H.R. 822 Passes House

Although I’m late with posting this (sorry I was busy yesterday evening) I just wanted everybody to know that H.R. 822, the National Right-to-Carry Reciprocity Act, passed the House successfully. The breakdown of the votes ended up being 272 for and 154 against. Now it moves onto the Senate where it will likely crash and burn. Of course I’m a pessimist and very well could be wrong although if it does pass the Senate I’m guessing it will receive the big veto from the President.

I’ve explained my overall support of this bill but maintain reservations as I perceive the potential for further federal regulations over the right to carry with this bill being used as precedence.

The Stop Online Piracy Act Hearing Looks a Little Bias

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) has sent out a notice alerting people to the fact that today’s hearing on the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) is a wee bit on the bias side:

The House Judiciary Committee will meet today for a hearing on the controversial Stop Online Privacy Act (SOPA). What could have been an opportunity for the committee to hear from a variety of stakeholders has devolved into parade of pro-SOPA partisans. Scheduled to testify are representatives from the Register of Copyrights, Pfizer Global Security, the Motion Picture Association of America, the AFL-CIO, and Mastercard Worldwide—many of which helped to draft this legislation in the first place, and didn’t let anyone else into the room. The only scheduled witness in opposition to the bill is Katherine Oyama, policy counsel on copyright and trademark law for Google.

It’s almost as if the government wants to push SOPA through and are trying to control the message to that end. One way debates can be won is by stacking the deck in your favor. Excuse me while I travel down a side road to make an important point.

In the past the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) had a regulation on the books known as the Fairness Doctrine. The regulation required holders of broadcast licenses to present both sides of an issue which resulted in the practice of having three people in a debate; one for the issue, one against the issue, and one neutral party.

Today many are asking the FCC to reinstate the Fairness Doctrine because they feel news today is too bais. What these same people fail to realize is the news was equally bias while the Fairness Doctrine was in effect but the game was played differently. For instance if you wanted to present an pro-gun control message you would get one person from the Brady Campaign (for the issue), one neutral party, and then a third pro-gun individual who was either crazy or just sounded crazy to the public (for instance you might get a self-declared militia leader who advocates the overthrow of the government to talk on the side against gun control). That way people the pro-gun control advocate would appear reasonable and sane so people would be more likely to side them him or her. Even with the Fairness Doctrine in place bias existed and that allowed the media to control the message.

Now that I’ve traveled down that side road let’s return to the topic at hand. The government wants SOPA to pass and they believe part of passing it requires controlling the message. Since many people don’t know the major players in this legislation the government has stacked the deck with numerous people who represent a pro-SOPA stance but appear neutral on paper (after all most people would believe Mastercard is a neutral party in this debate as their income isn’t derived from copyright). Most people will look at the list of testifiers and believe a large majority will be neutral and only a handful will speak for or against the legislation. In reality the government has simply stacked the deck in a rather underhanded manner so they can claim extensive support to justify passing the bill.

A majority of people don’t even realize that we’re being fucked over by our government since the methods being used to fuck us over aren’t blatant.

Italy Makes Large Cash Transaction Illegal

For those of you who pay attention to world news you’ve already heard that Italy has implemented a series of austerity measures. One of these measures I find especially egregious:

Measures to fight tax evasion will be strengthened, including a limit of 2,500 euros on cash transactions

What am I supposed to do if I want to buy my friend’s $5,000 vehicle? Since cash is out do I have to wait for them to get setup to accept credit and debit card transactions? Perhaps we’ll have to insert a middle-man such as an auto dealer in order to complete the transaction now. Is the legality of the transaction based on the worth of the object(s) being sold or the method of trade being accepted. If it’s based on the worth of the object(s) this becomes a big deal since all large value transactions between individuals (selling your automobile for example) will basically be illegal as most individuals are not setup to accept credit and debit cards. On the other hand if this is based on the method of trade being accepted (euros in this case) than this isn’t too big of a deal since both parties could agree to transact using something of value like gold and silver.

This austerity measure also assumes Italy’s problems have stemmed from lost tax money due to minor transactions between individuals going unreported. I can tell you right now that’s not the problem. As this isn’t the problem I’m betting money this austerity measure is being put into place so the government can keep and eye on what people are purchasing and use that data in enacting future legislation.

Obama is Tackling the Hard Deficit Problems

While government debt has been spiraling out of control Obama has finally taken a stand and signed an executive order that will surly help bring the debt back under control:

US President Barack Obama has ordered government departments to cut back on the number of branded mugs, t-shirts and key rings they give away.

Such items, known as swag, are paid for by taxpayers, and are used by the government to promote its work.

The president has also ordered government departments to issue staff with fewer electronic devices, such as smartphones and tablet computers.

With such decisive action we don’t even need to take a look at the money we dump into war, welfare, Social Security, Medicare, Medicade, worthless government departments, etc. I’m sure we can expect more actions like this that may very well save us a few billion dollars in our multi-trillion dollar deficit. Wow, when I say it like that it makes the actions of our President look pointless and futile.

Veteran’s Day

Today is Veteran’s Day which is a day when many make quick quips thanking our veterans for their service. I’m going to do something slightly different. Let me take a second to ask others to consider truly supporting out troops by removing them from harm and brining them home.

We currently have permanent military bases in at least 148 countries. Those bases not only harbor ill-will against the United States by many countries where those bases lie but also put the lives of our military personnel in jeopardy. Instead of sticking our noses into every other country’s business we should be minding our own. Thus this Veteran’s Day I’m advocating everybody show the greatest support for our troops that you can by demanding they be brought home so their lives aren’t put at risk to fulfill the desires of the tyrannical politicians.

Wisconsin’s Training Requirement Thrown Out

In a rare act of political common sense the lawmakers in Wisconsin have tossed out the mandatory four hours of training to obtain a carry permit:

Applicants to carry concealed weapons in Wisconsin will no longer have to complete four hours of training, after a Republican-controlled legislative committee voted Monday to do away with the requirement that had been assailed by the National Rifle Association as being too strict.

The rule mandating the successful completion of at least four hours of training was put in place by Republican Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen’s Department of Justice in advance of the law taking effect last week.

[…]

“There’s no reason why we have to micromanage how people obtain their concealed carry permit,” said Sen. Glenn Grothman, R-West Bend. Other states with no minimum training requirements haven’t had any problems and “there’s going to be no problem in the state of Wisconsin either,” Grothman said.

Senator Grothman states is beautifully, states lacking training requirements haven’t had any issues with the issuance of carry permits. The idea that training be required to exercise a Constitutionally guaranteed right is absurd. Has anybody ever advocated a requirement of training be completed before exercising the right of free speech? I’ve never heard anybody claim those wishing to protect themselves against self-persecution only be allowed to remain silent if they’ve passed a training program.

Why should those eligible to own firearms be restricted from carrying them?

Another State Votes Against Mandatory Health Insurance

It appears the tradition of nullification is alive and well in regards to the federal Health Insurance Company Enrichment Act. Ohio joins the rapidly growing number of states that have voted against allowing the government to dictate what you buy:

On the eve of the 213th anniversary of the passage of Thomas Jefferson’s Kentucky Resolutions of 1798, laying the intellectual groundwork of nullification, the people of Ohio exercised their power and nullified the insurance mandate in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.

Ohioans passed Issue Three, a constitutional amendment to preserve their right to choose their own health care and health care coverage. Preliminary returns indicated a wide margin of victory, with more than 60 percent approving the amendment. The amendment makes it illegal for any local, state or federal law to require Ohio residents to purchase health insurance, effectively nullifying a key component of the PPACA.

“This signifies that state level resistance to federal power is not just an old idea relegated to history books,” Tenth Amendment Center executive director Michael Boldin said, “It’s something that’s alive and well right now.”

Ohio became the tenth state to reject the insurance mandates in the PPACA.

Good on you Ohio. There is no justification that allows the federal government to determine what you will and will not buy. While the lack of justification hasn’t stopped the federal government from dictating that all Americans buy into Social Security it’s still nice to see a line in the sand drawn somewhere.

The idea that you have to buy health insurance under threat of punishment is disgusting and I’m not sure how the American public put up with the passage of such legislation. While those who support the legislation say it’s important to ensure all Americans receive quality healthcare they are mistaken in what this bill really enacts. It doesn’t enact quality healthcare, it enacts violence by putting a gun to the head of every American and demanding they buy health insurance.

A Personal Pet Peeve Regarding Legislative Activism Sites

During the couple of years I’ve been blogging one thing I’ve tried to avoid is writing posts advocating legislative action without linking to the actual bill under consideration. Honestly it irritates me when somebody demands people vote for or against a piece of legislation without linking to, or at the very least explaining, the legislation in question. As you can imagine this pisses me right the fuck off:

For months we’ve been talking about tomorrow: Election Day. We’ve been telling you how much is at stake for Ohio workers and their families. We’ve show you how unfair, unsafe and dangerous Senate Bill 5 is to our communities. And now, the time to act and repeal Senate Bill 5 by VOTING NO ON ISSUE 2 is upon us.

Tomorrow is your last chance to vote against Senate Bill 5 with a NO vote on Issue 2. Polls across the state will be open from 6:30am to 7:30pm. Click here to find more information on your polling location.

We expect long lines as voter turnout is expected to be high. Make sure to schedule time in your busy day to get to the polls and VOTE NO ON ISSUE 2. Tell out-of-touch politicians and their Wall Street cronies that you stand with Ohio’s public workers.

Click here to get more information on your polling location.

Tomorrow’s vote will come down to people like you. Without your support, we could wake up on Wednesday knowing that our communities will be less safe now that firefighters, police officers, and nurses are no longer able to bargain for the safety equipment they need to protect themselves as they protect us.

Get ready to vote tomorrow by clicking here.

After reading that do you have any clue what the fuck “Issue 2” says or purports to do? Why should I vote against it? What would “Issue 2” do if passed? Why isn’t there a single link explaining this piece of legislation on the post demanding people go out and vote against it?

Obviously I don’t life in Ohio and thus don’t care much what legislative issues are under consideration there. With that said I really wanted to point out this complete lack of information because somebody linked to this in a chat room I frequent asking that we do as the linked material advocates. Even if I lived in Ohio I wouldn’t be motivated to vote against “Issue 2” from the material presented in this link because the link doesn’t present any material.

Honestly I don’t care enough about Ohio’s politics to even bother digging up what “Issue 2” is. Judging by the lack of information presented on that site I’d be tempted to vote yes on it just because those urging people to vote no aren’t presenting any information, which makes it appear as though they’re hiding something. Here’s a pro tip for those advocating legislative action: ensure a link to the legislation under question or a very detailed summary are readily visible on the site so those who know nothing about it can seek information quickly.

The Only White House Petition that Will Accomplish Its Goal

The White House has demonstrated that they’re simply going to ignore any “We the People” petitions instead of engaging in actual debate as they promised. Knowing this I believe one petition submitted on the website has an excellent chance of achieving its goal:

We demand a vapid, condescending, meaningless, politically safe response to this petition.

Since these petitions are ignored apart from an occasional patronizing and inane political statement amounting to nothing more than a condescending pat on the head, we the signers would enjoy having the illusion of success. Since no other outcome to this process seems possible, we demand that the White House immediately assign a junior staffer to compose a tame and vapid response to this petition, and never attempt to take any meaningful action on this or any other issue. We would also like a cookie.

OK I doubt the last part will be honored by the White House but the rest of the petition will likely be enacted as stated. Isn’t it sad that our government is so blatant about ignoring the people that it’s willing to create a petition website, claim they will give each petition that receives an arbitrarily selected number of signatures a fair shake, and then simply toss any petitions that would change the status quo into the online equivalent of a fire? If a private business treated customers this way (and didn’t have the backing of the United States government to get away with it) they would soon find themselves in bankruptcy as its customers fled to their competition.

Taxation is Wealth Redistribution

Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well-armed lamb contesting the vote.

That quote is usually misattributed to Thomas Jefferson but who first said it matters not, the statement provides an excellent image that explains why democracy is not a just system. During any of the occupation general assemblies you usually find something saying, “Democracy is messy!” or, “This is what democracy looks like!” While the speakers say those phrases with a positive connotation I simply sigh when I hear them. Those phrases are usually said after some minor issue is raised during the general assembly and an hour of debate, screaming, and placating have finally beaten the majority down enough that they vote in favor of whatever was proposed just to get things moving along.

Democracy is an immoral system because it gives the majority power over the minority. It allows one group to use coercion or outright violence against another group and call the action just. An excellent article describing this fact was posted yesterday on Mises Daily:

Wealth redistribution, therefore, is theft. It is the taking by force from one group in order to give to another. Force is involved because anyone who fails to pay assessed taxes — confiscatory taxes that mostly go directly into someone else’s pockets — will be put in prison. People from whom money is taken have not usually voted for this action,[1] but those who wanted to receive others’ money usually have voted to take it from them. Many socialists will dispute this and argue that most people want to pay the amount of taxes they pay. This implies, for example, that when the government doubled the tax rate during the Great Depression, people, coincidentally, simultaneously wanted to voluntarily pay double the amount of income tax. It implies that when marginal tax rates reached 90 percent, people truly wanted to work and hand over 90 percent of their marginal earnings. The argument is too weak to take seriously. Besides, if most people want to pay all the taxes they pay, socialists will have no problem switching the payment of taxes from being required by law to being voluntary.[2]

One of the outcomes of democracy is always wealth redistribution. That is a majority of poorer people vote in favor of stealing the minority or richer individual’s wealth. This becomes very evident when you look at the language and income tax brakets. The occupiers call themselves the 99% and imply the 1% are the enemy. What composes this 1% varies from person to person but it’s usually the top 1% of income earners. Many calling themselves the 99% demand that wealth or assets be taken from the 1% and distributed amongst the majority group.

When you look at income tax brakets you’ll notice they get progressively higher as income increases but a smaller minority composes each higher income tax braket. It’s very easy to get somebody to vote in favor of stealing from another when the voter perceives the target as being wealthier. While somebody making $50,000 a year is unlikely to vote in favor of stealing money from those making $50,000 a year he very well may vote in favor of redistributing the wealth of somebody who makes $1,000,000 a year. This is what democracy looks like:

The last statement in the quoted paragraph holds important truth as well. If people truly wanted to pay taxes then there should be no need for force them through the threat of prison. I would bet if we repealed laws making the payment of taxes mandatory a large majority of people would stop paying taxes. Knowing this it seems absurd to believe a majority of the population agree that paying taxes is something they want to do voluntarily and therefore democracy has failed in this case to express the desires of even the majority. What a majority of people really want is a proxy to perform the act of theft for them which is what taxation accomplishes and what actually democracy gets us.

Those demanding other peoples’ money also like to control the language using such phrases as, “tax breaks for the rich” to imply the rich are somehow being gifted instead of simply having less stolen from them:

In dollar amounts, households in the lowest-earning quintile in 2004 received about $31,185 more in government spending than they paid in taxes, while the middle quintile received $6,424 more than they paid. The top quintiles, however, paid $48,449 more in taxes than they received in government spending. In the aggregate, the top 40 percent of income-earning households paid roughly $1.03 trillion more in total taxes than they received in government spending, while the bottom 60 percent received $1.53 trillion more in government spending than they paid in taxes (the difference being the amount spent by government in excess of what it brought in — an excess mostly financed by the future top income earners). This is wealth redistribution.

We can see from these statistics how absurd is the phrase “tax breaks for the rich.” The rich do indeed benefit most from tax breaks because of the fact that they pay most taxes. Tax breaks are the giving back to the rich some of the money that was previously taken from them. Yet socialists call this redistribution from the poor to the wealthy! In other words, if the poor aren’t allowed to receive as much of others’ incomes as before, and the rich are allowed to keep more of their income, then, in the eyes of socialists, the rich are taking from the poor. This is like saying that a thief who must return a woman’s purse after getting caught stealing it is redistributing money from himself to her.

When you are willing to demand the money of others you seldom are willing to express your idea for what it is, theft. Even if we claim the act of wealth redistribution for what it is the thieves try justifying the act as being moral in this specific case:

I conclude that society does not really care about morals. They care about what’s best for them, defining terms in different ways in different situations, to fit their own personal or ideological agenda. Socialists condemn the businessman who becomes rich by pleasing others and providing jobs for workers and who harmed no one else in the process. But socialists claim that workers (and nonworkers) who were paid the full value of their work by the businessman but still choose government force to make him pay more, are innocent, righteous, and deserve “social justice.”

Trying to argue with an opponent who is willing to justify acts as being moral depending on whether or not the acts benefit him is impossible. I do my damnedest to ensure what I advocate complies with my moral and ethical beliefs which is why you never hear me advocating higher taxes on anybody even though I would likely benefit from increasing taxes on those earning more than me. Being consistent is important in my eyes because inconsistency leads to cognitive dissonance which makes presenting your argument difficult as it can be shot down using your own beliefs and statements.

Another fact to take away from this article is that voting for government to improve your life always leads to the opposite:

Suppose your family decided to start a business. You invest time, sweat, money, and opportunity costs in creating a new product or service. Your company’s product did not previously exist, but you made it available for others, without harming or forcing anyone to exchange their income for the product. After some years, your product becomes so popular that your family has now become wealthy through voluntary exchange. Others, who engage in forceful, not voluntary, exchange, in their jealousy, use the government to regulate you. They force you to sell part of your company to your competitors (antitrust legislation) who are not able to compete as efficiently and effectively; they force you to pay your workers more than you can afford (union legislation); they force you to sell your product for a lower price than the market demands and for a lower price than you would like (price controls); they force you to produce in a way that pollutes less but raises your costs and reduces your output (EPA legislation); they then impose a “windfall-profits tax” because they think you’re earning too much money this year. Your company started out being your private property that benefited society, but then society — through government regulation — took control of it and sucked it dry. Now your family earns less, your workers earn less, and less of your product is available to consumers, and at a higher price. The consumers got what they voted for. Voting for the government to improve one’s life almost always results in the opposite.

People who earn their wealth by providing a service or product people desire should never be punished. Punishing the productive only demotivates them from trying to continue serving our society in grand new ways. If I knew producing my new product would better society but ultimately lead to my demise as others simply took the product of my mind and labor I wouldn’t be very motivated to invest my wealth and labor in developing the product.

Those who demand money be stolen from the “rich” and given to the “poor” need to stop. What they are really advocating is theft and I am willing to bet money that those same people would not support me walking into their home and stealing their property. Taxation is theft by proxy just as calling the police is violence by proxy. In both cases the person calling on the government isn’t asking for means or protection, they’re asking for a third-party to perform acts of theft and violence. Individuals advocating taxation should be fine with allowing others to come into their home and steal their property just as those who demand guns be taken away from others because they’re violent devices shouldn’t call the police when somebody breaks into their home.