Monday, September 29, 2008

An Open Letter to the New Hampshire Victory Fund

When I originally posted this, I erroneously believed that the New Hampshire Victory Fund was affiliated with the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund. I have since been informed that the Gay & Lesbian Victory fund DOES NOT have any affiliation with the NH Victory Fund - in fact, they do not have state affiliates of any kind. Not only that, they do not conduct polling, and they are not involved in the Presidential election. Thanks to Denis Dison, from the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund, for giving me the correct information, so I could address this more accurately.

I am writing because I received a phone call this evening from a poller who claimed to represent the New Hampshire Victory Fund. The phone call is one I found insulting.

The reason I found the phone call insulting is that your caller began by asking whether I intended to vote for Obama, McCain, or Undecided. The very content of the question is an insult to every single voter who has examined the candidates and determined that he is not willing to give his vote to either, but prefers, instead, to vote for someone else. Ralph Nader, for instance, or George Phillies, or any of the other candidates who DO NOT represent either the fascists from Denver or the socialists from St. Paul.

Not only was your caller's question on the Presidential race an insult to intelligent voters, he followed it up with identical questions on the race for Sununu's Senate seat and my district's House seat. In all three cases, his question identified ONLY the Republican and Democrat candidates, and offered "Undecided" as the ONLY alternative for voters who reject the Republican or Democrat alternatives.

Was it your intention to insult voters in this way, or did you simply not consider that intelligent voters might possibly choose to refuse to throw away their votes by voting for either of the two corporate candidates? You might want to consider that possibility when performing polls in the future, if you want to avoid insulting voters in the future.

Friday, June 20, 2008

File this under: I should know better...

I made the mistake of reading talk.politics.guns today, and am reminded why I unsubscribed from pretty much all usenet news a long time ago. The pro-gun posters were just as bigoted, just as arrogant, and just as obnoxious as the anti-gun posters. Sure, it's easy to forget that the people reading your posts are people, but is that any excuse for making yourself look like an utter ass? Apparently, it is - at least, it is for the people who post on newsgroups.

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Saturday, June 07, 2008

Oh, the irony...

NEVER talk to the police!

Professor James Duane (a law professor in Virginia) explains reasons why you should NEVER talk to the police, under ANY circumstances.

Did you know?

In times of war, the U.S. Constitution gives the President the power to ignore the Constitution? Including wars that are not declared, as required under Article 1, Section 8, of the Constitution? Apparently, the people who published the copy of the Constitution that I've read neglected to include the portion that gives the President that power. Or maybe it's in a classified section of the Constitution, that's only available to members of the Executive Branch?

Did you know that the President does not condone or authorize torture or inhumane treatment of prisoners? I guess that means that Manadel al-Jamadi, Abed Hamed Mowhoush, and Nagem Sadoon Hatab, among nearly a hundred others, are still alive and well and being treated with basic human dignity? And I guess that means that those photos from Abu Ghraib were just Photoshop jobs? Oh, that's right, that's neither torture nor inhumane treatment - it's "enhanced interrogation techniques." After all, America doesn't torture its prisoners. Never mind that when other countries used the exact same techniques, their officials were charged - by America - with war crimes.

Did you know that the President insists on the preservation of the human rights of all American prisoners? But then again, habeas corpus isn't a human right, apparently.

How do I know all this is true? Because I've been assured so by Nancy Theis, Special Assistant to the President and Director of Presidential Correspondence.

So, from now on, when someone tries to tell me that America is engaged in an illegal war, I'll just point them at that super-secret, classified portion of the Constitution that only the President has access to, that gives him the power to engage in war without the need for a pesky Declaration of War, and without the need to obey any of those pesky rules in the public portion of the Constitution.

And when anyone tells me that America tortures and mistreats its prisoners, I'll just point out to them that it's not torture when America does it - only when other countries do it.

And when anyone tells me that America violates human rights, I'll just point out to them that little things like habeas corpus aren't really human rights after all.

After all, I have been assured this is so by the Assistant to the President. And she wouldn't lie, would she?

Wednesday, June 04, 2008

If you have fibromyalgia, you are a woman who murdered her unborn child

At least, that's what you are according to Beverly, at Motherhood and other Ramblings.

Not only that, if you have HPV, you are a slut, and if you have HIV, you are a gay man who indulges in unsafe sex. All this, based on the word of a Catholic priest and a child psychiatrist who founded an anti-abortion group in Canada.

So like an HPV diagnosis in someone would almost guarantee that others would know the person's potential morals or lack there of, and HIV almost always denotes a gay man, a diagnosis of fibromyalgia could potentially indicate a woman who has aborted a child. Just a thought.

Here's "just a thought": Beverly is a moralistic bigot who deserves to be considered with the same level of thoughtfulness you'd give to Fred Phelps, George Lincoln Rockwell, or Khallid Abdul Muhammad.

With all the scientific and medical evidence that shows that fibromyalgia is a neurological condition that affects both men and women, the idea that anyone could still spew bigoted, ignorant garbage like that is simply mind-boggling.

Tuesday, June 03, 2008

My Response...

...to the people who have taken over the Libertarian Party.

If you're interested in a party that is still truly libertarian, follow me to the Boston Tea Party.

Friday, March 21, 2008

Congressional Guidelines for Abusing Women

I knew that men were victimized on a daily basis by the domestic violence industry. What I didn't know is how badly the domestic violence industry abuses those it supposedly protects.

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Praise Xenu!

A message that needs to be spread:

Message From Anonymous to the Public:

It has again come to the attention of Anonymous that there are a number of you who do not fully understand the scope of the threat that Scientology as an organization poses to the public at large and to their own members that espouse themselves to the teachings and practices of the institution known as the Church of Scientology. Many are still confused about what "Anonymous" is and who we are.

This press statement should answer many of the most common questions. If you would like clarification on any statements or would like to ask specific questions to Anonymous, there are many sources for information available that will oblige your needs. These resources will be listed in the references section of this release.

The Various Organizations of Scientology

+ Are directly responsible for the deaths of at least 7 people and countless others indirectly through emotional abuse, physical abuse, or medical malpractice.
+ Have wrongfully imprisoned at least 24 people since 1976.
+ Have infiltrated the Federal government, Local governments, and the Federal Bureau of Investigations.
+ Continues to Payroll off-duty police officers for private security
+ Circumvented due process by tampering with and obstructing evidence and witnesses.
+ Aggressively censors the media both on the national and international level through unscrupulous methods.
+ Driven lawsuits launched against them into the ground through malicious litigation.
+ Aggressively litigates, blackmails, slanders, harasses, and spread misinformation about: critics, former members, current members, psychiatry, psychology, and pharmacology.
+ Violates basic human rights both outside and within its walls.
+ Drains billions from the accounts of its member who were only seeking help that they could have otherwise obtained for free from legitimate sources.
+ Destroys families by perpetuating an internal culture of paranoia, isolationism, and total censorship.
+ Stolen paperwork, property, and identification from its members as a means of subjugation and coercion.
+ Is suspected of violating child labor laws.
+ Refuses vital medications to its members.
+ Convicted of fraud in many countries and multiple times.

Keep in mind that Anonymous represents an idea that people from all over the world, from all backgrounds, races, and creeds, and from all walks have life have come to embrace. It is a constantly evolving, adapting group dedicated to the principles of free speech, human rights, and upholding national and international laws.

Thanks to some very wise guidance from Emmy-award winner and critic of the Church of Scientology, Mark Bunker, as well as many other veteran critics and ex-Scientology members, Anonymous has pursued policies of peaceful protests, letter righting campaigns, and an effort to educate the masses on the documented cases of abuse, fraud, and illegal activities of the organization known as the Church of Scientology.

Current projects include world wide peaceful pickets at Church of Scientology sites across the world on March 15th 2008. Anonymous has also focused on lobbying for the repeal of the Church of Scientology's tax exemption status as an organization that operates under the legal definition of a business, and enjoys tax exemption status for religious education not currently allowed for any other religious group in the United States.

Outside of the protests, the mining of information by Anonymous and its supporters, both inside and outside of the Church of Scientology, have uncovered a wealth of new information and will continue to do so. Those that did take action on the protests of February 10th are now seeing ever increasing throngs of support appearing to increase their ranks. The protests on March 15th are already expected to be much larger in scale than previous dates.

There are already plans that extend out beyond the protest planned for March 15th, including Operation Reconnect where ex-Scientology members and those who have lost friends and family to the Church of Scientology's Disconnection policy will speak out to their loved ones. If you would like to participate directly or indirectly to aid our cause, please visit the forums at enturbulation.org

Our Anonymity is but a tool. It protects us from the threat of illegal harassment, malicious litigation, and Fair Game policy that is standard practice in dealing with all critics who speak out against the abuses and fraud of the Church of Scientology. It is a way to provide safety to those hurt by the Church of Scientology who have been too afraid to speak out. It is a way to unite peacefully behind an idea of justice, of human rights, and of law.


Our true strength is truth.


We are Anonymous.

We are Legion.

We do not forgive.

We do not forget.

Expect us.


While I did not find this message until today, I support it wholeheartedly.

Friday, February 15, 2008

Ron Paul and the GOP

Stephen Dinan makes the usual mistake that political pundits make when talking about Ron Paul and his supporters. He assumes that people who support Ron Paul are Republicans, and that the GOP just has to figure out how to keep them "in the fold."

I'm afraid Mr. Dinan is a little confused. OK, make that a lot confused. 

Ron Paul doesn't appeal to Republicans. He doesn't even entirely appeal to Libertarians. The people he appeals to are those who have this silly idea that the U.S. Constitution means something, and that the U.S. government is supposed to obey it. 

That's never been the Republican ideal, except in the rhetoric they used during the 1980s and 1990s to try to sell the Democrats as the party of socialism. The Republican Party is the party of high taxes, corporate welfare, large government projects, and empire. It's been that way since the 1850s. The whole image of the GOP as "the party of small government" is nothing but a marketing gimmick. Sadly, it's a marketing gimmick that the average American (and most Republicans in particular) believes.

Since the GOP has done everything from threatening Ron Paul voters (using Glenn Beck as their mouthpiece) to outright vote fraud (in New Hampshire, Louisiana, and Washington state, at the very least) to keep Ron Paul from getting the nomination, I have to ask, why should anyone who supports Ron Paul even give the GOP a second look? It's obvious they don't want you. It's obvious they think they can manage quite nicely without you. Well, why not take them up on it and show them just how well you can get along without the GOP?

Vote Libertarian. Vote Constitution Party. Vote Boston Tea Party. Hell, write in your own name on the ballot. Just don't vote for either of the "major" parties. If you support Ron Paul, it's obvious you're not a Democrat, so you wouldn't be voting for their candidate, and since the GOP has shown it doesn't want you, why should you vote for its candidate?

Saturday, February 02, 2008

Immigrants and Idiots

A couple days ago, I was debating with one of those no-nothing anti-immigrant morons, when he came up with what he imagined was an utterly devastating reply to the facts I presented showing that immigrants are, despite his fevered imaginings to the contrary, not a detriment to society.

His so-called argument was that, since immigrants send the money they make home to their families in whatever country they come from, they're stealing it from the American economy, and that's bad.

Let's pause a moment while you consider the sheer mindlessness inherent in the argument presented. What's that? Yes, you, in the back of the class. You don't understand why I say the argument is mindless? Well, let's review some basic economics then, shall we?

The American dollar, like most other national currencies, is what we call a fiat currency. What this means is that the dollar has value only because the U.S. government says it has value.

I'll repeat that, because it is very important to understand. The U.S. Dollar has value only because the U.S. government says it has value.

So what does this have to do with the argument above? It's really quite simple.

Unlike a representative currency, which is backed by something of real value (gold, silver, crude oil, diamonds, whatever), a fiat currency is valuable only in relation to the country it represents. In addition, a fiat currency is not removing something of real value from the treasury of the country it was printed in, because there is nothing of real value backing it. 

So let's take our hypothetical immigrant, who is working his tuchis off in America, saving his money, and sending it home to his family. What is he actually sending home? Pieces of paper that the U.S. government says have a certain value. But -- and this is important to remember -- it is only in relation to the U.S. economy that those pieces of paper have the value promised by the U.S. government. 

In other words, those pieces of paper are worthless anywhere else in the world, until the bearer chooses to exchange them for his own government's fiat currency. When those pieces of paper are exchanged, they begin their journey back to America, whether as a part of a string of exchanges, or as the currency used in purchase of American goods. Either way, it is only when those pieces of paper are used in an economic exchange that returns them to America that they are of any value at all. 

The only way you could believe that an immigrant sending his savings overseas is somehow stealing dollars from the American economy, is if you believe that the dollars have intrinsic value, rather than merely being glorified IOUs with nothing but trust in the government to support them AND you believe that the immigrant does not have the right to engage in economic exchanges on his own behalf. Even those beliefs are wrong, but they're not the point of this post. If you want a discussion of them at a later time, we can go into them, but the point I'm making is that as long as the currency in question is a fiat currency, it has no value except in relation to the economy of the nation in which it was printed, and therefore can not be"stolen" from the economy merely by being temporarily in another nation.