Author Archive
Electronic Votiing and ID Card
I have started this thread to handle any additional discussion of the possibility of electronic voting and/or of an electronic national ID card, now being discussed under: https://www.thoughtsaloud.com/2012/07/09/i-want-a-constitutional-convention/
Troy
Understanding History
Blogging about the Federal Reserve and its manifold crimes against the American People makes my blood run so hot that I thought to change the subject, if only for a moment.
All of my adult life, I have been an amateur historian. Like most of you, I found high school history boring beyond words. But, once I was free to focus on the elements of history that interested me (something other than the exact date when A shot B), then I found it to be a total delight.
However, I have learned some valuable lessons from the study of history – lessons not part of the history in question but about the very nature of history.
Allow me to set the tone for what follows with my favorite quote from the late Will Rogers: â€things ain’t like they used to be and probably never wereâ€.
On the surface, this is cute, possibly even funny. But, beneath that lies a philosophical insight of the type Mr. Rogers was justly famous for. That is, that much of what we think remember is fable that we have spun around a nugget of fact. If we are honest about it, we can each look into our own personal histories and admit that, in retelling events from that history, at times we added a little “seasoning†to our tale to make it easier to consume.
Usually, this was not done out of any malicious intent. It could be that we honestly could not remember all the details so we filled in the blanks with bits that made the whole sound right. Perhaps the actual details, as we remember them, made an event that was important to ourselves, not very interesting to people we relate it to. So, in goes a dash of this, a few drops of that and, voila, a well seasoned tale, palatable to some if not all. And, the more we retell the well-seasoned tale, the more it assumes the aura of absolute fact in our own memories.
Comments On The Federal Reserve
This is a new article meant to accommodate further comments on the Federal Reserve and our Economic system started in the I Want a Constitutional Convention thread below.
Greg asked:
Are we speaking of going back to the “gold†standard (or whatever the new standard would be)?
I care little what the standard is so long as it has intrinsic value and is in limited supply. Having said that, precious metals served the purpose quite well for a very long time. And, that system did not “break”. What happened was the desire of our manipulators to be free of the restraints that system imposed.
So, representatives of the global financial cartel convinced a combination of gullible fools and dedicated crooks to create the Federal Reserve, which is neither “Federal” nor a “Reserve”. It is nothing more than a for-profit business with significant foreign ownership that manipulates our currency for fun and profit (their profit, not ours). Since the birth of this monster, economists estimate that our currency has “lost” (been robbed of) 95 to 98 percent of its value (choose the percentage you prefer — it makes little difference). It has brought us repeated recessions and one Great Depression, along with a lengthened recovery time from each such event.
Think about this for a moment… As the Federal Reserve approaches the 100th anniversary of its creation, it still has just enough time to match that with a 100% decline in the value of the currency it was supposedly created to protect. It is hard for me to imagine a more complete, more obvious failure that this. If, indeed, “failure†is what it be (we can discuss this line of thought later).
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The CRA – Intent Versus Constitutionality
I am submitting this new article to allow continuation of the comments under the Two Things That are Driving Me Crazy post below that are concerned with the Intent behind several acts of Congress including (but not limited to): The Civil Rights Act and/or any other law that seeks to change our citizen’s attitudes and non-violent behavior toward each other or toward any group they may identify with.
I will try to trigger further comment by repeating my earlier comment that the Civil Rights Act was wrong-headed, was partly unconstitutional, had unintended consequences as bad as any wrongs it sought to right, and that its passage by Congress was driven more by pandering for votes than by any general sympathy for the Black Community.
I justify this last claim by simply pointing to the condition of Black families in our inner cities who are being “helped†by government programs. I contend that these people are actually captured in a sort of intentional social-political slavery from which escape is nearly impossible because of its many self-defeating attributes.
Before the Civil War, a Black slave at least had some chance to sneak off the plantation and enter the so-called “Underground Railroad†which usually led to freedom. As well, many of the non-slave States had begun to nullify the Fugitive Slave Act.
With today’s government-induced slavery of dependency, where is the “railroad†that leads out? One obvious way is through education. However, in many places, a Black student who actually tries to get an education in those pits that are the inner city public schools, may well face more physical danger (from other Blacks) than that faced by a slave trying to leave a plantation.
Let the disagreement begin!
Troy L Robinson
Lost In The Comment Hierarchy
As a frequent contributor to this forum, I find an active dialogue on a subject of my own submission to be the best reward for the effort of composition. In a word, I love lots of comments!
However, the really popular articles, that is, those that generate a lot of comments, soon get such an extended comment hierarchy that it becomes nearly impossible to follow.
Therefore, might I suggest a possibility? OK, thanks – I will.
Whenever we find an article is generating multiple threads of comments, these comment threads are inevitably about some sub-topic within the original article. Naturally, the more provocative articles have many sub-topics.
Ergo, my suggestion: When we find ourselves creating multiple comment threads within a given article, let us start a whole new article, based on the sub-topic in question. Hopefully, this would make the comment hierarchies much easier to navigate.
Of course, it would be the responsibility of the original author of the article to originate the new sub-topic articles/threads.
Please let me know what you think. If there is general agreement, I will begin to act accordingly.
Troy L Robinson
I Want A Constitutional Convention
As I have done a number of times in this forum, I wish to repeat my call for a Constitutional Convention – before the “use by†date on our current Constitution expires.
As I write this, we are only two (2) States away from the “call†becoming mandatory – subject to some dispute over how long an individual State’s “call†stays in effect.
Every time I speak up for such a convention, I get alarmed responses exclaiming this would open the door for the progressives to make their political perversions legal and official through the act of embedding progressive nonsense into the re-written Constitution.
My first response to this is, yes it could happen.
For the sake of discussion, let us assume the worst – that a convention is held, that the progressives have their way with the re-written Constitution and that they somehow convince the legislatures of 34 States to ratify the thing. What would this mean?
For one thing, it would show clearly that the legislatures of a majority the the States (and, presumably, the citizens of those States) actually favor the progressive agenda. Under our system, this is their right, whether you and I agree or not.
I propose that such an outcome might actually work in our favor because it would clearly lay the groundwork for those States still loyal to the original Constitution to secede and form an alternate Republic, faithful to the ideas of our Founders. Such would allow a grand experiment to begin – a side-by-side comparison of the success of a progressive government versus a libertarian government, under otherwise similar conditions.
What? Did I hear you say our original government, that one established by the Founders, was not libertarian? I respond that you either do not know what the word libertarian means -or- you know far too little about the government of the Founders.
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Two Things That Are Driving Me (More) Crazy
There are many things one hears/sees via the media that can damage one’s thought processes. However there are two that I hear over and over that have an especially damaging effect on my mind – and both of them I have blogged about in the past (and promise to continue to blog on until they or I go away):
The first is totally trivial. It is the constant use of the phrase “The Proof Is In The Puddingâ€. The “proof†of what is in what pudding? The very phrase is so incoherent that I would much rather listen to long finger nails dragging across a chalkboard than to hear it even one more time. Of course, the traditional phrase was “The Proof Of The Pudding Is In The Eating†which, surprise, actually conveys a complete, meaningful thought or idea. I have long given up on the idea that ordinary Americans might understand way-out things like: their own national history, elementary geography, basic economics (hell, I would settle for basic arithmetic), constitutional government, etc. But, is it too much to ask that we get one of the simplest phrases in our lexicon correct? To quote my hero John Stossel, give me a break!
The second is anything but trivial but it is of dire import to our continued existence as a Constitutional Republic. That is the widespread misunderstanding of Enumerated Powers spelled out in our Constitution versus the several “Clauses†(the “Commerce Clauseâ€, the “General Welfare Clauseâ€, etc.), and, no Virginia, there is no “Santa Claus†in our Constitution although you could never prove that based on the actions of our Federal Government.
I make no claim to be an expert on our Constitution (although, I have studied it, and the words of our Founders, albeit informally, for decades). However, even as rank an amateur as myself can easily understand that the “Clauses†are statements of intent (“mission statements†if you prefer) while the “Enumerated Powers†are those specific powers delegated by the States to the Federal Government for achieving those statements of intent (or “missionsâ€).
A Possible Solution
All hail the Great and Nobel Dave, for he has, whether by intent or not, suggested a possible solution to the growing chasm in our society. This “suggestion†has been spread over several threads and has revealed itself in bits and pieces but it is no less valuable for that.
Among other things, friend Dave has noted that an increasing number of the sheeple are quite willing to be governed without their direct consent, so long as their governors guarantee them basic subsistence along with a few entertainments.
An idea that is not at all new. About two thousand years ago, Julius Caesar opined that most of the people are easily governed if given only some bread and a circus.
Like many others who consider themselves part of the maker segment of our society (albeit in emeritus status at this point in life), I have always held that being a taker was inherently bad and should not be allowed, only to pound my head against the wall because I had no clue how to convert takers into makers.
After thinking about a number of things friend Dave has written, a light came on. Why not find a way for it to be OK for them to remain takers? After all, did I not just post a rant positing that our productivity rates have risen to the level where we may not even need to have all those takers suddenly start producing things?
So, the solution that is starting to emerge from the fog that passes for rational thought on my part looks something like this:
The Maker / Taker Paradox
In many articles in this blog, we rightly bemoan the fact that we have far too many people in our society who take much while offering little or nothing in return. From most perspectives, this is an appropriate complaint because our liberty, to a very great extent, is little more than an extension of our free-market economy. As we drift toward the bottomless pit called “socialismâ€, this becomes ever more apparent because a top-down planned economy offers freedom only to the planners.
This is important because a free-market economy depends on a free exchange between two willing participants. Such a free-market economy cannot survive in an environment where some of the participants simply take with little or nothing offered in exchange. The obvious reason such an economy cannot survive is that the makers must cease to pump goods and services into the market if they do not receive the exchange of corresponding values that incents / allows them to continue or even increase their production.
So far, so good. But… to what point? Possibly to this point: what if we have reached that point where the combination of science and technology have raised human productivity to a level where we actually need more consumers than producers (that is, more takers than makers)?
(Dear readers, please forgive me if I seem to be supporting a point of view that the Obamanation recently used to try to justify his job-killing policies (ATMs replacing bank tellers) – I assure you I am not intentionally headed for the same conclusion – that being that anti-poverty programs becoming our largest “growth industry†is acceptable.)
What Is Really Wrong With The Arizona & Obamacare Decisions?
I will not rehash the details of the two recent court rulings in question. Surely the media and the blogosphere have given you far more information than you need. My intent is simply to offer an opinion based on a point of view different from most of the analysis and opinion we have been subject to.
Most of that analysis and opinion has centered around the constitutionality of the two sets of laws – in both cases, are they consistent with the words and obvious intent of our Constitution and with the division of powers between the State and Federal governments?
Very powerful arguments can be made for either view, especially if one parses the sets of laws down to their most minute details.
I wish to opine that such details are not really important. That whether or not Arizona or Obamacare are totally in keeping with our Constitution is less important that a greater principle that is being violated in both cases.
The very essence of our Founding Documents and the system of government they spawned derives from a simple but vital notion: THAT WE HAVE A GOVERNMENT THAT GOVERNS BY THE CONSENT OF THE GOVERNED!
Regarding both court cases, a very clear and constant majority of those affected by these cases DO NOT give their consent and they have made this as clear as can possibly be made.
And, as should be clear to all without my saying it, a government that governs AGAINST the will of its people has become a tyranny. Period, no other explanation possible!
Once Again, Wrapped Around The Axle Of Terminology
Once again, I find myself trying to address a situation I have spoken to in past articles. This time is is the problem inherent in trying to have a discussion / argument / exchange on a subject when we have not first agreed to the meaning of the term(s) central to the discussion.
For instance, as I write this, there is an exchange going forth in another thread concerning education. And, it spews forth lacking any attempt to agree on the simple meaning of the word education (and, there are many other examples I might have chosen). We merely assume that our own meaning of a word or term is generally accepted when often it is anything but.
Sticking with the word education for this discussion, let me start by asking what the word means, offering my own definition in the process – a definition that is by no means established as the correct one simply because it comes from me:
Does education mean preparing someone for a task, job or profession? No. To me this is training.
Does education mean pounding certain notions and attitudes into a still-plastic young brain, probably by rote? No. To me this is indoctrination.
Does education mean teaching a person the basic skills of reading, writing, arithmetic and the elementary sciences? Yes but only partly. I would call this basic education.
Does education mean teaching a person the fundamentals of critical reasoning so that they are prepared to live as free individuals? Yes – beyond doubt.
The Failure Is Now Complete
As we all know, the Executive and Legislative branches of our government have been failing us for years, primarily because of their refusal to boldly acknowledge the problems we face and to take the bold actions needed to get us back on track.
Now, with the Arizona and Obamacare equivocations (where there should have been bold decisions), the Judiciary has proven beyond doubt that it too is a failure.
Pandering, equivocating, hiding behind hollow promises and insane predictions that the mess will somehow sort itself out as if by magic, and, worst of all, piling new government programs and regulations on top of old ones as if somehow the cause can become the cure if only the portions are increased enough.
This week the Supreme Court has joined the other two branches of government in suggesting that hard choices can be made with no hard effort to follow. Continuing the insane notion that somehow government can continue to insulate us from any and all of the realities and consequences of life without utterly destroying us in the process.
Can any of us now continue to deny that our government is a decayed, rotten structure? True, it may still sit on a solid foundation (the Founding Documents), but everything above that foundation is near collapse.
This leaves we-the-people (at least that portion of us who still care) with a very serious decision, one that must be made lest the structure of government collapse into a pile of rubble, leaving the tyrants to rule us at their whim.
Fast, Furious and Stupid
The Fast & Furious thing (scandal?, tragedy?, comedy?, soap opera?) just gets curiouser and curiouser. In just the last few days, I have learned:
- Bush started Fast & Furious. Reality: The Bush administration ran a sting called “Wide Receiver†which released guns to the Mexican drug cartels. The difference is that this sting had the cooperation of Mexican authorities, used guns with RF tracking devices implanted and was meant to snare drug runners, not US gun dealers. This program ended in 2007 after the administration found that the drug runners were removing the tracking devices. This was two years before Fast & Furious was begun.
- The Congressional hearings on Fast & Furious are nothing more than a partisan attack on Attorney General Holder, intended to distract him from the important work of preventing voter disenfranchisement. (This from House minority leader Pelosi, well known for spouting stupidity.) Reality: For this nonsense to be believed, one must first believe that Mr. Holder handles all Justice Department business by himself. Then one must accept that requiring a photo ID to vote is meant to disenfranchise any legal voter. Ms. Pelosi and her kind would also have us believe that people who have no problem whatever signing up for disability payments, welfare, food stamps, etc. are somehow totally unable to obtain a government-issued photo ID. If photo identification is so onerous, why aren’t the libs protesting “shopper disenfranchisement†when people are required to show an ID to pass a check, or “traveler disenfranchisement†when people are required to show an ID to board certain forms of transportation?
- Neither Attorney General Holder or President Obama knew anything at all about Fast & Furious prior to the story becoming public. Reality: If this were even remotely true, why the need for (improperly) invoking executive privilege to avoid providing supporting documentation to the Congressional committee? The truth is that before the start of Fast & Furious, both President Obama and Secretary of State Clinton made public statements to the effect that the Mexican drug cartels were obtaining their weapons through illegal gun sales in the USA. When an investigation showed this to be not the case, suddenly we have a program in place that seems tailor-made to, in fact, make these false statements become true. The bottom line is that Fast & Furious was intended to undermine the second amendment’s guarantee of our right to keep and bear arms, just as was secretary Clinton’s recent move to commit the USA to support the UN small arms control treaty.
Focused On The 5%
With this article I return to a topic I have spoken to in the past – the extent to which all Americans have common interests and the extent to which they do not. I was prompted to write this after watching the campaign video below. Please watch and listen…
First, a question… was this not the most blatantly racist thing you have seen lately?
Beside that point, however, is my topic. In my adult life, I have lived in several different states where I have witnessed court-approved (sometimes court-ordered) cases of gerrymandering congressional districts to virtually ensure the election of a black or an Hispanic. No doubt the same thing goes on elsewhere to virtually ensure the election of Jews, Muslims, gays, or whatever. The point is that such actions, and the reasoning behind them (if the word “reason†can be stretched that far without breaking) is that people can only be well represented in the halls of the national legislature by others who are part of the same special interest group. That somehow, the governmental policies that are best for one group are harmful to another.
Extensions To The Jargon
Today, I presume to offer four new extensions to the mumbo-jumbo soup of jargon that was once the English Language.
My first offering is a word that will mean “to make a statement that is too silly to be believed, especially when uttered by someone in a position of authorityâ€. The proposed word is biden as in “come on, you’re just trying to biden meâ€.
My second offering is a word that will mean “to make a statement so utterly stupid that the listener cannot believe was uttered by a supposedly intelligent humanâ€. The proposed word is pelosi as in “now that is a pelosi if I ever heard oneâ€.
My third offering is a word that will mean “to make a statement that means the exact opposite of what the words spoken normally meanâ€. The proposed word is obama as in “you are telling me that up is actually down? I think you are trying to pull an obama on meâ€.
My fourth offering is a word that will mean “a totally uninformed moron who casts a vote in an important electionâ€. The proposed word is voteron as in “those voterons have been obamaed into voting another crook into officeâ€.
Tossing My Hat
Regarding the “Stump Speech†below.
While I agree with much of what candidate Dave has to say in his stump speech, I have nevertheless decided to enter the race on the Libertarian ticket. Of course, I have no idea what district or even what state this virtual congressional seat is in, nevertheless, my hat is now in the ring (and just as well because I NEVER liked wearing hats).
MY QUALIFICATIONS
Apart from good intentions and strongly held principles, I have none. Still, this leaves me much more qualified than most candidates.
MY POSITIONS
Unlike Candidate Dave, I will make you no promise to always cast your vote in accordance with your wishes. I take this position for several reasons:
→ First, rarely will the people of this district communicate to their representative a clear majority position on any issue,
→ Second, your representatives are rarely given the time to give you all the details of an issue, pro and con, and get back your opinions,
→ Third, you-the-people are sometimes mistaken. Not out of malice but out of simple ignorance of the issues.
The Great Dichotomy
Sub-title: How can we have such a brilliant future while having no future at all?
Herein lurks a philosophical dilemma that should vex anyone who tries to apply rational analysis to our collective future.
On the one hand, we have the almost magical explosion of things scientific and technological. For instance, the technology of miniature electronics is advancing at such speed that one can hardly purchase, unpack, and deploy the very latest gadget before it is rendered obsolete.
Medical science and technology are curing diseases, mending broken body parts and extending human life to the point where it seems we may soon be able to live forever (a condition which, if ever realized, would be the beginning of the end of humankind – a topic I may blog on at another time).
Sci-tech advances in food production promise the ability to feed an endless swarm of our own kind.
And so on, and so on. Looked at from a purely sci-tech viewpoint, the future seems so bright we need to wear shades (or whatever that song actually said).
The “Unemployment Rate†and Other Lies
It has long since become obvious that the so-called “unemployment rate†announced by our government is not the least bit accurate. First, it does not count all of the unemployed and second, each cycle the government issues a false report that is, inevitably, followed by a worse (but still false) update.
Yet, the content of this lie can have a major impact on national elections. Why do we put up with this?
I contend that there is actually no truly accurate way to measure unemployment because we are not sure exactly what the word means. Does it apply only to people who don’t have a job but want to have one? What about people who don’t have a job and would not take one were it offered? What about me? I am retired so does that make me unemployed?
So Now It Begins
What we all knew from the beginning seems official now that Dr. Paul has ceased to seek convention delegates. Establishment candidate Mitt Romney has clinched the GOP presidential nomination. Now begins the really hard part. Trying to convince all of you that there is some actual difference between Romney and Obama other than the amount of melanin produced by their skin cells. For my part, I can’t see much difference at all. And, as for the melanin, as we all know, that is no more than skin deep and, thanks to human genome research, we also know that there is absolutely NO genetic difference between the two presumptive candidates. So, it would seem that the only obvious difference is actually no difference at all.
Yet, we will be asked again to believe the patent falsehood that something meaningful (like spending, the size of government or the amount of regulation) will actually be different depending on which of them you elect. (I say YOU because I would not vote for either of them if offered a large sum of money to do so. I am a committed Libertarian and will support Governor Johnson out of principle, irrespective of any realistic chance he has to win the election.)
A Glimpse Into YOUR Future
Lately I have contributed very little to this space, mostly because there is really nothing new to report. However, a recent incident in California is worth the effort because of the graphic view it offers all of us into our own inevitable future.
For months, I have repeated the warning that the various phoney “wars†(on drugs, on terror, on illegal immigration, on firearms, etc.) are actually moving us toward becoming a police state. This, along with the move toward a Marxist dictatorship, which has greatly accelerated under the Obama administration, will have very predictable consequences. Predictable because history is replete with similar examples and they all end the same way.
The incident in question is only one of many such that are occurring with increasing frequency – far more than most of us realize because so few of them are so clearly documented.