Ron Paul Does it Again

Even if you don’t agree with Ron Paul’s stances you have to admit he’s consistent. Yesterday he introduced legislation to deal with the issue of TSA and their groping of anybody and everybody who comes through the airport. His speech was pretty good to boot:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d-N5adYM7Kw]

Here is the statement from his website. The actual text of the bill hasn’t been posted online anywhere that I can see yet so I’ll reserve ultimate judgment for later. I will say through that I’m optimistic considering Dr. Paul’s track record.

The ACLU

Many of the people I talk to bring up the ACLU as some kind of paragon of civil liberties defense. I’ve never bought into this line of thinking even through I fully acknowledge that the organization has taken on some very good cases. The problem with the ACLU lie in what they consider civil liberties.

This post is here because of a conversation I had with a friend last night. My friend was pointing out the fact that not a single Republican was given a 100% score on civil liberties from the ACLU. This struck me as odd because if there is one thing you can’t fault Ron Paul on it’s civil liberties, and he’s a Republican. I decided to look up their scoring and found Dr. Paul had a measly 42% rating (I chose Ron Paul because he’s a known and predictable quantity, there are other people on there that should be given much high ratings as well). This lead me to question what the ACLU considers civil liberties.

Their pages for the House and Senate list the criteria that is used to determine each politicians ratings. Before I continue I’d like to point out when you hover over the green check marks following a politician’s name the tool tip text states, “Voted right way” while hovering over the red xs states, “Voted wrong way.” I just find their terminology rather funny.

But look at the bills they are using as judgment cases. I’ll just pull a single example otherwise this post will go on for pages. I’ll use the Probhibting Funding of Syringe Exchange Program which is stated by the ACLU as being:

On Friday, July 24, 2009, the House defeated an amendment offered by Representative Mark Souder (R-IN) to the FY 2010 Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act (H.R. 3293) by a vote of 211-218. The Souder Amendment would have prohibited federal funds from being used to support syringe exchange programs. The ACLU opposed the Souder Amendment as a rejection of evidence-based science, which would have harmful consequences for public health. Every scientific study of needle exchange programs has concluded that access to sterile injection equipment is a proven way to reduce the spread of deadly, infectious blood-borne diseases like HIV/AIDS and hepatitis C.

What the fuck does this have to do with civil liberties? This is a health care bill when you drill down to the basics. It has nothing to do with anybody’s rights in the slightest. I don’t care whether or not the ACLU stands for or against this bill, but grading politicians on it shows that they aren’t focused on civil liberties.

Beyond that another thing I hate about the ACLU is their stance on the right to keep and bear arms:

Given the reference to “a well regulated Militia” and “the security of a free State,” the ACLU has long taken the position that the Second Amendment protects a collective right rather than an individual right. For seven decades, the Supreme Court’s 1939 decision in United States v. Miller was widely understood to have endorsed that view.

The Supreme Court has now ruled otherwise. In striking down Washington D.C.’s handgun ban by a 5-4 vote, the Supreme Court’s 2008 decision in D.C. v. Heller held for the first time that the Second Amendment protects an individual’s right to keep and bear arms, whether or not associated with a state militia.

The ACLU disagrees with the Supreme Court’s conclusion about the nature of the right protected by the Second Amendment. We do not, however, take a position on gun control itself. In our view, neither the possession of guns nor the regulation of guns raises a civil liberties issue.

They don’t believe the right to keep and bear arms is an individual right. They also disagree with the outcome of Heller. What I find amazing is the fact that they don’t find possession nor regulation of guns a civil liberties issue. I can’t imagine what is more important to civil liberties than having a means of defending them.

So with a combination focusing on non-civil liberties issues and a willingness to ignore other civil liberty issues I must state I do not support the ACLU.

Calling a Bluff

Although I’ve never played for any extent of time I understand a big strategy in poker is to call somebody’s bluff. This is a great strategy in many regards but it’s also dangerous. Case in point Olin Corporation (they manufacture Winchester labeled ammunition) is moving it’s manufacturing plant after a union vote to refuse a pay freeze.

Basically members of the union thought Olin was bluffing and called them on it. Here in lies the example of why bluffing is dangerous, your opponent may very well be telling the truth. Personally there are a few things I’ll gamble on, my job isn’t one of them.

Celebrate Rebellion

Remember, remember the Fifth of November,
The Gunpowder Treason and Plot,
I know of no reasom
Why the Gunpowder Treason
Should ever be forgot.

405 years ago today a man by the name of Guy Fawkes decided to roll a few wheelbarrows of gun powder below the House of Lords and blow the kind to Hell and back again. The plot ended in failure as he was captured by one of the guards before lighting the fuse but the idea is still sound.

The problem stemmed from the fact that England had separated their church from Rome founding the Protestant Church of England. In order to get appointed to an official church position you had to swear an alliance to the monarch of England which rather clashes with the whole idea of Catholicism. The bottom line is life turned to shit for Catholics in the country who become more and more persecuted.

So what do you do when you’re a member of a group of people being persecuted in a monarchy? Well since a monarchy doesn’t lend itself well to hearing outside opinions your go to plan B which is to kill the monarch. The idea was simple, blow up the House of Lords during the State Opening of Parliament. This was supposed to signal a rebellion in the Midlands that would ultimately end with a Catholic princess placed upon the throne.

I’ve always found this piece of history interesting. It demonstrates quite well that you can only persecute a people so far before they’ll rise up against you. Fast forward 405 years. Our methods of rebellion have become far less violent thanks in part to the formation of democracy. But this election season the people of the United States showed the ruling party that we were unhappy with their Health Insurance Company Enrichment Act, continued bailouts, war, and all sort of other unpleasant things. Sadly the rebellion just put into place more of the same but it does who people take note of what the ruling party do and will rebel as best as they can find to.

So yes remember the fifth of November as a day to celebrate rebellion against oppressive rule.

Voter Fraud

The election season here in Minnesota is over which can only means one thing, recount time. Recounts aren’t that exciting and everybody who lives here knows the drill so I won’t bother covering it. What I do want to write about is voter fraud.

There are a lot of screams in this state about apparently voter fraud. You can look around and find stories of vans loaded with people driving from polling place to polling place to vote. Groups of people are demanding that Minnesota implement a system of voter ID Unlike many states Minnesota doesn’t require you to present photo identification in order to vote. When I arrive at my polling place I’m asked my name and address, if I know both I sign a sheet and get my ticket which allows me to get my ballot.

Likewise when you register in this state if you don’t have a utility bill from the last month or a government issued ID you can have somebody vouch for you. Hearing this you can get where the vans loaded with people going from polling place to polling place come from. The idea is simple; you send a van of people to a voting place, have each person register at that voting place, and have a plant in that precinct that will vouch for each individual.

Two things need to be preserved when voting; ensure each person only gets to vote once and ensure each voter’s anonymity. The reason for the first one is obvious while the reason for the second one may not be so obvious. Anonymity must be preserved to prevent the use of force to coerce people into voting for a particular candidate. I like examples so I’ll use one here. Let’s say Jim is employed by Canadian Pacific as a train conductor. Train conductors are union employees and the union wants you to elect a Democrat. Now let’s say Jim is a Republican and doesn’t want to vote for a Democrat. It’s likely the union will use the threat of force to coerce Jim into voting for the Democrat. So long as anonymity is preserved Jim is able to vote for whomever he chooses without worry. The second anonymity is no longer preserved he has to fear for his safety if he wants to vote for his candidate.

Anonymity can only be preserved by eliminating as many data points as possible. For our example let’s say through some strange twist in faith everybody in Jim’s district voted Republican. Without having to present photo ID Jim can still claim he never went to the polls and somebody must have committed voter fraud. By having to present photo ID Jim can not really deny he was at the polling place because his identify was most certainly confirmed.

This is a convoluted example granted but it makes the point that anonymity is important for the voting process. The question becomes how can we preserved both anonymity and prevent voter fraud? As usual the simplest and cheapest answer lies in impoverished countries. Election ink is used in may countries such as India to ensure each person only votes once. The concept is very simple and only involves having to stain each voters’ finger with a stain that penetrates the skin and lasts for at least 24 hours. Doing this you effectively eliminate the threat of people voting multiple times.

Of course at first glance this doesn’t stop a person from voting in another district. When you look deeper into the problem you find out it does. Most people willing to commit election fraud are also politically inclined enough that they want to effect the outcome of their own district. In other words that person is most likely going to vote in their district and not a neighboring one. Sure it’s not fool proof but it most certainly is close enough for government work.

I have no crazy belief that such a system would be implemented here in Minnesota because we’re Americans damn it and we will use the most expensive system for doing something! Alas it’s a pretty good solution that would effectively eliminate some of the larger problems we have in Minnesota with our election process.

Your Daily Laugh

Want to see something funny? If you answered yes then I have a clip for you (if you answered no then you have no sense of humor and I hate you). A couple of people walked around the recent Rally to Restore Sanity carrying a sign saying “Obama = Keynesian.” Hilarity ensues as people have no idea about economic theories make assumptions:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_23Nt5XumaU]

Election Results

Well the elections are over (for the most part, Minnesota proved once again we can’t really make a firm decision and recounts are going for our governor race) and the results are in. First let me say I’m glad to see Rand Paul won in Kentucky. With another Paul in the office we now have two major weapons to field against the Federal Reserve!

I’m also glad to see balance has been somewhat restored on a federal level. I’m not a fan of any single party controlling the House, Senate, and White House. Now the Democrats have the White House and the Republicans have the house and senate. Hopefully this means complete gridlock on any new legislation on a federal level.

Here in Minnesota we had to once again prove we’re incapable of making a firm decision one way or another. The race looked very bleak for Emmer early one because Hennepin and Ramsey county votes were counted first (these are our major blue districts). After the rural areas started flowing in though things started looking up and the vote is so close there is an automatic recount going down. I’m still betting Dayton will win but hoping for Emmer (a man can dream right?). What would be really good is further Coleman/Franken litigation going down so we don’t have a governor for several months. I believe legislation can’t be passed with a governor’s signature and honestly when no new laws are being created we all win.

Beyond the governor’s seat the Republicans won out in Minnesota. This is what concerns me about Emmer possibly winning, the entire capital would be controlled by a single party. On the other hand Dayton is a crook and a statist bastard so having him in would be nothing but bad news bears for our state.

What I can say is this; watching MSNBC last night was hilarious. I’m not even exaggerating when I say that the anchors on MSNBC pinned the possible destruction of the world’s economies on Rand Paul (if he doesn’t raise the debt ceiling according to MSNBC the entire world is doomed economically). It was also funny watching them try to spin the constant loses their preferred party was taking.

Election Problems

I have to admit this page is hugely entertaining. The website is called Our Vote Live and tracks (they claim in real time) reported problems at polling places. Some of this are hilarious. For instance:

Nov. 2, 9:11AM, Garland, TX, Registration inquiry, Polling place inquiry: After asking polling place and hours, wanted to know if child was registered to vote.

Of course most of the reported problems are actually kind of depressing (for instance several problems reported that there isn’t anywhere to park at the polling places). It should serve as a good read throughout the day.

Elections

I’m went early today to get my vote on and let me be very honest, there were far too many unopposed people running. Before you say anything I do realize the hypocrisy of making such a statement and not running to oppose any of these yahoos… but that’s not going to stop me from making the statement.

In case anybody is curious I voted for Emmer. Since getting the nomination Emmer has been kind of alienating me by pandering to the neocons but at the same time he’s pro-gun, anti-tax, and for the most part pro-liberty. What put me over though is the fact he’s not Mark Dayton (who will probably win because the majority of votes in this state seem to like pain).

I left quite a few spots blank. When I was first old enough to vote I believed that somebody who was running unopposed deserved my vote for just being willing to run. I no longer believe that and have decided if you’re running unopposed I won’t vote for you.

Because I’m an idiot I forgot to post the Minnesota Gun Owners Civil Rights Alliance Political Action Committee (GOCRA) endorsement link. I really do like how GOCRA does their endorsements because they explain why they are behind the people they endorsed.

Tomorrow’s Elections

Remember, remember, the second of November,
The politicians’ treason and plot,
I know of no reason,
Why the politicians’ treason,
Should ever be forgot.

Remember, tomorrow the polls open at 0600. Get there so you can vote out the statists bastards and get the pro-liberty candidates in. Personally I’ll be voting for Tom Emmer since he’s the best pro-liberty candidate for governor out there (especially when you compare him to that asshole Dayton).

Also remember when electing judges to vote out the incumbents. Those of us in Minnesota have the right to vote in our judges but the current batch of judges have been jockeying for that to change. Show them we don’t want that change. I’ll also throw out a mention of Greg Wersal. He’s running for a seat on the Minnesota Supreme Court and frankly deserves it. It’s certainly pro-liberty.