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April 28, 2006

Milestones

[Updates below.]

Just got a recorded call in Spanish on my cell phone. I couldn't tell you if it was an unsolicited telespam advertisement or just a wrong number, but I heard "marque el número uno" in the message which is common Spanish for "press number one" in phone menus. The phone number was 347-201-4567, an area code located in the Bronx in New York City.

One of my Hispanic co-workers told me some people were running credit card scams in Spanish to try and screw unknowing Spanish-speakers into giving up personal information. I wonder if this was related to that.

UPDATED 5/12/2006 2:51pm
Just got another one from 301-202-8808. Pre-recorded in a male Spanish voice that gave the distinct impression of an unsolicited advertisement of some sort.

April 27, 2006

Unclear on the Concepts

[Updates below.]

Boris Johnson, in The Spectator: They love capitalism, but not elections

It was towards the end of my trip to China that the tall, beautiful communist-party girl turned and asked the killer question.

It's bad enough that the title of this article and its very first sentence - even when their words are defined down to only the most bland, common denominator of meanings - flatly contradict themselves. It's simply infuriating to see it so permeate a piece of writing.

While keeping in mind that the author believes the Chinese "love capitalism" and have successfully bucked the notion that "free-market capitalism and democracy must go hand-in-hand," read these words of his from the rest of the article (copied from here):

I came away with an impression of a gloriously venal capitalist explosion being controlled by an unrepentant Bolshevik system...

The market, otherwise known as the sum of all voluntary trades among legitimate property owners, is under control by Bolsheviks or Bolshevik-wannabes. You know, the people who were primarily responsible for the creation of the Soviet Union and who were led by people like Vladimir Lenin, Vyacheslav Molotov, Joseph Stalin, and Leon Trotsky. All BFF with capitalists, for sure!
..., and - this is the key thing - with the patriotic support of almost all the intelligentsia.

[...]

'But what if you want to get involved in politics,' I asked. 'What do you do?' 'You must join the communist party, and work for the government,' said Lucy, a girl on my left. 'It is a great honour to join the communist party..."

[...]

...let me assure you that I found the same story everywhere...


Widespread intellectual devotion to the system amongst those not in the ruling class. The hints of a society that is, at the very least, generally skeptical of individualistic ideas.
At the end of our session at the journalism college a pale, intense academic came up privately and said of course I was right to say that journalism should root out corruption, 'but we must also care about stability,' he said, and there is the nub.

[...]

It is a clich� worth repeating that the Chinese have a [...] deep unwillingness to be seen to do anything that is extrovert, embarrassing, satirical, flatulent, foolish, irreverent...[t]hey have a different concept of the relation between the individual and society, and a distrust of any kind of seditious argument, let alone satire. It's not so much that they would be shocked by Voltaire. They would be shocked by Aristophanes.

[...]

Wasn't it absurd that the state was blocking access to Wikipedia, the online encyclopaedia, particularly since it seemed to have been written by Maoists anyway? And every time the students responded that it wasn't such a problem, that there were ways round it, I was struck by their apathy, their acquiescence, their un-Tiananmen spirit, their willingness to accept the arguments for 'stability' and the public good...


No, strike that; the open advocacy of collectivistic ideas. Stability is merely a code word for being primarily concerned with keeping the living in a manageable stasis whether they suffocate or just push on with mediocrity. The Public Good is thin shielding from the foggily incoherent demand that some definable majority of a population should usually get what it wants, implying the more fundamental assumption that the more people who agree on something the more valid, moral, and accurate to reality their ideas are.

All of this, of course, embraces the epistemology that the individual is not fit to judge, value, and act wisely, for neither his benefit nor for the benefit of others, and whose "atomistic" and "short-sighted" reason must be authenticated (if not supplanted outright) by the reasoning of other people...really any other people as long as they outnumber him or her and those who agree with him or her.

It is a clich� worth repeating that the Chinese have a colossal, 4,000-year-old respect for authority...

[...]

They want to do it the authoritarian way, the Chinese way, partly because the fear of disorder is so strong...

[...]

In fact, the more people like me insist on rabbiting on about democracy, the more the Chinese must inwardly resolve to vindicate their own specialness and their own solution, complete with prison camps, mass capital punishment, and getting fired if you have more than one baby...

[...]

'But what about Chairman Mao?' I asked. I had been stunned, in Beijing, to find his warty visage still looming over the entrance to the Forbidden City, and to see the crowds of reverential citizens still visiting the mausoleum of a man who, in his 27-year reign, was responsible for the deaths of 70 million people and who therefore, in the evil tyrant stakes, knocks Hitler and Stalin into a cocked hat. Surely it was time to break with the legacy of Mao? This time it was a spiky-haired young lawyer called Harry who dealt gently with my misconceptions. 'Different times produce different heroes,' he said. 'We cannot put ourselves in the position that Mao was in.'

[...]

When I asked the lecturers in journalism to name their professional heroes, they looked utterly bemused, eventually naming Edgar Snow, the American stooge and hagiographer of Mao.

[...]

China will never rule the world as long as the Forbidden City is adorned with the face of the biggest mass murderer in history.


My emphasis.

Not only is there entirely common support for the elevation of the society above the individuals whom comprise it, there is little desire to eradicate from honor one of the very few people on the planet with whom the concept of the tyrannical, ruthlessly brutal head of state is widely personified. People like Mao embody democide.

I often refer to myself as a pessimist. I don't think things are irrevocably ruined for all time and deplore that the best I can hope for is either a clear field of view to witness and comment rudely upon The Collapse of Civilization or a death mercifully soon. I am convinced people can be peacefully persuaded to change their philosophy.

However I was not so much of a pessimist that you could convince me someone considered worth listening to would seriously think a culture that:

  1. rejected independent, private business,
  2. wasn't hostile to the coerced collectivism of state-imposed central planning,
  3. rejected individualism, and
  4. wasn't ashamed of their affinity for a man who gave the orders and threats that directly lead to the murders of so many tens of millions of people for attempting to disagree with him;

is a "free-market capitalist" culture, a culture that "loves capitalism."

No, seriously, you couldn't convince me. It turns out I inaccurately estimated the distance to the dark bottom.

Some people, mostly of unsound mind, would assert #4 does apply to what they say are nations that live with free market or free market-like systems. Think the accusations leveled against the CEOs of gun manufacturers, alcohol companies, the tobacco industry, and oil conglomerates. I trust that at least some of the people reading this can identify the complete inappropriateness of the comparison.

The other three are different. I will claim right here that you won't find a person amenable to reason on this planet who thinks being for government control of private businesses, being at best apathetic about the state's violent economic and social planning, and being against rugged individualism are characteristics of a capitalist! It's almost the direct opposite of that!

People are complaining all the time that capitalists want to be removed from the shackles of the state. People are complaining all the time that businesses want to be regulated less. People are complaining all the time that capitalists are stubborn individualists who reject the legitimate demands of society and only care about themselves.

This is a whole new sensation of wonder for me. I know I operate with a very precise definition of capitalism with which most folks would find fault, but not only do I see people getting that wrong, I see them even getting their criticism totally backwards.

What the fuck is so capitalistic - so free market - about "technically communist" China!? Reader, when you think of China, do you think of a haven for private enterprise? Is modern China on your short list of countries that practice the economics of the Austrian School, let alone Frederic Bastiat, James Buchanan, Milton Friedman, Friedrich von Hayek, Henry Hazlitt, David Ricardo, Jean-Baptiste Say, Adam Smith, Walter Williams, and so on?

Hu Jintao and the Chinese Communist Party are not what I associate with private property, free association, and voluntary trade...and if someone is going to have the presence of mind to describe a culture as free-market capitalist, it ought to be a culture that respects those three institutions. I don't think there is one nation today that substantially respects any two of them.

China's outward signs of capitalism (defined these days as merely the generation of wealth by superficially private for-profit businesses) have conned another. Boris Johnson doesn't know what he's talking about.

UPDATED 5/2/2006 10:03pm
Newsweek International: The New State Capitalists:

Led by China and Russia, state companies are both consolidating control at home and expanding aggressively abroad, in some cases effectively reversing the privatization campaigns first unleashed in the West a quarter century ago.

[...]

Ever since Deng Xiaoping drove China onto the capitalist road back in 1978, foreigners have poured in, assuming the economy would ultimately end up in private hands. But Beijing never declared such intentions, and with each passing year it becomes more apparent that China is not in transition to a privately owned economy. What the leadership refers to as "Socialism with Chinese Characteristics" is a sustainable and competitive hybrid form of state capitalism.

[...]

In China, according to official statistics, purely state-owned enterprises now account for about 17 percent of China's GDP, down from more than 80 percent in 1978. But many analysts say the official statistics overstate the trend, in part by removing all joint ventures from the state sector, even when the state retains control, and by ignoring the domination of many supposedly private firms by former state officials who remain ruling-party members. By some estimates, government-linked companies still account for half of China's GDP and much of its dynamism: all but one of 22 Chinese firms that rank among the world's top 2,000 companies, according to Forbes, have ties to the government.

[...]

China's state sector continues to grow, while the local private sector (not including joint ventures) struggles, says MIT economist Yasheng Huang. Within China, state conglomerates hogged the vast majority of new bank loans given in 2005, for example; of the 1,600 companies listed on the country's domestic stock exchanges today, fewer than 50 are private.


China is not a capitalist society.

UPDATED 7/4/2006 11:15am
Here are some more of those signs of the free market so rampaging through China these days: China Defends Proposed Law to Fine Media:

China defended a proposed law that would fine media reporting on riots and disasters without official approval, saying Monday it wants to encourage responsible journalism - not punish independent reporting.

April 26, 2006

Comments Are Closed

I have been notified by my web host that my Moveable Type comments script is placing too heavy a load on his server. The last two days had me away from my usual routine and unable to be around to stop spam attacks before they snowball into something massive. My web host, a guy I've known for several years and who has extended one hell of a great deal to me during this time, has asked me to find another host because he simply cannot continue to operate his other websites and run my comments at the same time.

And despite my burning hatred of spammers, I still want an open comments system for my blog.

So, to keep my host happy in the short term, I'm closing all comments until further notice. If you wish to contribute something, please e-mail me at:

sarcastomatic

(at)

yahoo (dot) com


I request that you put something obvious in the subject line of your e-mail to differentiate it from the hundreds of crap messages I get every day with deceiving headings like

"hey"

"your site"

"URGENT"

"You gotta read this"


I suggest something like: "Comment for Magnifisyncopathological."

Please indicate that you want me to publish all or part of your comment. Assuming it is relevant and isn't full of shit (yes, for the purposes of my website that's a determination I get to make), I'll edit my post and append your comment to the bottom.

Hopefully, this situation won't last longer than a few weeks. At this point in time I can't really go out and look for a new web host, so I want to keep the one I have now happy. He's been an amazing guy, allowing me to run a website that consumes more than 10 gigabytes of bandwidth a month and 200+ megabytes of storage...for free.

Apologies for the upcoming inconvenience, but it must be done.

A big middle finger to the comment spammers that have (temporarily) screwed things up for my readers and ruined a worry-free deal I had going. You people fucking suck.

April 21, 2006

Attention Attorney General Alberto Gonzales!

Context: Gonzales calls for mandatory Web labeling law
The Bush administration's proposal would require commercial Web sites to place "marks and notices" to be devised by the Federal Trade Commission on each sexually explicit page. The definition of sexually explicit broadly covers depictions of everything from sexual intercourse and masturbation to "sadistic abuse" and close-ups of fully clothed genital regions.
The horrors of coerced pornographic material do not justify telling the rest of us how to operate our websites.

April 20, 2006

Private Border Fences

This is something the Minutemen should have started from the very beginning, rather than aiding the state in ruining the lives of people who cross an arbitrary political line in order to work for a living.

Minuteman border watch leader Chris Simcox has a message for President Bush: Build new security fencing along the border with Mexico or private citizens will.

[...]

"We have had landowners approach," Simcox said in an interview. "We've been working on this idea for a while. We're going to show the federal government how easy it is to build these security fences, how inexpensively they can be built when built by private people and free enterprise."

Simcox said a half-dozen landowners along the Arizona-Mexico border have said they will allow fencing to be placed on their borderlands, and others in California, Texas and New Mexico have agreed to do so as well.

"Certainly, as with everything else, we're only able to cover a small portion of the border," Simcox said. "The state and federal government have bought up most of the land around the border. I suspect that's why we'll never get control of the border."

© 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.


To the extent the land this fencing is built upon is owned by the person building the fence or is owned by someone who wants the fence built, I think this is a legitimate response to border insecurity.

However, if the fence is built without the consent of the land's legitimate owner, then I think it constitutes an invasion at least as bad as a Mexican trespassing on your land without your permission. And no, I don't consider land possessed by the state to be owned legitimately.

Happy 4-20!

Gettin' lots of search engine hits on last year's 4-20 post.

In contrast with that post, I'm not going to explain why all state controls on marijuana ought to be abolished. Also in contrast with last year, my friends and I do have plans, though they're reserved for the weekend.

Until then readers, spark one up for me wherever you are.

April 18, 2006

The 2006 Special Session on Texas Public School Finance

Because the Texas public school finance system was ruled unconstitutional, Rick Perry called the legislature together for a special session (and not for the first time)

To consider legislation that provides for school district property tax relief.

For 2005, Travis County Appraisal District imposed a combined property tax of 0.027423% on my house and land. Of that, 0.01623% was the tax rate for Austin ISD. In other words, more than half of the $2,700 I paid in property taxes for 2005 was for the public school district in which I live.

Yeah, I'd like "relief" from that. I'd like that tax removed entirely, not just temporarily reduced by spending a "state surplus" that doesn't legitimately belong to the state to begin with.

To consider legislation that provides for modification of the franchise tax.
"Dude. We need milk."

"I don't own any cows, man."

"Neither do I."

"Hey! Let's go milk that guy's cows!"

To consider legislation that provides for modification of the motor vehicle sales and use tax.

This proposal isn't getting the attention such a slimy bastard idea deserves. Essentially, the sales tax on used cars won't be imposed upon the actual price, but on the "standard presumptive value," defined as "the average retail value of a motor vehicle as determined by the Texas Department of Transportation, based on a nationally recognized motor vehicle industry reporting service." If what you pay for a used car is more than that "standard presumptive value," then the county tax collector will impose taxes on the sale price. But if the sale price is lower than the "standard presumptive value," then the taxes imposed will be on that price and not what you actually paid.

In other words, if you buy a car that's cheaper than TxDOT's arbitrary calculation based on the Kelly Blue Book value, you'll pay more taxes.

Which means it will make less sense to shop around for cheaper automotive deals when you'll just get hit with a bigger tax bite that might push the price higher than a car sold at or a dollar above TXDOT's price book.

Where did this stupid shit come from?

To consider legislation that provides for modification of the tax on tobacco products.

ATTENTION, SMOKERS! THE STATE FUCKING HATES YOU! HOW DOES IT FEEL TO BE TREATED AS A SOURCE OF REVENUE, RENEWABLE AT THE BARREL OF A GUN?
To consider legislation that provides for an appropriation to the Texas Education Agency.

Those of more socialist persuasions have an idea how to provide more money to schools:
Rep. Eddie Rodriguez, D-Austin, once again has filed a bill that would impose a state income tax on Texans.

Texas is one of the few remaining states that doesn't have an income tax. But many liberal think tanks believe it would solve the state's school funding problems — and many other financial woes.

But a statewide income tax is banned by the constitution and would require a public vote to overrule.

Republican leaders have said it's the only tax option that is off the table.

Copyright 2001-2006 Cox Texas Newspapers, L.P. All rights reserved.


Ah, yes, the idea that just won't die. Eddie Rodriguez's income tax plan, one of the few things that would drive me from Texas and into another state.

The Texas educational trainwreck will continue piling up until most people understand that education should be privatized and removed entirely from government control.

April 17, 2006

China's "outward signs of capitalism"

[Updates below.]

ABC Asia Pacific TV / Radio Australia: China restricts foreign press reports

Tight media restrictions in China are set to become even tougher.

The country's top media body has implemented another wave of regulations in a bid to control political and international news reporting.

The restrictions prohibit domestic television news organisations from using any international news reports not approved and provided by the official state television and radio stations.

Many local stations in major Chinese cities have taken to using reports supplied by foreign news services or satellite broadcasters as media competition and the demand for better news services grow.

Press freedom is an ongoing issue in China.

While the country may exhibit all the outward signs of capitalism, restrictions on --


Oh for fuck's sake. How does glaringly self-contradictory shit like this get printed?

UPDATED 9:20am
Really, it's sickening.

The Guardian: Citizen Ken takes the Chinese by charm

Six days in China seemed to have changed Livingstone from a gaffe-prone City Hall leftie into an advocate of China's new ideology - totalitarian capitalism. In between the grey gravitas of Beijing and the Blade Runner city of Shanghai, he seemed to have found a new authority, a new energy and a new philosophy - central-state-planned capitalism.

The desire to be accurate with one's words seems to slip every day.

And - seriously - read this direct quote from "Red Ken":

'The single most important reason for me coming to China was to get more Chinese companies to list on the London stock market. We want them to choose London and not New York. The Americans have over-reacted to the Enron scandal and foreign executives are frightened of the new rules. We want to tell Chinese businessmen that we will not put you in prison if someone down the management food-chain has forgotten to fill in a form correctly. You are welcome in London.

'China is already the second biggest economy, in real terms, in the world after the USA, and they might overtake the Americans by 2025, so we've got to integrate Chinese people into the economic system, not shut them out like the Americans,' he said.


An outspoken socialist wants Chinese businesses to come to England because it doesn't regulate the stock market as much as the United States.

You cannot reason with people so far beyond it.

UPDATED 4/27/2006 12:35am
People are profoundly unclear on the concept.

UPDATED 7/4/2006 11:15am
Here are some more of those signs of the free market so rampaging through China these days: China Defends Proposed Law to Fine Media:

China defended a proposed law that would fine media reporting on riots and disasters without official approval, saying Monday it wants to encourage responsible journalism - not punish independent reporting.

Is There a Free Market in Corporate Executives?

Seattle Times: Pay and rewards: CEOs out of kilter

The strong point of capitalism is the market. Put out an inferior product and the market will punish you. Work diligently and smartly, and most times you will have plenty of work at good pay.

The market works best when the product is easy to judge, when status, position, power and human feeling don't interfere too much, and when decisions come in small doses. None of these things applies when hiring an executive officer.

[...]

Choosing and compensating a CEO is a difficult task, and far too often in America it is not done well.

Copyright © 2006 The Seattle Times Company


I wonder what the Frank Blethen thinks about this.

April 13, 2006

A Binding Constitution

[Updates below.]

I am all for constitutions which bind future generations and agree with Chesterton's view of tradition as "democracy of the dead."

-Jonah Goldberg

Such a wondrous coincidence that I finished reading Lysander Spooner's No Treason No. IV: The Constitution of No Authority. While I reacted roughly the same as I would have if I hadn't read Spooner's argument, I can say my revulsion at Mr. Goldberg's remarks is deeper.
The Constitution has no inherent authority or obligation. It has no authority or obligation at all, unless as a contract between man and man. And it does not so much as even purport to be a contract between persons now existing. It purports, at most, to be only a contract between persons living eighty years ago*. And it can be supposed to have been a contract then only between persons who had already come to years of discretion, so as to be competent to make reasonable and obligatory contracts. Furthermore, we know, historically, that only a small portion even of the people then existing were consulted on the subject, or asked, or permitted to express either their consent or dissent in any formal manner. Those persons, if any, who did give their consent formally, are all dead now. Most of them have been dead forty, fifty, sixty, or seventy years. And the constitution, so far as it was their contract, died with them. They had no natural power or right to make it obligatory upon their children. It is not only plainly impossible, in the nature of things, that they could bind their posterity, but they did not even attempt to bind them. That is to say, the instrument does not purport to be an agreement between any body but “the people” then existing; nor does it, either expressly or impliedly, assert any right, power, or disposition, on their part, to bind anybody but themselves.
Emphasis in the original. I highly suggest reading the whole thing.

*Spooner wrote this in 1870.

UPDATED 4/17/2006 1:30pm
Richard Nikoley dug around and looked into that revolting "democracy of the dead" quote by Chesterton.

April 12, 2006

All It Takes Is the Right Recommendation

Given the photo here, her bread knowledge, and her general oh-hell-yeah-that-makes-sense-yness (as well as numerous references from my BSP beer geeks)...I've really got to try the Dogfish Head Golden Shower Imperial Pilsner.

Shit. Is 9:30am too early on a working Wednesday to want a big bad pilsner you've never had before?

Canada's Census Tyrants

2006 is a census year in Canada. Every five years the government here spends vast amounts of your money to gather personal information which will be used against you in upcoming purges.
See the London Fog for the details.

April 10, 2006

Carole Keeton Strayhorn is an Idiot

The AP via the Austin-American Statesman: Strayhorn says partisanship must end

Independent Texas gubernatorial candidate Carole Keeton Strayhorn told media executives at an annual conference Saturday that political partisanship in Texas must end, immigration laws should be enforced and educating the state's children should be the priority.

"I shall die a Texas independent," said Strayhorn, the Republican state comptroller, who is trying to get on the November ballot as an independent. "I think that this governor has so politically fractured this state that the only way to get something done is to set aside the partisan politics."


She's an idiot saying the same idiotic things every other idiot politician says.

The City of Hutto Owns You (and Your Paintball and BB Guns)

News8Austin: New ordinance prohibits discharge of certain guns

Firing a pellet or paintball gun within the city limits of Hutto is now illegal.

[...]

The ordinance affects anything that can shoot projectiles, including BB guns and paintball guns. It also states that a fake weapon that might be mistaken for a real gun can't be brandished.

"Paintball guns look like real guns. We have to treat them like they are real until we get there and find out otherwise," Thomas said.


Not shooting someone, not hurting another person...just shooting it in general or "brandishing" it or something that appears like it. You don't have to violate the rights of anyone to be a criminal...but that is news far older than I.
The city council passed the ordinance last month giving the police department the power to charge anyone breaking the new law.

By dictating what you can and cannot do with an object in your possession, the city council is attempted to assert control over your property. In line with nearly every law passed around the world, the state is trying to yoke you to their will.
Hutto's new Police Chief Harold Thomas says it's all about safety.

First and foremost: safety is a concept that refers to the well-being of the individual. Only individuals can be wounded, maimed, killed, and be witnesses to an event. Each individual has a different and shifting hierarchy of tolerance, fear, and experience with injury. Some people (such as a group of my friends and I in Wimberley) have little problem shooting each other with pellet guns while wearing regular clothing and a few extra pieces of protective gear. Others (such as everyone else who was with us), wanted absolutely nothing to do with the pellet gun action. The former accommodated the latter...mostly. But that metacontext is also included in the value hierarchy. If the shooters knew a friend was seriously, fiercely opposed to being shot with a pellet gun, we'd avoid it to maintain our friendships. Several friends in fact gave all pellet gun owners notice they would not tolerate getting shot.

Strangers and unsuspecting bystanders also have different values and probably share the same general human dislike of pain and potential permanent wounding. So we took some precautions before beginning our pellet gun war: we picked a spot hundreds of yards away from known homes and in an area dense with trees and brush. Given the relatively low power of our guns, we didn't expect to fire any strays that would escape our playing field and hit other people. Thankfully, that's what happened to the best of our knowledge and no one was hurt.

Suppose, however, that someone was. To a limited extent it would be possible to determine who fired the injuring pellet:

  • we had a variety of pellet colors;
  • not everyone was firing in the same direction all the time;
  • and the maximum distance of our guns is well within our range of sight, let alone our range of hearing should someone get hit

These are all things we took into consideration as individuals, things we judged according to our reason and environment. The real cruelty imposed by coercive collectivization is the attempt to forcibly substitute someone's reason for your own, to overrule your mind.

Had a wandering child been hit in the eye in this scenario and assuming Wimberley (or whichever municipality or local government rules the area) did not have a Hutto-style prohibition on the use of pellet guns, would the shooter be any less guilty of violating the child's right against the initiation of physical harm? Of course not. That individual would be just as guilty in that case as he (we were all males in this scenario) would be if this happened in Hutto. A person's responsibility cannot be any larger or smaller than the extent of that person's own act and it is absurd to imply, think, or even hope you can increase (or decrease) someone's individual responsibility by government decree.

The shooter has the choice to shirk or accept his responsibility to admit to his act and accept the punishment/restitution his victim or the victim's parents demand. Even if you assume an overwhelming state mandate punishable by dozens of years in jail and tens of thousands of dollars in fines and the immediate fury of the parent of an possibly blinded child...that choice to be honest or to be a liar cannot be made by anyone other than the shooter.

If the shooter cannot be determined, then what? Again, the state cannot make someone responsible because it cannot create reality. Determination is a question of fact-finding and if it becomes impractical or impossible to uncover the truth, it would be unjust to declare everyone in the group responsible. The eye injury was caused by one pellet fired from one gun. While the conditions the lead to the moment of injury could not have been possible without everyone present, the pellet itself could not have impacted on the eye without that one specific person pulling the trigger.

This doesn't mean it would be right or proper to not stop and render aid to the child or to not fess up to playing with pellet guns such that one of the group had to have been the person who fired the shot. It means that unless you can prove an individual is responsible for something, you cannot use retaliatory or retributive force against him. Once you abandon this principle, anything goes.

"Before we'd get complains about paintball guns, BB guns and all we could do was try to talk them into not doing it here and try to steer them away because people were afraid they were going to get their windows broke or someone injured," Thomas said.

Assuming for a moment that the person you are talking to, Mr. Thomas, is not immediately intimidated into obeying you because he knows that police officer are authorize to hurt people at their discretion (a perfectly valid assumption, in my opinion)...

...that's what ought to be done! Unless these shooters are trespassing and therefore violating someone's rights, peaceful conversation with the purpose of changing minds is the proper way to handle this. Furthermore, it really isn't anyone's job but that of the person who is complaining to get out there and explain his or her problem with pellet gun fire nearby. Should the ire of Old Man Willers get raised, it's that guy (or the person he's chosen to act in his name*) who should tell those damn brats that if they keep shooting each other in their backyard, one of their pellets could easily cross into his yard and hit his chained pit bull or his kitchen windows.

*No, I don't consider agents of the state as properly designated representatives. That's a post for another day.

The rule also gives police the right to charge a parent with a misdemeanor and a $500 fine if their child shoots a weapon illegally.

Copyright ©2006TWEAN News Channel of Austin, L.P. d.b.a. News 8 Austin


Adding further absurdity is this; while I'm willing to accept that there is a limit to the liability of a human based on his or her understanding of their actions (translation: some people are too young to be fully responsible for what they do), a blanket penalty for this imposed on all parents of children younger than an arbitrarily-picked age is not just. I'm willing to go out on a limb and say most children who are capable of voluntarily picking up a pellet gun in order to play shoot'em-up with other children who've voluntarily picked up pellet guns are cognizant of their actions enough to merit more than half of the responsibility if they hurt someone.

How to justly restore the victim of a child's action? There is a spectrum of ways agreeable to a variety of individual victims. Some people might just wince with the pain and bear it out, leaving the situation as a pure conceptual learning experience for the child. Some might want to slap the kid immediately afterwards as a delivery of direct responsibility. Some might want to sue to recover medical fees. All of this exposes the essential fallacy of the government's one-size-fits-all approach.

If this kind of local ordinance does anything other than demonstrate that collectivist compulsion is alive and thriving in central Texas, it demonstrates the essential laziness of the people who demanded it be enacted. "It ain't my problem any longer, it's the City's. Slap'em with fines and send in the sheriff!" Talk about shirking responsibility...

The ruling class of Hutto have declared that the people who live there and those who visit or pass through are fundamentally incapable of judging and acting in their best interests. They have asserted their ownership of not only a relatively-speaking trivial set of objects, but the bodies and minds of those who possess them.

Repeated throughout the world on an increasingly regular and common basis, this is taken for granted so deeply that News8Austin didn't even bother asking for a dissenting opinion, a voice of opposition, or even someone who was marginally, minimally concerned about the abolishment of yet another slice of human freedom. Nothing to see here; the new Police Chief Harold Thomas has said his bit and that's all there is to it. You aren't against community safety are you!?

No, you asses, I'm for individual liberty, an institution you've tossed aside in favor of a false and harmful security.

My friends and acquaintances probably wonder sometimes why I can occasionally come off as glum or dejected. This above is a huge reason. It is compounded by the fact that should this regulation be challenged in court, it will almost certainly be challenged upon the very same philosophical grounds it was championed: pragmatism and utilitarianism. The cycle will simply continue.

April 07, 2006

More Photos of the 2006 Lonestar Rod & Kustom Round Up

[Updates below.]

Continuing from last time. The high-resolution shots for either post won't be uploaded until the weekend. It also looks like I'll have plenty left over for a third post, so I'll keep ya updated.

On to the pictures!

Previous custom hotrod pictures posts: Automobophilia and Photos of the 2006 Lonestar Rod & Kustom Round Up. Again, I'll be back later this weekend to add links to higher-quality photos.

UPDATED 4/9/2006 11:56pm
Post updated to include links to large-format pictures.

April 05, 2006

Health Care Slavery...It's For Your Own Good, Massachusetts!

[Updates below.]

The AP via ABCNews: Mass. Lawmakers OK Mandatory Health Bill

Lawmakers have approved a sweeping health care reform package that dramatically expands coverage for the state's uninsured, a bill that backers hope will become a model for the rest of the nation.

Despite everything that's wrong with this "reform package," I wouldn't at all be surprised if other state governments try to force this on us.
The plan would use a combination of financial incentives and penalties to expand access to health care over the next three years and extend coverage to the state's estimated 500,000 uninsured.

This is how the state operates: they offer (stolen) cash to encourage compliance and they threaten the police baton to assail noncompliance.
"It's only fitting that Massachusetts would set forward and produce the most comprehensive, all-encompassing health care reform bill in the country," said House Speaker Salvatore DiMasi, a Democrat.

I've never lived in Massachusetts and if this becomes law there is no way I'll move there. I recommend those remaining rational people living there now to leave. Here's why:
If all goes as planned, poor people will be offered free or heavily subsidized coverage; those who can afford insurance but refuse to get it will face increasing tax penalties until they obtain coverage; and those already insured will see a modest drop in their premiums.

Folks, I want you to pause and think very clearly about the above.

If you can afford to buy health insurance, but decide to forgo it, the state will hit you with heavier and heavier fines until you comply. The state is attempting to substitute their minds and their reason for yours and if you demonstrate your independence of thought and action, you will be governed as the law (PDF) demands. There is no room for individual liberty in this scheme. There is no consideration for private property of either your self or your production. House bill number 4850 defines what the minimum amount of health care coverage for you ought to be and if you disagree, tough shit. There is a religious exemption, but if "Any individual who claimed an exemption but received medical health care during the taxable year for which the return is filed shall be liable for providing or arranging for full payment for the medical health care and be subject to the penalties" laid out elsewhere.

How's that for tolerance of diversity? If your religion says health care is wrong, you can be exempt but if you think it's wrong for people to force others to act against their will, ha, well, that's just the price of modern civilized society. Now get the fuck back in line.

On Tuesday, the House approved the bill on a 154-2 vote and the Senate endorsed it 37-0. A final procedural vote is needed in both chambers of the Democratic-controlled legislature before the bill can head to the desk of Gov. Mitt Romney.

Romney spokesman Eric Fehrnstrom said the governor, a potential Republican candidate for president in 2008, would sign the bill but would make some changes that wouldn't "affect the main purpose."


According to Wikipedia (since the state's website is fucking useless regarding this), the Massachusetts Senate is composed of 34 Democrats and 6 Republicans. Likewise, the Massachusetts House of Representatives is composed of 139 Democrats and 21 Republicans. Both the Governor and Lieutenant Governor are Republicans.

If being Republican meant anything, anything at all, the roll call vote in the House would be 139-21, the vote in Senate would be 34-6, and Romney would be vowing to veto this fucking atrocity. I had trouble with the state's website trying to get the accounting of who voted for, against, and who abstained...but if there is any remaining integrity in the minds of Republicans living in that "commonwealth," they ought to be profoundly disgusted with this near-total capitulation to the collectivistic demands of the jackals pushing this.

"What Massachusetts is doing, who they are covering, how they're crafting it, especially the individual requirement, that's all unique," said Laura Tobler, a health policy analyst for the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Only in the specifics. The general concept is well-worn and has the blood in its sleeves and shoes to prove it.
The measure does not call for new taxes but would require businesses that do not offer insurance to pay a $295 annual fee per employee.

If I had hair to tear out, I'd do it each time someone doesn't call a mandated, required monetary sum demanded by the state a tax. IT IS A TAX, YOU FOOL. And if you think that amount will remain static over time, you are just as much a fool.
The cost was put at $316 million in the first year, and more than a $1 billion by the third year, with much of that money coming from federal reimbursements and existing state spending, officials said.

So the rest of the country gets to foot the bill for the free health care of the poor and the enforcement of penalties against everyone else in Massachusetts. I feel ill.
The bill requires all residents to be insured beginning July 1, 2007, either by purchasing insurance directly or obtaining it through their employer.

If I lived there right now, I'd be getting ready to move before that date. No joke. Some things are just too important to sit back and take.
The plan hinges in part on two key sections: the $295-per-employee business assessment and a so-called "individual mandate," requiring every citizen who can afford it to obtain health insurance or face increasing tax penalties.

This is as clear an example of tyranny "for your own good" as any in the news right now.
Liberals typically support employer mandates, while conservatives generally back individual responsibility.

The latter is total horseshit and twenty volumes of historical voting data and advocacy quotes couldn't contain the examples to back me up.
"The novelty of what's happened in this building is that instead of saying, 'Let's do neither,' leaders are saying, 'Let's do both,'" said John McDonough of Health Care for All. "This will have a ripple effect across the country."

Hey fuckhead, I don't go around threatening you for not engaging in my pet projects. You stay the hell away from me.
The state's poorest single adults making $9,500 or less a year will have access to health coverage with no premiums or deductibles.

Those living at up to 300 percent of the federal poverty level, or about $48,000 for a family of three, will be able to get health coverage on a sliding scale, also with no deductibles.

The vast majority of Massachusetts residents who are already insured could see a modest easing of their premiums.


The aggressive redistribution of wealth continues. There is no right to health care and individuals should pay for their own health. Those who assert otherwise are attempting to enslave you to provide or fund the medical services their preferred class wants.
Individuals deemed able but unwilling to purchase health care could face fines of more than $1,000 a year by the state if they don't get insurance.

Romney pushed vigorously for the individual mandate and called the legislation "something historic, truly landmark, a once-in-a-generation opportunity."


What a cocksucker. I lack the capacity right now to describe how much lower than scum Mitt Romney is.

Republicans aren't worth shit these days (see the debate (!!!) on this at National Review) but this fucker pollutes their name for every second he remains in the party.

John McDonough of Health Care for All called the bill "promising."

"If it can be achieved as outlined, it would be an enormous step forward for Massachusetts," he said.


The jackals might be satisfied now, but they'll grow hungrier again. Arm yourself or perish.
One goal of the bill is to protect $385 million pledged by the federal government over each of the next two years if the state can show it is on a path to reducing its number of uninsured.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has threatened to withhold the money if the state does not have a plan up and running by July 1.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.


Anyone who bitches that the Bush Administration is a radical, arch-conservative, deregulatory government is fucking delusional.

I hope The People of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts get what they want. I hope they get it long and hard.

Jesus Christ...what a shitty thing to read about in the morning. Totally ruined the hours up to lunch.

UPDATED 3:55pm
I made the mistake of reading the New York Times' story.

"This is probably about as close as you can get to universal," said Paul B. Ginsburg, president of the nonpartisan Center for Studying Health System Change in Washington. "It's definitely going to be inspiring to other states about how there was this compromise. They found a way to get to a major expansion of coverage that people could agree on. For a conservative Republican, this is individual responsibility..."

No, it isn't. Individual responsibility in matters of health care does not involve the state telling you to buy at least an arbitrarily-defined quantity of insurance or face escalating tax seizures (with the attendant and unmentioned threat of police violence if you fail to comply) and it does not involve the state essentially giving a free ride to a whole class of people (with wealth coerced from the rest of the community) because a bureaucrat-derived formula says they lack the means to pay for that arbitrarily-defined quantity of insurance. Individual responsibility in the realm of health care means the individual is responsible for making the independent choices that he or she thinks best suits his or her situation...and those choices ought not to be colored by the blood of aggression or the threat to spill it.
Government subsidies to private insurance plans will allow more of the working poor to buy insurance and will expand the number of children who are eligible for free coverage.

Yay, corporate welfare in the form of social welfare. I can't wait to hear the problems this will generate a few years from now given the incentives created.
Businesses with more than 10 workers that do not provide insurance will be assessed up to $295 per employee per year.

And speaking of incentives, small businesses will soon have an incentive to employ no more than 10 people.
The Massachusetts bill creates a sliding scale of affordability ranging from people who can afford insurance outright to those who cannot afford it at all.

No government-created sliding scale can match the sliding scales of real-world individuals with changing (or stable) values, needs, and circumstances.

(page 2)

"Whenever you can have the medical community, the business community and the advocates all applauding our efforts, I think that's indicative of a successful exercise," said State Senator Robert E. Travaglini, the majority leader.

My rule of thumb? If you can convince a broad spectrum of entrenched establishment interests consisting of groups normally opposed to each other to agree on a policy, then something's up.
Mr. Romney, who is considering running for president in 2008, said in an interview Tuesday that the bill, passed by a legislature that is 85 percent Democratic, was "95 percent of what I proposed."

He said, "This is really a landmark for our state because this proves at this stage that we can get health insurance for all our citizens without raising taxes and without a government takeover. The old single-payer canard is gone."


My emphasis.

This thing that talks is either clearly misleading or is clearly insane. No, this isn't a case of outright state socialist central planning health care with one entity providing all to all financed through high tax rates. But it is not a difference in kind, it is a difference in degree.

Mr. Romney pushed the idea of the "individual mandate," requiring people who can afford insurance to buy it.

Man, gawddamn that's just scary. In the context of today, just about anything can be justified using that philosophy. Think about it. Using that justification, the state could try to force you to live a healthier life (quit smoking, exercise more, eat better, drive safer and with less-polluting vehicles, etc.) if you can afford the services and products to do so. I mean, think of how much money we could save through prevention! Stop the expensive problems before they arise to save our system the larger cost down the road!! Think of the social costs conserved for other public things!!! Who could possibly be against efficient government???
Eric Fehrnstrom, the governor's communications director, said that for those people with incomes above 300 percent of poverty, "our assumption was that these would be mostly single mothers who just did not have the wherewithal to get insurance. It turned out it was mostly young males. In some cases they are making very attractive salaries. These are people who just don't imagine themselves needing care, but of course when they break a leg when they're out bungee jumping they go to the hospital and we end up paying for their care anyway."

Well holy fucking shit, if the problem is hospitals sending costs to the state...stop accepting the costs and let the hospitals decide whom to accept and whom to treat. This is one of those "individual responsibility" things, you morons. The state created the problem by socializing that end of the market. The solution isn't more socialization; the solution is a freer market.
One element that Mr. Romney and some legislators did not want was the fee for employers who do not provide health insurance.

That's nice: hold out for big businesses, screw the individual.
Bob Baker, president of the Smaller Business Association of New England, said his members seemed to accept the idea of the fee.

"The notion of the level playing field, I think from an element of fairness and equity, people are O.K. with it, unless it impinges on their ability to pay for it," Mr. Baker said. "There hasn't been a hue and cry among our members."


There ought to be and if I were a member of that association I'd probably quit in vocal protest whether I could afford it or not.
James Roosevelt Jr., president and chief executive of Tufts Health Plan, agreed.

"I think that will help both improve the quality of health care and lower the cost," Mr. Roosevelt said, but he added, "We would have liked more flexibility in the design of health plans to permit lower premiums that are affordable for all people."


Whatever. I expect you have no problem at all with the idea of the state forcing people to get insurance plans...that is your industry, is it not? How openly crass.
Joseph Landais, 64, could use insurance for himself, his wife and three children. Mr. Landais, a retired hospital custodian, said his wife, a nurse's aide, makes too much for the family to be eligible for Medicaid but not enough to afford insurance. He had a hernia operation four months ago that he did not have to pay for under the free-care pool, but he had not been able to see a doctor since then, even though he is still not feeling well.

"After years that you've been working that hard," Mr. Landais said, "I think you deserve something back."

Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company


No, you don't, Sir. Not unless that work was performed under a mutual agreement by your employer to provide that "something" in addition to your wage. It is certainly not the case that strangers owe you anything, let alone "society" in the form of a government.

And by the way, Andrew Sullivan doesn't know a "real market" from a pile of rocks:

The bill mandating universal health insurance in Massachusetts is a fascinating one, and Mitt Romney's support a politically admirable maneuver. There are a few things to say in its favor. First off, it empowers individuals to take control of their own health insurance, rather than putting all the emphasis on employers. One reason we have a healthcare cost crisis is that the genius of American consumers is kept at arm's length in the healthcare universe. If you establish a base minimum of insurance, subsidize individuals who need financial help, and mandate a universal requirement, you then force everyone to pick and choose from a variety of insurance plans in an insurance "exchange". Inevitably, in such an exchange, you're going to have intermediaries trying to sell various policies, market them, and provide clear consumer advice about what's in them. You get a real market, in other words, where consumers can see trade-offs and make sane decisions.

[...]

What's not to like? There are several grand compromises like this one out there on various subjects. This one gives the left universality and the right market mechanisms. Romney deserves praise for pioneering it. And the founders once again deserve our gratitude for constructing a federalist system in which useful experiments like this can occur. And we can learn from them. More, please.


Utterly fucking clueless. And just to point to the final analysis (unintended irony, I'm sure), here is the open paragraph to the Washington Post article to which he points:
The Massachusetts legislature approved a bill Tuesday that would require all residents to purchase health insurance or face legal penalties, which would make this the first state to tackle the problem of incomplete medical coverage by treating patients the same way it does cars.

My emphasis.

Yeah, let's all celebrate how people from Massachusetts are about to be dehumanized another degree, by another decree of the state.

April 04, 2006

Tom DeLay Resigns, Finally

...and not a moment too soon. Listen to this guy's shit:

Since I first asked for your votes for Congress back in 1984, America has moved closer to, not further from, the "shining city on a hill" that he so magnificently described.

[...]

And we've done it all on the enduring strength of our principles and our ideas.

[...]

It has also been an honor to work closely with one of Texas' favorite sons, a president with great moral integrity and leadership, George W. Bush. His Administration has done much to restore the type of principled leadership that President Reagan demonstrated and that first drew me to seek service in our Nation's capitol.

[...]

With that plan in mind, I also intend to relocate to my Virginia property and reside closer to Washington, so that I can dedicate the necessary time and energy to making a successful transition from the public to private sectors for myself and family.

[...]

I have no regrets today, and no doubts.

I am proud of the past. I am at peace with the present.


Get the fuck out of Texas you worm. You belong in D.C. I might have expressed some sympathy for you when you were indicted on campaign finance violations, but you are still a liar and an idiot and don't even think your fraudulent flowery bullshit erases your total disgrace.

April 03, 2006

Photos of the 2006 Lonestar Rod & Kustom Round Up

[Updates below.]

The weather couldn't have been much better for the Lonestar Rod & Kustom Round Up. I haven't the time for a real in-depth review of the day I was there. I'll just say it was totally worth the $10 to get in.

I will be doing a follow-up to this post later this week in order to post more pictures. When that happens, I will come back and edit this post to add vehicle owner credit whenever possible and direct links to higher-resolution versions of these images. Until then, the thumbnails will just have to suffice.


On to the pictures!

Previous custom hotrod pictures post: Automobophilia.

UPDATED 4/7/2006 9:42am
More Photos of the 2006 Lonestar Rod & Kustom Round Up

UPDATED 4/9/2006 11:47pm
Post updated to include links to large-format pictures.

Gut Grumbles

My weekend:

  1. Friday Night, having a few beers and then running around the neighborhood overlooking downtown Austin from the east, taking pictures and drinking Fosters to come back home to have another few beers
  2. Saturday Night, going out with some friends for drinks at Casino el Camino and then hopping over to "the new Ritz" by Emo's for more drinks, coming back home for a round of drunken Pictionary
  3. Sunday Night, sampling crazy stouts, ales, barley wines, IPAs, and lagers for several hours in celebration of the ratification of the Black Star Pub's bylaws

Yeah, I'm not feeling 100% today.

Saturday was also the day my friends and I decided to check out the Lonestar Rod & Kustom Round Up. I maxed out my digital camera's memory card on that one. Pictures to be posted this week.