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"Secrecy
is
the
beginning
of
tyranny."
~
Robert
Heinlein
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Carpe Libertatem Sunday, September 7 |
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Mike Powers is the guest editor today. WANTED: A guest editor for Sundays. If you're interested, please email me. |
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Photograph courtesy of Jonathan Jessup
"Do you want to 'save the world'?' Save our 'country'?' It is very simple. Remove all laws, all permits, all fees, all bureaucrats. Let the love flow, let the love flow. It is not only just that simple, it is ONLY love that can do these things. Let your love flow." Column by NonEntity.
"The other type of politician bringing bloodshed and misery to the world are the true believers. Currently the most powerful of this class of politician are the neoconservatives....[who] want a world based on the teachings of the Hebrew Bible. Sarah Palin...appears to be in this camp." Column by Robert Johnson.
Why
the Scum Rises to the Top in Government Hayek
was right, says Lawrence W. Reed.
No,
it’s not the War in
US
Takes Control of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac American
taxpayers who lost their shorts were unavailable for comment.
Differing
Accounts of US Strike in Afghanistan Heighten Tensions “To
the villagers here, there is no doubt what happened in an American airstrike
on Aug. 22: more than 90 civilians, the majority of them women and children,
were killed.”
Spreading freedom and democracy around the world!
There’s
only ten?
Obama,
McCain Pledge to ‘Preserve’ Social Security Even
though the federal program is already about $13
trillion in debt.
Change we can believe in, eh?
Sounds more like business as usual.
Why
Is It So Hard to Fire a Policeman?
US-Mexico
Culture Roughly Sundered “All
along the 2,000-mile frontier there are signs…that a common border culture
that was helping to integrate northern
When
Storms Batter Islands, Taxpayers Pick Up Tab "The
crazy people are the federal taxpayers who are willing to subsidize that
economy." Crazy, indeed.
What Happens When 78% of Public School Eighth-Graders Fail the State Writing Test? School
officials toss the results.
No
Cash? No Problem, If You Barter But
tread cautiously, since the
Chemicals
in Marijuana May Fight MRSA Too
bad it’s illegal.
"In
Xanadu did Kubla Khan a stately pleasure dome decree...." Based on
a poem by Samuel Taylor Coleridge. By Rush. (Editor's pick)
A photo blog.
In the DVD player: The Last King of Scotland (recommended), Deadwood, Season 2 (highly recommended), The Illusionist (pretty good), Deadwood, Season 1 (highly recommended, similar to "Firefly", with some libertarian themes. Don't miss the fascinating Bonus Material disc, which explains the seemingly gratuitous profanity), Rudy (pretty good), The Bucket List (pretty good), Reno 911: Miami (amusing and raunchy), The War, Disc 2 (recommended), Inside Hurricane Katrina (recommended), Carrier (miniseries, recommended), Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse (recommended if you're an "Apocalypse Now" groupie), The War, Disc 1 (recommended), In the Name of the Father (strongly recommended), Aftermath: The Remnants of War (must see), Iraq For Sale: The War Profiteers (pretty interesting, but could have been better done), The Men Who Killed Kennedy (incredible, must see, especially the last segment), Baghdad ER (must see), Children of Men (highly recommended), Shooter (must see), Why We Fight (strongly recommended), The Lives of Others (strongly recommended), Operation Homecoming: Writing the Wartime Experience (highly recommended), Sophie Scholl: The Final Days (recommended), Ghosts of Abu Ghraib (must see), After Innocence (recommended), Deliver Us From Evil (must see), No End in Sight (must see), The Business of Being Born (must see if you may have a child in the future)
Playing on Pandora or Rhapsody or emusic or in iTunes: "Gazelle" by The Green Pajamas
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Supporters Bob Murphy Matthew Bredeson Glen Allport Polo Leyendecker Donovan Conrad Gretchen Vanek Rex Bell Scott LeGear Jon Davis Matthew Bryan Jeremy Horpedahl Shelley Garcia Bill Ross Old Will Thirteen Anne Berg Jacques Martell Gilberto Heredia Derek Henson Doug Herman Ray Birks Michael White Peter Warren Joe Stamper Donna Mancini Dick Mancini
Guest Editors Anthony Gregory Derek Henson Jeremy Horpedahl Robert Kaercher Chris Lempa William Muller Mike Powers
Helpers Log from Blammo Roger Young Scarmig
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The Root Cellar Recent columns by Root Strikers The
Dark 'Night'...of Hollywood Misinformation Movie recommendations by B.R. Merrick.
"Notes on Democracy is strong medicine for the politically naïve, though it may require more than one reading to keep the malady in remission. It is the perfect tonic for surviving our politicized culture." Column by George F. Smith.
Shaft the Navy, Stiff the Nation, Start a War? "Recall that other US Navy men, your fellow veterans, had to actually resist physical evil--napalm, bombs, and machine gun bullets. Those average guys aboard the USS Liberty. Remember those guys? Most Americans haven’t got a clue, since any reference to that perfidious attack rarely appears in the mainstream US media. But you, John, actually went out of your way to pen a preface to a book absolving good old Israel of attacking the US navy ship." Column by Douglas Herman.
The Imperial U.S.: Its Constitution and the Truth of Its History "
America
was not the revolution; freedom was the revolution and
"Notice that both parties to the fraud are doing nicely. The bankers earn real interest on phantom money, and the Pols get to purchase votes without having visibly to impose taxes to acquire the means. If they want to wage a war, they can do it on the Kill Now, Pay Later principle--for them and their dreams of power, such fiat money is a godsend." Column by Jim Davies.
"So you can feel all self-righteous and claim that 'society' owes you universal health care, or good 'public' transportation, or good retirement benefits or whatever, but what you are really saying is that you deserve to have someone else wait on you--you are the king and everyone else is part of your private serfdom whose lives are forfeit to your own very special one." Column by Nonentity.
I Don't Mind If You Keep Voting, But Do You Mind If I Keep Laughing While You Do? MUST READ "I don’t care who the candidate is. I don’t care what issues to which he seems to gravitate. I don’t care about his record, his leadership qualities, the apparent first-lady-ness of his wife (or her husband), his insider-ness or his outsider-ness, his race, his height, his weight, how well he speaks, how wonderfully he photographs, the nation of his birth, how likely it might be that he’s fun to drink with, or his appreciation for unique uses for a fine cigar." Column by Wilt Alston. (Editor's pick)
MUST READ "Can gold prevent such horrors [the democide of the 20th Century]? No, not entirely, but gold can and does reduce the likelihood of such horrors when used as a nation's money. Gold as money provides a strong limiting factor on the resources available to government, and in so doing, gold saves and improves the lives of millions." Column by Glen Allport. (Editor's pick)
Not to Worry, They're on Our Side Recommended "It’s pointless to look at their campaign platforms. They’re made up of words, and words to a politician are like drops of water on a hot skillet – they sizzle, then they’re gone. We know a priori both candidates are certified, homogenized, lobotomized statists, otherwise they wouldn’t be the two contenders." Column by George F. Smith.
"If you vote, you deserve to get screwed, just on general principle. If you vote, you are responsible for giving credibility to pure evil. Voting is the same as saying, 'Yes dear, I know I caused you to hit me. I promise to be better!'....voting and supporting the idea of government is killing millions of people worldwide and enslaving most of the rest." Column by Nonentity.
The Seen and the Unseen of Drinking-Age Laws "As is so often the case, the alleged benefits of the existing policy come along with a host of unintended consequences...." Column by Dan Coby Shahar.
Notes on Democracy: Mencken Vents His Spleen for His Era and Ours Recommended "Read onward as Mencken’s delightful microscope tears into the presidencies of Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, and Franklin Roosevelt with relish—exposing them and their adoring constituencies for what they are. If Machiavelli took off our blinders and exposed the rancid underbelly of tyrants in The Prince, Mencken did the same for democracy in this gem of a book." Column by Lawrence Ludlow.
MUST READ "When we think of a truly free market...we understand that we do not have to work for years and years, and give up thousands of hours and tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars, to satisfy our wishes. If I want to shop for vegetarian food, say, I do not have to spend years lobbying the local supermarket, or joining some sort of somewhat ineffective advisory board, and pounding lawn signs, and writing letters, and cajoling everyone in the neighborhood – all I have to do is go and buy some vegetarian food...." Column by Stefan Molyneux.
The Loopy Dynamics of Feedback Recommended "In any rational reality there would be some kind of reciprocity between the actions of humans in relations with each other. Somewhere along the line there arose the idea of 'sovereign immunity.' And even though we realized a couple of centuries ago that the idea of 'sovereigns' having power over others is really, really stupid, we still think it is all right for hired thugs to be completely devoid of any responsibility for their actions." Column by Nonentity.
MUST READ "The statist looks at a problem and always sees a gun as the only solution – the force of the state, the brutality of law, violence and punishment. The anarchist – the endless entrepreneur of social organization – always looks at a problem and sees an opportunity for peaceful, innovative, charitable or profitable problem-solving." Column by Stefan Molyneux. Spread this one far and wide.
Scapegoating and the Anti-Immigrant Hysteria MUST READ "...Americans, like most people, would rather not look too closely at their unattractive traits. We like to pretend that we are self-sufficient, honest people. But our desire to rely upon and preserve the welfare state reveals the truth about who we really are. Instead of facing up to the theft and self-deception that surround our support of the welfare state in its various manifestations, we simply project our traits onto people who seem different because they are poor and desperate and have nowhere else to go to make a better life. Furthermore, when we accuse these immigrants of 'breaking our laws' to come here, perhaps we should remember that the kind of laws they are breaking are the kind that were firmly in place in the Soviet Union before it fell – laws against making a profit, earning a good living, and creating one’s own destiny. In other words: laws against freedom." Column by new Root Striker Lawrence Ludlow.
Recommended "So what are the black-clad youngsters so filled with hatred and so prone to destroy? They call themselves anarchists, but they are the embodiment of the statist principle: 'do as I say – or else.' The masked hordes rioting the streets calling for anarchy want power; they want the power to do as they please, and they want the power to separate action from responsibility. They want the freedom to act – without consequence. They demand respect from others in the sense of fear, obedience and subjection rather than appreciation and admiration; they want to be the state and control its powers." Column by Per Bylund.
I'm an Anarchist, and I Don't Hate the Troops Recommended "But sometimes our prized objectivity blinds us to what everyone else has been taught to see. We don't understand that while we have overcome our indoctrination, others see it as a source of meaning and structure, and still others live to defend that – the cops and the soldiers that some hate for defending this system." Column by Marcel Votlucka.
An Open Letter to Voters: Please Don't Recommended "Like the man who bayonets a baby to save a city, when a man votes, he necessarily approves of the means used to obtain his end. The means of attaining any political end in a tax-based government is the coercion of tax dollars from innocents: an act of aggression. Quite simply, if you vote, you de facto support the infliction of violence upon your neighbors...." Column by new Root Striker Geoff Turecek.
MUST READ "I like this analogy because it reveals how voting is an act of submission: When you no longer resist tyranny, but agree to submit to the threat or use of force and do as you are told, when you no longer question the higher authority because you are allowed to choose your supervisor. In the process you condemn your offspring and future generations to be subjects of this authority establishing an institution of tyranny that eventually is accepted unquestioningly, perhaps even celebrated." Column by Mark Davis.
Recommended "Libertarians engaging in a political campaign to have someone elected have from my point of view given up their claim on liberty; they are no longer striving for liberty as number one, but are working to give someone power to liberate them. Is this really a way forward? Is it to love liberty to give it up?" Column by Per Bylund.
Danger Is My Middle Name--And So Is Yours MUST READ "Nothing is completely safe, including eating and breathing. And if nothing is safe, then throwing people in prison for doing something that endangers them is insane, even without considering the dangers of arrest and imprisonment, which are substantial. Using coercion to "save people" from their own choices is a huge, horrifying mistake that can only lead to ever-larger disaster, because the list of dangerous activities includes everything that people might ever do." Column by Glen Allport.
Recommended "Being offered a choice between two violent alternatives is not the same as being free to choose....People can only freely choose governments, if they have the choice not to choose governments." Column by Stefan Molyneux.
A Stato-Libertarian Analysis of Immigration Recommended "Thus the argument for immigration controls calls libertarian theory itself into question! On this one issue, libertarianism does not work. On this one issue, apparently, a libertarian (laissez faire) immigration policy is ultimately bad for liberty!" Column by Wilt Alston and Stefan Molyneux.
Recommended "Without the United States federal government, the Fed would not exist and the money used by Americans would be gold and silver – things which could not be counterfeited constantly to supply 'money' for war, for special interests, and for other groups and purposes opposed to the interests of the average American. Nor would Americans be forced to literally borrow money – money created from thin air – from a privately-owned central bank (as our government does now) and then pay interest on it as part of the national debt. What a scam!" Column by Glen Allport.
Recommended "Have you heard [Rudy Giuliani] talk? I can't endure it for a minute. I thought I hated hearing Shrub mutter. But at least there's a strain of comedy value in the Babbling Bush. He sounds kind of funny, like an evil but goofy clown. There's a chuckle to be had on occasion. Even if it's black comedy. Rudy is just terrifying, not funny at all. His speech is just as incoherent, just as sleazy, just as totalitarian as Bush's. But he comes off as even more disjointed in his thinking with even a more maniacal drive toward fascist rule." Column by Anthony Gregory.
Recommended "What have we bought with all that money? Thousands of dead American soldiers, many thousands more injured, 655,000 (and counting) dead Iraqis, cancer-causing depleted uranium poisoning in Iraq (and DU particles are being spread around the planet on the winds), a ruined Iraqi infrastructure (which had already been wrecked in the first Gulf war and which a decade of sanctions kept in poor repair), millions of Iraqi refugees fleeing the mess we have made of their country, an increased threat of terrorism in America, widespread use of torture by our own government, a sharply lower opinion of America by people in other nations, and (on a separate invoice, for additional money) a police state here at home." Column by Glen Allport.
MUST READ "But what you’re doing, what you’ve been doing for 20 years, is telling people that the Klan can be good if only the right person is in charge. You’re giving people false hope, because the Klan can never be good." Column by Stefan Molyneux.
Recommended "Thus it must be that many children are delivered into the public school system with their independence already undermined, and filled with unease in the face of arbitrary authority. This lesson can only have come from their parents." Column by Stefan Molyneux.
Recommended "There is no part of life too miniscule for a politician to get his nose into if it smells faintly of funding or power, and nothing the whoring masses won’t sell for a shiny new promise." Column by Retta Fontana.
The Earthly Lesson of Jesus' Crucifixion Recommended "No: despite the famous 'washing of hands' by Pontius Pilate, this horrifying, gruesome murder was at least semi-official policy, like so many millions of other murders by empires and democracies and tin-pot dictatorships throughout history. Jesus was murdered by Roman soldiers, and in such a way as to drive the point home to all who saw it, or who even heard rumors about it: We can do this to anyone we want, anytime we choose, and talking about love is as good a reason to kill you as any – especially if others start taking you seriously. We are in charge of your life, and the penalty for forgetting that is death. Fear us and obey, or die." Column by Glen Allport.
Recommended "The apparatus of the state is a machine designed to place an artificial barrier between human beings, thereby enhancing the need for more government. When we refuse to participate in the pretense, the machine stalls. It has no fuel to run on if humans refuse to be grist for its mill. It’s like Toto pulling back the Wizard’s curtain to reveal the frail, ignorant, old guy who doesn’t know how to get home, either." Column by Retta Fontana.
Shut Up About the 'Bill of Rights' and Play the Ace Recommended "Anarchists view rights as ethical truths that transcend states, statesmen, and time, and that exist independent of historical circumstance; and anarchists must present this view unabashedly, clearly, and without equivocation, to critics and would-be converts alike. If we appeal to “Bills of Rights,” it will look like we don’t truly believe in the natural, transcendent status of rights and liberty." Column by Thomas Van Wyk.
E-Passport: Doorway to the Panopticon MUST READ "The logistics of trying to interconnect 189 governments’ databases quickly escalates well beyond the realm of 'nightmare' into some kind of Lovecraftian singularity of technological horror." Column by Scarmig.
MUST READ "Immigrants weren’t in charge when we lost our freedoms. White guys were. Millions of 'illegal immigrants' threaten you somehow? Compared to your neighbor who votes Democrat or Republican and demands his Social Security? Puh-lease!" Column by Stefan Molyneux and (new Root Striker) Wilton Alston.
A Short Guide to Market Anarchy Deconversions Recommended "[Market anarchy] means everyone is allowed to live the way they want, according to their value system. Everyone has different value systems, and all that statism does is impose the ruling class value system over everyone, creating social warfare. In an M.A., there would be no more need for social warfare because everyone would be free to live the way they want." Pamphlet by Andrew Greve, Aaron Kinney, David Pearson and Francois Tremblay.
The Two Great Evils and the Hammer of Infinite Power Recommended
"There is no doubt that the
Hammer of Infinite Power is coming; the leading edge is already here. It smote
Murdering the Group, Saving Individuals MUST READ "It’s the same with immigration, the national debt, welfare, the war on terror and all the other state-driven and media-obscured questions of the day. Obsessed by details, blind to the obvious, we are like swimmers in shark-infested waters worrying about cramps." Column by new Root Striker Stefan Molyneux.
How We Can Get There From Here MUST READ "So the main task to be completed in my opinion is to so educate every member of society one by one as to convince him that a zero government society is the only kind consistent with his human nature and the only one that will maximize his pleasure in life; and that must be done by reason. So the two obstacles to surmount are the vast numbers involved, and the ugly fact that most people have been so well indoctrinated that they are barely open to reason; they live rather by myth, prejudice and superstition." Column by Jim Davies.
MUST READ "How has it come that we no longer see each other as people? How can we reverse this trend? The next time you are asked for identification, consider the ramifications of participating in this system. Who owns you?" Column by NonEntity.
MUST READ "And so it was 'ordained and established'--the wind was sown. Today, we reap the whirlwind." Column by Jim Davies.
MUST READ "The question of who gets to make decisions about the disposition of certain property is central to understanding freedom. Who gets to decide what activities are too dangerous for you? Should I get to decide what activities are too dangerous for you? What about your neighbor? Or the majority? Or the president? Or Congress? Or some judge? In a free society, the owner of the property gets to decide how the property is used. Because you own your body, I assert that you should decide how your body is used or abused." Column by Marc Victor.
MUST READ "There is a certain suspension of disbelief attendant to those social and political theories endorsing endless and boundless murder, theft and fraud (i.e. "statecraft"); one must believe, with the naive faith of a child who believes that world hunger can be eradicated by making a law that everyone can have ice cream for dinner if they want it, that one may kill the goose bearing golden eggs and still have eggs every day for the taking. The iron laws of time, human desire, and economics are in the process of refuting that belief; its defense rings hollow, there are no believable Utopian adherents of this philosophy anymore, only those that make no pretense about wanting to kill millions of people and suck the marrow from their bones for the sake of their own glorification and what they conceive of as a better world, organized by boot heel and rifle butt." Column by Szechuan Death, who sounds like a libertarian Mark Morford.
SpyChips: How Major Corporations and Govt. Plan to Track Your Every Move With RFID MUST READ Chapter 1 of a new book by Katherine Albrecht and Liz McIntyre. You can buy the book by clicking on the link at the end.
MUST
READ "To
define anarchy as statist-government failure is such an obvious distortion of
the concept of a free society that it is hard to decide where to begin to
dismantle such thoughtlessness. I
like to begin by simply pointing out that at least four layers of
statist-government agencies still claim jurisdiction over the area known as
Serene Outlaw: Henry David Thoreau in His Second Century MUST READ "At times, Thoreau thundered at his readers like a Calvinist preacher, rhapsodized like an Indian prophet, stung like a gadfly or chided their sensibilities as a droll friend. The odd collection of essayists who write for Strike The Root, and the thousands of readers who peruse the columns there may hardly reflect on the moralist under whose portrait their work appears, but by striving to write essays on a variety of topics, many of them dedicated to the rights of individuals, they keep his standards alive." Column by Doug Herman.
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