declaration of Independents: How Libertarian Politics Can Fix What's Wrong With America. By Nick Gillespie and Matt Welch. Public Affairs, 2011. Xv + 264 pages.

Gillespie and Welch rightly see that the Ron Paul movement represents a new force in American politics, but Paul is not really to their taste. On the one hand, these authors note, "Ron Paul said something truly distinct in 2008 about the nature of power – namely, that government should have less of it on all levels and in every instance. 'I don't want to run your life,' Paul said. I don't want to run the economy. . .I don't want to run the world.' Such sentiments are simultaneously radical and fully in the Jeffersonian tradition of governing best while governing least." (pp.38-9)

On the other hand, though Gillespie and Welch applaud this message, they do not care for Paul personally. He has "a stage presence straight out of an Asperger's syndrome conference. . .For a thousand reasons. . .Ron Paul is in no way a viable candidate for anything other than his safe congressional seat." (p.38-9).

Gillespie and Welch's ambivalence toward Paul reflects a fundamental problem with their book. To them, libertarianism is not only a political theory and program: it is a social attitude and even an aesthetic sensibility as well. Because Paul does not for the most part share their social preferences, they cannot fully embrace him. He is not really one of their sort.

They characterize libertarianism in this way: "While there are competing definitions of what 'libertarian' means, the simplest understanding attaches to people who believe that government is less efficient than the private sector, that people should be left alone as much as possible to lead their own lives, and that tolerance is the most important social value."(p.34) This very much differs from the conception of libertarianism defended over a lifetime by Murray Rothbard. As Rothbard saw matters, libertarians are committed only to defining the permissible use of force. They are free to adopt whatever attitudes they wish towards people's lifestyles, so long as they respect rights. They are emphatically not required to be "social liberals". Though Rothbard indisputably ranks as a towering figure of the modern libertarian movement, his name nowhere appears in the book.

The authors might respond, "So what if we differ from Rothbard; we prefer our own view." If they were to say this, they stand open to two objections. First, people such as Ron Paul and many of his followers who are social conservatives have been excluded from the libertarian mainstream by definitional fiat. Further, Gillespie and Welch's account raises the question, why are the social attitudes they favor correct? Are they mere expressions of preference, or do these authors claim for them objective correctness?

They extend the net of libertarian social values very wide; musical tastes, one gathers, are included. They mock William Buckley and Frank Sinatra, among others, who disparaged rock music. "Such dismissive critiques of rock music and other American ephemera like comic books, movies, and video games. . .proceed apace." (p.86). Of course, people who like rock music should be free to play it, and Gillespie and Welch offer an interesting account of how governmental suppression of it helped spark revolution in Czechoslovakia and elsewhere. But why must libertarians like it? Can you not be a libertarian in good standing yet regard this music as raucous noise?

What do you think of interracial marriage? It would be hard, offhand, to think of a question less relevant to libertarianism, as usually understood. Of course, no one has the right forcibly to prevent such marriages. What more need a libertarian say about this issue?

Gillespie and Welch disagree. They praise Tiger Woods for calling himself a "'Cablinasian', a neologism that combined his various racial and ethnic components. Weren't we – finally – at a point in history where everyone was ready to move on from simple, either-or categories?. . .As a Cablinasian he [Woods] represents something that's in all of us." (pp.130, 140) Why is mixing categories a libertarian issue?

The authors also welcome other sorts of diversity. "Most interesting of all, one needn't interact with the mainstream to create an identity. Online pornography caters to more types of fetishes than there are varieties of Pop-Tarts, arguably rivaling Starbucks in its ability to slake any and all thirsts."(p.136).

Their celebration of variety and change leads them on issue after issue to miss the essence of libertarianism, the use or threat of force. They support the free market and oppose government regulation of the economy, but this is not enough for them. Opposition to government intervention for them takes its place as part of a larger movement toward individual choice of certain kinds. "It is worth lingering a moment to marvel at the velocity of career change not available to those working in the media (and elsewhere).(p.107) What if your ideal in life is to get a stable job and remain in it through retirement? Are you less of a libertarian than someone continually on the move?

Even worse, what if you prefer to work for a large corporation? Then, it would seem, you have shown yourself to be an "organization man" and displayed a spirit antithetical to that of libertarianism. "The creative destruction of the Internet, along with the trailblazing pre-Internet example of disorganization men such as [baseball statistician] Bill James across thousands of disciplines, has destroyed corporate monoculture and subservient workplace identity as we know it." (p.114).

Gillespie and Welch miss the crucial distinction between freedom from coercion and their own preferences for particular outcomes of choice that manifest wide variety. In their discussion of education, this mistake leads them to some dubious proposals. They say, "without making any sort of fundamental change in funding levels, structure, or school taxes, we can accomplish significant educational improvement virtually overnight through widespread implementation of what is known as the 'weighted-student formula'". (pp.192-93). In this formula "the money follows the students"; students may enroll in any public school that will accept them, and actual enrollment determines how much money a school receives. To the authors, "With a minimum of fuss from the outside, weighted-student formula funding creates a market in education." (p.103) The authors fail to grasp that a choice among government institutions and a free market are very different things.

They are certainly not opposed to free market education, but they do not call for the government to exit entirely from the field. To the contrary, they enthusiastically favor vouchers. To them, as always, choice and variety, not libertarian rights, stand uppermost. "That essentially one model dominates the delivery of education is a sign that something is very wrong, that a monopoly impervious to its customers' needs is calling the shots."(p.195)

In 1980, Murray Rothbard memorably criticized the Libertarian party campaign of Ed Clark for offering "low-tax liberalism" in place of libertarian principle. As a result he earned the enmity of the Kochtopus, an enmity that his death by no means has brought to an end. It is not hard to imagine what his opinion would have been of the pseudo-libertarian concoction we have here on offer.

http://lewrockwell.com/gordon/gordon90.1.html
0








 

Americans 4 OPEC

* This photo is a satire

For more than 40 years, we Americans have powered our businesses, fueled our cars, and made our lives more comfortable with the help of OPEC oil.

We think that special relationship is worth protecting.

That's why we've started a new group to do just that: Americans4OPEC. Currently, the Obama Administration is on the verge of approving a pipeline that could deliver nearly a million barrels of Canada's "oil sands" oil to American markets every single day, reducing US dependence on our OPEC friends. Every barrel of oil we buy from Canada undermines our support for our traditional OPEC allies by displacing OPEC imports. We appreciate, and are grateful for the fact that Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, Venezuela and the United Arab Emirates have kept America supplied with oil, reasonably consistently, for decades. We have come to depend on our OPEC friends and they have come to depend on us. The pipeline from Canada will even displace new sources of OPEC oil, like Venezuela's heavy crude. That's no way to treat a friend.

Americans4OPEC was founded to let our political leaders know that we cherish that special relationship.

Unfortunately, bullying by the Canadian prime minister and the Canadian oil industry, and this bizarre "ethical oil" argument that seems to imply Canada is a more tolerant, open, and ethical country than our traditional allies in OPEC regimes, have succeeded in getting the pipeline through several stages of the U.S. government's approval process. We have to stop Keystone XL before it's too late. That's why Americans4OPEC is speaking out for America's best interests — telling President Obama that we don't want Canada's oil. And with our partners in OPEC ready, willing and able to sell us all the oil we want, we don't need the Keystone XL pipeline, either. We don't need new sources of oil as long as we can continue being supplied by existing sources. Join us, Americans4OPEC*, in standing up against Canada's oil and standing up for our valuable, longtime OPEC allies.

* Americans4OPEC is not a real organization, but a satire created by EthicalOil.org to highlight the choice Americans now have: A choice between several more decades of dependency on OPEC's conflict oil or a future built on reliable, secure, and peaceful ethical oil from neighboring Canada.

 

Americans4OPEC: Blame Canada!

September 1st, 2011  |  By: Alykhan

 1 4ShareThis5Email0

 

Earlier today, I snapped a few photos of Americans4OPEC, which today joined the anti-Keystone XL protests outside the White House. Here's one of the photos and the group's press statement. You can visit their website at Americans4OPEC.com


Americans4OPEC statement, which is available on their website:

"For more than 40 years, we Americans have powered our businesses, fueled our cars, and made our lives more comfortable with the help of OPEC oil.

We think that special relationship is worth protecting.

That's why we've started a new group to do just that: Americans4OPEC. Currently, the Obama Administration is on the verge of approving a pipeline that could deliver nearly a million barrels of Canada's "oil sands" oil to American markets every single day, reducing US dependence on our OPEC friends. Every barrel of oil we buy from Canada undermines our support for our traditional OPEC allies by displacing OPEC imports. We appreciate, and are grateful for the fact that Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, Venezuela and the United Arab Emirates have kept America supplied with oil, reasonably consistently, for decades. We have come to depend on our OPEC friends and they have come to depend on us. The pipeline from Canada will even displace new sources of OPEC oil, like Venezuela's heavy crude. That's no way to treat a friend.

Americans4OPEC was founded to let our political leaders know that we cherish that special relationship.

Unfortunately, bullying by the Canadian prime minister and the Canadian oil industry, and this bizarre "ethical oil" argument that seems to imply Canada is a more tolerant, open, and ethical country than our traditional allies in OPEC regimes, have succeeded in getting the pipeline through several stages of the U.S. government's approval process. We have to stop Keystone XL before it's too late. That's why Americans4OPEC is speaking out for America's best interests — telling President Obama that we don't want Canada's oil. And with our partners in OPEC ready, willing and able to sell us all the oil we want, we don't need the Keystone XL pipeline, either. We don't need new sources of oil as long as we can continue being supplied by existing sources. Join us, Americans4OPEC*, in standing up against Canada's oil and standing up for our valuable, longtime OPEC allies.

* Americans4OPEC is not a real organization, but a satire created by EthicalOil.org to highlight the choice Americans now have: A choice between several more decades of dependency on OPEC's conflict oil or a future built on reliable, secure, and peaceful ethical oil from neighboring Canada."



 


--
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum
 
* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls.
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.
0



If a tree falls in the woods, how many liberals would it take to fund the therapy for all the trees around it?

--
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum
 
* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls.
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.
Do the Ubangi Stomp on a muzzie's head.







http://www.debbieschlussel.com/41606/its-official-forget-911-its-be-kind-to-extremist-muslims-week/

 

September 2, 2011, - 2:40 pm

It's Official: Forget 9/11; It's "Be Kind to Muslims" Week on TV, Etc.

By Debbie Schlussel

Forget any accurate coverage of the 9/11 attacks and who perpetrated them–19 Arab Muslims.  This week on TV and in newspapers is "Be Kind to Muslims" week.  The 9/11 coverage on TV, which began this week, is an absurd pander-fest to a huge group of extremists in America–Muslims–and how they are the "real victims."  The whitewash is so obnoxious, it's beyond disgusting. It began, last night, with the dopey, saccharine Linda Ellerbee's "coverage" on Nickelodeon, last night.  As is typical with Ellerbee (and her dumb bright orange high-top Chuck Taylor tennis shoes), last night was another pander-fest to Muslims, featuring Akbar Ahmed, an Islamic studies professor who is a well-known apologist for Islamic extremism.

911wasanislamjob

(Thanks to Reader "Doda McCheesle" for the Graphic)

And on Sunday, Soledad O'Brien hosts a CNN special, "Unwelcome: The Muslims Next Door."  Hmmm . . . I'll bet there's nothing in this show about the multiple violent, Holocaust-denying, anti-Semitic death threats I've gotten from Muslims since 9/11. And I'll bet she doesn't ask a single Muslim in the show whether he or she will condemn HAMAS and Hezbollah.  'Cuz they won't.  Uh, Soledad, here's a tip:  that and other reasons, like honor killings (which I'll bet also won't be mentioned), are why Muslims should be unwelcome here.  But, sadly, they are all too welcome, because, as I pointed out, 25% of all Muslims currently in America came here between 2000 and 2011.  So her "unwelcome" stuff is BS. Soledad O'Brien = moron, liar, propagandist. No surprise for the Al-Crescent News Network. Here's a preview of this BS:

Below is a USA Today summary of all the "TV Remembers 9/11″ crap to which we'll be subjected.  I call it crap because not a single show–NOT ONE–talks about the Islamic threat. Instead, the few shows that mention Islam and Muslims are apologist and pandering.  PBS a/k/a Palestinian Broadcasting Service, tells us, on "America Remembers – 9/11," about

efforts of American Muslims to get beyond the mistrust sowed by the attacks.

And "The Space Between" a fictional movie about 9/11 tells us

the story of a flight attendant (Oscar winner Melissa Leo) who accompanies a young Pakistani-American boy (Anthony Keyvan) from Texas to NYC, where his father works in the World Trade Center.

Yes, because of all the kids of 9/11 victims about whom they could have made a fictional movie about, they chose a Muslim kid. Again, 9/11 is all about the Muslims–as victims, NOT as the perpetrators that they were and continue to be. And supporters of Al-Qaeda and violence against Americans (as I noted, this week, the Pew Research survey of Muslims in America showed that 1/3 of them support Al-Qaeda to some degree, as well as suicide bombings).

http://www.debbieschlussel.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/911tvcoverage_0001.jpg

http://www.debbieschlussel.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/911tvcoverage_0002.jpg



--
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum
 
* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls.
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.