Wednesday, December 12, 2012

[Mock] Republicans and the Village Media Are Idiots

I have promised that politically I'll save my sarcasm for non facebook posts.

No problem.

Whose a special special special special special super SMART party? Yes, its the smaaaaaaaaaaart Republicans.

SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Smart.

Such smart questions from the village media. Which asks the same questions 14 times. Because they are stupid.

Maybe 15 will make them get it?

Thursday, December 6, 2012

[Phil] A Fallow Commonwealth

Puerto Rico recently voted for statehood. Of course, with the do nothing, know nothing congress we currently have (especially in the house of representatives) this means nothing. Government can't do much of anything right now, especially something new, never mind the fact that Puerto Rico might actually add a Democratic state to the union, so God Forbid we actually add another state to the Disunited States of America. Nonsense, all of it.

However, since I do want to avoid a second civil war, and I just don't think most people have the stomach for Excision , I think that the Puerto Rico situation might offer another middle ground. After Obama won, Secession petitions were filed in every state of the union, but the former confederate states got some of the highest amounts. So, the problem with secession is that it allows local areas to have control over the central government, which is the primary reason Lincoln was opposed to it. But the truth of the matter is, that this country has a long and storied tradition of holding territory that is not fully incorporated into the United States of America.

There are reservations (which are in theory soveriegn nations but in practice are abused by both federal and state governments, which is particularly ironic since if they are separate nations states shouldn't be able to touch them. At all. And yet states still have some influence in Indian territory). We have administered areas which are essentially colonies (like Guam or the Virgin Islands) and then we have a unique situation with Puerto Rico which is a common wealth, whose citizens get the protection of the US military and some basic benefits like Social Security and Medicare, without the ability to vote. They do not, however, pay federal income taxes.

Given how anti tax Red States are at the moment, I'm moderately certain that they would leap at the chance to stop paying Federal Income tax in exchange for their representation in Presidential Election and the Congress. Granted, social conservatives have a need to control a woman's body at all costs, but fiscal conversatives and Ron Paul Republicans seem to care about the size and influence of government more than they do about imposing their values on the rest of the nation. They still LIKE imposing their version of crony capitalism on the nation but taxes seem more important. So why not amend the constitution to give states the ability to go Commonwealth like Puerto Rico for several years at a time before they get another referrendum?

It's a win win proposition. The Red States pay less taxes, and the Blue States get to pass government reforms without the Red States interfering in everything that they do. Moreover, it is not as permanent as excision, because some red states are slowly becoming blue states due to demographics changes.

Hell, I think an even better slution is to allow the Red States to set just how much federal service their going to get. They want anything but basic defense from the military? They have to pay taxes. They will, of course, have to generate enough income to pay for their share of the national debt. That doesn't go away, especially given how our interest has increased due to their playing games with our credit rating, but they could still save a lot of money this way. Let them do what they've always dreamed...pay full price for medicare and medicaide with state generated revenue. Bear in mind that most of these states are a net loss anyway, and a simple condition that the states must allow federal taxation to be provided at par for ANY federal services (ie the states can raise the money any way they like, but they must be revenue neutral for any federal services provided) and I think they'd leap at the chance. Plus it would be a very education experience for the people in these states. There a few net revenue positive red states, but not many. It also fulfills the concern of strategic military necessity (ie, Fly Over country pretty much unites the more populated blue states and is necessary as a logistics pathway for defense of the country).

I know this sounds harsh, but

a) It would work. I sincerely believe that most red states would happily trade their vote in the congress and for the president rather than pay federal taxes.

b) It makes them prove that their theory of small governments will actually work.

c) It still allows freedom of movement for citizens, such that people stuck in a Red State can still leave for government services.

d) It helps make Red States more revenue neutral instead of being financial drains because corporations will set up shop their to take advantage of people that like to let themselves be exploited, thus boosting their income, thus improving their tax base, thus making them less of a drain on the rest of the country once (if ever) they decide to become a voting state again.

e) It does reinforce the idea that states have SOME level of sovereignty.

f) It actually encourages neofederalism because red states would LOVE to allow blue cities trapped in their borders to still state in the US in exchange for being able to stop paying income taxes. This could permanently free many imprisoned cities from Red influence like New York, Atlanta and Chicago.

g) It is a better alternative than civil war, which is what I see as a likely occurance if these desperate reality challenged people continue to lose influence and retain any power with increasing delusion and increasingly desperate measures like voter suppression and gerrymandered districts.

Monday, November 26, 2012

[Rant] Clever Play Vs Dick Moves and Markets

I like to play board games, and not the regular "Monopoly" version either, but hard core multi piece multi rule, on rare occasion multi day board games. Indeed, before my friend went feral, I used to go play board games every other monday night with a crowd of very intelligent, very talented individuals. Bear in mind that while I was raised on card games and board games as a familial 'rite of passage' I was often considered a 'dabbler' by some in this crowd because they took it rather seriously.

Thus, you can be assured that this is a crowd that takes things like rules seriously. Now in my observation of the culture of the games as played, there was a serious amount of respect paid when someone successfully navigated the rules in creative and innovative ways. Specifically, finding combinations of things whilst keep track of a seeming infinite number of moving variables made game play better for everyone because it made things seem more challenging but it also forced you to do better. This seemed (to me) particularly true with games that used heavy amounts of strategy with just a tiny bit of randomization.

Conversely, certain styles of moves were basically regarded as 'broken' beyond measure. If a rule was so good that it made the game basically unfun for anyone who didn't make it and was obviously either not playtested or just, well, stupid, it was generally tossed in the rubbish bin where it belonged. It is difficult to say exactly what the litmus test for this was; after all I'd seen some games where the qualification might be ignored because it was well enjoyed, whereas another seemingly innocuous rule was widely reviled and hated by all, but I think by and large it required a combination of loathing from all the participants as well the basic perception that it was not only blatantly unfair but also made the game 'unfun.'

Markets are powerful tools. We should reward people who play the game well because it helps make the entire system more vibrant. Having said that, at some point, certain features of a market are quite arguably called 'dick moves' that serve no one but people abusing the system. And lets be honest here, that's what it is...abusing the system. Markets for profit might not be 'fun' but a society is not, contrary to the claims of libertarians, only about the individual. After all, to quote the movie "Cloud Atlas"..."An ocean is composed of a sea of drops." There is no 'collective' that does not also consist of individuals, and a 'dick move' in a market is an unconcionable slander on those who participate in it.

The real question is, how is such a move enforced?

Well therein are certain problems. In a highly stratified society, the golden rule applies. Those with the gold, make the rules. This is the nature of humanity and virutally all civilizations in the history of man; the question is HOW MUCH power you allow the upper levels of society to have....but if the upper levels of society get to make the rules, of course they are going to make rules only for them.

Imagine if you will, at my friend's house, if all the games we played were tilted to his advantage (far from the case in actual reality since he was an excellent host who routinely stepped out of the way for someone else who wanted to play) and if someone did manage to find a clever combination to benefit themselves, that he tilted the field to make things better for himself...People would get fed up rather quickly and stop coming.

Now, in a system based on our own rather flawed constitution, with winner take all elections and the presumption on the power of the states, with tiny legislatures that are easily bought by ALEC and billionares, why then should we assume that markets function properly when they only benefit a few? Some argue that "Rule of Law" means we just have to obey this...others argue about how we need to protect the minority, whilst in the same breath arguing about the flaws of Affirmitive Action.

Are you in favor of allowing unjust protections for a minority or not? Or is it that you only want economic benefits that only serve you or your tribe? The great irony of our times is, of course, that there are many who argue for the justice of markets that benefit none but a tiny majority, not because of economic self interest, but because of a subconcious affiliation to regional politics and the tribalism that this entails. Think I'm wrong?

Well, I don't, but that's another subject for another time. Let's just say that I'm not the only one that thinks that and tribal motivations are strong.

But common sense does indeed demand that in a normal situation, if you wanted to have fun, you wouldn't keep showing up at the house of someone who rigged the rules only for their benefit, but if, in the interests of 'privitization' 401K's replace pensions, and social security is privatized and sacrificed on the alter of wall street, then you play at one house...or die.

Because really that's what libertarians are advocating about the so called Constitution of the United States, that I didn't vote for, nor did anyone living. The document is so difficult to amend that we will continue with rigged rules and either must leave the country (which is very difficult to do) or simply sit, trapped by their manufactured arguments crafted by billionares without any interest in mind.

They (Republicans and many sympathetic libertarians) say 'wealth redistrubtion' is highway robbery, and yet tactically feel that their only way to win is to have Citizen's United, which allows them to spend unlimited money in markets. They speak of rights in that only the government shall be restricted, but never the individual, as if only a government can imprison someone in poverty.

The idea that rights are only restricted to natural rights is ludicrous. The argument that only the government can imprision or take your life is also false since if medical necesity or wage stagnation forces you into a job you do not want, you are just as imprisoned by the so called 'free' market as if you were in an actual prison.

Snarky, clever libertians would argue, "Well be stuck in prison for a while and see how different you feel?"

To which I counter, be stuck in a minimum wage job working at Wal Mart at age 55 and we'll see.

Societies and cultures are formed by rituals and by rites...in ancient times in some cultures this was a walk about or a time of solitary contemplation. What rite can we enact to ensure the arrogance of willful deniers of reality must recognize their sins against their fellow man?

The irony in all this is that some of these people are indeed incredibly generous to charity. I speak not of the laughable illusion that donations to their favorite religion are charity, but a genuine effort on their part to give back to society, and to such individuals I laud and approve their efforts but they do seem to be in the genuine minority in the cause of their fellow liberatarians. We as a society must choose whether we want to reward someone who rigs the game to their favor (the exact opposite of a free market) or the individuals who actually contribute to society.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

[Rant] Repost of a Video by FIRE

I don't hold Rush Limbaugh in the same category as anyone else mentioned in the list 3/4's of the way through this. Rush is a professional liar and a man who makes his living yelling fire in theater and then selling exit tickets as people try to get out. I also am questioning the "value added" of unlimited free speech in society. After all, I'm sorry, but lies don't seem to add value to society and fostering lies doesn't add much either...having said that, I think that the video and FIRE in general seems to make an excellent point, which is that universities exist as a sharing point of ideas, and even lies should be permitted there because the whole point of broadening the educational experience is exposure to the new. More over, Universities are often draconian in their enforcement of speech codes and the like. Tolerance achieved through denial of reality is no better than descration of the value of science by denial of reality. You MUST hear what it is you don't want to hear, or you will end up harming both yourself and those around you.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

[Phil] My Review of Common Sense by Thomas Paine

My impression of Mr. Paine has only gone up the more I have read about him. He is truly a man ahead of his time, and is not at all the sort that is often made out by Libertarians in their view of our founding fathers...well that is to say, eastern libertarians as compared to western style libertarians. Thomas Paine was no only liberal, but he was radically liberal for his time and his actions have caused me to change my planned reading of Keyes major economic treatise and instead replace the work (part of my 2012 goals) with "The Age of Reason" with a full intent to read, "The Rights of Man" in early 2013.

The purpose of Common Sense was to energize the common folk of the colonies of the America (the British colonies) to revolt against the monarchy, and to reject the concept of monarchism in general. What suprised me the most about the work were its strong biblical ties to the point that a significant portion of the document deals with religion and the current interpretation of the Bible. Nevertheless, this was brilliant on Paine's part, since his intended audience readily accepted religion and knew the Holy Bible quite well.

The core of his early arguments against the monarchy come from the Old Testament, and the well documented struggle between the early Israelite prophets and the desire of the Israelites to have a king, 'like everyone else.' Indeed, the bible is chalk full of anti monarchist statements, especially in the old testamant. And the arguments are strong ones....which were later countered by the concept of the Divine Right of Kings. As if, somehow, God himself endowed these individuals with superior and moral judgements...

But the biblical and historical record simply do not bear this to be the case, as Paine rather skillfully points out. His attack on the ludicrous idea of a heritary monarch is also quite skillful. Indeed, when you think about it, how often is the quality of greatness that thrusts an individual to prominence, either by work, chance or connection ever repeated to the next generation?

At best such individuals are usually a shadow of the former except in a very few cases where someone is brought up almost by birth to be a replacement in a family business, but even in such cases, power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. The concept of the monarchy is rather thoroughly and logically trashed by Paine, including the idea of a limited monarchy (especially a hereditary one) since historically such things tend to be unwieldy....if the monarch has any real power.

He spends the second part of the pamplet talking about America's potential, which is enthusiastic and great...though not as ground breaking as the first portion in the eye of time. Having said that it was still vital to awakening the common folk about what America could do and what it could be, and how the attempts at redress were folly at that point, and how a congress was needed to unite the people.

On the whole, the document is rather impressive and well constructed, but directly itself doesn't add much insight into my greater attempts at personal philosophy except shooting dead any fringes or romantic notions about Kings and Queens.

Monday, October 29, 2012

[PHIL] Enforcability, Majority Rule and Oligarchy

My thoughts on this came from a recent graphic that outlined the differences between the Libertarian, Democratic and Republican parties and listed that the Democratic party was an Oligarchy. This rather confused me, so I asked for some clarification. The clarification was interesting but essentially boiled down to a minority making decisions for the majority. My reply, "Short of Genetic Engineering it is now my observation that this will always be the case, the question is which minority and what is their relationship with the majority?" might have been misconstrued since the person who made the original post unfriended me as a result. I meant no offense, but sometimes people looking for it can take offense no matter what you do. I will, however, attempt to explain in greater detail what I meant below.

Enforcability

First though I feel the need to talk about the concept of enforcability. The actual enforcibility of a law has three important points that are to me self evident.

1) The rule of law is, at a practical level, essentially the rule of the largest mob of people or at least the ability of the state to enforce force but, in an attempt to provide the illusion and/or best attempt at fairness, divests the powers and decision making capacities of that mob into abstract concepts, enduring social contracts in the form of laws, and institutional mechanisms to ensure that those abstract concepts are applied as they are written, rather than as they are interpreted by people at any particular time.

2) Since this Rule of Law is an illusion in that, unless the power of the state is essentially godlike, it requires the belief and participation of the concept in the minds of the component members of that society, faith in the institutions that create and execute these laws must be maintained. What then, can reduce faith in this concept more then, than the crafting of a law which cannot be enforced and that the majority do not want to accept? If the vast majority of society abhors murder, then the state can, with relatively little resources and ease (comparatively) track the guilty and enact the penalty of law upon the culprit. Whereas, if the law in question is say...a speed limit, and the vast majority of the population believes that it should be 10 miles per hour higher than the signs posted, but despondent parents and well endowed insurance companies are able to set it at a specific level, then you end up with a mixed result in which the speed limit is largely ignored by the populace unless there happens to be a law enforcement official present, and even then, since it might go to a jury trial, a law enforcement official is more likely to simply look for the most egregious offenders rather than someone who violates the law just a little bit. The more arbitrary the police or other law enforcement agencies, the less likely people are to respect the law and thus endanger to some degree the concept of rule of law itself.

3) So long as there is a government, there will be tax, of one kind or another, in any society that attempts it. That is if there is any kind of Rule of Law. Abstract anarchist societies that believe in self governance are essentially under Rule of the Mob but it just happens to be a well disciplined and very polite mob. Rule by Robot/AI might also not require tax, but Rule of Law definitely requires the efforts of people because abstract concepts only exist when people who believe in them choose to manifest those concepts into the physical universe in a meaningful way by action or, when applicable, lack of action.

Where there is tax, there must be an allocation of resources. Until such time as there is a lack of scarcity of resources, a prioritization must be made on which laws are to be enforced since the observable trend of humanity is that a significant portion of the population will desire more services from their government than the government can provide, and if this is the case, then the laws that can actually be ENFORCED are the ones that come to the fore under wise rule. Popular demand has often demanded unenforcable laws be enforced, but the consequences are dire and the waste of resources are more often than not, rather severe.

Majority Rule

In any conceivable society hitherto now or in the near future that has Rule of Law, the consent of the governed requires the consent of the majority (even if that consent is simply an unwillingness to live rather than remain a part of that society). At such time as the majority of a society wish to change it (by vote, by violence, or by self removal) then it is changed. Thus, Rule of Law or even Rule of Status Quo requires majority consent.

However, it is also my observation that the majority is generally more than inclined to accept the status quo if their perceived basic needs are met. This means that great change requires great energy to perform, whereas small change does not require as much energy but can change the inertia of a society over time. This has some severe consequences, primarily in that those who expend the most energy tend to be able to make the most changes. Or in other words, "the squeaky wheel gets oiled". This is doubly true in more flexible societies (IE Democratic Republics).

The practical means of which is that basically, a minority willing to engage substantial time, effort and will are able to enforce their will upon the majority of the members of society. Merchants, who are able to use power by proxy in the form of capital goods, can hire lobbiests and other champions to whisper in the ear of lawmakers indefinitely. The religious, who literally believe that their God demands the law be interpreted a certain way, can form organizations whose sole purpose is to bend the law in their directions. occasionally purely secular organizations are also able to do this, such as the National Rifle Association, but let us be clear...such influence will always exist even if Religions, Capitalism or Private associations were banned. Even the most tyrannical oligarchy (as defined by the dictionary as compared to libertarians) will still have factions within it. The military will want funding that the intelligence services want to go to them, whereas the propaganda department will want funds or the civic works department etc.

Thus, in any society with a passive and disinterested populace (ie...human beings as they currently exist or have existed for all known and recorded history or are likely to exist for the foreseeable future) defacto cedes its power to the minority most determined to enact its will, through protracted campaigns at influence of law makers, or a willingness to use lethal force (such as a one party state or a merchant class willing to bribe law enforcement to bust up peaceful protests etc).

Minorities will always rule. The question is HOW they rule and what might be their relationship is to the majority.

There are many questions to be asked about a minimalist or maximalist government or even the concept of Natural Rights vs Expected rights, but those are topics for another time and post.

Friday, October 19, 2012

[Phil] Dispersed vs Concentrated Power or...the Cognitive Dissonance of Conservatives and Libertarians

Common sense indicates from any serious student of human nature and history that, while a benevolent dictator is the most efficient of government, it's really only efficient for whom the dictator is benevolent to and, most importantly, transition of power is a nightmare.

I've covered that in previous posts, but what I want to point out is yet another example of cognitive dissonance in any American libertarian and conservative philosophies...

Libcon Posit:

1) Federalism is good.

2) Local Control keeps too much power from the central government.

3) Defense and other key critical areas by the central government is good and allows for defense against other large alliances.

Guess what? I agree.

I also like small governments. The government which governs least, governs best.

Where we radically disagree is on the fundamental nature of the state and of human nature.

Honest Libcons (As compared to greedy people who just want more), basically ascribe to the theory of Natural Rights. The problem with this, isn't the actual idea, but basically the same problem with the Communist Manifesto in that the Communist Manifesto was largely a reaction to the excesses of industry and as such goes on and on about class. Wheras Natural Rights was a reaction to Monarchy and so goes on and out about about rights as endowed by the creator and puts heavy emphasis on the individual.

Side Note -

This video is very popular among Libertarians because it highlights their mighty struggle against the State or the uncaring collective will of the we.

So instead of moderate clap trap, which simply seeks the middle of everything, I'm going to reaxiom the reaxiomation
libcons love to pull so much and simply call this radical idea "Rejectionism."

It rejects the idea that we need to reduce the world to this tiny little struggle between the individualism and capitalism or any ism of any kind whilst at the same time avoiding Anarchy.

I might build up on this, but I think the central tenet of Rejectionism is the rejection of Isms including the absense of the necessity of political philosophy.

Or in other words Posit 1) Don't go fucking nuts in any particular political direction.

Which must be followed by posit 2

2) Lack of a political direction is worse than no direction at all.

We've seen that from moderates and being Chaff just makes you a road hazard.

This might seem like a distraction but by defining and establishing political shorthand, it lets us reference it later.

-End Side Note

Specifically, I think with Rejectionism, another point has to be that there are a finite number of ways to do things. Which means that as awesome as the idea of keeping power in the form of the government in check by dispersing it among local governments, why in the name of all that is holy would you not do the same with individuals?

This obsession on the individual vs the collective makes libcons blind to the very facet of human nature that seeks to enslave them in government. There are greedy people in the world. Smart greedy people understand this and agree that government can hold other greedy people in check so everyone can profit, and dumb greedy people just want to be in charge or just want the government to get the hell out of the way so they can do whatever they want.

But the assumption of natural rights that the individual comes first and interferance should be as minimal as possible (and I agree with this) ignores the fact that since there will be as many opinions of what 'minimum as possible' is as there are people, then the PRACTICAL reality of what that means is that the rule of the majority should ultimately apply, if you accept that a sentient being capable of participating in society has equal value on a base level to all others.

That's a tough question...after all, the weak, children, the impaired, the insane etc, should be afforded protection by the majority, but are they truly citizens? They have rights in advanced society...so if you define citizenship as 'having rights' then yes, but if you define citizenship as 'the ability to participate at the base level of power' then 'er...maybe' applies because CHILDREN DON'T VOTE.

My point in this is, natural rights as a concept were fine but we've moved on since then and we're going to move a lot farther as our concepts of what it means to be human chance as we unlock the mind and link it to technology and unlock the genome and splinter as a species....

These are questions we would be wise to answer ahead of time and my answer is that any being capable of communicating with other beings and recognizing its worth and their worth and establish and negotiate terms for mutual benefice between the two should constitute a participating empowered citizen. The base line upon which the majority is constituted.

But the point is...if a balance between centralized and localized power in institutions is needed, then in no society should it ever be acceptable for power to accrue in that of individuals vs the majority such that the majority cannot check it.

In practical terms, that means that power is power and to separate government power from economic power is ludicrous. You do not need communism or even socialism to have societal mechanisms in place to prevent the accrual of wealth too high from the baseline, because since money is time and power and the abstraction thereof, possession of too much by such indivduals should be intolerable to society.

Because too much power in the hands of one unless in a situation with unlimited space and unlimited resources, inherirently will result in reduced power for the many.

Because the MANY is comprised of INDIVIDUALS. The 'collective' of collectivists ARE ALSO INDIVIDUALS thus making the entirity of the libertarian position ludicrous on its head. The very individuals they seek to break against are individuals themselve and they are imposing a tyranny of the minority and a tyranny of inaction due to their concept of natural rights, acting as if natural rights as a concept has abrigated since the foundation of the species, which it has not.

Its silly, and it has to stop.

Thursday, September 27, 2012

[Cons] How Firm a Foundation

What is the Value Added of the Constitution, or having a constitution at all?

It is a reasonable question to ask. Those of us who live in the real world, who are not the 1%, must justify our existance, and our time. Now sometimes there are institutional shields for this, such as "Child" which is cared for by their parents, or "Disabled" which is cared for society at large, but as a practical matter, to receive resources in our current society (ie money which obtains food) you must have a place in society and a reason to have the rights and privilidges you receive. In theory, there are certain baseline rights we all receive, but from an enforcement perspective, those rights are applied very differently based on who you are - All of which comes basically down to the question the 1% asks of us on a daily basis, "What is your value added?"

So why a constitution?

The standard off the shelf answer is that a Constitution provides a blue print for society. It's the foundation, the touch stone upon which all other elements of society are built.

That makes sense, because that's really the way most of us think about the constitution, when we bother to think about it at all.

But what most people don't realize, is that as much as our society has changed, conservatives have inherent biases and advantages built into the founding document; its why they like it so much.

Some of this might seem obvious, but its worth going over again:

Who wrote the constitution? Rich, White, Elite, Business Owning Men 200+ years ago

Why did they write it? Because the previous government, the Articles of Confederation wasn't working. It was feeble and couldn't enforce its own laws. We needed a government that would allow the states to remain united and strong but flexible enough to give the states the individual freedom that both the states, and the inhabitants of those states demanded at that time.

What has changed? A lot has changed. On a practical level, its been amended in a lot of ways; but primarily it has expanded the right to vote to more of the population and determined practical matters of how power is handled within certain branches. The other major change was that it clearly established the dominance of the federal government, but the actual wording of the document is still kind of vague in certain areas; it does not say for example, "States can't leave" or "The Federal Government shall always triumph over States in any disupte between the two"...that was established by Right of Conquest, which isn't in the constitution at all.

But think of all that has gone on in 200 years -

Racism is now acknowledged.

Sexism is now acknowledged.

The inherent superiority of an indivudal just because they have money has been challenged....but that question is still very much in play.

There are elements of the constituion that favor the wealthy, because it also favors commerce. There really isn't any distinction between markets or governments directly in terms of which is which and which role one should play. Of course there were implied elements, but the phrases of the time have often changed, leaving room for interpretation.

But if the constitution affects all of us, every one of us, shouldn't the language at the blue print level be simple enough so that almost anyone who has the right to affect it, and obligation to be governed by it be clear in a way that anyone and everyone can understand?

How much do you have in common with Thomas Jefferson, George Washington or the slave owning southerners from the slave states? The former were honorable, intelligent men. The latter were perhaps intelligent but still thought that owning slaves was a cool idea.

Do you see where I'm going with this?

A lot can change in 200 years. A LOT can change in 200 years.

If the purpose of the constitution is that it is the social contract, the thing that binds all of us together and are the rules that we play by; how then can something that was crafted in so distant and so alien a time be binding upon us?

Are the amendments sufficient to govern society today? Conservatives argue yes. Liberals just assume the answer is yes.

But if the Constitution is the foundation of our society; then the advantage automatically falls to Conservatives. Conservatives resist change. Liberals embrace it.

The most common arguement for a stable constitution is that stability promotes growth. And that is absolutely true. For a lot of reasons. Change of any kind risks conflict, and the more conflict rises, the greater the chance that it will resort to force of arms to resolve.

The popular historical narrative is that this only occurred once in the Civil War.

The practical actual narrative is that it tends to occur about once a generation: The calling of the army against Unions in the early 20th century, the crushing of the occupy movement, the calling out of the national guard in the civil rights era (either to crush protest or ensure that desegregation would occur), the whiskey rebellion, the Bonus Army, etc etc.

On a practical level, the federal government seems to need to show force on the domestic population every 10-15 years, and if you notice, the VAST VAST majority of the time it is to resist change rather than embrace it.

Our society has changed. Our constitution has changed very little.

Right now there is a huge disconnect between our conservative society and our progressive society, and independents tend to sort of dangle in between them.

That's because we're on two different foundations...the conservatives are on the written constitution that is TWO HUNDRED YEARS OLD with a few patch works to keep the raft floating about expanding the franchise...

And liberals are on what judges have said the constitution means, such as the 1937 expansion of the commerce clause which was an unspoken agreement between the executive and the supreme court that the president would not dilute the power of the current court in exchange for their more generous interpretation of his measures.

Compromise is good, and it is necessary...

But the conservative foundation is built on stone, and the liberal position is built on sand; especially modern liberal tradition which is based on a wide interpretation of the social contract and judicial culture...but if a sufficient amount of judges are CHANGED...

Where in the constitution does it say that politicians should be honest? Where in the constitution does it say you have a right to health care? Social Security?

Having your food labels so it isn't poisoned or bad for you?

All of these are good ideas; and there are LAWS for some of this...but the more time passes, the more you have to IMPLY that the government can do this things rather than DEMAND it do them because that's the founding purpose of what it does.

A constition that promotes stability is a good thing; but a foundation built in an earth quake zone needs to be flexible. Granite foundations in California are going to crack and buckle eventually...

And our constitution is crumbling. You don't know it. You don't look at it that way, but how much do you approve of government?

And that's on both sides.

What's congress's approval?

The courts?

If they were working so well, why aren't people satisfied with the result?

And every generation there is a test, a stressor that forces force to be used. 9 times out of 10 that comes down on the side of the conservative view point. Historically, there has been a compromise after this to make things work.

But....Fox News exists now. There is a disconnect between the ways conservatives and liberals look at the world. Fox news is perfectly legal and perfectly constitutional. One message and one reality can be crafted and created...

If that generational test occurs...and the people who believe in Fox take power....why do you just assume that the compromise will take place after the fact?

I argue it won't.

Amending the constitution is difficult. Very difficult, and in those moments of pressure in the past, a sufficient number of conservatives had to come to the table to make change possible - such as allowing 18 year olds to vote or eliminating poll taxes.

How likely do you think conservatives are to come to the table to reform immigration?

To change tax policy in a liberal direction?

To put health care in the constitution?

The number of 'red line' issues is only growing...thanks to Fox. And Occupy was already crushed.

The center cannot hold because a house divided cannot stand.

Either we come to an accord on a constitution that we can all agree on, or sooner or later there will be a civil war. Now think about the most radical conservative you know..and ponder how they feel about liberals...

Now add in 10 years of civil war and think about how that person now talks about immigrants or muslims or someone they REALLY don't like...

They would feel that way about liberals in a civil war.

Now imagine that person in charge of nukes...

You see where I'm going with this?

Either we solve the problem of the disconnection from reality NOW (their problem, not ours) or they will KILL us later.

This is not hyperbole. It is basic observation of human nature and repeatable human fact.

Either we have a shared narrative where we can make our disagreements work...or we die.

Because the current constitution gives THEM all of the cards, not us.

But more importantly...when we build the next constitution, we need to build certain safe guards that cannot be changed (basic rights and representation) but a repeatable mandate that it be rewritten and reinterpreted on a cycle long enough to ensure flexibility stability but short enough that the past does not govern the present or much more importantly, the future.

Personally, I think a cycle of 50-75 years is good...indeed, make it flexible based on the current expected life span, so if we all start living 300 years, it can go up to 100 if we need it to.

The advantage in the constitution should be with liberals, not conservatives...since as far as history is concerned, its the conservatives that are wrong 99% of the time. You want a firm enough foundation to keep hysteria from taking over (usually also from conservatives) but flexible enough so that legitimate change is acknowledged over time in a way that makes it real and makes it happen.

It also means that a region that is alien as the south compared to the rest of the country probably shouldn't be a part of your country to begin with.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

[Rant] If Conservatism is So Strong....

If conservatism is so strong...why does it need to shout down any other ideas?

If conservatism is so strong...why does it claim to be the victim when it victimizes?

If conservatism is so strong...why is there only one "true" conservative network in a society with a "free market" in which the majority of the country is "center right?"

If conservatism is so strong...why is there always an excuse?

If conservatism is so strong...why do they need to raise the bar on voting as high as possible and pretend its for "voter security?"

If conservatism is so strong...why does it need to crush truth instead of nourish it?

If conservatism is so strong...why is that only rich people, selfish people or theocrats seem to be its most strident advocates?

Some liberal blogs, sites and individuals delete comments they don't like.

ALL conservative blogs, sites and individuals delete comments they don't like.

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Blame Canada

A friend of mine, one of a few bellweathers I use/used to indicate conservative actual thinkers, recently told me that the level of vitriol in my posts that it is time to cut back.  The canary is singing.  Listen or die.
The other canary gave itself a stroke bashing its head against the cage like a crazy psychotic pseudointellectual zombie....but that's another story...

So, instead of saying...the things I've been saying about those on the right end of the spectrum who are...liberal with the truth...I'm going to refer to them as "Our Less Fortunate Friends." or LFF.
So...is lying really necessary for LFF ideology?  My thoughts were last week that it was.  Lying and deception, especially self deception seem to only succeed in this country when the LFF's embrace them wholesale.  But then I think of Canada.

Canada is a thriving democracy.  Canada has universal health care.  Indeed, the canadian style of living has gone up for Canadians to the point that for the median population, their's is apparently higher than America's. 

And Canada has an LFF government.  But the thing is...in Canada, they have laws that limit free speech. I know! Shocking! Draconian! Death!  Clearly Fascism has found Canada.  Tell that to a Canadian some time...they'll laugh at you.  Now, the LFF party up north does lie...but ironically up there, tis the liberal party that lies MORE.  In fact, they lie more than the dems, to the point that no one trust them up there any more and part of how the LFF party got elected.  And they did so without fox news.

Canada understands the importance of having a press that can't just lie whenever it wants.  And they don't have the feared 'fairness doctrine' that holy holy holy apologists for the holy holy holy United States Constitution demand will cause civilization to crumble if the right to lie is not enshrined in freedom of speech.

Canada seems to be doing just fine.  Its not perfect...but neither is America.  But their democracy is real, and its thriving, despite some actual restraint on 'speech'...perhaps because one can have unlimited freedom of political speech...without the right to lie. 

Just saying.

But as I considered this, I had to come to the conclusion that LFF ideology does not require lying.  LFF media has spawned all over the globe, but other societys simply neither tolerate nor do they have the same degree of flagrant outright lying we do in the US of A.  So why even have it?

Well I've said it before, and I'll say it again.  There is LFF ideology...and then there is PLANTATIONIST ideology.

In fact, I think the lack of outright lying in LFF style ideology in other nations at the degree to which it happens here; isn't because LFF ideology needs it; southern apologists need it.  A resurgeant confederate ideal, manufactured and pruned and distrubited by the gruesome twosome in Alabama is a major force behind the lie factory.

How sad for us.

If only we were willing to do something about it.

We're not.

As a side note: Real conservatives apologize.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

You Can Get It Fast, Cheap or Good. Choose Two of Three

It's a well known trope and its written on pieces of paper in restaurants throughout America. You can have it fast, you can have it cheap, or you can have it good/quality. Choose two of three. I'm going to make my own version of that to the internet conscienceness.

You can let the stupid vote.

You can have a constitutional right to lie.

You can have a democracy.

Choose two of three.

This isn't that hard when you think about it, but let's look at it.

The argument for a constitutional right to lie is freedom of speech means you can lie. Some, with a better understanding, argue that profiting from a lie is fraud and is already legislated, but Fox News has a Supreme Court decision that basically gives them the constitutional right to lie. Note, I challenge you to find a founding father that said lying is cool. We're not talking Parody here...or fiction, or even benignly unknowingly making a mistake but bald face lying for profit. So even if our pathetic justice system, which is busy depriving individuals of their liberty because of drugs (and spend billions of dollars on such) spend almost no time at all enforcing existing fraud legislation on corporations and the media, because Fox can, per the Robert's court, basically just say its entertainment. Of course, a regular network, that does a fictional work like War of the Worlds puts up every commercial break, "This is a work of fiction. It's entertainment." Fox news doesn't do that. Why? Because it is political propaganda deliberately designed to exploit the stupid.

I find this particularly ironic given an ideology that claims moral superiority. Is not honesty a Christian value? Is not Honesty a basic family value we teach our children? Yet these people willingly lie to themselves and reject any inconvient truth, attack science, etc. They want their cake, to eat it, and to not gain any weight. So far, their own dishonesty has been their greatest weakness, and thankfully even the stupid who aren't caught up by their lies can see through their scams eventually...especially when it affects them personally.

Fox news might be the number one network, but no one but conservatives, independents that are actually conservatives and liberals making fun of it actually watch it. But really, I'm not talking about that more in this entry...because I've already talked about it and so have lots of people.

Understanding reality is like interest. Those who understand interest earn it. Those that don't pay it. Those that understand reality watch something besides Fox. Those that don't, watch Fox.

End of story.

More importantly, can one BLAME Fox? They've rigged the game so that they can profit from a lie. No one checks them on it...aside from fact checkers, but then they discredit fact checkers as having their own political agenda such that even intelligent indepents are leery of trusting them entirely, allowing smidgens of the Reagan reality to slip through the defenses of anyone who isn't firmly fixed on liberal sources of information, because everything else requires a constant judgement call on every single item, and its impossible to call what is true and what is a lie every single time. Moderates by their very nature, indeed I believe by their biology are going to take news from more than one source, and if one of those sources is a lie factory, then that means that they're being affected by lies.

The problem is that Democracy DEPENDS on voters making informed decisions. And you can't do that based on the inability to discern truth. Conservative ideology, it seems, depends on lies. You can argue to the contrary, but any intelligent independent or liberal can see it as plain as day. They suppress the vote, suppress the truth. That's a sign of weakness, which is odd because I think without the lies some of their basic ideas; or the ideas they say they care about are important and eternal and an excellent check on liberal excess.

But as someone that lived a lie and was lied to for the bulk of my life, my tolerance of dishonesty is low. But it isn't just personal.

A democracy is about making a CHOICE of who to vote for. Republicans, and Republicists...supporters of Republics, like to argue that the value of a Republic is that by choosing virtuous leaders you can temper the will of the mob. Well, that's a nice theory, but it only evens out and smooths the random impulses of the mob. A strange fad that infects half the population to spend a trillion dollars on pet rocks for a day is a bad idea, and a process of representation can delay it.

But an entire paradigm built on nothing but lies is going to create a sustained lie that will produce elected representatives that are more than willing to reflect the lies believed by their stupider minions. For democracy, or a democratic republic to work, voters must be able to make informed choices.

Which means you EITHER:

a) Improve the quality of the voter by ensuring that the stupid cannot vote. Property ownership is not a proper threshold...there are many many dumb property owners, and they have no real qualifications that improve society. More importantly, the definition of society has moved on since the original constitution was created to give more people the right to vote than rich white male land owners.

It IS possible to create a test to allow for intelligence. There are perils of this-sure. There are perils in holding an election. There are perils in having a military. I will argue in a future post how this can be done. Let us for now simply posit that by hook or by crook one solution to the conundrum of a functioning democracy is to improve the quality of the voter.

b) Remove lying reducing the barrier for the less intelligent or less able voter to be able to make a better choice. This is best accomplished by making Lying in anything short of fiction or parody a felony. Especially if it is done for profit. Already the law you say? Then we need to change our enforcement mechanisms to make it work...but given how hard it is to sue someone for liable or slander in this country I think we can say that there are no real consequences for lying, especially by the press, by politicians and by corporations.

That needs to change.

c) Don't have a democracy. There are many other forms of government, all called worse by Winston Churchill and they certainly do have flaws, but they pretty much all have the advantage that by reducing the size of the basket, you also reduce the amount of stupid. That's not always true, but it can be if designed right.

The real problem with these is a lack of accountability and most important of all; stability in the transition of power. Thus far, democracy does this better than all other forms of government, but that doesn't mean it has to be this way.

Personally, I favor a very low threshold test, something that even someone of an IQ of 90 can achieve, like maybe a 4th grade graduation test....but whatever it is...whatever we do...we cannot continue on our current course.

An ideology and civilization based on lies will have disconnects...some huge, like Climate Change, some small like an outbreak that becomes political anathema to the Reagan Reality to admit for some reason so they pretend that it doesn't exist...and it kills millions.

Disconnection from reality is a bad thing. Disconnection from reality in an era of weapons of Mass Destruction is a formula for disaster. Sarah Palin is stupid. And anyone who isn't a Reagan Reality inhabitant could see this, which is the main reason McCain lost and Palin isn't the current Republican candidate.

You don't let stupid be in charge of the nukes.

But if we don't change, it will happen eventually. You can only roll the dice so long without rolling snake eyes.

It. Will. Happen.

Monday, September 10, 2012

Excision: Lincoln's Mistake

When in the course of human events it becomes necessary to dissolve the bands.....powerful words. In 1860, Lincoln faced a choice. He could either allow the South to secede in peace, or force the union to stay together at the point of bayonets. Though called a tyrant by his contemporaries, he was no lover of empire. And, though he did eventually sign the emancipation proclamation, he was not merely a militant anti slaver. To be sure, he despised slavery and skewered the Confedrate position in the Lincoln-Douglass debates...in the reality reality, the war was about economics....the economics of slavery but the decision Lincoln made was neither to oppress snooty rich white plantation owners or to appease corrupt tarrif imposing future carpet baggers in the north; no, it was to preserve the union.

If a chunk of the country were to break off in a snit every time something didn't go its way, then pretty soon there would be no country left at all, and since at the time the United States was one of the only truly democratic countries on the planet, and many of the vital reforms the UK now enjoys today had not yet been implemented, Lincoln felt it important not only for the United States but the whole world and the precious seeds of liberty that had been planted in the blood of patriots.

It is possible for a conflict to really be about good vs evil, despite the shades of grey in the humans that made up both sides. There were good southerners and there were evil northerners, but there was nothing good about the ideology of plantation owners' insistence that it was ok for one human being to own another. I didn't see any of them, volunteering to be slaves for a while...

So what was Lincoln's error?

Lincoln believed in extending the hand of friendship to the defeated confederacy. He believed the descendants and lackeys of plantationists could be reformed. What a naive idea....but as a good man, who can blame him for hoping such a thing? After all, he didn't have the 150 years of evidence of willful denial of the truth that this noxious culture would continue use to practice, or foree it's toxic spread to most rural areas of the United States. Slavery might be dead, but apologiests for the plantation owners are alive and well.

There is no moral superiority in geography. The north only behaved in an aberrant favor towards the south, but in their tolerance of Jim crow and slaver apologists, became in victory the very thing that they had crushed in military defeat. This willful denial of the truth has reached its zenith in the social singularity of the Reagan Collective; a bundle of self sustaining lies that will shift its groupthink paradigm to attack anything that threatens its dominance, assign the very traits of which it itself is most guilty on all opponents and excuse any tactic or behavior in the name of cultural dominance. Engineered in the bowels of diabolical think tanks owned by the plantationists, this superbug in the ecology of the idea is now resistant to all forms of truth whatsoever.

Shall we descend into the barbarism of civil war once more? I say nay....you can no more kill an idea than you can shoot a bacteria with a bazooka. But there is a remedy...any doctor will tell you that a step between a patient and death with a putrescent limb infected with insidious poison is amputation.

Expulsion. Removal. Excision.

To put it in terms that they can understand....Boot the South! If a democracy can add states then it should also be able to expel them with equal measure.

There is no mechanism in the constitution that allows it, however nor is there one that forbids it. By the 10th amendment to the constitution, all powers not measured as belonging to the federal government belong to the states. Technically, no amendment forbids the states from leaving either. Not one. And while I am glad the South lost, from a purely legal stand point, the balance of power was ALWAYS with the states on matters not enumerated in the constitution. I believe in a very widely interpreted commerce clause, but that still has nothing to do with membership. To this day, no written part of the document states that a state may not leave, save the tenth which says that if the document doesn't include a right, it goes to the states.

Emancipate the results of the hidden wishes of the plantationists. Let them practice their anarchist capitalist nihilist utopia. Let the states that lost the civil war cease to revel in victory at the paralysis and status of the rest of the nation. A majority of the other states can and should vote to expel the number that included the former confederacy forthwith and until such time as they admit of their own accord that the ideology of their forefathers was a lie and that there is NO constitutional right to lie. Freedom of speech is not freedom from truth. Freedom from religion is not restraint upon the free exercise thereof.

Let there be a parting of ways. Let the south and the rest of our nation no longer be one.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Reconstruction Done Right (or how to solve all our problems)

Background: One of the most persuasive arguments against rebooting the constitution is the sheer demographics.  When you look at red states and blue states, they are too finely balanced to have the supra majority needed to create the document.  No problem! Let me show you how.

First, money.  We need progressive banks, PACs and thinktanks fully purged of corpradem elements willing to commit to a long term vision of a better America.  Occupy has already started this, both with their B corporation project in California and Occupy the SEC.  It will take about 20 years but is very doable.  You will also need a hard core leadership team capable of taking the long view like Karl Rove and the Koch Brothers.

Second, create ECHO news.  Echo's job is like CNN but will remove the veneer of neutrality and actually echo FOX lite view points.  With an important difference, it will be geared explicitly to the southern demographic. All anchors and pundits will be from the south, and the days of the confederacy will be hailed by all racial demographics.  On this position they will be more aggressive than FOX...any time Perry clones say secession is an option.  Echo entertainment division will content and media distribution channels dedicated toward glorifying slavery and the antebellum south.  Progressive media owned by the cabal of reformation will muzzle natural progressive outrage at this behavior. Fox and clones will be alarmed but since echo is always reactive, never proactive, it will be impossible to purge them from the reagan reality without offending the south, since the primary mission of the echo network is to amplify the Reagan reality and the more insane fringe elements already harnessed by Ruprect Murdoch.

Third, waiting ten to fifteen years for echo to fully burrow it's way into the Reagan reality, the cabal then waits for the progressive high in the cycle (see 2008) when conservative behavior will be at its most irrational and then can for a constitutional convention.  Progressives will agree to this.

Fourth, once the inevitable deadlock occurs, a plebecite is held to allow secession by some states.  Strategically important states in the center of the country will be tampered with (see Diebold) and remain in the union.

Fifth, the south is excised from the union but required to pay for any federal property (ie military bases etc).

Sixth, the new progressive president warns the south that no form of hostile or war like language will be tolerated.  The south, being the south, will be unable to not threaten violence against the rest of America.

Seventh, this threat is considered causus beli for war via the Bush Doctrine of preemptive strikes.

Eight, a weakened south, thinking it can rely on militia and Bubba and his shotgun to defend themselves are utterly crushed in a quick and decisive war.  (Note: it is utterly vital that the pacifist wing of the progrssive movement not be allowed to have the presidency for this to work.  We need Teddy Roosevelt, not Carter.) (He would be considered a democrat today.)

Ninth, using the Bush standard set by Iraq, we begin reforming the south properly this time with education camps and companies designed to profit from their suffering.  Note, that it is not because making them suffer is good, or even just, but because giving the corporations running the southern reconstruction zone a profit give will ensure that the occupation and reconstruction will take as long as possible.

Tenth, while the south is fully occupied and controlled, rebel sympatathizers in central red states, certain to commit terrorists acts in sympathy with the south are moved to reservations on southern land.  Meanwhile, more land can be restored to native Americans in these states per treaty we have already broken.  Lands currently owned by red states.  If necessary, we can create a central and mountain occupation zone as well.

Eleventh,  create a new constitution..  Then in a symbol of old to new, dangle the old constitution on a thread, cut the thread and then sign the new constituon, without the red menace.

Twelfth, profit.  Eventually, the south, fully vetted and potentially eugenically purified of excessive conservative contamination is admitted back to the fold, with firm pacifist clauses in their state constitutions ala Japan.

A modest proposal.  But also one that would absolutely work and a viable alternative to the conservative vision of America.


Monday, May 7, 2012

Third Parties In 2012

My analysis of third parties in 2012, mainly because I'm NOT voting for Mitt Romney and I'm not voting for Obama.

So as I have stated before, I'm not voting for Obama in 2012 given among other strikes:

Signing the NDAA allowing indefinite detention of US citizens.  - I don't care if he was 'forced' to sign it or avoid losing political capital.
Capitulation to the Republicans on the Debt crisis. - You do not negotiate with political terrorists and encouraging this kind of behavior actually did more damage to our credit rating than the deficit itself did.
Treatment of Occupy - You might not be a fan of occupy but a coordinated response by the DHS against mostly peaceful protesters to get mayors and police to crush them in a short period of time is absolutely unacceptable.
Failure to Prosecute Bush - This isn't going away.  Ever.

Now Added: Absolutely terrible governance on the health care debate.  Failure to fix the senate allowed a handful of democrats to have their way including Olympia Snow when it should have been HIM leading the debate, not the other way around.

Caveat: If the Supreme Court is as blatant about throwing down AHA as they were with Citizen's United and ignore existing precedent for the last 60-70 years, I will be forced to vote for Obama.  It is not that they might throw it down that bothers me, as there are several ways they can do this but if they effectively make the commerce clause interpretation go back to what it was pre 1937 it means that the conservative justices all lied about their honoring of Stare Decisis, and that the Supreme Court is a wholly political and illegitimate branch of government.

As such, fixing the court will take priority over Obama and I might even move early to have a vote that matters.

Again, it isn't IF they reject the law but HOW.

At any rate...so 3rd parties.

Not a fan of Libertarians really, especially the randian streak but they are a strong party and any 3rd party doing well sends a message to the Cowardly Democrats.  This is a rather interesting article about the chances of the Libertarian candidate this year.  He could play spoiler.  We have a whole generation that has forgotten Ross Perot and they don't remember much about Nader either.  12 years is an eternity in the small political minds of most Americans, but he has the advantage of a significant majority position in a lot of areas that are important people; specifically low deficits and a complete uncaring about social conservatism.  Ron Paul SAYS he is socially liberal but he's not.  Which means he has voted to repeal many protections on a federal level for women's rights...or not voted in favor of them.  Gary Johnson is different.  He's also opposed to the absolutely STUPID war on Drugs which Obama has actually ramped up through Holder the Idiot.

I admit, I just don't like the Greens.  I should.  I am a firm AGW believer.  The greens are more liberal than most democrats and I should be voting for them all the way.  I. Don't. Care.  Unlike my parents, I am not a big fan of Cynthia McKinney and Ralph Nader after he ran in 2004 despite a need for the left to rally against Bush.  They seem way too caught up in their own view point, and they also believe in the carbon tax which I think is useless. Better to have, literally, a conservative tax because their beliefs are doing more damage to the planet.  Seriously.  Reality denial should cost people money, especially in a political system where cash is speech.  I might vote green, but they've got a lot to do to impress me, and I haven't investigated them this year.  If they're like they have been the last several election cycles, forget it.

One group that is definitely attracting my attention is the Pirate Party.  I can see Occupy aligning with them more than the Greens even though they support both groups. Indeed if the Occupy movement could form an alliance with the Pirate Party they might be able to make some significant headway.  I doubt they could win, simply because the Pirate PArty is so new, but they could do what third parties do best which is affect the narrative, and SOPA, PIPA, CISPA and Copyright and Patent Law have gotten ridiculous in this country.  More importantly, the PP could theoretically do a better job of creating a third party alliance with the special snowflake greens and libertarians to reform the electoral process since they are not left/right but instead pro freedom which both greens and libertarians can embrace.

Monday, April 30, 2012

Review - The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith

This book has aged far better than the Communist Manifesto, both in terms of the applicability of the theories found therein, and in terms of the respect with which it is had by the general population.  However, having read it, I find the general application of anarchy libertarianism to be functionally hilarious.  Smith neither advocates nor evidences for the kind of magical 'free market' thinking espoused by today's captains of industry.

What he does do, is show with stunning thoroughness, the ripple effects of limits by the state on resources that are artificially placed or by private individuals in such a state or by circumstances.  He does indeed show the nature of a TRUE free market, which is allowed to operate on its own and show the historical real world examples that allow one nation to prosper and another to perish.

The level of research he does is also fascinating, especially understanding that he lived in an age which required months of travel and had no form of instantaneous communication.  To know all of the things he did about the American colonies, China, India etc, he had to talk with people who had been there or travel there himself.  It is understandable that it took him as long to write it as he did.

Having said that, Smith himself was quite the philosopher and was a good and charitable man.  Nothing at all like many of capitalism's more ardent defenders in this day in age.  Explain to me, upon reading this book, how the CEO of a cooperation, as an agent of that cooperation is able to justify an 8000% ROI that is sufficiently greater than the base salary man below him?

Smith talks at great lengths about the value of having a skilled labor force and a middle class which has a lot of money.  In fact, he actually shows the damage of stratification for locking up capital in silly ways.  When I read "The Wealth of Nations" I certainly don't picture Ronald Reagan and if I do, I DEFINITELY don't picture George W. Bush and tax cuts.  The dangers of deficits are certain but the concept of a non gold based currency is post Smith.

At some point, I think economics moves beyond the 19th century, and while I think his comments on the nature of being and the value of wages and production are astoundingly insightful for his time, much of which is still applicable to today, I also think there have been many fundamental shifts since then, including such radical notions that women can vote, slavery is a bad idea, black people are not an inferior race etc.  I say this not to imply that Mr. Smith should be faulted for advancing such ideas (he assuredly does not) but rather had these new technologies and ideas existed at his time, his thorough and universal work would certainly have incorporated them.

Mr. Smith is amazing.  His so called 'disciples' are not.  There some solid ideas in this work, but it should be regarded as 'holy' no more than that other 200 year old document, 'the constitution.'

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

[Constitution] The Mother of All Amendments

I have personally become convinced that unless we slide further towards democracy, our nation is doomed to dictatorship or oligarchy.  My simplest evidence for this is the sheer corruption of the federal government.   I don't care which of the two realities you live in, pick two of the three branches of government and you're likely to find them totally non functional.  In my case, I think it is all three.

The Senate is the most dysfunctional legislature on the planet that has any actual power.  It lost all legitimacy (to me at least) when they proved utterly unable to fix health care.  Leaving aside the fluid question of rights, it is a vitally important national industry that is broken for a lot of people (like...millions) and it couldn't produce something better than the AHA.  There are some things good in the AHA.  But if THAT is the best the Senate can produce....

The abject failure to fulfill its basic duty to ratify or even reject executive nominations on a simple majority also to me says the body is not legitimate.  The filibuster is not in the constitution.

The house has some still but is currently run by morons and was always designed to be a racaus collection of frat boys and sorority girls compared to the senate.  Which it is.

The supreme court is likely to strike down the AHA.  And while there are things in AHA that I don't like, the supreme court's reasons for doing so appear (on pre examination) to utterly ignore previous precedent.  I know conservatives like to argue otherwise, but frankly, I really don't care about their interpretation of the constitution anyway.  They look at the document and either think its fine or that we need to remove some amendments.  Combined with Bush v Gore and Citizens United and the Supreme Court is an illegitimate institution.  It does not represent the will of the people, either past, present or future but it does represent the will of the minority.  It is a political institution that is supposed to be apolitical.

And the executive...the imperial presidency.  Unaccountable to anyone.  Able to ignore the law of the land and only paying lip service to our rights, both in the current president and the president before that.

The states have lost power (in part legitimately, because the south proved that they can't be trusted with power by ignoring the 14th amendment to the constitution for 80 years.  The Voting Rights Act is totally legitimately focused on those racist southern states that thought segeration was a nifty idea.)   However, they are supposed to be a counter to abusive federal power.

Most importantly, the people have lost power.  The leadership is corrupt, and given the wealth of the nation, 9 justices, 500+congressmen and 200+ top cabinet posts and administrators are EASY to bribe with billions in lobbying money and reelection funds.  When you say Cash is Speech, corruption is the result. 

But that's the subject for another blog entry.  For this one, I believe the root fix is to have a constitutional convention with one primary focus.  If you want to do other stuff, go for it, but don't expect it to pass and insist that the things it produces are segmented.  Many older folks who still view the constitution as some kind of sacred text are scared to death of an Article V convention because anything could happen.  CRAZY people might mess with it.

Guess what? They're doing this now.

The way to do this is, state by state, pass an amendment which has no time limit and requires a 90% agreement of the state legislature or population to repeal calling for a constitutional amendment which says the following:

Amendment 28

Section 1 - The several states shall all provide a reasonable mechanism by which the population of that state may pass a popular referendum.

Section 2 - The people of the united states shall collectively have the right to place a popular referendum on a federal ballot providing said referendum shall collect signatures amounting 1% of the population.

Section 3. - No referendum may repeal or alter the first, second, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, thirteenth, fourteenth or fifteenth amendments; save the amendment clarifies or enhances the freedoms in a manner acceptable to the population affected thereof.

Section 4. - Any referendum must declare a method of adequate funding within the text of the amendment itself. 

Section 5. - Congress and the several states may not aggregate amendments, but must allow each that qualifies to be voted on individually.

Section 6 -  The period of election for the referendum shall not exceed one year after which the referendum qualifies for the federal ballot.  

Section 7 - Congress and the several states shall have no authority to alter or rescind this amendment, though they may be given the power to enforce amendments individually created by the referendum process described within this amendment.  The Federal Court may not declare an amendment to the constitution unconstitutional but may find a party (individual, state, federal or institutional) to be in violation of an amendment.

Section 8 - An amendment passed by at least 50% of the electorate in a single election will then be subject to another election approximately one year later.   If the amendment passes with a majority in both cases, the constitution is amended.

Section 9 - Congress and the several states shall have the power to ensure by legislation that the provisions of Section 4 are properly enacted. 






Slow Jam the News

Monday, March 5, 2012

[Right and Wrong] Choose Ye This Day Whom Ye Will Serve

Do you care more about your honor, or your party?

Let us assume that any given conservative you hear from sincerely believes that the move by the Obama administration to change the rules of insurance is about freedom of religion, not access to Birth Control. Let us assume that such an individual has spoken up prominently about it.

Rush Limbaugh spoke to it as a matter of birth control. Even if you, as a conservative, do not agree with Limbaugh, if you spoke up about the 'freedom of religion' issue, you have a moral obligation to condemn him with just as much fervor as you spoke in defense of 'religion'...unless you secretly agree with Rush Limbaugh. To me, there is no other assumption I can make.

Rush Limbaugh is the keeper of orthodoxy for the Republican Party. He, like Grover Norquist, forces Republican leaders to shift ever farther to the right. If like that, or secretly like that, this is fine, but there comes a point where you must speak up or lose any honor you may have.

Make no mistake, when a liberal, or a democrat (and I no longer even call myself that because of the abomination that was SOPA) does something wrong, especially THIS wrong, I speak up against it.

I have alluded that Mitt Romney does have core values...that they are the values of the LDS church and that he feels it is his moral and spiritual obligation to increase the prominence of his faith (and in the process increase the righteousness in his view of the nation) by being the first LDS president.

There is a well known story in the LDS church, where Joseph Smith, wrongfully arrested and placed in a jail, was sit to forced to sit and listen to a foul mouthed jailer, who insulted them, their wives, their daughters, and their faith. Finally, Joseph Smith could stand no more, and stood, clothed in radiance and majesty of the victim and said, "SILENCE, ye fiends of the infernal pit. … Cease such talk, or you or I die THIS INSTANT!"

The guard shut up.

A man, a real man, stands up against what is evil. A man, a real man, does not let a woman who wants to testify about the need for birth control pills for her gay room mate for health issues that have nothing to do with birth control, and Rush Limbaugh calls her a slut, saying tax payer funds (not insurance funds) would 'pay her to have sex' he is not only lying, but he is being a right bastard.

So in the one area that he cares about, his real values, Willard says the following: "“I'll just say this which is it’s not the language I would have used," Romney said. "I’m focusing on the issues I think are significant in the country today and that’s why I’m here talking about jobs and Ohio.”

Infernal pit...vs...'not the language I would have used.'

One of my favorite versus in the New Testament is as follows: Joshua 24: 15 "And if it seem evil unto you to serve the LORD, choose you this day whom ye will serve; whether the gods which your fathers served that were on the other side of the flood, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land ye dwell: but as for me and my house, we will serve the LORD."

If you are going to put yourself up as a moral example, one of the most important duties of the president, and the best you can do to condemn this evil act by Rush is I would have used different language..." is a moral failure at best.

Saturday, January 21, 2012

My Review of The Communist Manifesto

So I finally read "The Communist Manifesto" by Karl Marx. I am putting this on my political blog instead of my review blog primarily because to properly analyze this, I think I need to speak and include my political beliefs, though I shall start from a purely literary perspective. Actually, no, before that, I'll start from an effectiveness purpose.

Reading it, and seeing the political rhetoric within, I understand why it scares Republicans. The ideas espoused by Karl Marx have had a heavy influence on most every government on earth. Indeed, Communism, after Capitalism, was the dominant political philosophy of the 20th century.

The common wisdom of the modern day is that communism was proven wrong because the Russians, the most dominant communist country, ground to a halt due to lagging technological development, corruption and a general lack of freedoms by the local populace. But for something that didn't supposedly didn't work, country after country that wanted to transform themselves from a poor rural or pre industrial society, chose Communism instead of Capitalism.

Furthermore, the first section of the Communist Manifesto, which speaks of the historical class struggle, might be a bit...hyperbolic, but it also makes some strikingly resonant points. The elite in this country are utterly unaccountable. Look at SOPA.

A government, or an elite, that truly respected the median 80% of this country, would never try to pass such an abomination.

And yet, Donald Rumsfeld, as much of an idiot as he is, makes a good point. From orbit, look at North Korea vs South Korea.

And yet...

If it was simply dictatorship that would make a country suffer, why do so many dictators choose the trappings of communism?

I argue that in part it is the powerful rhetoric of Karl Marx's work. History might show that capitalism makes a population more prosperous than communists, simply based on the wealth of the members involved.

But is that what we should measure the value of a society by? The communists certainly didn't. At least at first. In the 1940's and 1950's under Stalin, it was about the accomplishments of their people, defeating the Nazis and putting Sputnik in orbit.

Symbols won the cold war. Landing on the Moon. Star Wars. The Olympics. Bit by bit, the people in the Soviet Union saw how capitalism made Americans free and rich and grew jealous and resentful that their own government didn't give them such freedoms.

And now we have 2012. The central tenet of Capitalism is markets, which requires competition. But maybe...without Communism to compete against, Capitalism is also starting to lose its edge. The very things that Karl Marx talks about in the Manifesto are starting to happen again.

The non 1% are starting to be slowly relegated to serf status. Renfields and other apologetics will whine that the poor in America have it great. They will say that they have freedoms here and such.

And yet...

SOPA, a blantant attempt to steal the internet, something that many people depend on for their work every day, or their enjoyment, was passed in this so called Capitlist Democracy.

Libertarians often say that we don't have capitalism any more. And judging by the workings of our government, I'd agree with them.

The problem with the Manifesto is that there is no real end game in mind. So Karl Marx basically figures that the Proletariat will rise up against the Bourgeoisie and that they will all privately work together in some sort of utopia. It doesn't take into account the most negative of human emotions such as fear, avarice and greed. Capitalism, on the other hand, does.

So the defacto modus operandi for Communism became to enforce its ideals on those who didn't want to obey the tenants of communism.

A free society works more efficiently.

But has our own society become an illusion? Do the elite who run the country realize that giving us the illusion of freedom makes us more productive? But if we were truly free, and our vote truly mattered, would we have to choose between Barack Obama, who with the rest of the Democrats wanted to steal the internet like a bunch of Mafia Thugs until the very last possible moment when the light of day was shown on them like cockroaches?

Or the Republicans.

And really...if you aren't a Republican or a Renfield, do I really need to say what's wrong with the Republicans?

Libertarians often talk about the evil government that forces them to obey laws they don't like under threat of a gun. Well, guess what folks, that is what government is...the biggest mob. The person who controls the appartatus of force and how it is wielded. The theory of the Rule of Law is that it at least depersonalizes that force and makes it less passionate and less arbitrary.

And then we turn around and make corporations people. We say that Cash is Speech.

So for those of us who hold ideals other than the dollar being the ultimate arbiter of what makes society valuable or what makes an individual valuable, are we not also 'under the threat of a gun'? Indeed, if we are the majority in a democracy and the minority can use the levers of power to prevent us from enacting policies that benefit the majority, at what point does it become Tyranny of the Minority?

They say it doesn't.

But then again, they say a lot of things.

I look at Russia with Communism and Russia with Capitalism and I don't see much difference.

I see a lot of differences here, but then I look at the treatment of Occupy Wall Street and I must wonder...are we really free or,like the matrix, are we merely given the illusion of freedom to increase our productivity, and as the need for that illusion goes away, so our so called freedoms are more and more brazenly stripped from us.

I think Karl Marx got an awful lot right, but he never really answered the question of what happens when the Communists 'win' and a new set of Bourgeoisie takes over.