Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Fred Thompson

May 6, 2007

There has been a lot in the news about Fred Thompson running for President. He does appear to have some very good points. As regular readers know one of my biggest issues is the taking of civil rights for less than felony convictions. That being based upon the Constitution and what I saw time and time again during my time (more then 20 years ) in EMS. So far he has not officially announced, and, after reading about his so, so record while in the Senate regarding Second Amendment issues I have to say that I will not be voting for him. He also supported McCain’s Incumbent Protection.

Clearly, this is not the man to lead the way.

http://gunowners.org/pres08/thompson2.htm

FRONT SIGHT

May 4, 2007

Front Sight NEWS RELEASE:

 

From: newsletter@frontsight.com [newsletter@frontsight.com]
Sent: 5/1/2007 9:03:39 AM
To:
Subject:

May 1, 2007

From Dr. Ignatius Piazza
Founder and Director
http://www.frontsight.com
info@frontsight.com
1.800.987.7719

Please Forward to Your Local Newspapers, Radio
Stations, and Television News Stations


Utah University Students Add CWP to Their Degrees

Las Vegas, Nevada: Students of Utah universities now have
the opportunity to add the initials CWP (Concealed Weapon
Permit) to their names and receive a level of training with
a handgun that exceeds law enforcement and military
standards all at the expense of Dr. Ignatius Piazza and his
Front Sight Firearms Training Institute.

After hearing that Utah Legislators had lifted the Utah
University ban against students carry concealed weapons on
campus, Dr. Piazza, the Founder and Director of Front Sight
Firearms Training Institute near Las Vegas, Nevada wants
every law-abiding, full-time university student to have the
opportunity to attend Front Sight’s Five Day Armed Citizen
Course and Piazza is willing to pay the $2,500 course
tuition for each student.

When asked why, Piazza stated, “I have always tried to lead
by example so I am personally supporting the wise decision
of the Utah Legislators. If our university students are old
enough to fight for our freedom and die in Iraq with a
machine gun in their hands, then with Front Sight’s
responsible training under their belts, they are certainly
old enough and intelligent enough to carry a concealed
handgun on college campuses to protect themselves,
classmates, and faculty from the next homicidal and suicidal
psych drug failure. I want to give Utah University students
the comfort of skill at arms that will forever protect them
and those around them. This is the least I can do to be a
positive part of the real and immediate solution to stop
random gun violence in our academic institutions.”

Front Sight’s Five Day Armed Citizen Course has been
hailed by private citizens and law enforcement alike as
one of the most comprehensive handgun training courses
in the world and results in graduates walking away
with all the certification, finger prints, photos and
paperwork to successfully apply for concealed weapon
permits in Nevada, Florida, and Utah. Due to reciprocity
laws, securing these three Concealed Carry Permits will
allow a graduate of Front Sight’s Five Day Armed Citizen
Course to legally carry a concealed handgun in over 30
states in the US.

Roland Burk, currently serving and protecting in Utah, is a
man who would know. Says Burk, “As a full time peace
officer, soldier, and combat veteran, I have received a
large amount of firearms training in the last decade. Some
of the best training I have received, has not been provided
through my law enforcement and military training. Instead
it has come at my personal expense, through classes at Front
Sight. I have seen Front Sight take someone who has never
fired a gun before, and turn them into safe, educated,
capable, and proficient, armed citizen. The type of armed
citizen who is then able to save dozens of innocent lives.”
Burk adds, “I believe everyone has the right, and to a
certain extent the duty, to protect themselves and those
around them.”

Having previously served for 16 years as a Department
Director for Utah State University, Scott Bradley who has
also attended courses at Front Sight is delighted and amazed
at the incredible opportunity available for Utah university
students. Scott Bradley states, “As one who has attended
numerous classes at Front Sight, I can attest to the quality
and comprehensive nature of the instruction. In every case,
I have found the courses to be vastly superior to any
instruction I have previously received, including my own
military training experience.” Bradley adds, “The Utah
Legislature has wisely recognized a great truth which has
been well understood for centuries: That the right to defend
one’s self, one’s loved ones, and our fellow man is an
inherent God-given right-a right that must be recognized and
preserved. Dr. Piazza should be commended and recognized for
his generous offer of this excellent and potentially
life-saving training at no cost to university students. I
hope thousands will take advantage of this wonderful
opportunity.”

In order to take advantage of Dr. Ignatius Piazza’s offer
full-time students of Utah universities simply follow these
three easy steps:

1. Go to http://www.frontsight.com and subscribe to Dr. Piazza’s
free 15 Gun Training Reports and when the subscription thank
you page is revealed, order Front Sight’s free brochure and
DVD.

2. Then go to Front Sight’s Course Schedule page and select
your Five Day Armed Citizen Course date.

3. Print out the Application for Training page. Complete
the Application for Training including the Statement of No
Criminal History, Substance Abuse, or Mental Illness. Have
someone, other than a family member, who has known you for
five years, sign the Character Witness Statement. Supply
payment for the Criminal Background Check and attach a
document from your university indicating you are a current
full-time student taking at least 12 Semester Units of
classes.

Mail the documentation in Step 3 to Front Sight at least two
weeks prior to the Five Day Armed Citizen Course you select
and Dr. Piazza will pay for your $2,500 tuition, enroll you
in the course and Front sight will e-mail a Confirmation of
Enrollment letter to you.

Piazza adds, “I sincerely hope we are inundated with
university students from Utah attending our Five Day Armed
Citizen Course. Today’s university students are tomorrow’s
leaders. I want our future leaders to experience first hand
the comfort and confidence that comes having a gun with the
skill to use it to defend yourself, your community, and your
country. Hopefully other states will follow Utah’s lead as
Front Sight stands ready to assist them when they do.”

Senator Bob Beers of Nevada agrees with his peers from Utah
and supports Piazza’s efforts to train university students
to carry a concealed handgun on campus. Says Senator Beers,
“Nevada’s legislative session has just over one month left,
and several Second Amendment bills are still in play. As
well, lawmakers’ sensitivity to our citizens’
responsibilities of self-defense seem heightened. It would
be wonderful if Nevada’s university students could join
Utah’s in keeping campuses safe and secure.”

For more information contact:

Dr. Ignatius Piazza
Founder and Director
Front Sight Firearms Training Institute
http://www.frontsight.com
1.800.987.7719

To Unsubscribe from this newsletter please click:
http://www.frontsight.com/subscribe.asp?Action=R 

Virginia Tech and Neo Comms

April 17, 2007

Once again we are a nation that must face a national tragedy. Once again we are faced with a barrage of unfounded quasi-logic. Our so-called leaders are spouting for more gun control based upon the false claims that generally accompany any crises. Some are claiming already that the defunct Assault Weapons Ban would have stopped the criminal. As if more laws would have any effect whatsoever on a criminal hell bent on destruction. Many cite the Japanese model yet, it too is a paper tiger ( see http://www.davekopel.com/2A/LawRev/Japanese_Gun_Control.htm ).

The utter chaos that happened, and continues to happen in places like Canada, Great Britain, and Australia since the implementation of draconian gun laws provides a template for disaster that we most certainly should not implement. While changes need to be made here in the United States more restrictive laws are patently not the answer.

Pandering by politicians of whatever stripe should be examined closely for logical fallacy and shear idiocy based upon emotion. The Neo Communist’s (Neo Comms for short) will without a doubt decry our freedoms; Without ever noting that more freedom, not less probably could have minimized the tragedy. They will, without a doubt fail to note how a law that would have allowed qualified persons to be armed at Va. Teck was quashed last year. They will, without any doubt deny any culpability whatsoever for preventing the victims of this latest shooting spree and the other incidents that we are all to familiar with from being able to effectively defend themselves and others. Indeed they will overtly deny that by passing the laws that turned our schools into target rich free fire zones they  share guilt for every person harmed in any of these incidents.

Islamic Ignorance

February 18, 2007

Sent: Friday, February 16, 2007 11:13 AM
Subject: Update: The Carnival of Islam in the West

as-salaamu ‘alaikum wa rahmatullah wa barakatuh

That got sent to me. Can you believe it? Not only that but this treasure trove of intel was not sent BCC.

edit

Seems that some people have a problem with their exploits being exposed to the light of day, and that WordPress supports that sort of thing.

Lou Dobbs a deeper view of the man.

December 19, 2006

Lou Dobbs Thinks You’re a Fool

By Angelo Mike

Posted on 12/14/2006
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Lou Dobbs has made himself a crusader for the middle class on his CNN show. He’s just written a book, War on the Middle Class, in which he describes government, corporate, and special interest groups which have unofficially declared war on the middle class and told working people where to go.

I, for one, am totally stunned at his book and his claims. In it, Dobbs manages to say that he supports American individualism, individual rights, capitalism, free markets, and a good work ethic, but that these must be upheld by policies of price and wage controls, corporate taxes, subsidies, government control of education, protectionist tariffs and trade agreements, and mass democracy.

Huh?

It’s hard to know where to begin in the mess of contradictions that begins right on the book jacket itself, which says, “The war is nothing less than an all-out assault on the middle class, waged by a government that has become the instrument of corporate and special interests, by a business culture that is driven by the profit motive above all other considerations….” Dobbs analyzes every aspect of the decline of the middle class and traces each of them back to a dysfunctional government working hand in hand with unfettered capitalism.” (Emphasis added.)

This Marxist delusion — that the state is the great enabler of capitalism — is the dominant theme on his show and in his book. It makes a review like this so difficult because I have to agree with him nominally on many points, disagree with the diagnosis of what causal forces are at work and his antiquated, mercantilist solutions, and then properly explain what forces and institutions should be removed to bring about true capitalism and prosperity.

So I’m bewildered as to where to start with Dobbs. He goes back and forth throughout the book, confusing capitalism with mercantilism, blaming mercantilism for bad policies that he calls capitalism, and blaming free trade for the consequences of protectionist policies … and then there’s his actual understanding of politics itself. I hesitate to say what his understanding of economics is because there isn’t any economics in War on the Middle Class. There’s a lot of talk about how this nation was founded on a principle of economic opportunity, but that’s as close as Dobbs comes.

Dobbs begins:

America has become a society owned by corporations and a political system dominated by corporate and special interests, and directed by elites who are hostile — or at best indifferent — to the interests of working men and women of the middle class and their families.

Corporate America holds dominion over the Republican and Democratic parties through campaign contributions (who else will?), armies of lobbyists that have swamped Washington, and control of political and economic think tanks and media.

I think many of the Mises Institute’s readers, including myself, would largely agree. The way Dobbs states some of this makes him sound like he’s reversing causation of who is truly to blame for bad government policy, but what he says here is very much worth noting, and Austrians and libertarians condemn such interplay of business and government, whether to the detriment or favor of business.

But Dobbs is for the government having all the power he doesn’t want them to abuse. And by abuse, Dobbs means that the government should enact only policies that he supports. Well, the problem is that the political entrepreneurs, those enabled to get to the top, believe the very same thing.

Dobbs complains in his chapter, Class Warfare, about how entrepreneurs and CEOs make way too much. He never explains why these profits are too much, except as a disparity between CEO income and what people like me  make.

In saying that they make too much, he also says that mobility up the economic ladder has declined, while at the same time, CEOs are becoming richer by running their businesses better. But, that this is done at our expense. Somehow. He never explains how they do that. He merely gives statistics on corporate wages, profits, and job cuts, and expects us to join him in his economically repudiated theories of exploitation of the workers.

Little does Dobbs know that the savings and profits of entrepreneurs  are what enable the very existence of wage earners because entrepreneurs give current goods (wages) in the expectations of future goods (profits).

Along the same lines, Dobbs complains that labor unions are ineffective and are threatened with dissolution. Those unions, however, are vested interests who depend on government grants of privilege to be able to extort employers out of hiring non-union workers.

Dobbs does recognize part of this problem (even if he won’t properly diagnose it at the fundamental level) when, in chapter nine, he complains that teacher’s unions insist that teachers be paid based on length of employment and not on merit.

Only one system alone pays based on merit, or more precisely, marginal productivity, and that’s unfettered capitalism, where all property is privately owned, and the  government’s role does not extend beyond the protection of private property.  No government grants of privilege, no subsidies, no price or wage controls, and no tariffs. Employers compete for employees by bidding up wages and other work-related benefits, and employees compete for employers by acquiring skills, educating themselves, and offering  competitive prices for their labor.

This means an inexorable tendency towards paying employees the rate of their marginal revenue product — the returns they provide  their employer for each additional unit of labor provided.

Unions  systematically disrupt this system by demanding privilege with the backing of  police power. They demand from the government the power to forbid employers from hiring non-union workers to do the same work they may refuse to do at a lower rate — or at all if they’re on strike.

Union organizing doesn’t raise wages. All it does is ban from working those marginal workers whose marginal productivity is less than that of the legal minimum. In the case of union regulations, it is banned from those fields in which they work, and those marginal prospective employees now go into other, lesser paying jobs, increasing the supply of labor in those fields they enter, further depressing wages and escalating the demand on government to do something and, in Dobbs’s view, stop ignoring the problem.

Again, when unions abuse this power, in Dobbs’s view, that’s bad. So why give them this monopoly-backed police power to force their will over the objections of anyone they like?

Dobbs also has a further problem with credit card companies and other financial institutions  trying to hold debtors to their claims. For instance, he blames the Bankruptcy and Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 for forcing people to pay their debts without protection of bankruptcy laws. This is particularly egregious because “the leading cause of personal bankruptcy is the medical and health care costs incurred by catastrophic illness.”

This is all true, and I don’t know the substance of the law he talks about. But bankruptcy laws themselves are yet another disordering of capitalism in which debtors are granted government protection against having to pay their debts. It nullifies valid contracts, and all the sympathetic circumstances in the world couldn’t change the fact that it’s just a way of enabling theft from creditors.

But even by Dobbs’s own measure, if unfortunate circumstances make it necessary for the law to discharge contracts and make it artificially more profitable to go into debt, isn’t it important to look at the causal forces at work that determine why health care is so expensive in the first place?  Dobbs does not make a single mention of how the government has induced the cost of medical care to be so high and for the quality to become increasingly more poor.

Take the example of health insurance. In chapter ten, Dobbs complains, “The United States is one of the only industrialized nations that doesn’t provide health care to all its citizens, yet we still spend more on it than any other country. Right now, forty-six million people in this country do not have health insurance….”

I’ll leave it to the readers to figure out how, exactly, it is that we can’t afford health care now, yet once it becomes universal it will be free and affordable.

The problem is that the government makes it perfectly sensible for these forty-six million to not get health insurance. If they do purchase a health insurance policy, the government will force them to subsidize people in unlike classes of risk. And, the government forces us to insure things that are inherently uninsurable because we are either in direct or partial control over them — such as whether we are employed or not. And much of our health is partially or entirely under our control, making a regular check-up uninsurable.

The insurance system has become a system of wealth redistribution. To use Hans-Hermann Hoppe’s illustration of this point, if a firm offered insurance against accidents that cause bodily injury to a professor, and the same policy to NFL football players, would he agree to such a service?

The biggest work-related risk faced by  a writer and desk jockey is his chair collapsing underneath him. If this happened and he needed medical care, his insurance provider, using the premiums pooled from him and other clients, will give compensation to him for his medical costs.

But an NFL player obviously is in a much higher class of risk, and is much more likely to be injured and receive compensation. University professors would likely be paying higher premiums so that compensation could keep being awarded to NFL players, while the professors continue working in a relatively safe profession.

In a free market, NFL players would tend to pool risk as clients of insurance firms with other NFL players, desk jockeys with other desk jockeys, etc. Yet this kind of policy is exactly what the government disallows.

Then there are the costs of paying for doctors and drugs, which are much higher than they would be on a free market, despite whatever conception Dobbs has of such a state of affairs. Some of the special interests that Dobbs never criticizes  are doctors, medical schools, drug companies, and the FDA, which are insulated from any competitor that the government does not approve of and license.

In creating a cartel in health care and drugs, the government artificially restricts the supply, insulating the higher wages of people in these industries from outside competition and innovation, reducing the amount of health care we can get, and the quality of it.

Dobbs doesn’t devote a word of criticism to any of these programs and monopolies. Instead, he uses the problems they create as the pretense for criticizing businesses for cutting medical benefits to employees, when the government makes it more profitable to engage in such a cost-cutting procedure.

Now we turn to a central theme in the Dobbs oeuvre: his claims that the cost of free trade is too high, and that middle-class jobs are being outsourced by greedy companies to other countries while lower and lower paying jobs are being created. In particular, he focuses on jobs in the manufacturing industry, which presumably needs more influence in Washington to lobby on behalf of its special interests.

Hence the futility of Lou Dobbs’s criticisms of our political system for bending to the will of corporations, but at the same time having to ceaselessly regulate and determine whose interests are most sympathetic, and which classes of people deserve special protection.

In a way, Dobbs’s criticisms here are so dull and antiquated that not much needs to be said to refute his protectionist fallacies. In the chapter titled “Exporting America,” he claims  that job outsourcing to other countries is bad, and our manufacturing class of workers are being especially hurt. He cites statistics  we all know are true about the number of jobs outsourced, and hopes that we’re all nationalist enough to want to protect the interests of that class at the expense of everyone else.

Manufacturers, then, are yet another special interest that Dobbs wants the government to bow to, but, by virtue of being selected as instrumental to this country’s well-being, they’re a good special interest. See the pattern?

If jobs can be provided more cheaply in another country, it is in part because the consumers and clients of the firms practicing outsourcing decide that they do not want to foot the bill to see their fellow countrymen have jobs at higher rates than what could be paid in another country. This will never be fixed by a government decree, which can only hinder the desires of the heartless consumers, who only seek their own interest above all else.

Moreover, the loss of jobs from one area or industry to another is, in a free market, symptomatic of the fact that conditions ceaselessly change, and that our desires are unlimited as consumers. We will always want something better and cheaper that can be consumed more directly for our satisfaction. If the manufacturing industry isn’t doing that in a manner in which the consumers approve, this simply means that the labor that manufacturing employees lose will be freed up to enter other, more highly valued and productive markets.

The horse and buggy industry suffered terribly from competition with the automobile industry. Was their interest in making a living not more important than our desire to drive cars? There is nothing unique about the position which horse and buggy employees suffered due to cars, just as there is nothing unique about the loss of manufacturing jobs. These people’s livelihoods are temporarily disrupted (again, assuming a free market where there are not the current prohibitions, regulations, licenses, subsidies, etc., which hinder people from freely entering other professions or working for themselves), but this is always the case for any economy in which the consumers have freedom to decide who serves their desires best.

It was just as true of fabric makers hundreds of years ago who made petitions to stop new looms from making their work more productive, serving the consumers of fabric better, and eliminating from their work force those workers whose marginal productivity did not justify their employment in their current jobs.

It may be objected that the benefits of job protectionism outweigh the costs. But while the supposed benefits of protectionism are clearly seen, the bad consequences are pernicious but unseen. The loss of jobs on a market are plainly visible and painful, but the complex economic phenomena at work are not.

Consequently, protectionist policies give  benefits that are seen but impair the satisfaction of the desires of consumers by depriving them of the goods that could be produced if the newly unemployed were put to work in other industries. It also externalizes the cost of protection onto consumers by forcing them to pay higher prices for a lower supply of goods from the protected industry,  goods that are not necessarily of the same quality as those from foreign competitors. These effects are all unseen.

What Lou Dobbs should read: $14

Lou Dobbs is not a fresh voice of opposition to the government. He does not offer us anything more than  antiquated notions of mercantilist policies of protection, which plunder the many consumers in order to protect his favorite class of people. He supports the very policies of destructionism, economic nationalism, and protectionism that create more and more economic crises, for which the tax payers need to be shaken down again and again to foot the bill and subsidize the pet industries of guys like him.

Dobbs says he is a straight shooter, and while I have no reason to doubt the sincerity of his intentions, the policies he desires are not the sum of  good intentions, but of their own consequences. He does not understand the forces at work in creating the unsatisfactory conditions he often quite correctly notes. He just lists seemingly random, disconnected data, and once he’s done laying out the data in chapter after chapter, the blame typically lands on business, capitalism, and free trade while playing on notions of class warfare and how the well-being of entrepreneurs is opposed to the consumers they have to serve if they want their patronage.

One can imagine such a thing as free-market populism. But populism in the hands of Dobbs has yielded a case for all-around economic regimentation and growing impoverishment, which will not stop the war on the middle class but rather decide it in favor of the state.


Angelo Mike is a public policy student at Marymount University.

Sometimes a deeper look at an individual pays off. Simply watching a show may present quite a different picture than one might suppose.

Government Thievery

October 9, 2006

GOOD NEWS, BAD NEWS, UNBELIEVABLE NEWS

by James W. Harris

Robbery With A Badge

America’s insane drug laws have turned cops into robbers.

Last week Davidson County, North Carolina sheriff’s deputies pulled over a car
traveling on Interstate 85, southwest of Lexington. The officers said the car
was following too closely to another vehicle.

While searching the car, the officers found $88,000 in cash. The driver and
passenger insisted the money was to buy a house in Atlanta.

The officers didn’t believe them. So they called in a drug-sniffing dog.

According to the Davidson County newspaper The Dispatch, the dog “found a
strong odor of narcotics inside the car.”

But no drugs were found. Nor any evidence of wrong-doing. So the two men
weren’t charged with any crime and were free to leave.

But not with their $88,000. The sheriffs kept that.

Incredibly, thanks to federal and state civil asset forfeiture laws, police can
seize property and cash on the mere suspicion that they may be connected with
drugs. The lack of proof of a crime is no protection. The sheriff’s department
called in federal investigators, and they are now preparing to argue in federal
court that the government should be able to keep the money.

If they win — and the government does win the vast majority of asset
forfeiture cases — the local sheriff’s office cut will be 75 percent ($66,000)
of the confiscated money.

Asset forfeiture has been quite lucrative for the Davidson County Sheriff’s
Office: $1.6 million in 2005 and $1.4 million in 2004.

“It allows us to buy equipment without using taxpayers’ money,” said Sheriff
Grice.

Police departments across the country report similar windfalls.

This practice, common for many years, was given a strong boost in August. The
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit ruled that if a motorist is
carrying a large sum of cash, that money is automatically subject to
confiscation. “Possession of a large sum of cash is ‘strong evidence’ of a
connection to drug activity,” the court ruled.

In other words, for all practical purposes, driving with a lot of cash is now a
crime in the United States of America.

(See links below for an article on the Eighth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals
case, and the full text of that court’s ruling.)

(Sources: http://www.the-
dispatch.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060927/NEWS/609270339/1005/news
* Article on Eighth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals case:
http://www.thenewspaper.com/news/12/1296.asp
* Text of U.S. v. $124,700 (U.S. Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit, 8/19/2006):
http://www.thenewspaper.com/rlc/docs/2006/moneyseize.pdf )

Yet another example of why the drug war is a total and complete failure.

Anger and Hurt in Colorado … again

September 27, 2006

By now I am sure that anyone that does not have their head in a hole in the ground knows that again in Colorado, there has been another tragedy at a high school.

Today some pathetic excuse for a human being made his way into  a High School and took six hostages. He released four over a period of hours. Then apparently made threats about a certain time, and consequences. (16:00 hours[PM])

As the time approached this misfit cut off communication. The Police, GOD BLESS THEM, did a dynamic entry. The coward perpetrator popped off a round or two at the good guys, then shot  one of the girls in the head. Killing her. He then turned the weapon on himself, with the same result.

The investigation continues, and an entire state grieves. More to follow, as this is a developing thing.

Dude! Don’t buy a Dell!

July 23, 2006