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Orwellian? Indeed.

“The first thing that must strike any outside observer is that Socialism in its developed form is a theory confined entirely to the middle classes. The typical Socialist is not, as tremulous old ladies imagine, a ferocious-looking working man with greasy overalls and a raucous voice. He is either a youthful snob-Bolshevik who in five years’ time will quite probably have made a wealthy marriage and been converted to Roman Catholicism; or, still more typically, a prim little man with a white-collar job, usually a secret teetotaller and often with vegetarian leanings, with a history of Nonconformity behind him, and, above all, with a social position which he has no intention of forfeiting.

“This last type is surprisingly common in Socialist parties of every shade; it has perhaps been taken over en bloc from the old Liberal Party. In addition to this there is the horrible—the really disquieting—prevalence of cranks wherever Socialists are gathered together. One sometimes gets the impression that the mere words “Socialism” and “Communism” draw towards them with magnetic force every fruit-juice drinker, nudist, sandal-wearer, sex-maniac, Quaker, “Nature Cure” quack, pacifist, and feminist in England.”

— George Orwell, The Road to Wigan Pier

More of this quotation appears in today’s Wall Street Journal at page A17 or at WSJ

His prejudices aside, Orwell’s point is that those who espouse socialism or other utopian schemes, rarely spring from the milieu these schemes are supposed to benefit. Rather, those most likely to become true believers are academics and intellectuals (“middle-class” had, and perhaps still has, a somewhat different meaning in Britain from the in the U.S.) who are most pleasured when they are allowed to act out as nags and busybodies. Know anyone like that?

P.S. Orwell’s religious beliefs are pretty much unknown. Many of his writings suggest he was an atheist or agnostic. He was, however, according to his wishes, buried in an Anglican cemetery according to the rites of the Church of England. Perhaps hedging his bets; perhaps not.

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High School 1957 – 2011

This was sent to me by my good friend and reader Gary C. Thought I’d pass it on with a short comment.
There is a lot of hyperbole in these tales, but they describe essentially the way it has become.

Scenario 1:
Jack goes quail hunting before school and then pulls into the school parking lot with his shotgun in his truck’s gun rack.
1957 – Vice Principal comes over, looks at Jack’s shotgun, goes to his car and gets his shotgun to show Jack.
2011 – School goes into lock down, FBI called, Jack hauled off to jail and never sees his truck or gun again. Counselors called in for traumatized students and teachers.
Scenario 2:
Johnny and Mark get into a fist fight after school.
1957 – Crowd gathers. Mark wins. Johnny and Mark shake hands and end up buddies.
2011 – Police called and SWAT team arrives — they arrest both Johnny and Mark. They are both charged with assault and both expelled even though Johnny started it.
Scenario 3:
Jeffrey will not be still in class, he disrupts other students.
1957 – Jeffrey sent to the Principal’s office and given a good paddling by the Principal. He then returns to class, sits still and does not disrupt class again.
2011 – Jeffrey is given huge doses of Ritalin. He becomes a zombie. He is then tested for ADD. The family gets extra money (SSI) from the government because Jeffrey has a disability.
Scenario 4:
Billy breaks a window in his neighbor’s car and his Dad gives him a whipping with his belt.
1957 – Billy is more careful next time, grows up normal, goes to college and becomes a successful businessman..
2011 – Billy’s dad is arrested for child abuse, Billy is removed to foster care and joins a gang. The state psychologist is told by Billy’s sister that she remembers being abused herself and their dad goes to prison. Billy’s mom has an affair with the psychologist.
Scenario 5:
Mark gets a headache and takes some aspirin to school.
1957 – Mark shares his aspirin with the Principal out on the smoking dock..
2011 – The police are called and Mark is expelled from school for drug violations. His car is then searched for drugs and weapons.
Scenario 6:
Pedro fails high school English.
1957 – Pedro goes to summer school, passes English and goes to college.
2011 – Pedro’s cause is taken up by state. Newspaper articles appear nationally explaining that teaching English as a requirement for graduation is racist. ACLU files class action lawsuit against the state school system and Pedro’s English teacher. English is then banned from core curriculum.. Pedro is given his diploma anyway but ends up mowing lawns for a living because he cannot speak English.
Scenario 7:
Johnny takes apart leftover firecrackers from the Fourth of July, puts them in a model airplane paint bottle and blows up a red ant bed.
1957 – Ants die.
2011 – ATF, Homeland Security and the FBI are all called. Johnny is charged with domestic terrorism. The FBI investigates his parents – and all siblings are removed from their home and all computers are confiscated. Johnny’s dad is placed on a terror watch list and is never allowed to fly again.
Scenario 8:
Johnny falls while running during recess and scrapes his knee. He is found crying by his teacher. Mary hugs him to comfort him.
1957 – In a short time, Johnny feels better and goes on playing.
2011 – Mary is accused of being a sexual predator and loses her job. She faces 3 years in State Prison. Johnny undergoes 5 years of therapy.
The irony of all of this is that with all of the cultural pressure for helicopter parenting and political demands for a nanny-state, we actually live in less desirable world nowadays. Would we want to go back the 1950s? The answer is emphatically – no! But we don’t have to. Let’s just get rid of the nonsense that permeates our society. We can apply what economists call a marginal cost analysis to each of the 2011 scenarios. Does the extra safety, if any, provided by the overreaction to the difficulty depicted justify the cost?
How do we get this started? A while back I read of a mother who lived in one of the New York City boroughs allowing her 11 or 12 year old son go to Manhattan on the subway by himself one day. His journey was rather amazing – it was, in fact, uneventful. When she mentioned her son’s adventure it to some acquaintances, she was severely criticized. I don’t recall if they actually did so, but some even threatened to call the child protective services in New York. The mother told everyone to “get stuffed” or words to that effect. I would nominate that woman for a Presidential medal of freedom. Unfortunately, we’ll have to wait for a new President for that. Regard less of what his real attitude might be, President Obama is in too much trouble with his leftist supporters anyway to be that politically incorrect.

HIGH SCHOOL — 1957 vs. 2011
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Are you a Felon?

Lawyer and professor Harvey Silverglate writes in a book of the same title, that we all commit Three Felonies a Day.  This is because the criminal codes — especially the federal — have criminalized so many acts that it is nearly impossible for anyone to function day to day without running afoul of, on average, at least three that could be felonious.
The Senate Judiciary Committee is considering an amendment to the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act that would make it a felony to “exceed authorized access” to any computer. This law was originally passed in 1986 to deal with the problem of hacking into computers for nefarious purposes such as identity theft, stealing trade secrets, and the like. It has been considerably broadened in recent Congresses.
While the law has laudable intentions, much mischief can be made by overzealous prosecutors and those with less than pure motives. This, and laws like it, are treasure troves for prosecutors to go after political opponents.
As Orin S. Kerr, a former federal prosecutor and professor at George Washington University Law School writes in today’s Wall Street Journal:
“[T]he Justice Department believes that [the Act] applies incredibly broadly to include ‘terms of use’ violations and breaches of workplace computer-use policies.
“Breaching an agreement or ignoring your boss might be bad. But should it be a federal crime just because it involves a computer? If interpreted this way, the law gives computer owners the power to criminalize any computer use they don’t like. Imagine the Democratic Party setting up a public website and announcing that no Republicans can visit. Every Republican who checked out the site could be a criminal for exceeding authorized access.
“If that sounds far-fetched, consider a few recent cases. In 2009, the Justice Department prosecuted a woman for violating the “terms of service” of the social networking site MySpace.com. The woman had been part of a group that set up a MySpace profile using a fake picture. The feds charged her with conspiracy to violate the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. Prosecutors say the woman exceeded authorized access because MySpace required all profile information to be truthful. But people routinely misstate the truth in online profiles, about everything from their age to their name. What happens when each instance is a felony?
“In 2010, the Justice Department charged a defendant with unauthorized access for using a computer to buy tickets from Ticketmaster. Ticketmaster’s website lets anyone visit. But its “terms of use” only permitted non-automated purchases, and the defendant used a computer script to make the purchases.
“In another case, Justice has charged a defendant with violating workplace policies that limited use to legitimate company business. Prosecutors claimed that using the company’s computers for other reasons exceeded authorized access. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals recently agreed.”
For Professor Kerr’s complete essay, see here 
Silverglate’s thesis, as well as Ayn Rand’s observation that the totalitarians’ strategy is to make us all criminals, and then selectively enforce the laws against disfavored persons – “troublemakers” – has been validated.  The felony classification used to apply only to acts which seriously harm an individual or the public and require  direct and palpable and has an intentional, knowing, or reckless state of mind. No more.  While elimination of a culpable mental state for s serious crime might be a violation of due process, the cost to contest an indictment would financially ruin most of us.  Ignorance of the law has traditionally be held to provide no excuse for its violation. That adage, however, came before the time when the federal criminal code (and those of most states) came to rival the content of most libraries. I suppose that means full employment for lawyers, but that does us no good when everyone else is languishing in prison or unemployed because no one wants to run a business for fear they will be next.
Call (or write) your senators and representatives and urge them to vote against this amendment.
Bob Reagan
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A University Degree No Longer Confers Financial Security

The National Center for Policy Analysis (NCPA) summarizes and comments on a recent article in The Economist.  Here’s the link.

A University Degree No Longer Confers Financial Security

Cheers!

Bob Reagan

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Rick Perry’s Ponzi Scheme that Works

I read recently that if we were to load all of the illegal immigrants in the U.S. into Greyhound buses to ship them back to Mexico (although there are many who do not hail from that country), the line would extend from San Diego to the Canadian border. That fact alone tells me that wholesale deportation of illegals is impossible. So what do we do? I have no comprehensive answer, but Texas Governor Rick Perry, now running from the Republican nomination for President, espouses, and has taken action, toward providing the offspring of illegals, who didn’t choose to come here themselves, a means toward an education. In English, no less. For that, many of my conservative friends have jerked their knees and excoriated him. There was a sort of sharkfest in that regard among the GOP debaters on CNN last night, and even more so among certain pundits today.
Now, I have not, and do not, endorse Perry for President, although I admit to fast becoming ABO – anyone but Obama, who is a natural born U.S. citizen, notwithstanding protestations by cranks to the contrary. But he has taken a sensible approach, given that at least the children of illegals born in the USA are here to stay if they wish. In that regard, I offer the following updated version of an essay I wrote a couple of years ago. To wit:

The Economist is a British periodical that has been published each week since 1843. It styles itself as a “newspaper” but its format is what most of us would call a magazine. It also claims to be politically conservative, but that term probably has a somewhat different meaning in Britain that in the United States. Despite its foreign origin, The Economist devotes a good deal of its news and commentary to the rest of the world, especially the United States. I have subscribed to it off and one for parts of the last three decades. The “off” periods occurred when, because of inattention, I failed to renew, or the total amount of reading material I had coming regularly became too much to handle. For the latter reason, it was my intention to allow the current subscription to lapse. But then came the 2009 Christmas season’s “Special Holiday Double Issue” with the cover story “Progress and its Perils” emblazoned across an illustration of naked Adam and Eve (with fig leaves, of course) enthralled by an Apple I-Pod with my friend the Infernal Serpent lurking overhead. Clever as the cover is and as interesting the featured commentary was to read, what really enthralled me was the story inside entitled “A Ponzi Scheme that Works.” This feature describes the multi-national, multi-continental origin of the American people. Its thesis is that the greatest strength of America is that people want to live there, and presents considerable evidence that is quite true.

For those interested the story can be found at this link or in the print version at page 41.


Immigration has been at the forefront of American concern for a long time. I mean a real long time. According to archaeologists and geneticists, as well those in other scientific disciplines, the first human being emerged (you can believe that God created him/her directly, through the process of evolution, or it just happened; it matters not) in or near the Great Rift Valley in eastern Africa, and the species migrated to the rest of the globe from there. I suppose that makes all of us, including those whose biological ancestors were here pre-Columbian, African-Americans, even if in an extremely attenuated sense. Those who were native here before and during European colonization and settlement doubtless were anxious – with good reason it appears – about the arrival of the colonists, but most of the anxiety about immigration in the now United States occurred after independence from Britain.
Immigration populated the United States and the other American countries. The Western Hemisphere was sparsely populated before the arrival of Christopher Columbus and those who followed him. The microbes that the Europeans unsuspectingly brought with them wiped out most of the indigenous population, and those remaining were subjugated (in Latin America), or disbursed and marginalized (in North America).
The main characteristics of immigrants – whether from Europe or the other eastern hemisphere continents – was, and is, their boldness, courage, and adventurousness. They were not “huddled masses” described in that obnoxious poem that some idiot believed was appropriate for the Statue of Liberty. Many have suggested that immigrants who left their homeland migrated because they were not doing well where they were. That is probably true in most cases, but the tone of that suggestion often is that they are and were what some might call “ne’er-do-wells.” That notion is misplaced. The ne’er-do-wells usually stay put and eke out enough to get by, and no more. Those who have gumption and vision, but are repressed by a hidebound society and culture, or a pathological political system, are the people who emigrate. Two such new Americans are featured by The Economist article. One is the perhaps rather well known Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who suffered persecution in her native Somalia, and later in the Netherlands where the pusillanimous Dutch failed to protect her from the barbaric Muslims they have allowed to run amok in their country. The other is the more or less (until recently) obscure Joshua Lee, born in Korea, but who prefers the more relaxed social atmosphere in America and did not come here to escape violent persecution. Like these examples, most immigrants to America have done pretty well, and their descendants have done better. I here include the current Mexican and other Latin American immigrants, legal and illegal. They come here to work, not to collect welfare. And they work hard. As The Economist article points out, it is difficult for an able bodied male to do anything but barely subsist on welfare in America, as they can in Europe. To the extent that illegal immigrants – and their family members who accompany them – are able to sponge off the taxpayers for medical care and other services, that is the fault of our government at all levels. Not being stupid, the immigrants accept the largesse offered to them.
Samuel Huntington, a Harvard political scientist, wrote two influential works before his death in December 2008. The Clash of Civilizations theorized that world conflicts are the result of civilizations of disparate values coming into contact and competing to establish their hegemony and value systems. The most widely disparate are the Western and the Islamic civilizations, and that violence between the two is inevitable. Writing in 1994, he sure got that right. It is almost if he had a crystal ball. In a later work, Who Are We?, alluded to in The Economist article, Huntington questions whether the numerous Latin American immigrants will change the United States into “two peoples, two cultures, and two languages” and eschew “the Anglo-Protestant values that built the American dream.” It is probably too early to tell if Huntington’s fears have merit – similar fears were expressed about Italian, Polish, and other immigrants 100 years ago. In his Clash of Civilizations, he observed that the two aspects of culture that kept people cohesive were religion and language. I have not studied the extent to which it is happening, but have noticed that there are quite a few Protestant churches catering to Mexicans and Mexican-Americans in my city and its environs, and I hardly ever have any contact with anyone who cannot speak English, if only limited. Linguists will tell you that learning a second language as an adult is difficult. As a lawyer, I have a number of clients whose first language is Spanish. They are nearly all self-employed entrepreneurs, and their main problem, like many of their indigenous competitors, is collecting debts for goods and services provided. Like the Economist article’s author, I am not particularly pessimistic about our current immigrants. What really worries me is the sixth plus generation descendants of Mayflower immigrants who are guilt ridden about their inherited means and believe that everyone’s wealth is unearned like theirs. Those are the leftists, the real racists who believe that today’s immigrants from Asia, Africa, and Latin America are incapable of fending for themselves as individuals and must be coddled by a nanny state.
I have heard some radio and television polemicists complain that during the last Presidential campaign, the present First Lady opined that America is a downright mean country. I have never heard or read a direct quote to that effect by Mrs. Obama, but if she so opined, she is correct in many respects. Americans are generous to a fault, and our government has spent much of the blood and treasure of its people trying in vain to export our Republican Democracy. Nevertheless, America does not have a great deal of use for ne’er-do-wells or huddled masses, whether native or foreign born. Not to worry, because, as related earlier, most of those stay put. America needs and welcomes individuals with vision, gumption, and fortitude. The sports adage displayed in numerous locker rooms that when the going gets tough the tough get going is never truer than in this country. The United States won World War II with the help of immigrants, many of whom came, or whose ancestors came, from the enemy countries. The immigrants to this country have provided individuals like that; from John Smith to General John Shalikashvili; from Ann Hutchinson to Ayann Hirsi Ali, and countless others. There will doubtless be many more.
Part of the fear of immigrants is doubtless that they will become Democrats, and provide a new voting bloc for that party. That is a horror to be sure, but let us not give them a reason. It should be the mission of the Republican Party to demonstrate to immigrants why our vision of American is superior, not drive them into the arms of the party of slavery, segregation, and socialism.
One more thing about gumption. When jumped on about his immigration stance by fellow debaters, he didn’t back down. That is not enough to persuade me to vote for him, but it helps.

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Not a Second Amendment Issue

Tomorrow (or if you are reading this tomorrow 9/13/2011, today) at 10:00 am EDT, the House of Representatives Judiciary Committee, Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security will hold a hearing on: H.R. 822, the “National Right-to-Carry Reciprocity Act of 2011” (text linked here). Two law professors and the Philadelphia (Pa.) police commissioner are on the witness list.

I recommend that your read the bill for yourselves, but the general thrust is to require states that have a law whereby a person can obtain a license to carry a concealed handgun to permit residents of other states to carry concealed weapons while in the host state under the same conditions those states prescribe for their permit holders. Most states already have reciprocity, but there are a number of exceptions. One I am familiar with is that Ohio does not recognize Texas licenses – I have no idea why – although it has its own concealed carry licensing scheme. This bill is favored by all Second Amendment rights organizations and there has been a great deal of lobbying for it.

I have some concerns about this legislation. No one is a more staunch supporter of the right to keep and bear arms than I am. Of course, I am for restrictions on minors, persons adjudged mentally incompetent, drug addicts and other substance abusers, persons convicted of violent felonies, and those otherwise proven irresponsible citizens (Texas, for example, will not issue and will revoke concealed handgun licenses for those delinquent on child-support payments, student loan payments, and some other categories). However, I am very much a believer in federalism; that is, the right of the people of different states to use their own judgment as to what is the best way to safeguard and promote the health, safety, and good order of their citizens and guests. If New York wishes impose stricter conditions on those carrying arms than Texas, that should be up to the people there. Also, I believe the proposed legislation is more a feel-good measure than substantive. Persons can ascertain for themselves whether they can carry their arms in another state, and under what conditions, and choose to visit or not visit those places if it is that important to them. I also believe it is a bad precedent for Congress to add more and more words to the already voluminous federal statutes.

There is no question anymore that the right to keep and bear arms is a fundamental right specifically recognized by the Constitution, and cannot be infringed any more than freedom of speech, religion, or trial by jury for those accused of crime can be (District of Columbia v. Heller; McDonald v. City of Chicago). Requiring uniformity among the states with regard to reasonable regulation on the exercise of those rights by statutes, however, is not a good idea. Neither is running to Congress whenever we disagree about what some states are doing.

I personally believe that the Texas concealed carry law should be changed to permit more places where a licensee can carry weapons, but I do not want the Congress to make that decision. That is up to us.

To those who believe I am a “states rights” fanatic, I reject that notion. There is no such thing as states rights, federal rights, or group rights. Rights belong to individual persons – period. Governments at all level have powers, duties, responsibilities, but not rights. If states – or the federal government – infringe on fundamental rights, the Constitutional mechanisms should be invoked to preserve those rights. Otherwise, stay out of the way.

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The Proud Towers fall; America’s Last Summer?

“While from a proud tower in the town,
Death looks gigantically down”
                                                          – Edgar Allan Poe, “The City in the Sea”
These lines from Poe’s poem were quoted by Barbara Tuchman and were the source of the title of her collection of essays about the Western world in the two decades prior to the outbreak of the cataclysmic Great War in 1914. The Proud Tower (Macmillian 1966) sought to portray the principal nations (the United States, Britain, France, and Germany), and movements (Anarchism and Socialism) from the standpoint of those who lived during that time with no inkling that a catastrophic war was on the horizon. To those living during that time, the problems and concerns existed, and were not inconsequential, as her chapter on the Anarchists showed. But they seemed for all intents and purposes surmountable. After all, Europe had enjoyed essentially a century of peace since 1815, punctuated only by a few brief wars on the continent, and brushfire wars in the colonies and elsewhere. The most protracted and destructive was the American Civil War, which did not involve Europe and the rest of the world. That century also saw unprecedented material progress, and quantum leaps in transportation and communication which erased physical distances in ways that no one could have imagined earlier. The prospect that all this progress might be thrown away and destroyed was unimaginable. But it nearly was to be. It surely was for the tens of millions who were to prematurely die.

Fast forward a century to 2001. The trials and tribulations of the 20th Century were matched only by the continuation of the net material progress brought about by continued scientific and technological developments. Unlike the 19th century, it was not peaceful by any standards. It was a time of cataclysmic conflict and terror. The war that started in 1914 arguably lasted, with a few interludes, until 1994 when the last Russian troops left Eastern Europe. The most violent phases, known as the two World Wars, were horrific in the destruction of life and property, and the Cold War phase was certainly psychologically devastating in its constant threat of total nuclear annihilation. And it was not without its costs in blood and treasure, and its setbacks. But in 1989-1991, all that ended. The Soviet Union and its clients capitulated, and the West won – without firing another shot.

The last decade of the 20th Century was as calm on the surface as the first. In almost a blink of the eye, the totalitarian second world was gone except for a few insignificant tinhorns. Everything seemed to be coming up roses; peace and prosperity seem to be in the foreseeable future. But it was not to be without its troubles.

September 11, 2001, for all its immediate horror and loss, will not define the 21st century like August 1914 did the 20th. The decade following has seen two protracted wars and deepening international suspicion – not to mention shocks to the collective psyche of the United States, and, yes, the rest of the West. Currently, an economic downturn has many concerned, but that came seven years after the 9/11 attacks, and its relationship to them is tenuous at best. It will pass, just as the others did (although in my view, improvement in the economic and especially the employment picture will occur faster when the current occupant of the White House loses his job, along with those who rode in with him).

A quarter century ago a President observed that then it was Morning in America. But in a real sense, it always is morning in our nation. Morning brings a new day and new challenges, even when they first appear to be setbacks. Like those earlier mornings of December 7 and April 12, the challenge has been met. America has endured and prevailed. It has and will again.

Historian David Fromkin, titled his analysis of the beginning of the First World War Europe’s Last Summer (Alfred A. Knopf 2004). In that book, Fromkin describes the European summer of 1914 as unusually beautiful and pleasant. I recall that the summer of 2001 was also a nice summer, at least in my part of the country. Early September, especially the morning of the 11th, had beautiful weather nationwide. Regardless of the destruction of our Proud Towers, it is all but certain that no future historian will write that the year 2001 was America’s last summer.

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Cincinnatus, Where Art Thou?

Washington Post opinion writer Ruth Marcus is concerned about political office becoming the only field in which lack of experience is considered a job qualification.  See Those Career Politicians.  She seems to think the “permanent political class” is a good thing.  Marcus even cites James Madison’s observation in Federalist #62 that good government, among other things, requires the “knowledge of the means by which that object can be best attained”  — See here — for the proposition that a government composed entirely of Cincinnati – citizen legislators – would be dangerously ineffective. Of course, that is exactly what our arguably greatest founder was. George Washington only brought the military superpower of its day to its knees and won independence, demonstrated that it is indeed possible to herd cats in his service as president of the Constitutional Convention, and established a functioning government nearly out of whole cloth as first President. Ineffective? Hardly. There are other examples throughout our history who when in and out of public life. Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt were others.

The reason many criticize career politicians is not for their experience in the political arena, or lack thereof in private business, but that they tend to be in public office so long that they lose touch with the real world. They do not have to live in the economic and social climate resulting from the laws they enact or fail to enact. Many Representative and Senators, as well as their counterparts at the state level. try diligently to keep up with the plight of their constituents, but hearing about the problems a private business owner, consumer of goods and services, and ordinary citizen faces every day is not the same as directly experiencing them.  Members of Congress should go back to the private sector and to make a living there after a certain number of terms.

Longevity in office (or in private business) does not necessarily equate with great experience or increase competence.  There is a saying that one might have 20 years experience or one year experience repeated 20 times.  The value of longevity in government is more with learning and who has the pull, where the pressure points are, and how to influence peddle (or to be snarky, where the bodies are buried and which closets the skeletons are in).  And the lucre that lobbyists make tells us something. There is doubtless much subtle blackmail going on in Washington (and in every state capital) sued by the lobbyists to please their clients.

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Neither Liberty nor Safety?

Haviland Smith, a retired CIA station chief who served in eastern and western Europe and the Middle East and as chief of the counterterrorism staff, writes an essay entitled “Ten Years Later” reminiscing the 9/11 al-Qaida attacks and the ensuing ten years. See link here.  He makes a number of interesting points, one of the most salient is the various intrusions on liberty taken in the name of security and safety. “In the aftermath of 9/11, Americans were clearly prepared to and ultimately did surrender their civil liberties and individual rights in the hope that doing so would add to their own physical security. We forgot Benjamin Franklin’s injunction that “they who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.”

Apropos to one of Mr. Smith’s points was an opinion peace in The Economist in early summer 2001 entitled “Free Jenna” referring to the then President Bush’s imbibing daughter. That author was filled with wonderment about why there was such an obsession in the U.S. with a 19 year old women wanting to have an alcoholic drink or two with her meal. He opined that in addition to a lingering Puritanism, Americans have “a pathological obsession with safety.” And “the only way to keep these dangers at bay is to regulate even the most trivial bits of behaviour (sic). Hence the need to replace standard playground equipment with “safer” alternatives, such as one-person see-saws and transparent tubes to crawl through. And where else would photocopier toner come in packets that warn you not to eat the contents? See link 6/7/2001 Of course, suing for an injury that could have been avoided with a modicum of care by the injured person has been an American pastime. Now, after 9/11, flying commercially is a monumental hassle. Color-coded alerts (which make about as much sense as the various “alerts” for missing children named after previous victims), and even making the Super Bowl stadium a virtual armed camp are commonplace. We cannot make a large cash transfer without the government knowing about it, nor can we even check out library books in privacy. Didn’t take long for the Economist essayist to be proven absolutely right.

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Can a Happy Marriage be Gay?

The current social issue du jour is gay marriage.  It shouldn’t be.  Here is a discussion with John Stossel,
Brian Brown of the National Organization for Marriage and David Harsanyi, libertarian columnist at The Blaze. Link here:

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