Thursday, August 25, 2011

Re: Fwd: [New post] Who's Afraid of Ron Paul?

Is it because of Ron Paul's adamant insistence that the "creature from
Jekyll Island," aka as the U.S. Federal Reserve System, be audited?
----
yes
and because he:

doesn't favor a US interventionist policy:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G7d_e9lrcZ8&feature=relmfu
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WUYDt7kC3Z0&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yXYd5eHfRIE&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TXb_7TZRRGo&feature=related

is a conservative
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=54WFoV-veCM&feature=related

defends personal liberty:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A6a9549ZeqQ&feature=related

he doesn't think the USA is responsible for Israel
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yUmfvSr9qP0

On Aug 25, 7:27 am, Bruce Majors <majors.br...@gmail.com> wrote:
> **
>     <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/author/eowyn2/>  Who's Afraid of
> Ron Paul?<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/2011/08/25/whos-afraid-of-ron-...>
> *Eowyn <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/author/eowyn2/>* | August 25,
> 2011 at 5:25 am | Tags: 2012 presidential
> election<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?tag=2012-presidential-election>,
> Barack Obama <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?tag=barack-obama>,
> conservative <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?tag=conservative>,
> Constitutionalist<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?tag=constitutionalist>,
> Federal Reserve<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?tag=federal-reserve>,
> libertarian <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?tag=libertarian>, media
> bias <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?tag=media-bias>, TEA
> Party<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?tag=tea-party>|
> Categories: 2012
> Election <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?cat=4934384>,
> Constitution<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?cat=29050>,
> Culture War <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?cat=20812>,
> Economy<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?cat=17656840>,
> Liberals <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?cat=35711271>,
> Media<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?cat=292>,
> Republican Party <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?cat=56189>,
> Taxes<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?cat=34919470>,
> Tea Party <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?cat=34918731>, United
> States <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?cat=5850>, US
> Presidents<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?cat=51656283>| URL:http://wp.me/pKuKY-8Wd
>
> <http://fellowshipofminds.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/ron-paul.jpg>
>
> Ron Paul <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ron_Paul>, M.D., is a longtime
> Congressman serving the state of Texas. Described as conservative,
> Constitutionalist, and libertarian, Paul has been termed the "intellectual
> godfather" of the Tea Party movement.
>
> He is also one of the Republicans competing to be the GOP presidential
> nominee for 2012. In fact, a recent (August 23) Rasmussen Reports
> poll<http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/elections/ele...>finds
> that Obama and Ron
> Paul<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/public_content/politics/electi...>are
> running almost dead even in a hypothetical 2012 election matchup.
>
> <http://fellowshipofminds.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/media-propaganda...>
>
> This is the media's coverage of Ron Paul compared to other 2012 candidates:
>
> <http://fellowshipofminds.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/chart_builder2.gif>Source:
> Journalism.org<http://www.journalism.org/numbers_report/are_media_ignoring_ron_paul>
>
> Here's the chart presented as number of campaign stories:
>
> Candidate               # of Campaign Stories
>
> Barack Obama                    221
> Mitt Romney                        120
> Newt Gingrich                     112
> Michele Bachmann            108
> Donald Trump                      94
> Sarah Palin                            85
> Tim Pawlenty                        52
> Jon Huntsman                      44
> Rick Perry                               33
> Ron Paul                                 27
> Rick Santorum                      21
> Herman Cain                         11
>
> Tim Pawlenty got more media coverage than Ron Paul? Puleeze!!!!!
> Why is that?
>
> Is it because of Ron Paul's adamant insistence that the "creature from
> Jekyll Island," aka as the U.S. Federal Reserve System, be audited?
>
> Or is it because Ron Paul recently warned that "They're setting up the stage
> for violence in
> America<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/2011/08/24/theyre-setting-up-t...>
> "?
>
> H/t beloved fellow Joseph.
>
> *~Eowyn*
>
> Add a comment to this
> post<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/2011/08/25/whos-afraid-of-ron-...>
>
>   [image: WordPress]
>
> WordPress.com <http://wordpress.com> | Thanks for flying with WordPress!
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> Unsubscribe<http://subscribe.wordpress.com/?key=bc12420384128b0acc5d5cde9e47da77&...>|
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>
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Terrorist Front Group CAIR has its panties in a wad over new 9/11 coloring book that shows (gasp) Muslims as terrorists!




Terrorist Front Group CAIR has its panties in a wad over new 9/11 coloring book that shows (gasp) Muslims as terrorists!

barenakedislam | August 25, 2011 at 1:05 PM | Categories: 9/11 Censored | URL: http://wp.me/peHnV-yLG

With the 10th anniversary of the Islamic terrorist attacks of September 11th quickly approaching, a new children's 'graphic coloring book' about the events of 9/11 has emerged and the Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated CAIR thugs are frothing at the mouth over it. According to the publisher, the book entitled 'We Shall Never Forget 9/11 -- The Kids' [...]

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Team Obama Regulates Goat Herders' Workplaces









One of the readers comments:

BEDROOMS: "Only one goat per person allowed in individual sleeping quarters. To alleviate jealousy and arguments leading to fights, individuals may claim their goat, including gay goats, as their own. Naming your goat is allowed but no goat can be named 'Obaaaaaama.'"


http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=45722

Team Obama Regulates Goat Herders' Workplaces

The Obama administration is setting new workplace regulations to assist foreign workers who fill goat herding positions in the U.S. , including employee-paid cell phones and comfy beds.
 
These new special procedures issued by the Labor Department must be followed by employers who want to hire temporary agricultural foreign workers to perform sheep herding or goat herding activities.  It describes strict rules for sleeping quarters, lighting, food storage, bathing, laundry, cooking and new rules for the counters where food is prepared.
 
"A separate sleeping unit shall be provided for each person, except in a family arrangement," says the rules signed by Jane Oates, assistant secretary for employment and training administration at the Labor Department.
 
"Such a unit shall include a comfortable bed, cot or bunk, with a clean mattress," the rules state.
 
Diane Katz, a research fellow in regulatory policy at The Heritage Foundation, unearthed the policy in the "Federal Register," the massive daily journal of proposed regulations that Washington bureaucrats publish every day.

Under the Obama Administration, the nanny state has imposed 75 new major regulations with annual costs of $38 billion.
 
"This captures what is wrong with government," Katz said.  "I could not have made this up."
 
With unemployment holding steady at 9% and government regulations adding more burden to small businesses, such as those run by ranching families, Katz said, bureaucrats aren't helping.
 
"Instead of remedying the problem, the regulations make it that much harder," Katz insisted.  "We may need a whole set of regulations just to define what a comfortable bed is.  I imagine it's not straw."
 
The new lighting standards say that in areas where it is not feasible to provide electrical service such as tents or mobile trailers, lanterns must be provided.  "Kerosene wick lights meet the definition of lantern," the regulations say.
 
"When workers or their families are permitted or required to cook in their individual unit, a space shall be provided with adequate lighting and ventilation."
 
"Wall surfaces next to all food preparation and cooking areas shall be of nonabsorbent, easy-to-clean material.  Wall surfaces next to cooking areas shall be of fire-resistant material," the regulations say.
 
"It makes you wonder," Katz said, "how they ever did this before the government got involved?"
 
"Who knew we needed all of this federal help for herding goats?" Katz quipped.


 


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**JP** Fw: Reminder: Protest "Stop Killings in Karachi"

 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, August 24, 2011 10:14 PM
Subject: Reminder: Protest "Stop Killings in Karachi"

 

Dear Friends,

 

This is to remind you to join us for the protest against Karachi Killings. You are requested to spread this information as far as possible, and bring as many people as possible to this demonstration. Please note the important information about the Protest Demonstration:

 

Date:                     August 25, 2011

Time:                    03:00 PM

Day:                       Thursday

Venue:                 Mr. Books (Super Market also known as F-6 Markaz).

Plan:                      All the protestors would get together at Mr. Books and  then walk to the National Press Club.

 

Please bring black strips and placards.

 

Looking forward to see you,

 

Safeer Ullah Khan

Coordinator IHI

Advocacy & Comm. Manager

Bedari - working with women and girls for their human rights

House 875, Street 79, Sector I-8/3

Islamabad, Pakistan

www.bedari.org.pk

Phone: Office: +92 51 4862877, +92 51 4862880

Cell: +92 345 5063535

Bedari is a national level humanitarian, women and girls' rights development organization without religious, political or governmental affiliations. Bedari works to eliminate violence against women. Bedari is founding member of AASHA – Alliance against Sexual Harassment at Work Place: www.aasha.org.pk

 

From: Noshaba Arif [mailto:narif@cavish.org]
Sent: Monday, August 22, 2011 12:37 PM
To: Safeer Ullah Khan
Cc: Wasim Wagha; aimalk; Anam Khangep; Arifa Mazhar; Arshad Rizvi SAMAR; Ch Shafiq; dr.r.perveen@gmail.com; Fakhira Power99; Hadia Nusrat; harris.khalique@gmail.com; Hassan Akbargep; Huma Chughtai; Ishaq Hunzai; Khalida Salimi; KishwarSultana Insan Foundation; Mahvesh Khan; Marvi; NazooraAli Wpf; Nilofar Qazi DMA; Rabeel Hashimgep; Rehana Shaikh; Rubina Bhatti; rubinabhatti@thenetwork.org; rukhshanda naz; Samina Ijaz CPDI; Shafiq Chauhdry; ShaziaAzhar Sach; Simi Kamal; Uzma Shahgep; Zbirwani Pnrdp; &#39,Uzma Tahir&#39,; aftab.iqbal@akfp.org; Aliya Mirza; Anis Haroon; Asma Ravji; Basharat Masih; Bilquis Tahira; Farhana Sohail; Farhana Sohail DAMAAN; Ghazala Mihalah; Gulnaz Sheikh Sungi; Hrcp Islamabad; hrcp@dslplus.net.pk; Izhar Ali Hunzai; jenny.euler.bennett@gmail.com; Mazhar Arif Samar; Mehboob Sada; Mukhtar Ahmed Cpdi; Nageen Nomadgallery; Nasreen Azhar; Noor Sungi; Qamar Gep; RaheelHashmi Gep; Rashida Dohad; rukhsana.shama@actionaid.org; Saadia Mumtaz; Saghir Bukhari Unifem; Saliha Ramay; Samar Minallah; Sameena Nazir; sameena Imtiaz WAF; shabanaarif1971@yahoo.com; Shafqat Munir; shakoor@rdpi.org.pk; Sumaira Poda; Tasneem Ahmar; Zahid Cpdi; Insani Huqooq Ittehad (IHI); mangi aumir; Arslan Barijo; Aniqa Raza
Subject: Re: IHI Meeting on Karachi Situation

 

Safeer this is to confirm you that  I and Arslan will attend IHI meeting.

 

Noshaba

On Mon, Aug 22, 2011 at 10:34 AM, Safeer Ullah Khan <safeer@bedari.org.pk> wrote:

Dear IHI Friends,

 

As we had arranged a demonstration on a very short notice on Friday, very few people could join us. However, it was decided on Friday that we would call a meeting of IHI members to chalk out a future plan of action. We invite you all to join us for a meeting on Karachi's Situation at 2 PM on Tuesday, August 23, 2011. We would have a one point agenda – Karachi. Please note that the Bedari office has moved and the current address of Bedari office is:

House No 875, Street No 79, I-8/3, Islamabad.

 

Please send us your confirmations.

 

Note:

Some of IHI members have complained that they did not receive emails regarding protest on last Friday.  I would like to bring it to everyone's attention that we tried to resolve this problem by creating a group on Google Groups. Through this group, you do not need to know the email addresses of all the members to reach out to them. You just need to send an email to one email address and it would reach all the members. The one email address is given below:

 

ihi-pakistan@googlegroups.com

 

We already have over 60 members listed in this group, and more people can be added to this list.

 

Thank You

Safeer Ullah Khan

Advocacy & Comm. Manager

Bedari - working with women and girls for their human rights

House 875, Street 79, Sector I-8/3

Islamabad, Pakistan

www.bedari.org.pk

Phone: Office: +92 51 4862877, +92 51 4862880

Cell: +92 345 5063535

Bedari is a national level humanitarian, women and girls' rights development organization without religious, political or governmental affiliations. Bedari works to eliminate violence against women. Bedari is founding member of AASHA – Alliance against Sexual Harassment at Work Place: www.aasha.org.pk

 

From: Wasim Wagha [mailto:wasim_wagha@yahoo.com]
Sent: Friday, August 19, 2011 11:52 AM
To: aimalk; Anam Khangep; Arifa Mazhar; Arshad Rizvi SAMAR; Ch Shafiq; dr.r.perveen@gmail.com; Fakhira Power99; Hadia Nusrat; harris.khalique@gmail.com; Hassan Akbargep; Huma Chughtai; Ishaq Hunzai; Khalida Salimi; KishwarSultana Insan Foundation; Mahvesh Khan; Marvi; NazooraAli Wpf; Nilofar Qazi DMA; Noshaba Arif; Noshaba Arif; Rabeel Hashimgep; Rehana Shaikh; Rubina Bhatti; rubinabhatti@thenetwork.org; rukhshanda naz; Safeer Ullah Khan; Samina Ijaz CPDI; Shafiq Chauhdry; ShaziaAzhar Sach; Simi Kamal; Uzma Shahgep; Wasim Wagha; Zbirwani Pnrdp; 'Uzma Tahir'; aftab.iqbal@akfp.org; Aliya Mirza; Anis Haroon; Asma Ravji; Basharat Masih; Bilquis Tahira; Farhana Sohail; Farhana Sohail DAMAAN; Ghazala Mihalah; Gulnaz Sheikh Sungi; Hrcp Islamabad; hrcp@dslplus.net.pk; Izhar Ali Hunzai; jenny.euler.bennett@gmail.com; Mazhar Arif Samar; Mehboob Sada; Mukhtar Ahmed Cpdi; Nageen Nomadgallery; Nasreen Azhar; Noor Sungi; Qamar Gep; RaheelHashmi Gep; Rashida Dohad; rukhsana.shama@actionaid.org; Saadia Mumtaz; Saghir Bukhari Unifem; Saliha Ramay; Samar Minallah; Sameena Nazir; sameena Imtiaz WAF; shabanaarif1971@yahoo.com; Shafqat Munir; shakoor@rdpi.org.pk; Sumaira Poda; Tasneem Ahmar; Zahid Cpdi
Subject: Demonstration against killing in Karachi

 

Dear IHI members

 

It is a long time we all are going through violence.  There come times when we all need to stand up and say 'ENOUGH is ENOUGH'.

 

The situation in Karachi to is one which need our quick response and need all of us to become composed, integrate and stand up and say 'STOP killin in Karachi'.

 

I propose that we all shall come out, join together outside the National Press at 4 pm and demonstrate our concer.

 

I request all friends to come with placards and banners.

 

Wasim Wagha

member IHI

Aurat Foundation

 



 

--
Noshaba Arif
Project Officer
Cavish Development Foundation
House No. 50, Street 23, Sector G-10/2 Islamabad
Ph: 051-2212434


Hurricane humor


 


The First Senior Moment!!!

And, that's what happened to the dinosaurs.


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On War, Obama has been Worse than Bush


On War, Obama has been Worse than Bush
Thursday, August 25, 2011
by Anthony Gregory

Obama said he would divert resources from Iraq to Afghanistan. To his everlasting shame, he has not broken this promise.

[This is a transcript of a lecture given at the Austrian Scholars Conference, March 7, 2011]

The real critique of the wars certainly goes beyond the numbers. It is good, however, to look at the figures. Most people in the country know that Obama hasn't exactly ended the wars. I'm sure people say, Yeah, but Obama is ending the wars.

This claim is not obviously 100 percent false in every respect, perhaps. And so we need to be careful when we get into the details.

So, during the run-up to the ascension of Obama to the throne, he was critical of the Iraq war. He said things like This war's lasted longer than World War I, II, the Civil War; 4,000 Americans have died (and of course Americans are the only people that matter in the war). More than 60,000 have been injured; we spent trillions of dollars; we're less safe.

These were very sound critiques of the Iraq war. A lot of us made these kinds of utilitarian critiques. They're almost utilitarian anyway. I don't think they are the most important reasons to oppose the Iraq war, but they are important reasons; they are sufficient reasons on their own, certainly. And Obama did sound better on the Iraq war than Bush or McCain.

At the same time ­ and this is forgotten -- he always was worse on Afghanistan. The Democrats, from Kerry to Obama, were always worse on Afghanistan. Obama's position paper said he's been calling for more troops and resources for the war in Afghanistan for years; he would divert resources from Iraq to Afghanistan. To his everlasting shame, he has not broken this promise.

Another point I want to make is on Iraq. He wasn't antiwar; he was always slippery on this war. I want to just relay a couple of interesting points.

In 2004, the position of the Democrats was always We shouldn't have gone in; now we're in, we're going to have to get out one day, but it sure isn't responsible to talk about getting out now, because we need to be responsible; we need to fix the country, and then we'll get out.

In '04, in the Chicago Tribune, Obama said, "There's not much of a difference between my position on Iraq and George Bush's position at this stage."

Throughout the years, he voted for war funding once he was senator, and he defended his votes. Presumably it would be wrong to defund an immoral war. And in 2008, Obama hailed the Iraq surge -- a controversial policy harshly criticized by many Democrats the year before -- going so far as to tell Bill O'Reilly that the surge "succeeded beyond our wildest dreams."

In December of '08, when he was the lame-duck president, Bush signed the Status of Forces Agreement with the Iraqi leadership, which set the timetable for withdrawal. It was almost precisely the timetable for withdrawal that Obama had proposed, within a couple months.

So the official US policy, by the time Obama took office, was that the United States would withdraw the troops from the cities by June of 2009; and by the end of this year, 2011, the troops would leave Iraq entirely. That was the policy when Obama took power. He did not expedite that.

To his credit, he hasn't put all his political capital into stopping it, although even there I would qualify my statements.


Boots on the Ground

In Iraq, at the height of the surge, which worked beyond our wildest dreams, there were 170,000 US troops in Iraq, and now there are fewer than 50,000. Which, by the way, is about the number that Rumsfeld and those clowns said that we would need for the war. So, now that the war is kind of wrapping up, we're at the level that they thought we'd need to invade and conquer and occupy and win.

In Afghanistan, meanwhile, Obama has fulfilled his promises, unfortunately. Before 2006, except for a blip in July, there were about 10 to 20,000 troops. And then by the time Bush left office, unfortunately he ramped it up to 33,000 troops. By mid-2010, there were almost three times as many -- 91,000 troops. Throughout 2009, Obama has almost tripled the presence in Afghanistan.

Obama's first defense secretary, Robert Gates, who by the way was Bush's defense secretary too, floated the idea the United States might have to stay beyond 2011. And some Democrats on the Armed Services Committee have said, Yeah, we can't just withdraw. (I suppose you can't just go into a country and bomb it and stay there for only eight years ­ that would be reckless.)

Figure 1. US Military Fatalities in Afghanistan and Iraq, Per Year

Figure 1

Source: Calculated from data gathered at icasualties.org.

The total number of troops fighting wars under Obama has been higher than it was under Bush except at the end of Bush's term. At the first half of the Bush administration, which is when there were people in the streets shouting, "Bush is a war criminal" -- when the Left was correct about something -- there were fewer troops.

There were more US fatalities in Iraq under Bush, although the total number of US fatalities in 2009 and 2010 was higher than it was in 2003, and higher than it was in 2008, the last Bush year.

Let's say we had a third Bush term. If he was planning to withdraw gradually from Iraq and leave Afghanistan alone, I think the trajectory would have been much better than it is today, where Iraq is about where I think it would have been, and Afghanistan is much worse.

Obama also boosted private contractors by about a quarter in both Iraq and Afghanistan. As of January 2011 -- of course, this is government data and you'd be surprised how much they don't know what they are talking about ­ there are 87,000 contractors in Afghanistan; 71,000 in Iraq.

There were more civilian contractors (including foreigners) that died in the first half of 2010 than there were soldiers. And some people are pointing out that shifting some of the burden to contractors obscures what is going on.


Costly Wars

Obama always said that we are spending way too much; we're going to go line by line in the budget. And one of the only good promises he made was to save money on Iraq. That's how he was planning to support everyone from cradle to grave. It doesn't really add up that way, but at least he wanted to cut spending on something big.

And he did cut the spending in Iraq. But the spending has gone up enormously in Afghanistan. Even adjusted for inflation, we see that, other than Bush's last two years with the surge, total spending was lower for most of the Bush term on the two wars.

Figure 2. Estimated War Funding by Operation FY2001–FY2011
(in billions of dollars, adjusted for in!ation in constant 2011 dollars, as of Feb 2011)

Figure 2

* Calculated using FY02 metrics.
Note: CPI years and budget fiscal years might be off by a few months, but this chart is still illustrative of trends with inflation.
Source: Amy Belasco, "The Cost of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Other Global War on Terror Operations Since 9/11," Congressional Research Service, March 29, 2011, p. 3. Consumer Price Index inflation calculated using the Bureau of Labor Statistics's Inflation Calculator, available online.

Obama criticized Bush for financing wars off budget. In his first year Obama had a big supplemental-funding bill ­ another broken promise.

The Afghanistan war has expanded out of control, and the war makes no sense. The government says there are 100 Al-Qaeda members in Afghanistan, and so the troop levels are higher, more people are dying and they want to stamp out the opium trade. They can't even stop people from buying crack four blocks from the White House, not that they should try. This is the most ridiculous war. It's even a more ridiculous war than the Iraq war in terms of the idea behind it.

Meanwhile, Obama is drone-attacking Pakistan. He's expanded this war greatly. One or 2 million Pakistani refugees have had to leave the Swat Valley. It's one of the greatest refugee crises since Rwanda. Obama's bombed Yemen; he's bombed Somalia; he even threatened Eritrea, this tiny little country near Ethiopia, with invasion.

In a normal country, when your government says it might invade another country, people have a clue, but we're at war so much with so many countries no one even knows any of this stuff.

And on Iran, Obama continues to be belligerent when he caught Iran "red-handed" with that Qom nuclear facility. Iran reported that they had this facility that they hadn't really started working on yet, according to the Non-Proliferation Treaty, in which the National Intelligence Estimate, the administration, and the International Atomic Energy Agency all say Iran's basically following the law.


Civil Liberties

Warrantless surveillance has continued, and it's been normalized. The TSA outrages have gotten worse. Now the Left thinks that you're crazy if you oppose the police state, and the Right is finally realizing the federal government shouldn't get to touch us like this.

Detention without charge has continued. Habeas corpus is gutted. Obama was supposed to close Guantanamo within a year; now it looks as if they are never going to close it. And even at their best they'll say we'll have a "Guantanamo Lite" within the United States.

Even when they said they would try Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in civil court, the administration's position was We'll try him, and we'll convict him, and if we don't convict him we'll still detain him. So of course the American Right goes crazy because how dare he be soft on terrorism.

Renditioning, this outsourcing of people to be tortured, has continued, at least on some level. In 2009, they renditioned a guy who wasn't even accused of terrorism. He was accused of knowing about supposed fraud related to defense contracting.

So they tied him to a chair; they deprived him of sleep; they told him his family was in danger, that he'll never see them again ­ all the horrible stuff that happened under Bush, but he was basically a white-collar criminal at worst.

The drone attacks are through the roof; there's robot killing. Bradley Manning, the likely whistleblower with WikiLeaks, has been detained. And Obama used to say his administration would protect whistleblowers. I guess he meant protect them with steel cages.

We have the same basic trajectory on war, on spending, on civil liberties, on foreign policy; the Defense Department is as bloated as ever. People forget that both parties are the same on pretty much everything, and foreign policy maybe more than anything else.

For the full research, including a discussion of the Libya war, see the policy report, "What Price War?: Afghanistan, Iraq, and the Costs of Conflict."



Anthony Gregory lives in Oakland, California. He is research editor at the Independent Institute. See his website for more articles and personal information. Send him mail. See Anthony Gregory's article archives.


This article is based on a talk delivered at the Austrian Scholars Conference, March 7, 2011. The research culminated in the Independent Institute policy paper, " What Price War?: Afghanistan, Iraq, and the Costs of Conflict." Thank you to Jennifer Lewis for providing the transcript.


http://mises.org/daily/5231/On-War-Obama-has-been-Worse-than-Bush

What Do We Mean by “Big Government”?


The Calling
What Do We Mean by "Big Government"?
Size and scope
Steven Horwitz
Posted August 25, 2011

In the comments on last week's column, there was an interesting exchange over just how big President Hoover's expansion of government really was after the 1929 stock market crash and the onset of the Great Depression.  One commenter criticized my measuring expenditures and the budget deficit according to their percentage of GDP. Since GDP was falling, the critic wrote, those percentages may exaggerate the growth in expenditures and the deficit.

There are several responses to that criticism, the first being that the growth in government expenditures might have been part of the cause of the fall in GDP (by reducing investment more than government grew), which would bolster the point that government was growing in a harmful way.  However, the deeper and related response is that measures of the impact of government that focus only on the scale of government are an incomplete way of understanding the full effect that government can have on an economy.


Scale and Scope

To see that larger impact, we need to adopt a distinction that Robert Higgs effectively uses in his book Crisis and Leviathan.  Higgs differentiates between the scale of government and the scope of government.  Scale simply refers to the kinds of measures noted above. Higgs points out that we would expect there to be a strong correlation between, say, population and the size of government.  Even in a world of very limited government and economies of scale, a larger population will require more police and a larger legal apparatus.  A larger, more complex economy might also require a somewhat larger scale of government, even if it is strictly limited in its powers.  The scale of government is indicated by the size of total expenditures and other traditional measures.

By contrast scope refers to the range of government powers.  The important point is that giving government more power need not mean a significant increase in expenditures.  For example, the Federal Reserve System is not even on the map in terms of the expensive things the federal government does, yet giving the Fed the various powers, especially the monopoly powers, it possesses has had a significant -- and damaging -- effect on the economy.  One might say the same thing about laws like the minimum wage or occupational licensure.  They don't necessarily cost much to implement or enforce, but they can have highly significant consequences.

Thus the ability of government to inflict economic harm by being "big" is a matter of both scale and scope, and we often forget to recognize the latter.


Great Depression

This point is nicely illustrated by the Great Depression.  In arguing that Hoover was no friend of laissez faire last week, I used quantitative measures to emphasize questions of scale, but my list of interventions contains both scale and scope items.  Public works and government loan programs certainly expand government budgets and thus scale, as well as increasing the scope of its powers.

Other items, however, are not very costly but still very damaging.  The big three here would be Hoover's attempt to keep wages from falling, the Smoot-Hawley Tariff, and his stricter enforcement of antitrust laws.  None of these involved significant increases in government expenditures, yet all three were damaging to employment and the business environment, especially the first two, and thereby substantially worsened the Great Depression.

The same could be said of many policies of the Roosevelt administration, as well as its antibusiness rhetoric, which is one major source of the regime uncertainty that Higgs argues extended the depression.


Obamacare

The scale versus scope distinction is relevant in our own time as well.  The recently passed health care "reform" will certainly increase the scale of government, but it will also increase its scope, as government will have more power over individual decision-making.  Business leaders are already reporting that uncertainty about its effects, and not its impact on the federal budget, is a major reason they are not hiring.

The Dodd-Frank financial "reform" law probably won't add that much to the federal budget, but the increased scope of intervention it creates is already making life miserable for the financial sector, and the damage it causes will be well out of proportion to its cost.  And in a repeat of the 1930s, the Obama administration's frequent antibusiness, or at least anticorporate, rhetoric has been a cheap but effective cause of reduced private-sector investment.

The scale of government matters, but we cannot get so tangled up in debates about the size of federal government expenditures that we overlook the effects of changes in the scope of government power.  Changes in scope are often more damaging to economic growth ­ and individual freedom ­ than are changes in scale.  We forget about them at our peril.

http://www.thefreemanonline.org/headline/what-do-we-mean-by-%E2%80%9Cbig-government%E2%80%9D/

Fwd: [New post] Who's Afraid of Ron Paul?



Who's Afraid of Ron Paul?

Ron Paul, M.D., is a longtime Congressman serving the state of Texas. Described as conservative, Constitutionalist, and libertarian, Paul has been termed the "intellectual godfather" of the Tea Party movement.

He is also one of the Republicans competing to be the GOP presidential nominee for 2012. In fact, a recent (August 23) Rasmussen Reports poll finds that Obama and Ron Paul are running almost dead even in a hypothetical 2012 election matchup.

This is the media's coverage of Ron Paul compared to other 2012 candidates:

Source: Journalism.org

Here's the chart presented as number of campaign stories:

Candidate               # of Campaign Stories

Barack Obama                    221
Mitt Romney                        120
Newt Gingrich                     112
Michele Bachmann            108
Donald Trump                      94
Sarah Palin                            85
Tim Pawlenty                        52
Jon Huntsman                      44
Rick Perry                               33
Ron Paul                                 27
Rick Santorum                      21
Herman Cain                         11

Tim Pawlenty got more media coverage than Ron Paul? Puleeze!!!!!

Why is that?

Is it because of Ron Paul's adamant insistence that the "creature from Jekyll Island," aka as the U.S. Federal Reserve System, be audited?

Or is it because Ron Paul recently warned that "They're setting up the stage for violence in America"?

H/t beloved fellow Joseph.

~Eowyn

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Which Strategy Really Ended the Great Depression?


Our Economic Past
Which Strategy Really Ended the Great Depression?
Burton W. Folsom Jr.
September 2011 • Volume: 61 • Issue: 7 •

"World War II got us out of the Great Depression." Many people said that during the war, and some still do today. The quality of American life, however, was precarious during the war. Food was rationed, luxuries removed, taxes high, and work dangerous. A recovery that does not make­as Robert Higgs points out in Depression, War, and Cold War.

Franklin Roosevelt recognized that the war only provided a short-term fix for the economy -- and a very costly one at that. What would happen after the war­when 12 million troops came home and the strong demand for guns, bullets, tanks, and ships ceased?

Roosevelt envisioned a New Deal revival. He had created the National Resources Planning Board (NRPB) in 1939 and urged it during the war to plan for peacetime. The NRPB leaders believed that government planning was necessary to promote economic development. They consciously (and sometimes unconsciously) followed ideas popularized in 1936 by John Maynard Keynes in his bestselling book, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money.

Capitalism was inherently unstable, Keynes argued, and would rarely provide full employment. Therefore government intervention was needed, especially in recessions, to spend massive amounts of money on public works, which would create new jobs, expand demand, and rebuild consumer confidence. Yes, government would need to run large deficits, but economic stability was society's reward. If government planners could manage aggregate demand through public works, the boom-bust business cycle could be flattened and economic development could be managed in the national interest. No more Great Depressions. Man could indeed be master of his economic future.

Before and during the war Keynes's ideas swept through the United States and first transformed the universities, then the political culture of the day. With statistics in hand and a near reverence for government, the Keynesians were the new generation of planners. They wanted to remake society. Not entrepreneurs, but economists were needed to gather data, plan government programs, and regulate economic development. Paul Samuelson, for example, a 21-year-old economics student, was cautious at first, but then euphoric after Keynes's book was published. "Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive, but to be young was very heaven," Samuelson wrote. Other economists soon accepted Keynes, and by the 1940s his ideas dominated the economics profession. In 1948, Samuelson would defend Keynes by writing the best-selling economics textbook of all time.


Planning for Peace

Those on the NRPB were among the excited disciples of Keynes and economic planning. The war itself seemed to be evidence that government jobs had pulled the U.S. economy out of the Depression. Now the economists and planners needed to take the nation's helm to plan for peace.

According to Charles Merriam, vice president of the NRPB, "[I]t should be the declared policy of the United States government, supplementing the work of private agencies as a final guarantor if all else failed, to underwrite full employment for employables. . . ." That idea launched what Merriam and the NRPB dubbed "A New Bill of Rights." FDR would call it his Economic Bill of Rights. Included was a right to a job "with fair pay and working conditions," "equal access to education for all, equal access to health and nutrition for all, and wholesome housing conditions for all."


New Bill of Rights

FDR viewed this Economic Bill of Rights as his tool for guaranteeing employment for veterans (and others) after World War II. But it was more than a mere jobs ploy; it had the potential to transform American society. The first Bill of Rights, which became part of the Constitution, emphasized free speech, freedom of the press, and freedom of religion and assembly. They were freedoms from government interference. The right to speak freely imposes no obligation on anyone else to provide the means of communication. Moreover, others can listen or leave as they see fit.

But a right to a job, a house, or medical care imposes an obligation on others to pay for those things. The NRPB implied that the taxpayers as a group had a duty to provide the revenue to pay for the medical care, the houses, the education, and the jobs that millions of Americans would be demanding if the new bill of rights became law. In practical terms this meant that, say, a polio victim's right to a wheelchair properly diminished all taxpayers' rights to keep the income they had earned. In other words, the rights announced in the Economic Bill of Rights contradicted the property rights promised to Americans in their Declaration of Independence and in the Constitution.

FDR promoted his Economic Bill of Rights in his State of the Union message in 1944, but he died before the war ended. Shortly before his death, Senator James Murray (D-Mont.) introduced a full-employment bill into the Senate for discussion. The bill committed the government in a general way to provide jobs if unemployment became too high. Many leading Democrats and economists supported Murray's bill. "In this session of Congress," The New Republic reported, "one of the first bills to be introduced will no doubt be the full employment bill of 1945, designed to carry out item number one in the Economic Bill of Rights." The Nation joined The New Republic in endorsing the full-employment bill. "Mr. Roosevelt's program," it concluded, "is squarely based on the best economic authority available. It is entirely consistent with the economic doctrines of the distinguished British economist Lord Keynes."

On September 6, 1945, President Harry Truman gave a major speech in which he supported the Economic Bill of Rights, especially a full-employment bill. Most congressmen, however, rejected both. Rep. Harold Knutson (R-Minn.) said, "Nobody knows what the President's full employment bill will cost American taxpayers, but the aggregate will be enormous."

Instead, Knutson and many other congressmen favored cutting tax rates and slashing the size of government as the best measure to restore economic growth. Senator Albert Hawkes (R-N.J.) even argued that "the repeal of the excess-profits tax, in my opinion, may raise more revenue for the United States than would be raised if it were retained." Hawkes proved to be prophetic. After vigorous debate Congress scrapped the Economic Bill of Rights and cut tax rates instead. American business then expanded, revenues to the Treasury increased to balance the federal budget, and unemployment was only 3.9 percent in 1946 and 1947. The Great Depression was over.

http://www.thefreemanonline.org/columns/our-economic-past/which-strategy-really-ended-the-great-depression/

We Do NOT Have a Federal Government


We Do NOT Have a Federal Government
by Paul Rosenberg

WHAT WAS "FEDERAL"?

Nearly all of us use the word federal to refer to the United States national government, as distinct from the state governments. This has been an error on our part.

Federal was a description, not a name. It would be fair to use federative in its place. It described a type of government, not a particular organization.

For example, when we say "my friend has a fast car," we don't think that fast is the car's brand name – it is merely a description of the car's acceleration and top speed.

Federal was not the brand name of the government that James Madison designed, it was a description, like fast.

Notice how Madison distinguishes between national and federal. We have lost this distinction, and it is crucial.

James Madison

Federalist #39

The proposed Constitution, therefore, is, in strictness, neither a national nor a federal Constitution, but a composition of both.
  • In its foundation it is federal, not national;
  • In the sources from which the ordinary powers of the government are drawn, it is partly federal and partly national;
  • In the operation of these powers, it is national, not federal;
  • In the extent of them, again, it is federal, not national; and, finally,
  • In the authoritative mode of introducing amendments, it is neither wholly federal nor wholly national.

Madison – six times in this passage – distinguishes between federal and national. There can be no question about this: he is referring to two different things. Federal is NOT the same as national.

We no longer use these distinctions because the US government has become entirely national – we have nothing else to attach the tag federal to.

At the founding – as Madison was writing the US Constitution – the meanings of the words he used were these:

  • National powers were those of an independent central government.
  • Federal powers were those that came from the contributions of the states.

To be fully precise, "federal" meant a union based on a treaty. It described the type of association that was being used.

Madison distinguishes between national and federal in exactly the same way that we distinguish between a business and a club.


FEDERAL POWERS

You can see from Madison's words that the structure of the United States government very carefully included federally-derived powers. Madison specifies them as fundamental components.

At its origin, the national government was dependent on the states, and not vice-versa. When the states shifted their positions, the central government, which rested on top of them, had to move along with them.

Understand, this was not a case where the national government was supposed to shift along with the states – there was literally no other possibility. An analogy would be the surface of the ocean moving up and down as a wave passes. The national government rode on top of the federal arrangement – when and where it moved, the national government automatically followed – like the surface of the ocean moving with a wave. There was nothing else it could do or be.

Madison did this on purpose. It was the central controlling and protecting mechanism of his design.

Here is what Thomas Jefferson had to say about the original federal structure of government in the US:

Thomas Jefferson, Letter to William Johnson, 1823

The capital and leading object of the Constitution was to leave with the States all authorities which respected their own citizens only, and to transfer to the United States those which respected citizens of foreign or other States; to make us several [separate] as to ourselves, but one as to all others.

Jefferson, as usual, understood the essence of the arrangement: Separate among ourselves, but as one toward the rest of the world – the outsiders who only saw the surface of the wave, not the waters underneath.

Jefferson (who was certainly not alone in this) saw the centralizing movement of power from the states to the capital as the great threat to the American experiment of liberty:

Thomas Jefferson, Letter to Nathaniel Macon, 1821

Our government is now taking so steady a course as to show by what road it will pass to destruction. That is: by consolidation first, and then corruption, its necessary consequence.


THE PATH OF DESTRUCTION

The federal structure of the US government was abolished in steps, over time. Certainly the largest factors were the confusion, ignorance, apathy and fear of the populace, which resulted in mute compliance. There were, however, watershed moments along the way. The most important of these events were the following:

Marbury v. Madison, 1803

This most important of Supreme Court rulings resulted from a complex case involving dirty deals, a politically-stacked Supreme Court and the entry of partisan politics into the operation of the American republic. By the time it was over, the Court had ruled against the man who wrote the Constitution (James Madison) and claimed the sole right to interpret it. Here's how it went:

  1. The Federalists, Alexander Hamilton being the driving force, organized into a faction (a political party) that organized and pooled their power.
  2. Facing a loss of control after the election of 1800, they pushed John Adams to appoint a large group of judges and other officials in the lame duck session before he left office. Adams complied. These appointments were written for five-year terms – long enough for the Federalists to retain control through the next election.
  3. Not all the commissions could be completed before Jefferson was inaugurated. One of these was slated for delivery to a hard-core Federalist named William Marbury.
  4. When Jefferson took the Presidency, Marbury's appointment was still in the Secretary of State's office. James Madison, who now filled that office, withdrew the appointment for precisely the reasons you'd expect (being based on dirty dealing), and went about to appoint someone else.
  5. Marbury ran to the Supreme Court, which was entirely composed of Federalist appointees. He demanded to be given his office.
  6. In a complex ruling, the Court (led by John Marshall) ruled that Madison was wrong to withhold the appointment, but that this didn't matter, since the underlying law from 1789 was unconstitutional.
  7. The shock of ruling against the author of the Constitution aside, 'Marbury' brought up the important issue of constitutionality: Who decides? Even if we say there is an argument to be made for the Supreme Court to interpret the Constitution, it is NOT in the Constitution. The Court should have said something like this:
Since it has fallen to us to decide such an important matter, we will render our opinion in this case. However, we request of the Congress and the States, that they pass an amendment to the Constitution clarifying this issue.

There is a great deal of confusion related to Marbury v. Madison that has come down to us. This ruling is universally presented in American schools as crucial to the "checks and balances" of the US government. This is deeply misleading.

Judicial review (the Supremes ruling on constitutionality) involves one branch of the national government providing a check on the other branches of the national government.

Judicial Review provided no check whatsoever on the national government as a whole.

The original design of the republic empowered the states to act as checks on the national government. This was the primary purpose of the federal structure. Without it, the national government has no check on its expansion and use of power. Thus it would seem that the states should be the interpreters of the Constitution – after all, it was they who created it.


RULES VERSUS JUSTICE

There is one last and important thing to mention regarding Marbury v. Madison, and that is the enthronement of rules above reality -- of legal wordings over justice.

The "midnight appointments" of the Federalists used rules to manipulate the power-structure of the republic and to secure power by unintended means. James Madison, above all people, understood this. He withdrew Marbury's appointment to conclude the abuse that was done to his system.

Chief Justice Marshall, however, ignored the injustice and parsed words instead: He went on at length over the distinctions of "nominate," "appoint," "confirm," and the fixing of seals.

Then, Marshall says this:

The people have an original right to establish for their future government such principles as, in their opinion, shall most conduce to their own happiness...

The exercise of this original right is a very great exertion; nor can it nor ought it to be frequently repeated. The principles, therefore, so established are deemed fundamental.

What Marshall actually says here is that the American people wish not to work so hard defending their rights. He is giving them an excuse to be lazy:

The rules will take over from here on out. You can relax.

Liberty was the primary issue of the founding of the republic; the Constitution was subsidiary to that: it was a tool, valuable only if it helped to secure liberty.

The reversal of the central order – liberty being made subsidiary to rules – dethroned liberty.

Hamilton, Marshall and the Federalists were political power-seekers. To them, liberty was little more than a word that gave them legitimacy; what they really wanted was power.

Madison's design stood in their way; Marbury v. Madison pulled it apart.

The 14th Amendment, 1868

The 14th Amendment filled a hole in the Constitution by declaring that no state could trample an individual's rights, such as the southern states had done by enslaving black people. (There was an earlier precedent for this, but the amendment was probably necessary.) The key section reads:

nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.

Essentially, the 14th Amendment made sure that the Bill of Rights applied to everyone, no matter what their state government did. This was, in my opinion, a reasonable addition to the Constitution.

The problem with the 14th Amendment is not the text itself, but that people took it to imply the moral superiority of the national government. That is a highly questionable assumption.


THE CENTRAL GOVERNMENT & SLAVERY

When Americans talk about states' rights, there is an instinctual objection that never fails to grip people – that without central government power, slavery would still exist. The truth, however, is the opposite. And that truth is this:

Every branch of the national government of the United States assisted slavery until 1863. You can verify this yourself; go look-up The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 and the Dred Scott decision.

While the southern states and the national government were supporting slavery, the northern states fought it: They nullified laws supporting slavery. (Wisconsin was exemplary in this.) The secession resolution of Georgia complains specifically about this:

For above twenty years the non-slave-holding States generally have wholly refused to deliver up to us persons charged with crimes affecting slave property. [Northern state officials] shield and give sanctuary to all criminals who seek to deprive us of this property.

The northern states were the anti-slavery heroes, not the central government in Washington. If your school books implied the contrary, they lied.

The 17th Amendment, 1913

The 17th Amendment took the powers of the states and transferred them to Washington, by mandating the popular election of senators.

Previously, senators were elected by the state legislatures. That gave the states massive power in the central government. It provided a check on the power of the national government. If the states were unhappy with the direction of national government, they could instruct their senators to change it.

With senators being elected directly by the populace, the states were cut-out of the equation. In their place, political parties gained massive power, and nearly all power was consolidated in the city of Washington.

The argument in favor of the 17th Amendment was that state houses were corrupt and that they acted erratically, often leaving seats vacant for some time.

It is certainly true that the states were unruly. This, however, was not a crucial issue; the work of the Senate could continue regardless. Respected politicians, however, did not want to be seen as part of a disorderly body.

As for corruption in the states, that was often true, but the implied idea, that Washington was pristine, was – and remains – a bad, bad joke. But, even now, the moral superiority of the central government is often assumed, probably because many people find comfort trusting in the largest and most powerful thing.

Power always corrupts, but a structure featuring small, separate pockets of corruption is far less dangerous than one featuring a single, large seat of corruption, to which all money is gathered. As Thomas Jefferson wrote:

It is not by the consolidation or concentration of powers, but by their distribution that good government is effected.

The government of the United States remains, but it is of a fundamentally different character than the federal republic designed by Madison. Yet, we all keep saying federal. Not only is this use incorrect, but it has prevented us from recognizing the crucial fact that the American federal republic was stolen from our great-grandparents. This is not a trivial argument over vocabulary.

Deceptions and frauds are accomplished over time by changes in the meanings of words. Sometimes this is done purposely and sometimes it happens because people are more comfortable evading the original meaning. But regardless of how much intent was involved, the meaning of federal changed radically between 1803 and 1917. Our current use of the word conveys a completely different meaning than the original. This change of definition has masked a fundamental turning point in the governance of the American people.

What you do about this -- or whether you do anything at all -- is entirely your choice. I am merely pointing as best I can to the truth. I will add only this:

If you call yourself an American, be one.

http://lewrockwell.com/orig11/rosenberg-p3.1.1.html