Tag Archives: America

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Singing Through the Sequester, Cory Booker Might Not Sail to Senate, Iain Banks Dying of Cancer: P.M. Links

Hollywood and the presidential
family truly are America’s royalty. The sequestration cuts will not
interfere with an annual
White House concert later this month. Cyndi Lauper, Justin
Timberlake and others are expected to perform. The president is,
though, generously returning
five percent of his salary in solidarity with furloughed
employees, which works out to $20,000.

Cory Booker’s potential coronation into the Senate might be
hampered by his mixed record as mayor of Newark. His political
ambition has caused some to see him as an absentee leader.
After a thumbs up from its House of Representatives, Alabama is
inching closer to legalizing
homebrewed beer, but only in limited amounts for personal
consumption.
A Florida man is facing 25 years in prison minimum for
allegedly
selling his old prescription painkillers to a police
informant.
Some Catholic traditionalists are not happy that
Pope Francis is deflating some of the pomp out of
ceremonies

Elections approach in Zimbabwe in a few months, so now is the
time for President Robert Mugabe’s party to start threatening the
opposition.

Science Fiction writer Iain Banks, author of the “Culture”
series of books, has been diagnosed with late-stage gall bladder
cancer and likely only has months to live.

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Who Framed the Right?

Conservatives are now complaining that they’re losing the fight
over same-sex marriage because the left has done a better job of
framing the issue.
For instance, Rush Limbaugh said last week that conservatives
lost control of the definition of marriage, while the liberal side
“really excels at changing the language to benefit them
politically, and they do it in such a way that a lot of people on
our side have no idea what’s happened until it’s too late and the
issue is already lost.”
Writing in National Review, Mona Charen makes a similar point:
Liberals are winning by framing opponents of same-sex marriage
(SSM) as bigots: “the most potent argument in the SSM quiver is the
race analogy. During oral argument at the Supreme Court, advocates
argued (as they have elsewhere) that impairing the right of
homosexuals to marry is analogous to proscribing interracial
marriage. If that’s true, it’s game, set and match. If SSM is like
interracial marriage, then the only possible motive for opposing it
is bigotry.”
All of a sudden, conservatives are sounding a lot like George
Lakoff—the liberal linguistics professor who gripes about the
über-powerful message machine of the American right.
Conservatives, Lakoff says, “have a huge, very good operation,
and they understand their own moral system… and they understand
how to talk about it, and they are constantly updating their
research on how best to express their ideas.” Those clever little
devils!
But saying the other side wins simply because it frames the
issue better is, in a way, saying it wins because voters are too
stupid and gullible not to realize your own side is right. This
might feel good, but it is a problem—because it allows you to avoid
engaging the arguments other people find so persuasive.
Take the analogy between interracial marriage and gay marriage.
It does not work simply because it has been repeated loudly and
often. It works because it fits. If proponents of SSM went around
claiming the argument against gay marriage sounds just like the
argument for dropping the atom bomb on Hiroshima, we’d all be
scratching our heads. It’s an apples-to-aardvarks comparison.
The racial analogy, however, fits rather neatly—because the
arguments against racial mixing and those against same-sex marriage
sound so similar and work the same way. Both attempt to rebuff a
demand for equal treatment by appealing to the Bible, natural law
and 2,000 years of tradition (see
this article ;for some examples).
Another reason SSM proponents have succeeded in portraying some
opponents as homophobic is that, sorry, some of them really are
homophobic. True, plenty are not: Many SSM foes oppose gay marriage
out of sincere religious conviction, while simultaneously loving
their gay and lesbian neighbors and wishing them well. But some of
those who are not bigoted against gays might be leaving themselves
open to that accusation by virtue of the fact that the nonbigoted
arguments they present are so weak.
Example: A couple of months ago a writer at The Washington Post
wondered how straight people could possibly think gay unions
diminish the value of their own marriages. The Wall Street
Journal’s James Taranto took issue with this, claiming it was “a
straw man. We’ve been following this debate for years, and we’ve
never heard opponents claim that same-sex marriage would diminish
or endanger their own marriages. Their arguments are based on
morality, tradition and worries about the effects on the
institution of marriage…”
Really? The argument, then, seems to be this: While gay marriage
might not ever harm any individual straight marriage, it still
damages the institution of marriage as a whole.
How, exactly, does it do this? Is there is some ontologically
separate entity called Marriage that exists independent of all the
marriages of all the couples in the world? There would have to be,
according to the institution-of-marriage argument. But that makes
no sense. After all, you would not say a virus “threatens humanity”
if, in fact, no individual human person was ever harmed by the
virus. Humanity is simply the sum of the humans in it. Nor could
one reasonably contend “society” was harmed by the introduction
of—oh, let’s say rock music—if nobody ever suffered any harm from
rock ’n’ roll. If individual marriages do not suffer from the
existence of gay marriage, then neither can “the institution of”
marriage.
It’s this sort of foolishness that leads some proponents of
same-sex marriage to question the motives of the other side. If you
continue to defend a proposition with vehemence even when your
rational arguments don’t hold up, then people can be excused for
thinking you have other, less rational reasons for doing so.
This article
originally appeared in the Richmond Times-Dispatch. Read More

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A. Barton Hinkle: Who Framed the Right?

Conservatives are now complaining that they’re
losing the fight over same-sex marriage because the left has done a
better job of framing the issue. All of a sudden, conservatives are
sounding a lot like George Lakoff—the liberal linguistics professor
who gripes about the über-powerful message machine of the American
right.
But saying the other side wins simply because it frames the
issue better is, in a way, saying it wins because voters are too
stupid and gullible not to realize your own side is right. This
might feel good, writes A. Barton Hinkle, but it is a
problem—because it allows you to avoid engaging the arguments other
people find so persuasive. View this article.
Read More

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Peter King: U.S. could preemptively attack North Korea

Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y, says that the U.S. could preemptively launch a strike on North Korea, if provoked. “If we have good reason to believe there’s going to be an attack, I believe we have the right to take preemptive action to protect ourselves,” he said on CNN.”I don’t think we have to wait until Americans are killed or wounded or injured in any way,” King continued. “I’m not saying we should be rushing into war, don’t get me wrong, but if we have solid evidence that North Korea’s going to take action, then I think we have a moral obligation and an absolute right to defend ourselves.”Watch, via The Hill:Continue Reading… Read More

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3D Printing Will Make Gun Control Laws Irrelevant, J.D. Tuccille Tells RT America

Yesterday, RT America ran a
report on the impact of 3D printing on the debate over firearms and
gun control laws. RT’s Marina Portnaya interviewed me for the
report, and I told her
what I’ve written

before: 3D printing has the ability to decentralize
manufacturing to the DIY level and thereby render legal
restrictions irrelevant. If prohibited or restricted items can be
created in the privacy of your home or office, the law doesn’t
matter. We also discussed chemical printing and CNC machines, but
as is often the case, only a brief bit on 3D printing made it into
the report, There’s no embeddable version available, but you can
see
the video here. My contribution begins at the 2:58 mark. Read More

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“Traditional marriage’s” lamest defense

Heritage Foundation fellow Ryan T. Anderson’s defense of one-man-one-woman marriage in the Washington Post argues that Americans should affirm the “traditional” model of marriage for the good of the country. “Marriage is based on the biological fact that reproduction depends on a man and a woman,” he writes, “and on the social reality that children need a mother and a father.”In other words, nature teaches that marriage is about complementarity between genitals, hormones, and gonads. To redefine marriage as something other than responsible parenthood would be to override nature’s law and give in to those selfish desires that undermine the common good.Continue Reading… Read More

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Anarcho-Capitalism: So Crazy, It Just Might Work!

George Mason University economist, and advocate of
anarcho-capitalism, Bryan Caplan explains why details of the
ideological history of human attitudes toward methods and
techniques of government show that ideas that almost everyone
dismisses offhand as nutty and impossible can and in fact have come
to dominate our political culture.
I mean, you think anarcho-capitalism is crazy? Imagine how
people used to react to democracy? ;

Let
Caplan explain:

Imagine advocating democracy a thousand years ago. ; You
sketch your basic idea: “Every few years we’ll have a free
election. ; Anyone who wants power can run for office, every
adult gets a vote, and whoever gets the most votes runs the
government until the next election.” ; How would your
contemporaries react?
They would probably call you “crazy.” ; Why? ; Before
you could even get to the second paragraph in your sales pitch,
they’d interrupt: “Do you ;seriously ;mean to tell
us that if the ruling government loses the election, they’ll
peacefully hand the reins of power over to their rivals?! ;
Yeah, right!”
A thousand years later, the planet is covered with
democracies. ; In most of them, defeated incumbents
consistently make the “crazy” decision to peacefully walk away from
power. ; In long-standing democracies, this pattern is so
familiar we take it for granted. ; But we shouldn’t. ; The
viability of democracy is an amazing fact that begs for an
explanation….

Caplan then points out that in the modern world, a political
leader who told his cronies their response to losing an election
would be to start killin’ would not be obeyed, but condemned as
“crazy.”

The lesson: “Crazy” is relative to expectations. ; A
thousand years ago, everyone was used to despotism. ; No
one ;expected ;a defeated incumbent to voluntarily
hand over power. ; As a result, refusing to hand over power
didn’t seem crazy. ; Since it didn’t seem crazy, incumbents who
refused to hand over power after losing an election probably would
have managed to retain power. ; In modern Sweden, in contrast,
everyone is used to democracy. ; Everyone expects a defeated
incumbent to voluntarily hand over
power. ; ;Refusing ;to hand over power seems
crazy. ; As a result, refusing to hand over power would end not
democracy, but the incumbent’s career.

Now, Caplan says, anarcho-capitalism sounds as nuts as to most
everyone as democracy likely did in those days of yore:

“Do you ;seriously ;mean to tell us that
privatized police companies will peacefully settle disputes,
instead of attacking each other until one firm becomes the new
government?! ; Yeah, right!”
….Suppose however that a stable anarcho-capitalist system
existed. ; Then this logic reverses. ; Since everyone is
used to this system, people ;expectprivate police
firms to amicably resolve disputes. ; In such a setting, a CEO
who advocates a war of conquest would seem crazy – and his pleas to
his co-workers would fall on deaf ears. ; In a stable
anarcho-capitalist society, a war-mongering CEO doesn’t get a
war. ; He gets fired.
Since we’ve never had anarcho-capitalism, this peaceful
equilibrium sounds like wishful thinking. ; But it’s no more
wishful thinking than stable democracy. ; Both systems sound
crazy when first proposed. ; Neither can be stable as long as
people expect them to be unstable. ; But both can be stable
once people expect them to be stable.
You could object: The expectations necessary to sustain
anarcho-capitalism are highly unlikely to ever arrive. ; But
the same was true for democracy a thousand years ago. ; Yet
somehow, expectations radically changed and stable democracy
arrived. ; How did expectations change so dramatically? ;
It’s complicated. ; But can expectations change
dramatically? ; Absolutely.

As someone who was first exposed to anarcho-capitalist ideas 25
years or so ago, has written histories of the libertarian movement
since then, and is quite confident (even without survey data) that
the ideas seem far less crazy to far more people than he could have
imagined then, I think Caplan has a point. (On a far narrower level
of precipitous shifts in cultural attitudes toward “crazy,” I think
the progress of ideas such as gay marriage and marijuana’s use as
medicine or legalization recently are encouraging signs. Things do
change.)
Part of the key to Caplan’s “It’s complicated” is the tireless
work of ideological and economic education pursued by all the
various thinkers and organizations and journalists and advocates
working under the rough rubric of the “libertarian movement,” whose
history was told in my 2007 book
Radicals for Capitalism: A Freewheeling History of the Modern
American Libertarian Movement, and whose most recent
surprising success was told in my book from last year,
Ron Paul’s Revolution: The Man and the Movement He
Inspired. Read More