Garbage In, Garbage Out

If I had a nickel for every time some “progressive” blogger’s critique of libertarianism 1) completely ignored that there are skeptics of capitalism at all within it, 2) assumed It All Began With Ayn Rand, despite her hating libertarians during her life & her closest ideological offspring being bigoted warmongers, and/or 3) boiled down to “I’ll call Hayek a Libertarian, Hayek supported Pinochet, ergo libertarianism is inherently pro right-wing dictator, suck it” as Freddie does at his own site, I would never have to work another day in my entire life.

No, Freddie, there is internal criticism, you just don’t see it because you picked the most stereotypical circle of “libertarians” to observe. The ones you’re pointing at as proof of anti-reformist tendencies in fact are the reformists, in the sense that they are compromising with the current system — which is the problem with them in my view (they’re defending stolen property). Supporting murderers & oppressors is not in any way consistent with libertarianism, Hayek revealed himself to be a statist prick in doing so regardless of that damn book he wrote.

BTW: about this crack of his, referring to supposed enforcement of orthodoxy:

If someone suggests that, say, the federal free lunch program isn’t a matter of creeping authoritarianism, they are swiftly dispatched.

I’ve long been describing social welfare spending by the state as revolt insurance, meant to prevent mass rejection of a rigged economic system. I have yet to be kicked out. Oh yeah, and the original reason for the school lunch program wasn’t simple generosity & concern for hungry kids, but a way to dump surplus farm goods & thus prop up food prices. Seriously, look it up.

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Ed Kilgore’s Late Pass

upsidedown-flag

The National Rifle Association — that group that simultaneously claims to uphold the right to bear arms for the purpose of resisting tyranny while calling for more government employees to be heavily armed, with no cognitive dissonance — has a new president, James Porter. As if he were a “progressive”-derived stereotype of an imagined high ranking NRA member simply brought to life, he’s a white male in his 60s from Alabama who refers to the Civil War as “the War of Northern Aggression”. Over at the Political Animal blog, Ed Kilgore hears this bell and gives the expected reaction:

Am I perhaps being unfair to these people in suggesting that they are behaving like America-haters and are flirting with treason? I don’t think so. Porter and those like him could dispel this sort of suspicion instantly, any time they wanted, by just saying: “Let’s be clear: the kind of ‘tyranny’ we are arming ourselves to forestall is something entirely different from anything Americans have experienced since we won our independence—a regime engaged in the active suppression of any sort of dissent, and the closure of any peaceful means for the redress of grievances. We’re not talking about the current administration, or either major political party, as presently representing a threat of tyranny.”

I’m not holding my breath for any statements like that to emerge from the NRA, or indeed, from the contemporary conservative movement. (emphasis mine)

While the NRA holds no claim to consistency when it comes to defending liberty, Ed here is calling for Mr Porter to, in order to calm the nerves of those picturing right-wing armed rebellion, make what is a testable claim: that suppression of dissent is a pre-Revolution thing, nothing they’re claiming to see now or even that has been the case. Let’s test that claim, shall we?

  • Sedition Act of 1798: printing harsh criticisms of then-president John Adams could get you put in prison.
  • Sedition Act of 1918 (yes, there were two of them): voicing opposition to the war, or “insulting or abusing the U.S. government” could get you put in prison. Eugene Debs found this out the hard way.
  • 1920′s: people still being arrested for speech.
  • 40′s and 50′s: loyalty oaths, criminalizing party affiliations, “Are you now, or were you ever, a communist?” (the accusations even extended to people who merely thought blacks should be treated as equal citizens).
  • COINTELPRO…just put it in a search, ffs.
  • …and of course we remember the Occupy crackdown. Singular, not plural, because it was a national effort coordinated with the FBI — with the involvement of several of the finance companies being protested, and the Federal Reserve.

Suppression of dissent “entirely different” from the American experience? Sure, if you never said anything, swallowed whatever you were fed & didn’t happen to be a member of any group defined on sight as un-American. Otherwise, suppression has been there all along in some form.  Funny of Ed to suggest James Porter should say different, since if he did then that’d further solidify the Stereotypical Base Conservative archetype by injecting historical cluelessness on the basis of race & class privilege, with a Colbertesque sheen to it even.

That the definition of tyranny to people like Mr Porter boils down to “a black Democrat is in the White House” does not mean all is well. Has it really ever been though? Or is punishing dissent as American as denying people you disagree with apple pie?

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Strangling the Reformist Goose

On May Day, noted neo-liberal blogger Matt Yglesias wonders aloud if Marx had a point. Bouncing off a Brad DeLong post basically claiming a rationally interested ruling class would gladly keep up the revolt insurance, thus heading off rejection of the system, Matt observes what he calls “Wall Street Journal editorial page” tendencies spreading in opposition:

You see a rising tide of Rand-inflected moralism about market outcomes and a reduced emphasis on Friedman-style pragmatism. You also see a sharply reduced emphasis on belief in any kind of macroeconomic stabilization policy, in favor of a “let them eat cake slash move to North Dakota*” moralism about unemployment. Last but by no means least, it really has become the conventional wisdom among American elites that the appropriate policy response to fiscal imbalance in a time of high and rising income inequality is to restore balance by reducing the scope and generosity of social insurance programs.

I assume by “Friedman-style” he’s referring to Milton** and the Monetarist emphasis on central banking & the money supply as economic levers in contrast to Keynes.  That is, skepticism of the stated means of Keynesian economics but agreeing to the end — think Fed Not Congress.  Matt’s view of the reason for that rejection, given the phrase he uses to describe this overall tendency, paints it as inherently right-wing, no doubt having visions in his head of a Tea Party swagged out lynch mob massing towards Ben Bernanke’s residence in the middle of the night. Well given the demonstrated institutional corruption within the Fed, and the effect of their actions being to subsidize concentrated wealth, he might wanna make room in that fever dream for some OWS veterans.

“Macroeconomic Stabilization policy” itself is a curious thing when you think about it. The critique commonly assumed of it is that 1) spontaneous market order (AKA “the free market”) will take care of itself & 2) what we live within right now is consistent with spontaneous market order. The second part of that is such obvious nonsense that anyone claiming it as truth with a straight face I will gladly laugh off. More often though, the criticism is political rather than anything coherent in economic terms: think GOP politicians whining about the national debt while simultaneously proposing high-end tax cuts & more military spending by the largest arms dealer (and user!) in the world. They want “stimulus” too, they just call it Protecting The Homeland or Reasserting American Leadership. That said, both the progs concerning themselves with the shift away from social programs & the ones calling for the return of Keynes have a point — though not one either will like once they read it through…

-To the Keynesians: demand crater is describing surplus capital with nowhere to go from the other end. Saying government must spend to fill the gap & “create jobs” admits a zero-sum game has been constructed with regard to capital & labor. The more labor loses, the less mass consumption can be expected — without debt at least, which empowers high finance. So either people have less & less money, surplus capital piles up, & things stagnate, or people shift to debt until it pops & things collapse…to then stagnate. You’re performing maintenance on a giant hamster wheel.

-To the progs: ironically, Keynes has convinced the ruling class that they don’t need you & your “safety net”. Why bother when they can just holler at the Fed & limit any future serious investment to defense contractor stock? I hear some people in Syria have high aggregate demand for weapons…

So to Matt, I say keep going. It’s not cyclical, the rulers don’t give a shit, and the reason they call it “stabilization” is because the foundation is wobbly. Feel free to Wobble right back at it.

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Stop cheering, we lost

bm-collage

Last week the Boston Marathon got bombed, killing 3 people and maiming 170. Allegedly this was done by Tamerlan & Dzokhar Tsarnev. A running battle with the police later, and Tamerlan is dead, while Dzokhar is in custody in a hospital with a bullet hole in his throat. What follows will pretty much sum up my thoughts on the whole thing:

-The capture of these two on camera, along with a report of actually seeing one of them drop the backpack that later exploded, is already prompting calls for more routine surveillance of everybody, basically assuming that we are all just pre-suspects. The chilling effect of being perpetually watched by the authorities? Why, that’s just crazy talk. “If you’re not doing anything wrong, what are you afraid of?” they say — I know this tune, it always comes around. Like clockwork.

-Progression from shock, to grief, to expulsions of the noxious gas of bigotry occurred at warp speed this time. A Saudi man wounded by the first blast was initially fingered as the culprit due to 1) being Arab & 2) running away — which is kind of what you do when bombs are going off, don’t you think? I dunno about you, but if I’m in a crowd and I hear a loud “boom” from my south end, I’m breaking North. After the Saudi victim was realized to be a victim of the bombing & not an accomplice, “damn ragheads!” type remarks continued anyway.

-Once the images of the suspects got out, ethnicity was out the window briefly as something to blame: they’re Chechens, literally as “Caucasian” as you can get. This could only mean one thing — it’s time to rage against all Muslims (this sentiment bubbled up to an extent even before either of them were identified as claiming to be Muslim, keep in mind).
Oh yeah, also it means it’s time to threaten to nuke the Czech Republic. Here, have a map:

not-czech

The place on the left marker is the Czech Republic, the place on the right is the region of Chechnya. Gawd forbid these two had been Georgians, we’d be burning down Atlanta by now.

-Background info that has since came out suggests the bombing would’ve been the older brother Tamerlan’s idea, as he’s reported to have been radicalized such that at one point he threw a fit at a mosque because the imam speaking mentioned Martin Luther King favorably. Dzokhar in contrast seemed like more of a tagalong saying “eh, he’s my brother, whatever…”

(BTW, if my brother is reading this, if for some reason you should ever propose us bombing something, my answer is No).

In a sign of the younger brother’s view of the whole blowing-people-up thing, after the bombing he actually went back to his college campus, & even to a party. Somebody took a level in Dumbass…

-As for the entire Boston metro area, they basically said “Police State Time!!” & put every non purveyor of donuts (seriously…) on lock-down, unable to even walk outside.  Nothing stirring but tanks rolling down the streets, snipers crawling on peoples garages, cops openly pissing on the 4th Amendment in door-to-door searches at gunpoint. All that, and how’d they eventually find Dzokhar? The everybody-cower-in-your-homes order was lifted & someone mere blocks away from the shootout walked outside to inspect their boat.

For the low price of a couple pressure cookers, some nails, & other items, we will roll over and show our ugly, fear ridden dark side.  We will take the actions of two people as reason to lash out at anybody Muslim or assumed to be (you just know some Sikhs are gonna catch hell again…) in spasms of decidedly not “Accidental” bigotry. We will accept being told to stay inside & not answer the door for anybody other than the police.  We will hear calls for a U.S. citizen caught on U.S. soil and accused of a violent crime to be sent to Gitmo and tortured, and nod silently, re-foreignizing him in our minds as if that matters, and as if that forms a sustainable barrier protecting our rights. We will see Right-Wing Nutjob Lindsay Graham give dark warnings about treating a citizen accused of crimes like any other citizen & maybe hear giggles from partisan Democrats, only to have Hippie Librul Socialist President Barack Obama effectively 10-4 the idea.

…and then we will cheer.

Folks, winning against terrorism is not flushing freedom down the toilet & bowing down to authority. It is not being terrorized. It is not being afraid. It is being open in defiance of those who’d want you in the fetal position.

We. Fucking. Lost.

Spare me the happy talk.

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Choice, force & guilt

Corey Robin, author, blogger & professor of political science at Brooklyn College, is not a fan of libertarians. At all. However, his exposure to them leans overwhelmingly toward the U.S. mainstream understanding of the term as depicted by the Cato Institute, so in a way I understand.

Recently on Twitter, Corey ended up encountering some people that according to his assumptions & experience shouldn’t exist: left-libertarians. The conversation came to focus on the idea of responsibility for crimes of the State, with Corey arguing (since he believes the Government Is Us myth) that not evading taxes is morally equivalent to endorsing what is done with them, in this case war. That the decision is clearly separated from who gets the bill for it doesn’t even come into play for him. Smelling a contradiction being baked, I jumped in with the following:

So you wouldn’t complain & call it selfish if every anti-war citizen took up tax evasion?

As a standard issue “progressive”, Corey Robin’s attitude towards taxes from what I can tell up to this point is agreement that they’re the price we pay for civilization, rather than being the price for the clash of such as dL would describe it, or a form of institutional fraud (due to the implied promises made of the alleged representative state to citizens) as I’d call it. Yet, here was his reply:

I think it would be great if a movement of citizens refused to pay taxes to support war machine.

Think this through: he starts off from an assumption that what government does is our call, then by implying that anti-war tax resisters would be in the right versus the government basically admits the opposite. Otherwise, what is there to oppose?

Such a stance as what I offered doesn’t just emerge out of nowhere, there is a principle behind it. “If I don’t do this, I’ll be hunted down and shot” is not consent, as it appears even Corey has acknowledged. Question is what that means to the rest of his political philosophy, because that particular chunk doesn’t fit.

If I had to guess, it’ll mean nothing, & he’ll forget having said it. Well, not if I can help it… *reaches for “publish” button*

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“You’re cute” — and we’re *screwed*

A good rule of thumb to hold with regards to politics: Never underestimate the power of the trivial to overshadow the gravely important.

Latest example of the above rule came to us last week, when amidst the ongoing backdrop of a still-terrible job market post Capital Paradox (simultaneously with corporate profits doing just great, I might add), more civilians being killed in our name in Afghanistan, and the ongoing crime of the military prison at Guantanamo Bay remaining open & holding people in limbo many of whom have already been cleared as not dangerous, Obama caused a stir… by complimenting the Attorney General of California, Kamala Harris, on her looks at a fundraiser.

Naturally, there ended up people screaming “P.C. POLICE!!!” when the sexist nature of bringing this up was pointed out. Folks, the problem is not the compliment (going by her official pic on her state bio page, far as politician types go she is quite photogenic*), it’s the context: her looks have absolutely nothing of relevance to do with her job, and what he was talking about at the time was her in that job. This is rarely ever deployed towards men in the same positions. On that and that alone, the ones pointing at it were in the right, it wasn’t appropriate… now, make that kind of shaming effort towards Obama on war, civil liberty & the economy, dammit!

The distraction of the bright, shiny object didn’t stop there though. Oh, no. A pollster just happened to release today a survey analyzing voter attitudes towards candidates. They found that regardless of policy (two fictional candidates, one male & one female, were used), mentioning the female candidates looks in coverage dropped her part of the vote, whether positive or not. What the hell?

The political condition here is akin to a layer cake made of Stupid & Evil. General profile of one who even wants the positions discussed matches that of a psychopath. Interests from concentrated wealth decide who among the psychopaths make the best liars & guide who ends up on the ballot. The media fluffs the official line the overwhelming majority of the time, tossing aside what should rightly be seen as relevant information in favor of another form of mindless entertainment plus stenography. And in the end, there are the masses, filled with views about the way things work that are just plain wrong, given little incentive to learn because their voice matters for squat anyway.

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Doublethink fires a shot. I think.

As the latest round of talk over “gun control” continues due to the most recent well-publicized mass shooting incidents, naturally polls come up asking about it. I’ve heard about a particular outcome of these frequently, the remark that universal background checks get approval numbers reminiscent of sham elections in old-school dictatorships. Via the Washington Post, I find out Quinnipeac University did a poll including this question on gun laws getting the same result — 91% in this case — but also got… here, see it for yourself:

24. Do you support or oppose – requiring background checks for all gun buyers?

                     Tot    

Support              91%    
Oppose                8     
DK/NA                 1

25. Do you believe that if there are background checks for all gun purchases the government will or will not use that information in the future to confiscate legally-owned guns?

                     Tot    
Confiscate           48%    
Will not             38     
DK/NA                14

The demographic breakdowns are at the original site, but with a number like 91% there ain’t much to break down for the first response. The combination of the two though…I don’t get it. The overwhelming nature of the reply on background checks means you might as well be looking at the whole sample as your subgroup, which means a decent chunk of respondents are in both that 91% category of supporting universal background checks and the 48% that conclude universal background checks = legally owned guns being taken away.

So…are the overlap folks in favor of even legal guns being taken away? Are they thinking “good, these paranoid fools should just trust the police like decent citizens”? Or are there a lot of people who just didn’t understand the question?

Either way, another reminder of the dilemma of the public will. There is a lot government does specifically against most of us, but that doesn’t mean majorities are inherently right on everything. This is especially so when most are kept ignorant on purpose.

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Room for improvement

equal

Today started at the Supreme Court arguments over same-sex marriage, particularly California banning it via Prop 8 and whether they, um, can’t do that. Tomorrow the ridiculously named “Defense of Marriage” Act, which banned federal recognition of same-sex marriages when legal in a state, comes up.

Given the state involvement in relationships and my preference for state involvement in nothing, I can see where there’s a sense of tension here. In principle, that government on any level is deciding which relationships are legitimate and which ones are not is ridiculous, as it takes such a base emotional value — love – and subjects it to a 3rd party to define. That isn’t a concept that only Christianist right-wingers entertaining visions of wholesale societal collapse can be wary of: personally, my own view of what it means to declare your love for someone is an act of civil defiance of sorts…

“THIS person, I see as above the rest of you, more important than the rest of the world. If need be I will DIE for them, and they would do the same for me! Bring it, humanity, WE are ready!”

Prior to this, ones attachments are either blood or mere commonality/”hey neighbor” type stuff. Love is self-determination in the face of whatever those ties think. So the question goes, with this conception of love as form of emotional disobedience, what are we to make of the pro-side of same sex marriage, given the recognition sought is legal? No piece of paper can ever contain the reality of these relationships, so why seek it? I see the argument for sure of simply erasing the state from being involved at all, thus recognizing that there is no such thing as a compelling interest in the romantic lives of consenting adults. However, though obviously we as libertarians didn’t tie the knot between state and the construct known as marriage, it is there, and has been for long enough that most people living today are used to it.

There being issues of legal recognition for things like hospital visitation rights, adoption, insurance & whatnot doesn’t exactly help loosen the knot either. Basically, we have to deal with the society we have for the moment, and for this moment the question is simply whether or not, for all the flaws and contradictions within civil marriage as we know it, gays have a right to enter it. Let’s see, how best to explain this…

Shift gears for a moment. Pretend we’re not even discussing marriage. Instead, think about the police. Specifically, think about their use of racial profiling, targeting minority groups for additional harassment & violence. Now, the inherent role of the police as the local form of the tip of the spear of government is a role the playing of which I reject. Yet, doing so doesn’t itself stop the racial profiling, which is a pretty big deal if you happen to be a member of a targeted racial group.

It is not a mark of inconsistency to recognize that within a problematic structure some people are getting it worse than others and wish to stop that. Loving While Gay and Driving While Black as reasons for discrimination are both invalid.

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…and the world came crashing down.

A lot of things are said within the United Nations. Most don’t really go anywhere, so it’s more symbolic than anything else. Still, some symbolic gestures cause more screaming than others. Consider the reaction of Egypt’s current ruling party to a U.N. declaration on women’s rights:

The Islamist movement that backs President Mohamed Mursi gave 10 reasons why Muslim countries should “reject and condemn” the declaration, which the U.N. Commission on the Status of Women is racing to negotiate a consensus deal on by Friday.

The Brotherhood, whose Freedom and Justice Party* propelled Mursi to power in June, posted the statement on its website, www.ikhwanweb.com, and the website of the party on Thursday.

Egypt has joined Iran, Russia and the Vatican – dubbed an “unholy alliance” by some diplomats – in threatening to derail the women’s rights declaration by objecting to language on sexual, reproductive and gay rights.

Iran, Russia & the Vatican. I’m guessing this alliance across religious boundaries in favor of imposing boundaries on women simply for being women is not what the owners of cars around town I see with the “coexist” bumper sticker had in mind…

A major sticking point for the Muslim Brotherhood, according to their statement, is the concept of marital rape. Basically, that they see treating rape legally as rape as somehow absurd in the context of marriage. This logic defines marriage as permanent consent, as if simply because a woman has entered such a relationship they are at the man’s disposal for sex at any time, regardless of her having a mind of her own. Needless to say, if this is part & parcel of marriage in Egypt, it’d be quite understandable if women there opted to stay single in large amounts.

Older readers or those with more than a passing knowledge of U.S. legal history should see this as familiar, since similar anti-women legal loopholes were prevalent here until the 1970′s. I can even imagine our own religious ultra-traditionalists at the time — the Christian Brotherhood, if you will — railing against such as The End of Society As We Know It. That record has skipped endlessly, playing the same old tune with each even minor shift towards measures of equality:

  • “Women able to vote? Society will collapse! Are you mad?!?”
  • “Blacks able to vote? There goes America, down the drain…”
  • “Women able to not consent to sex in marriage? We’re doomed!!”
  • “Laws against anal thrown out? God’s wrath shall come by dinner time!!”
  • “Gays getting married?!? AAAAAAAHHHHHHH!!!!”

It’s a common refrain: assumption that the way things are is the way things must remain for mere survival & stability. Well, life is not that fragile, and the only society that doesn’t move *at all* is one that is dead, awaiting the taxidermist & a spot on the mantle.

Speaking of gay marriage, there’s a bit of news in the U.S. on that front, with Senator Rob Portman — a Republican — declaring support for it, basically because his son is gay. That this decision had to come about on Not Hating Your Children grounds rather than on the basis of “they’re adults, why do you give a shit?” says a lot about how foreign the concept of empathy is to “our” rulers. Yet we aren’t exactly immune, as polling shows support for same-sex marriage jumps substantially when someone knows a gay person.

To the ones in the aforementioned poll that said they didn’t know anyone who was gay: you do, you just don’t know it yet.

To the folks over in Egypt complaining about equality for women: you all know women, what’s your excuse? You’ll live, we did.

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It’s a start…

I never thought too highly of Rand Paul. Let’s get that out of the way right now.

I even incorrectly at the time of his campaign predicted the other guy would win, due to his opponent being the better liar & Rand running away from the anti-militarism that made his father, for all his contradictions elsewhere, such a popular figure.

Well yesterday, Rand remembered for several hours that he is the son of Ron, speaking at length against John Brennan’s nomination to head the CIA and by extension the claim of the Obama Administration to the right to unilaterally kill you. Naturally, being a Republican senator from FriedChickenVille, Real Murrikuh, the primary jump-off point was specifically about the proverbial Citizen Minding His Own Business getting droned over coffee, a formulation that, though understandable, tends to imply that the problem with murder vanishes once you cross the borders. Yet he expanded on that in a way questioning of U.S. foreign policy & militarism that I was shocked to hear coming from him instead of his father, actually name-checking the 16-year old that was murdered in our names in Yemen:

There was a man named al-Awlaki. He was a bad guy, by all evidence available to the public that I’ve read, he was treasonous. I have no sympathy for his death. I still would have tried him in a federal court for treason and I think you could have been executed. But his son was 16 years old, had missed his dad, gone for two years. His son sneaks out of the house and goes to Yemen. His son is then killed by a drone strike. They won’t tell us if he was targeted. Suspect, since there were other people in the group, about 20 people killed, that they were targeting someone else. I don’t know that. I don’t have inside information on that. But I suspect that.

But here’s the real problem: When the President’s spokesman was asked about al-Awlaki’s son, you know what his response was? This I find particularly callous and particularly troubling. The President’s response to the killing of al-Awlaki’s son, he said he should have chosen more responsible father.

You know, it’s kind of hard to choose who your parents are. That’s sort of like saying to someone whose father is a thief or a murderer or a rapist, which is obviously a bad thing, but does that mean it’s okay to kill their children think of the standard we would have if our standard for killing people overseas is, you should have chosen a more responsible parent.

Obviously I disagree with Rand Paul on putting anyone to death, even if it is al-Awlaki, but again, Real Murrikuh. Also, his sympathy with al-qaeda did not occur in a vacuum: at one point he was actually condemning the 9/11 attacks, participating in online discussions with the Washington Post, & being invited to the capitol. Going off of the timeline we know of for Anwar al-Awlaki, his turn from this to Islamist militant spokesperson appears to coincide with the move towards U.S. invasion of Iraq. This is not to defend taking up such views, only to point out the process, and how it reflects the humongous Fail when it came to “hearts & minds” with regard to the world’s reaction to how the U.S. government approaches it. He clearly shifted allegiances, engaging in what can safely be called nutjobbery.

But that and a nickel doesn’t buy an explanation of why in the hell his son had to die!

As usual, the fear-mongers supporting never-ending global war act as if everyone is an imminent threat, like the slightest stir of anger in faraway places is equivalent to someone about to detonate explosives at the Nets game. The continuation of this absurdity is the true threat to national security, as eventually if you treat the entire world as your enemies they will decide the shoe actually fits & respond. Common sense, on the other hand, would acknowledge that They, even if they don’t particularly like Us, are Over There, and the overwhelming majority of likelihood of them attacking us can be mitigated by not being Over There. It’s kind of like not getting stung by bees — don’t go slapping beehives with a stick.

For someone with any degree of actual power to point out how absurd the entire foreign policy status quo is, is itself a pigs flying moment. Yet, as is par, it’s inherently damaged by appeal to such power to check itself, via invocation of the Constitution. Folks, if the checks & balances and the Bill of Rights actually worked in the way described in public government schools’ American History courses, there’d have been war crimes trials by now. The shape of the beast changes, but it is still a beast, it is still the fire of arbitrary authority doing whatever it feels like. If I were the hopeful sort, I’d suggest the next step should be repeal of the blank check known as the Authorization to Use Military Force, followed by calls for rapid draw down and removal of the U.S. military from its current global deployments — a shift from talk to action on dismantling the empire once and for all. I’m not holding my breath though. This continues not for the reasons given to us by the perpetrators of these crimes, but for reasons of self-aggrandizement & enrichment, thus disproving the security argument isn’t enough.

Still, for most of a day the U.S. Senate functionally did jack squat. That’s a good thing.

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