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Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Why People Tolerate a Total State

by Wendy McElroy

?Why do so many people not realize America has become a total state??

Anyone who points out the politically obvious and is accused of panic-mongering has considered this question. The NSA's massive spying, the TSA frisking their children, the IRS targeting people politically, the longest war in American history, the militarization of law enforcement, the indefinite detention of prisoners at Gitmo...nothing, nothing seems to budge some people from the belief that the US is the freest, grandest nation on earth. It is an article of faith as deeply held as any belief in God.

But why?

Libertarian Class Analysis

There is no one answer but a good place to start is with a libertarian theory of class analysis. Karl Marx is usually credited with originating class analysis and the Marxist version is the one that most commonly comes to mind. Namely, people are classified based on their relationship to the means of production. Are you a worker or a capitalist?

But class analysis as an analytic tool did not originate with Marx. It was produced by 19th century radical liberal (that is, libertarian) historians who wrote in post-Napoleonic France: Charles Comte, Augustin Thierry and Charles Dunoyer. Their mentor was the great classical liberal economist J.B. Say. Perhaps the best presentation of this version of class analysis occurs in Franz Oppenheimer's book The State. Here he presents the two antagonistic principles upon which most societies operate: the economic and the political means. Or Society and the State.

Oppenheimer wrote, ?I mean by Society, the totality of concepts of all purely natural relations and institutions between man and man.? It consists collectively of all voluntary exchanges of labor and goods, including intangible 'goods' like culture. It is a productive and peaceful means that brings mutual benefit to all involved or no exchange would occur.

Oppenheimer wrote, ?I mean by it [the State] that summation of privileges and dominating positions which are brought into being by extra-economic power.? It consists of the systematic appropriation of labor and goods, including intangible ones like freedom of speech. It is a non-productive and violent means that benefits the thieves and harms the productive.

This one insight is the basis of libertarian class analysis: Society and the State were in basic and constant conflict with each other. The analysis classifies people based on their relationship to productivity. Are you part of an industrious Society or do you belong to the parasitic State?

Oppenheimer explained the social dynamics set in motion by the political means. Parasites naturally multiply and drain ever more resources. As the political means comes to dominate, however those who produce means see an ever diminishing return from their productivity and, so, they have little incentive to labor beyond subsistence. Society stagnates, which means there is less for the parasite to drain. And, yet, the State is now bloated and it needs an increasing amount of resources. Since it no longer has the consent and cooperation of the productive section, it must use conquest. The American State is at the stage of attempting to conquer American Society.

The Political Means Dominates America

The State is not merely the politicians and officials who run the visible structure of government. It includes every civil servant and bureaucrat. The largest employer in America is the federal government. According to the Office of Personnel Management, there were approximately 2.79 million civil servants as of December 2011. But this number is for ?civilian? personnel only and does not include uniformed civil servants, such as law enforcement. Of course, every state, county and city ratchets up the civil servant count with their own employees.

The State also includes the people whose political support is purchased by the stolen labor and goods, such as disability recipients. The ranks of these recipients is swelling as the individual states aggressively encourage the unemployed to pursue disability (a federal expense). For example, in New Mexico, the number of disability recipients jumped 58.7% in nine years. NPR recently (03/22/13) ran an in-depth analysis that estimated the total number of people on disability to be ?about 14 million Americans who don't have jobs and who don't show up in any of the unemployment measures we use.? Disability is only one 'welfare' program among dozens and dozens.

The State includes people ostensibly in the private sector whose job is to facilitate the theft of labor and goods ? for example, lawyers who hit productive businesses with dubious suits based on Nanny State laws. Employees in the military-industrial complex, suppliers to the military, subsidized banks and corporations, the list of those who survive on tax money goes on and on.

This is the first reason why so many people will never recognize that America is deteriorating; it is not deteriorating for them because they are the beneficiaries of the political means, and the police state works to their advantage. They benefit through money and pensions but many also benefit through acquiring status or power over others. A vast number of government employees could never earn these advantages based on merit in the private sector. They have a deep vested interest in not seeing themselves as the enemies of Society. Nor are their families likely to turn against the source of food on their tables.

The Tipping Point Theory

But why are people who are not tax consumers seemingly blind to the danger of the present State? Among the many explanations, I think three are commonplace.

They may not be blind but merely silent.

Or they may not be discontented. The Austrian economist Murray Rothbard once told me how his parents lived far better during the Great Depression than they had before it. They both held onto decent jobs and prices were very low. Such people are not fertile for a discussion about the economic calamity being inflicted by a State under which they prospered.

Equally, people who have never experienced the direct violence of the state are inclined to dismiss disturbing reports from those who have. As long as they live in relative comfort, these people allow the State to process their lives. They go about the business of living instead of focusing on matters they do not control. For many, it will take a tipping within their own lives or within society at large for the business of living to include a recognition of how dangerous the State can be.

A tipping point is the critical point at which an accumulation of minor changes triggers a major and often irreversible one. The build up to a social tipping point occurs on an individual basis. The Arab Spring is an example. Enough people became individually dissatisfied to form a mass protest movement. And it happened with sudden ease. The key is ?enough individuals? need to become dissatisfied for a tipping point to occur. Before it happens, however, the people who simply want to live will tend to ignore political problems out of a feeling of isolation or helplessness. Afterward, some will awaken. Perhaps they will be appalled at the brutality the State heaps upon those who challenge it, perhaps a family member will become involved in a protest, perhaps they will simply cease to feel helpless..

Conclusion

I suspect America is close to a social tipping point. If so, it will be caused by a bloated State consuming more and more from a Society that is already half on its knees.

How many individuals need to feel the tipping point within themselves for it occur in a general manner? The nineteenth century libertarian Benjamin Tucker estimated the figure at 10%. If 10% of society said ?no? to a law, then the law would become unenforceable. The number or percentage is impossible to measure, of course, but it is almost certain to be far, far less than 50%. Fortunately, history has rarely required a majority for social change to occur.

Whether or not the outcome of such a tip would be Society or more of the State depends as much upon how many people become reluctant to say ?yes? as much as it does upon the 10% who say ?no.?
_
Wendy McElroy is a frequent Dollar Vigilante contributor and renowned individualist anarchist and individualist feminist. She was a co-founder along with Carl Watner and George H. Smith of The Voluntaryist in 1982, and is the author/editor of twelve books, the latest of which is "The Art of Being Free". Follow her work at http://www.wendymcelroy.com.


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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Cop's Outburst After Man Escapes Petty Marijuana Charge Lands Him In Contempt of Court


Chris | InformationLiberation

A tax-slave escaping a petty marijuana charge?! OUTRAGEOUS!

From the Winston-Salem Journal:

A Kernersville police officer was suspended with pay Wednesday after a Forsyth County judge found him in contempt of court for an incident in which he burst out of the courtroom after a trial and loudly confronted a defense attorney.

Officer S.P. Senor, who joined the Kernersville Police Department in 2000, was ordered to pay a $100 fine by Forsyth District Judge David Sipprell. Senor had become upset after Sipprell had found a man not guilty of misdemeanor possession of marijuana after a trial in Kernersville District Court.

Senor was the officer who had stopped the defendant, Dennis Bowyer, for a broken license plate light. A K-9 dog sniffed around the car and Senor searched the car, finding a small amount of marijuana in a compartment in the car.

Bowyer denied that the marijuana was his and said that he did not own the car. Sipprell found Bowyer not guilty after determining that prosecutors had failed to prove under state law that the marijuana belonged to Bowyer and that Bowyer was in possession of it, according to John Barrow, Bowyer?s attorney.

When the trial ended, Senor stormed out of the courtroom and angrily confronted Barrow, Barrow said.

The Winston-Salem Journal reports the cop's annual salary is $47,880, which I would assume does not include overtime nor benefits, that's how much taxpayer money the state gives him to put poor people in jail for petty marijuana charges.
_
Chris runs the website InformationLiberation.com, you can read more of his writings here. Follow infolib on twitter here.

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sigh...more failed 'war on drugs' effort stories created by law enforcement. You would think a rational society would understand by now that drug use is not a criminal activity. Alterations of consciousness in one form or another has been evident in societies since the dawn of man. Any restrictions in this manner are purely suppression efforts by control freaks. Marijuana will ruin your life and the cops will make sure of that. @69171--I agree--after all, 70% of Americans believe in some invisible sky dude who watches them pee.
20461 is the invisible sky dude a NSA agent? @20461 lol, yes the whole god charade. i guess in order for us to get along we need some sort of galactic babysitter until we mature as a species.

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Monday, July 29, 2013

Los Angeles Deputies Kill Armed Man, 80, in Marijuana Raid


by Phillip Smith

Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputies shot and killed an armed 80-year-old man as they served a search warrant on a marijuana grow operation in a remote part of the county early Thursday morning. The as yet unnamed man becomes the 19th person to die in US domestic drug law enforcement operations so far this year, and the fourth in the past week.

According to NBC Los Angeles, deputies were serving a "narcotics" search warrant at the multi-unit rural property in the desert community of Littlerock at 7:30am. Lt. Dave Dolson told the TV station deputies entered the home through an unlocked front door, and one deputy fired when they encountered a man armed with a handgun. The man, who may have been the property owner, was pronounced dead at the scene.

Later Thursday afternoon, the Sheriff's Department released a statement on the killing.

"When deputies approached a rear bedroom at the location, they encountered an 80-year-old male who was armed with a semi-automatic handgun. The suspect pointed the handgun at the deputies and a deputy-involved shooting occurred," the statement read.

Deputies recovered the gun, marijuana, and growing equipment at the home where the man was shot. Residents who lived in other units on the property were detained, but later released.

The shooting will be investigated separately by several agencies, including the offices of the Los Angeles County District Attorney and Coroner, and the Sheriff's Homicide and Internal Affairs bureaus.


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Sunday, July 28, 2013

5-Year-Old's Suspension Over Toy Cap Gun Reversed


Child who wet himself in fear will not have permanent black mark on record
Steve Watson


A Maryland kindergartner who wet himself with fear while being interrogated over a toy gun back in June has had a suspension reversed, with the incident being struck from the record after the child?s family hired a lawyer and fought school officials on the matter.

As we reported at the time, the five-year-old from Dowell Elementary School in Lusby, Maryland was questioned alone by school officials for over two hours after he showed a friend his cowboy-style cap gun on the way to school.

Officials finally called the boy's mother in when he wet his pants. The school principal even stated that had the gun been "loaded" with caps, then it would have been "deemed an explosive and police would have been called in."

The Washington Post reports that officials wrote to the boy?s family last week to inform them that the 10 day suspension will be reversed "in its entirety".

The letter, sent to the family's attorney, says school officials reviewed the record, "carefully considering both the needs of the student and those of the school system."

The school had previously refused to remove the incident from the boy?s school record, stating that it should remain on the permanent record because other children had been traumatized by the incident.

After repeated efforts by the attorney Robin Ficker, the school finally relented and agreed to rescind the punishment and the mark on the boy?s record. The mother, who refused to back down on the case, stated "I'm just glad they finally decided to make right what they had done so wrong."

"We need to talk about having common sense when it comes to talking about school safety. We need not to overreact on young children and terrorize them? "He was a normal, typical 5-year-old who had a toy." the mother added.

Ficker, who was also the attorney involved in the infamous Hello Kitty bubble gun incident back in January, filed a detailed and lengthy report that alleged teachers bribed other students with a school currency called "Husky Bucks" to provide ?statements? about the incident. The statements were then written by the principal, and were not sent to the boy?s family.

Ficker?s report also made note of the fact that both the boy and his sister were questioned in an "intimidating manner at length.? Ficker also made the point that five-year-old?s often do not have the understanding to grasp the gravity of student conduct codes.

"It is common for kindergartners to play Cowboys and Indians, Cops and Robbers or to bring things to Show and Tell," the appeal said. "In any case, telling a little 5 year old something once or twice, is often not enough."

The reversal of the suspension comes at the same time as the dismissal of criminal charges against 14-year-old Jared Marcum who refused to stop wearing a gun rights T-shirt to school in West Virginia.
_
Steve Watson is the London based writer and editor for Alex Jones? Infowars.com, and Prisonplanet.com. He has a Masters Degree in International Relations from the School of Politics at The University of Nottingham, and a Bachelor Of Arts Degree in Literature and Creative Writing from Nottingham Trent University.


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Charges Dismissed For Teen Arrested Over NRA T-Shirt


Prosecutors tried to gag Jared Marcum from talking to press
Paul Joseph Watson


Common sense has finally prevailed in the case of a middle school student arrested after he refused to remove an NRA t-shirt, with criminal charges against 14-year-old Jared Marcum being dismissed by a judge.

Marcum faced a year in jail after being arrested on April 18 by police in Logan County, West Virginia on charges that he ?obstructed an officer? by refusing to stop talking. The incident began when Marcum refused to remove an NRA t-shirt when asked by a teacher.

After Marcum refused to take off the shirt, calmly attempting to explain to school administrators that he was exercising his first amendment right, cops were called solely, "Because I would not take this shirt off, because I believe that I should have a right to wear this," according to Marcum.

The t-shirt featured the words "protect your right" above an image of a hunting rifle, a message the school deemed a violation of its dress code which bars images featuring "profanity, violence, discriminatory messages or sexually suggestive phrases."

Police initially claimed Marcum made "terroristic threats" for daring to exercise his first amendment, but later backed down from that charge.

Despite prosecutors pursuing the case for a planned July 11 court date, Marcum?s attorney was able to persuade them to drop criminal charges and the judge dismissed the obstruction charge, although it remains unclear whether Marcum will face any further action brought by Logan Middle School administrators.

?After a review of statements from the officer and the school?s principal, White says he and a prosecutor agreed that creating a criminal record for Marcum wasn?t a good idea,??reports the Associated Press.

After the story attracted nationwide attention, prosecutors Christopher White and Sabrina Deskins asked Logan County Circuit Judge Eric O?Briant to?impose a gag order?that would have prevented Marcum, his father and his lawyer from discussing the case with the press, an attempt to take the matter ?out of the court of public opinion,? according to Marcum?s attorney Ben White.

After preparing a petition to intervene on the gag order in the interests of the free press, WOWK reporter Charlo Greene was thrown out of the Logan County Courthouse and prevented from presenting her argument on orders of the judge.

Marcum?s treatment attracted national condemnation amongst conservatives and libertarians as it underscored how both authorities and the education system treat the first and second amendments as nuisances to be frowned upon and discouraged.

Since the Sandy Hook shootings last year, there have been?innumerable instances?where schools have reacted with outright panic and hysteria to toy guns, objects shaped like guns or even the mere discussion of guns by students.
_
Paul Joseph Watson is the editor and writer for?Infowars.com?and?Prison Planet.com. He is the author of Order Out Of Chaos. Watson is also a host for Infowars Nightly News.


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God help me this cuntry is truly on the crazy train to stoopid. Why have people not called for recalls for these psyhcopathic clowns , I swear it is not authoritarian issues here it just is plane g-damn stoopid on steroids. We definiatly need a call for mass civil disobedince NOW.

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Saturday, July 27, 2013

Teenager Jailed for Sarcastic League of Legends Comment, Facing 8 Years in Prison


by RT

A teenager from Texas could spend the next eight years in prison if a court decides that the sarcastic comment he made during an online argument is enough to convict him of issuing a terroristic threat.

Justin Carter was only 18 years old when he and a friend got into an online spat over Facebook back in February with another person. They were arguing about the computer game ?League of Legends,? his dad told a local ABC affiliate, but one snarky remark made by the teen was apparently enough to raise suspicion in one woman who was watching the conversation unfold all the way up in Canada.

?Someone had said something to the effect of 'Oh you're insane, you're crazy, you're messed up in the head,?? father Jack Carter told KKVUE News, ?to which he replied 'Oh yeah, I'm real messed up in the head, I'm going to go shoot up a school full of kids and eat their still, beating hearts.??

According to the parent, the teenager from Texas followed up that remark with the phrases ?LOL? and ?JK?? Internet shorthand for ?Laugh out Loud? and ?Just Kidding.? The Canadian witness wasn?t amused, however, and reportedly conducted a cursory Google search to find out more about the sarcastic gamer. That information led her to learn that the Carter household is located close to a local elementary school, prompting her to alert the police.

Carter, who has since turned 19, was arrested in late March and has so far spent three months and one day behind bars. His trial is slated to begin in July, and if convicted of ?making a terroristic threat? he could spend most of his twenties in federal prison.

Under Texas law, a person could be charged with a misdemeanor if he or she ?threatens to commit any offense involving violence to any person or property? with the intent to prompt a reaction, cause fear in another or interrupt the occupation of a public place. If the defendant is thought to have made a threat to cause impairment or interruption of a public service, it?s a felony in the Lone Star State.

?These people are serious. They really want my son to go away to jail for a sarcastic comment that he made," Jack Carter told KVUE.

It?s likely that the timing of the teenager?s quip ? only two months after the tragic Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting left 26 people dead in Connecticut ? didn?t discourage authorities from launching an investigation. His father said his son didn?t mean anything of it, though, and was just being behaving like an average teenager.

?Justin was the kind of kid who didn't read the newspaper. He didn't watch television. He wasn't aware of current events. These kids, they don't realize what they're doing. They don't understand the implications. They don't understand public space,? said Jack Carter.

?If I can just help one person to understand that social media is not a playground, that when you go out there into social media, when you use Facebook, when you use Twitter, when you go out there and make comments on news articles, and the things you are saying can and will be used against you," he said.

Carter?s trial is expected to begin July 1 in Texas. Earlier this month, a grand jury in Massachusetts declined to indict an 18-year-old aspiring rapper who was accused of making terrorist threats after posting prose on his Facebook page that referenced the Boston Marathon bombing. Cameron B. D?Ambrosio was detained for one month in jail and stood to serve as much as two decades if convicted.


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Our government is a reflection of Jewish Bolshevik Communism where now our words are policed. The woman in Canada who started this needs to get a life I mean now we're going to convict people for thought crimes. I would never have my kids fight in the American military. Looking this story on at other forums, I noticed that there's significant number of people who basically approve authorities reaction in essence, although all seem to agree that 8 years us overkill. So I created a survey at http://tolu.na/11brmac - what should have been authorities reaction on the report about boy's remark. Please spend 2 minutes to participate. A government is fucked up B people today are retarded!
If you read the sentence it is sarcastically imply-d by the comment kus he was pist off like "ya right" but no one sees shit that way like the "RETARDS" you all are :D Why is it humans can do great things for all (non humans), but we stay as parasites?
Wait i can answer that for you! THE MONEY and false government! I think that Anonymous should look this woman up and do a 4c/b/ troll on her btw how did she get away wit it O.o she looked him up and info about him (finding his address) was not marked as one of the people he talked to so.....wtf?
and yes Anon 3 im wit you >:) Where is the expression of intent to make a real threat. N.B. If his comments were patently not made as a genuine threat, then patently his comments cannot genuinely be taken as a threat (except by those of a delusional mind-set)
Unfortunately, any society which is devoid of an education system for the benefit and enlightenment of the masses, is prone to produce a system of government geared to exploit and control the mentally under-developed - thus intellectually defenceless - masses; such a government will be run by the privileged and therefore unscrupulous few; who, with the protection of their intellectually-challenged weaponised goons, will not resist the temptation to exploit their intellectual advantage; who must then construct grounds for rolling-out grossly over-reaching, unconstitutional legislation which they permit themselves to apply gratuitously, in order that these exploiters may have a "legal framework" to protect themselves should any of the people they are unlawfully exploiting ever awaken to the fact. Such a society is in fact just a massive Guantanimo prison, where all its citizens are in-mates, existing soley at the discretion of their jailers - the government they "voted for". Perhaps this is why home education is so severely restricted in such societies - oppression cannot rise to power without first stripping the people of their intellectual capacity to perceive, much less fend off, the sly hand of the oppressor, until its too late and that hand has gained an iron-grip upon the throat of society. If this all sounds familiar - it should. It's exactly what the Nazis did in the last century. But there is a critical difference between the Nazis and such a government in today's world - the Nazis lacked the hi-tech weapons, surveillance, communication and propaganda technologies available to the governments of today.

Remember, the only way to "fight" the authority of a more powerful oppressive State, is to leave (or perhaps renounce that society and it's benefits). That's why the Russian's used to build walls to keep people in.

Nothing in the above expression of ideas is made with any intent of influence, and may not be interpreted or otherwise utilised for the purpose of influence of any kind. Any party/parties making such interpretation/utility, by so doing, accept sole liability for their actions and also indemnify against any liability, the author of the above expression of ideas; said author does not condone any such interpretation or utilisation.

Per previous comment: If I wish to know whether I live in a free society, I need simply ask my friendly government agents whether I live in a free society. If the answer is "NO" - then I may choose either to stay or to make good my escape from that society. However, if the answer is "YES", then I might also ask - A) if it's a free society, am I free to not pay taxes? Also, B) if its a free society, am I free to leave that society? Finally, C) if it's a free society, why do I need permission to exercise responsibly the rights and liberties necessary to a dignified, free and peaceful existence? (All dictators in history have, as their first act of office, outlawed the ownership of weapons, except among their own soldiers (aka private army).

Disclaimer as per above previous comment. In no way, shape or form does the author of this, or author's other comments, accept liability for, or condone, or express any influence or control over, the thoughts and/or mind-set of others or their actions.

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Thursday, July 25, 2013

WV Court Officials Trying to Silence Media in Quest to Convict Boy for NRA Shirt


by Carlos Miller

What started off as a routine harassment from a middle school teacher to a student over a t-shirt he was wearing has turned into an embarrassing and infuriating abuse of First Amendment rights in West Virginia.

First, school officials suspended 14-year-old Jared Marcum because he was wearing an NRA shirt.

Then police arrested him because he had argued in the principal?s office that the shirt wasn?t breaking school policy.

This week, prosecutors tried to keep him from speaking to the media through an emergency gag order, which they said would serve in his ?better interest.?

But Logan County prosecutors Christopher White and Sabrina Deskins are the same people trying to convict him on a charge of obstruction, which could land him in jail for a year, so they are the last people looking out for his better interest.

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Don't stand for that shit mate! Talk up a storm to the entire world. Set up a blog, post on Facebook, call Alex Jones, and ask for donations from the public so that you can hire a high profile lawyers to stick it to the man. This is your new summer vacation.

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Peter Schiff: The Golden Cycle


By Peter Schiff

The New York Times had the definitive take on the vicious sell off in gold. To summarize one of their articles:

Two years ago gold bugs ran wild as the price of gold rose nearly six times. But since cresting two years ago it has steadily declined, almost by half, putting the gold bugs in flight. The most recent advisory from a leading Wall Street firm suggests that the price will continue to drift downward, and may ultimately settle 40% below current levels.

The rout says a lot about consumer confidence in the worldwide recovery. The sharply reduced rates of inflation combined with resurgence of other, more economically productive investments, such as stocks, real estate, and bank savings have combined to eliminate gold's allure.

Although the American economy has reduced its rapid rate of recovery, it is still on a firm expansionary course. The fear that dominated two years ago has largely vanished, replaced by a recovery that has turned the gold speculators' dreams into a nightmare.

This analysis provides a good representation of the current conventional wisdom. The only twist here is that the article from which this summary is derived appeared in the August 29, 1976 edition of The New York Times. At that time gold was preparing to embark on an historic rally that would push it up more than 700% a little over three years later. Is it possible that the history is about to repeat itself?

At the time The Times article was written gold had fallen to $103 per ounce, a decline of nearly 50% from the roughly $200 it had sold for in the closing days of 1974. The $200 price had capped a furious three-year rally that began in August of 1971 when President Nixon "temporarily" closed the gold window and allowed gold to float freely. Prior to that decision gold had been fixed at $35 per ounce for nearly two generations. That initial three year 450% rally had validated the forecasts of the "gold bugs" who had predicted a rapid rise in gold prices should the dollar's link to gold be severed. The accuracy of these formerly marginalized analysts proved to be a bitter pill for the mainstream voices in Washington and Wall Street who, for reasons of power, politics and profit, were anxious to confine the "barbarous relic" to the dustbin of history. Incredulous as it may seem now, with gold still priced at $35 per ounce, official forecasts of both the Secretary of the Treasury and the Chairman of the Federal Reserve were that demonetizing gold would undermine its value, and that its price would actually fall as a result.

Of course government experts could not have been more wrong. Once uncoupled from the dollar, gold's initial ascent in the early 1970's was fueled by the highest inflation in generations and the deteriorating health of the U.S. economy that had been ravaged by the "guns and butter" policies of the 1960's. But the American economy stabilized during the mid-years of the 1970's and both inflation and unemployment fell. When gold reversed course in 1975 the voices of traditional power elite could not contain their glee. When the gold price approached $100 per ounce, a nearly 50% decline, the obituaries came fast and furious. Everyone assumed that the gold mania would never return.

Although the writer of The Times piece did not yet know it, the bottom for gold had been established four days before his article was published. Few realized at the time that the real economic pain of the 1970's had (to paraphrase The Carpenters 1970's hit) "Only Just Begun". When inflation and recession came back with a vengeance in the late 1970's, gold took off (to quote another 1970's gem), like a skyrocket in flight. By January 1980, gold topped out at $850 an ounce. The second leg of the rally proved to be bigger than the first.

The parallel between the 1970s and the current period are even more striking when you look closely at the numbers. For example, from 1971 to 1974 gold prices rose by 458% from $35 to $195.25, which was then followed by a two-year correction of nearly 50%. This reduced total gains to just under 200%. The current bull market that began back in 2000 took a bit longer to evolve, but the percentage gains are very similar. (We should allow for a more compressed time frame in the 1970s because of the sudden untethering of gold after decades of restraint.) From its 1999 low to its 2011 peak, gold rose by about 650% from $253 to $1895 per ounce, followed by a two year correction of approximately 37%, down to around $1190 per ounce. The pullback has reduced the total rally to about 370%. The mainstream is saying now, as they did then, that the pullback has invalidated fears that rising U. S. budget deficits, overly accommodative monetary policy, and a weakening economy will combine to bring down the dollar and ignite inflation. But 1976 was not the end of the game. In all likelihood, 2013 will not be either.

The biggest difference between then and now is that until 1975 ordinary Americans were barred by law from buying and owning gold. About the only route available to participate in the earlier stage of the precious metal rally was by hording silver dimes, quarters and half dollars minted prior to 1965. My father indulged in this process himself by sifting through his change, the cash registers of any merchant who would allow him (exchanging new non-silver coins and bills for silver), and by sifting out silver coins from rolls he bought from banks. It was a time-consuming process, and most of his friends and family members thought he was crazy.After all, he had $10,000 worth of pocket change earning no interest. But the $10,000 face value worth of those coins he collected had a melt value of over $350,000 when silver hit its peak.

By the mid 1970's none of the problems that initially led to the recession in the early years of the decade had been solved. Contrary to the claims of the "experts" things got much worse in the years ahead. It took the much deeper recession of the late 1970's and early 1980's, which at the time was the worst economic down-turn since the great Depression, to finally purge the economy of all the excesses. The lower marginal tax rates and cuts in regulation implemented by President Reagan and tight money under Volcker helped get the economy back on track and create investment opportunities that drew money away from gold. As a result gold fell hard during the early 1980's. But even after the declines, gold maintained levels for the next 20 years that were three to four times as high as the 1976 lows.

Although the economy improved in the 1980's, the cure was not complete. Government spending, budget and trade deficits continued to take a heavy toll. The U.S. was transformed from the world's largest creditor to its largest debtor. When the time came to face the music in 2001, the Fed kept the party going by opening the monetary spigots. Then when decades of monetary excess finally came to a head in 2008, the Fed open up its monetary spigots even wider, flooding the economy with even more cheap money.

Unfortunately just like 1976, a true economic recovery is not just around the corner. More likely we are in the eye of an economic storm that will blow much harder than the stagflation winds of the Jimmy Carter years. And once again the establishment is using the decline it the price of gold to validate its misguided policies and discredit its critics. But none of the problems that led me and other modern day gold bugs to buy gold ten years ago have been solved. In fact, monetary and fiscal policies have actually made them much worse. The sad truth is that as bad as things were back in 1976, they are much worse now. Whether as a nation we will be able to rise to the occasion, and actually finish the job that Ronald Reagan and Paul Volcker started remains to be seen. But I am confident that the price of gold will rise much higher, and that its final ascent will be that much more spectacular the longer we continue on our current policy path. Don't believe the mainstream. Just as before, they will likely be wrong again.


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Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Snowden vs. the Soyuz

by William Norman Grigg

If it hadn?t been for the subtle and cynical intervention of the imperial Russian government, the American War for Independence might have failed. George Washington and his colleagues would have been condemned as traitors, and then dispatched to eternity with all of the horrors devised by inventive sadists to deter similar impudence on the part of those described as the Crown?s subjects.

This little-appreciated fact should be pointed out to those who have claimed that there was something inappropriate about Edward Snowden receiving help from Russia in his search for political asylum from the world?s most powerful and most lawless regime.

At the time of the American revolt, the British Empire enjoyed incontestable superiority at sea, but possessed a mediocre army. It could project power anywhere on the face of the globe, but depended on foreign mercenaries to do most of the hands-on work of killing and dying.

As the rebellion coalesced in the American colonies, George III made a formal request to Empress Catherine to rent 20,000 battle-hardened Russian infantrymen, and a flotilla of Russian naval vessels to supplement the task force en route to chastise the colonists. Catherine politely declined the offer while bidding her fellow monarch good luck. In private conversations, however, the Empress was indulgently disdainful of the British king, saying that he had bungled the management of the American colonies and should be ?taught a lesson.?

Catherine?s refusal to intervene on behalf of King George was not the only favor she did on behalf of the American patriot cause. As the War for Independence unfolded, the Empress conducted a brisk business supplying the navies of France and Spain, both of which gave material support to the Patriot cause.

When the British government began to interdict neutral shipping to inspect for America-bound ?contraband,? Catherine sent communiques to Sweden, Denmark, Holland, and Prussia proposing the creation of a ?League of Armed Neutrality? with the advertised aim of protecting freedom of the seas. This had the effect of diplomatically isolating Great Britain diplomatically, thereby nullifying its naval advantage. France labored under no similar restrictions. This is why the French fleet was able to supply ninety percent of the weapons used by American rebels in their War for Independence.

Russia was one of several countries to which the Continental Congress had deployed envoys in search of aid. Francis Dana, a former secretary to John Adams, endured a long, lonely, and apparently fruitless mission to the Court of St. Petersburg. Harried by the imperial secret police and immersed in the exhausting intrigue of court politics, Dana was never given an audience by the Empress, whose decisions were guided by calculated self-interest, rather than idealism. The dejected American emissary must have been astonished on his return to hear John Adams laud Catherine as a ?friend? of liberty?s cause, and to hear Washington extol the virtues of the ?great Potentate of the North.?

In his book The Great Upheaval: America and the Birth of the Modern World 1788-1800, historian Jay Winik describes Empress Catherine ? the authoritarian ruler of a Russian police state ? as the ?midwife? of American independence. The American revolt quite likely would not have succeeded if Britain hadn?t been ?neutralized and isolated by Catherine?s Armed League?; by denying King George?s request for military aid, and using her influence to curtail Britain?s naval advantage, the Russian tyrant ?helped bolster the hopes of beleaguered American rebels fighting for their lives?.?

The Russian government of Vladimir Putin has rendered similar aid to an American whistle-blower who is fighting for his life ? much to the dismay and outrage of people who are Americans by birth, rather than conviction, and who mistakenly believe that patriotism is measured by one?s willingness to abide the institutional criminality of the government that impudently rules us.

In 1995, when he plagued the House of Representatives, the execrable Senator Charles Schumer of New York ardently defended the Regime?s annihilation of the Branch Davidians outside Waco, and treated with unfiltered scorn anybody with sufficient temerity to condemn that Soviet-caliber episode of state-inflicted mass murder. As it happens, the FBI?s campaign to annihilate state enemies at Mt. Carmel received material assistance from the Russian security services in the person of the late Dr. Igor Smirnov of the Moscow Institute of Psycho-Correction ? whose wife, Elena Rusalkina, has continued his work as a ?counter-terrorism? contractor for the Department of Homeland Security.

Commissar Schumer, who lauded the joint U.S.-Russian production at Mt. Carmel, is now distraught that the Russians aren?t willing to help the Regime in Washington apprehend a state enemy so he can be tortured and put through a show trial. In a June 23 CNN interview, Schumer fumed that by ?aiding and abetting Snowden?s escape,? Putin had ?put a finger in the eye of the United States.? Schumer much prefers it when the Russians are aiding and abetting Washington?s murderous crimes against the American people.

Like the rest of his detestable cohort, Schumer believes that the world?s inhabitants, including foreign rulers, have a moral obligation to submit to Washington?s will. Assuming that Putin was involved in the decision to facilitate Edward Snowden?s flight from Hong Kong to Latin America, his actions may well have been motivated by a desire to give a metaphorical middle digit to Schumer and his ilk.

In any case, if Putin consciously aided Snowden, that choice -- like those made by the Empress Catherine ? was based on calculations of political advantage, rather than a principled devotion to individual liberty. And Edward Snowden?s willingness to accept help from Russia is akin to the entreaties made on behalf of the American rebels by Francis Dana.

Commenting about Snowden?s flight to Russia en route to Latin America, a very good friend (and former editor) of mine observed: "If Edward Snowden is going to hopscotch around the word to locations where elections are rigged and human rights ignored, that giant sucking sound is sympathy evaporating for him."

A better way of viewing Snowden?s behavior is that he is hopscotching around the world to countries not ruled by governments that kill people by remote control, and are strong enough to prevent him from being seized and tortured by the only government that routinely commits crimes of that kind.

Yes, Vladimir Putin and his clique are products of the Soviet system that murdered tens of millions of people. At present, however, they are content to contain their ambitions to the country they currently control.

Russian drones aren?t plying the skies above distant countries, raining death and terror on helpless neighborhoods. Putin the ex-KGB chief doesn?t have Tuesday meetings to authorize summary executions on the basis of a ?Kill List? compiled by anonymous and unaccountable functionaries. Russia?s FSB secret police, like its counterpart, the FBI, does stage false-flag terrorist incidents, but once again, those are carried out for domestic political purposes. Moscow doesn?t provide arms, training, and support to terrorist groups in Syria, Iran, and elsewhere; that?s Washington?s gig. And since September 2001 it has Washington, not Moscow, that employs the services of KGB-trained secret police in countries like Uzbekistan and Syria.

During the Brezhnev era, Soviet ?journalists? routinely participated in KGB-orchestrated denunciations of dissidents and human rights activists. As the well-coiffed commissar David Gregory demonstrated during his June 24 interview with Glenn Greenwald, behavior of that kind is not quite commonplace for members of the American media elite. An even more repellent example was provided by New York Times columnist Ross Sorkin, who said on CNBC that ?I?d almost arrest Glenn Greenwald [because] he wants to help get him to Ecuador or whatever.?

Russia is ruled by a degenerate gangster regime, not a cunning Communist cabal pursuing global hegemony and ideological domination. In many important ways, that long-suffering country is less collectivist than the United States has become.

In Russia today, "Solzhenitsyn's Gulag Archipelago is required reading in schools for 11th graders," notes Russian writer Stanislav Mishin (who could be described as the Russian equivalent of a Pat Buchanan-style nationalist conservative). "All the brutality of the Soviets and the crimes that were committed will be in the minds of our children for generations. Where is any review [in American schools] of the crimes that Wall Street committed when it sponsored and set up those same Communist Marxists or Hitler's Fascist Marxists? Nowhere. Where is the admission of the massacres that the American army committed in the independent nation of the Confederate States? Nowhere, nor [is there] anything of the terror bombings of German cities or anything else of that nature. You will never hear anything on these from those NYC/DC blabber heads who love their Wall Street and think that genocidaires like Sherman were bully."

Mishin observes that under the administration of former President Medvedev (a prot?g? of Putin), Russia had a flat income tax -- "and not the 30% or so suggested by those American conservatives but at 13" -- and a top corporate tax rate of 24% "compared to the American Federal rate of 36% and additional state rates." There is also a far greater diversity of opinion in the Russian media than one finds in the American "free" press ? a fact underscored quite memorably by the way the American media eagerly joined in the Orwellian Two-Minutes Hate of Edward Snowden.

What about foreign aggression and revolutionary subversion? Aren't Putin and his comrades to blame for promoting terrorism? One imagines Mishin drawing a steadying breath before addressing that subject.

"Who invaded over 30 nations in less than 200 years?" Mishin quite reasonably inquires. "Who has fought over 6 wars since 1991: Iraq followed by 10 years of bombing them, Somalia, Bosnia, Yugoslavia, Iraq, and Afghanistan, while engaging unofficially in Somalia, Kenya, Yemen, Pakistan and the Philippines? Who waxes and screams for full invasions of Iran, Yemen, Pakistan, Venezuela? Who threatened to bomb our ships and come in and defend the Chechen Islamics? Who sponsored revolutions in Serbia, Armenia, Georgia, Ukraine, Belarus (failed), Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan (failed), Moldova (failed)?"

Whatever we learn about Snowden?s motives and affiliations, questions of the kind raised by Mishin should be honestly considered by those who criticize the whistle-blower for ?hopscotching? from country to country to elude the long reach of the drone-murderers and dungeon masters in Washington. Assuming that a gap separates post-Soviet Russia from proto-Soviet Amerika, it's one that can be crossed in the kind of modest jump one performs in a hopscotch game.
_
William Norman Grigg publishes the Pro Libertate blog and hosts the Pro Libertate radio program.


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Monday, July 22, 2013

Shock Video Shows Police Forcibly Drawing Blood


Man screams "what country is this" as cops strap him down
Paul Joseph Watson

Shock video out of Georgia shows police strapping down citizens accused of drunk driving before using a needle forcibly draw blood as the victim screams, ?what country is this??

The policy of police obtaining a warrant to draw blood from those merely suspected of being drunk at a DUI checkpoint or a routine traffic stop has been in place for years across many states, but to actually see it in action is disturbing.

The clip shows individuals being strapped down on a padded table at the Gwinnett County jail. Even those who show no resistance whatsoever are forcibly restrained and have their heads pressed down by an officer using his elbow.

?We all are American citizens and you guys have me strapped to a table like I?m in Guantanamo f***ing Bay,? complains another victim of the blood draw.

Mike Choroski, the man seen screaming ?what country is this? as officers hold him down and take his blood without consent, is still awaiting trial, claiming that he is not guilty and there was no accident involving his vehicle.

?I?m a taxpaying American who refused something?.I refused to do this?.what happened to me in that room was unnessesary and nobody should have to do that,? said Choroski.

?Holding down and forcing somebody to submit to this is really intrusive in terms of that level of invasive procedure into someone?s body is ridiculous for investigating a misdemeanour,? Attorney David Boyle?told Fox 5 Atlanta, describing the forced blood draws as an ?unreasonable search? under the 4th Amendment.

Despite the fact that citizens can lose their drivers license for a year if they refuse a standard breathlyser test, cops can then get a warrant to forcibly draw blood, ?for every DUI stop, even if there?s no accident or injury.?

In Gwinnett County, Georgia police have carried out more than 100 forced blood draws since January.

?I?m stunned, I did not know that this was legal, I did not know they could take your blood without your consent,? said a Fox 5 anchor in response to the clip, opining that the process was a violation of the 4th Amendment.

Georgia is one of numerous states that enforce ?no refusal? checkpoints where police can forcibly draw blood. In 2005,?the Supreme Court ruled that it is not unconstitutional for the state to hold down Americans and forcefully withdraw blood.?A January 2013 ruling affirmed that a warrant must be obtained for the process, although police could dispense with the warrant requirement in an ?emergency?.
_
Paul Joseph Watson is the editor and writer for?Infowars.com?and?Prison Planet.com. He is the author of Order Out Of Chaos. Watson is also a host for Infowars Nightly News.


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They better not let me out those restaraints once they have them on, cause wether I get my ass kicked or not I' m gonna draw me some blood as well mother fuckers. This is bullshit! At least we still have Freedom of Speech! Or do we? People I say it's time for an UPRISING SOON! I'm gonna take a guess and say that Mike Choroski's blood will show he was DUI. The worst part about all of this is how difficult it is to become a citizen of another country. FUCK THA POLICE Hey why complain, we're... Vampice Our blood supply is at stake. Forgive the pun aww you guys arent seeing the humour in this.... If you guys are gonna live in a police state you gotta take the good with the bad. I was totally not surprised that this was in atlanta, georgia. In fact I KNEW it had to be georgia. You know why? Because I live here. This place is fucked! America is fucked. They are taking our rights one by one. America is dead. Freedom is dead.

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Sunday, July 21, 2013

Police Once Again Mistake Cell Phone for Gun - But This Time, They Open Fire


By Carlos Miller

Las Vegas police responded to a call of a suicidal man who pulled out a cell phone and pointed it at them, perhaps to record them, prompting an officer to shoot at him.

The officer missed but the man fell to the ground anyway where police arrested him.

?The individual reached into his pocket, he pulled out a dark object, pointed it at the sergeant in a manner like he would be firing a pistol,? explained Deputy Chief Al Salinas of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department in the above video.

The incident took place Sunday at 2 p.m., so darkness of the night did not contribute to the officer seeing the cell phone as a ?dark object.?

The man, who has not been identified, will most likely be charged with assault with a deadly weapon as well as battery with a deadly weapon because prior to the shooting, he had been throwing landscaping rocks at the officers, according to Salinas.

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Saturday, July 20, 2013

SWAT Team Kills Armed Homeowner in Dawn Drug Raid


by Phillip Smith

An armed West Virginia homeowner who confronted dawn police raiders with a rifle was shot and killed by State Police officers Wednesday. Richard Dale Kohler, 66, becomes the 18th person to die in US domestic drug law enforcement operations so far this year, and the third in less than a week.

According to the West Virginia Gazette, State Police spokesman Sgt. Michael Baylous said officers from the State Police special response team and DEA agents knocked on the door of Kohler's home at 6:05am. to serve a federal warrant. The newspaper described the special response team as "akin to a SWAT team."

Officers knocked on the door, Baylous said, but no one answered, so police "had to break down the door or forcefully open it somehow." Baylous gave no indication of the amount of time that elapsed between the initial knock on the door and police breaking it open.

When police break down the door, they saw Kohler pointing a rifle at them, Baylous said. The troopers opened fire, shooting multiple rounds and killing Kohler. Baylous said he did not think Kohler had fired his weapon, but it was still unclear.

Baylous said the warrant police were executing was part of a larger, ongoing drug investigation with multiple suspects. He would not comment further on the nature of the investigation, except to say that the DEA division involved was one that focused primarily on prescription drugs.

A neighbor told WSAZ TV that she had seen unusual amounts of traffic going to and from Kohler's home, but that she was surprised to hear he even had a gun.

"I mean, I can't see him just open fire like that, but you know when all that comes after you, you never know what somebody's going to do," Christina Murdock said.


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Friday, July 19, 2013

Richard Clarke: Hastings Accident "Consistent with a Car Cyber Attack"


?Intelligence agencies? know how to remotely seize control of a car.?
Kurt Nimmo


Former U.S. National Coordinator for Security, Infrastructure Protection, and Counter-terrorism Richard Clarke told The Huffington Post on Monday that the fatal crash of journalist Michael Hastings? Mercedes C250 coupe last week is ?consistent with a car cyber attack.?

?There is reason to believe that intelligence agencies for major powers? ? including the United States ? know how to remotely seize control of a car," Clarke said.

On Saturday, Infowars.com posted a video of a talk presented by Dr. Kathleen Fisher, a program manager for DARPA, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, an agency of the United States Department of Defense responsible for the development of new technologies. Fisher admitted that the Pentagon has researched remotely controlling cars through hacking on board computers.

In 2011, Car and Driver magazine published an article substantiating the Pentagon research. "Currently, there's nothing to stop anyone with malicious intent and some ?computer-programming skills from taking command of your vehicle. After gaining access, a hacker could control everything from which song plays on the radio to whether the brakes work," writes Keith Barry, citing research conducted by the Center for Automotive Embedded Systems Security, a partnership between the University of California San Diego and the University of Washington.

?What has been revealed as a result of some research at universities is that it?s relatively easy to hack your way into the control system of a car, and to do such things as cause acceleration when the driver doesn?t want acceleration, to throw on the brakes when the driver doesn?t want the brakes on, to launch an air bag,? Clarke told The Huffington Post. ?You can do some really highly destructive things now, through hacking a car, and it?s not that hard.?

Clarke was careful not to directly implicate the government in hacking Hastings? car. ?So if there were a cyber attack on the car ? and I?m not saying there was,? he said, ?I think whoever did it would probably get away with it.?

He also put credence in the FBI?s claim -- despite claims to the contrary by associates of the writer -- that the agency was not investigating him. ?I believe the FBI when they say they weren?t investigating him,? said Clarke. ?That was very unusual, and I?m sure they checked very carefully before they said that.?

?I?m not a conspiracy guy. In fact, I?ve spent most of my life knocking down conspiracy theories,? said Clarke. ?But my rule has always been you don?t knock down a conspiracy theory until you can prove it [wrong]. And in the case of Michael Hastings, what evidence is available publicly is consistent with a car cyber attack. And the problem with that is you can?t prove it.?

Despite the overwhelming evidence that Michael Hastings was targeted and assassinated for his journalism -- most notably his story resulting in the fall of Gen. Stanley McChrystal and remarks on NSA surveillance -- the establishment media continues to portray the attack on Hastings as the delusional meanderings of conspiracy theorists. Clarke?s comments serve as the latest pi?ce de r?sistance in an unfolding drama revealing just how far the government will go to silence critics and truth tellers.

Prior to his murder, Hastings said the Obama administration had declared war on the press. His desire to go into hiding -- expressed in an email mere hours before his assassination -- demonstrates the ability of the government to monitor opponents by using a well-developed NSA surveillance grid and take executive action against investigative journalists and others who dare to stand up to the national security state.


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It amazes me that the press are the ones who give this story and many like it no coverage or dismissive coverage. They are wholly co-opted, and cowed, even to the point of murder of one of their own.

That is truly scary. Crimes by the powerful and repression by the government goes unchallenged or investigated, often even defended.

If the press can't be bothered about freedom of the press, why should the government be? They are tamping down the dirt on their own grave.

Never mind their responsibility to the freedom of the American people.
How many decades has it been now since that notion wasn't a sad joke?

Anyone who thinks the death of Michael Hastings wasn't sinister has only to read his words and watch his video's from the weeks before he died. If you think Ed Snowden took a stand for freedom by revealing the truth about the government, pray for him and his survival.
And that the spirit of Mr. Hastings may rest in peace.

May their work continue so that justice freedom and liberty may not perish from this land, and from this world.

Who cares what Richard Clarke thinks he's part of our dirty Jew establishment. He will cover for the Mossad and the Jewish government in the U.S. What you want to do is look at this: "Woody Harrelson: I'm an anarchist", and then watch this movie: "The Stuntman"; and then recall the old TV series: "Mission Impossible"; and there's your answer.

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Thursday, July 18, 2013

Concord Cop Shoots Small Cocker Spaniel Mix


by Alan Wang

CONCORD, Calif. (KGO) -- A Concord man is livid because a police officer shot his elderly dog. The police say it was justified, but the dog owner tells ABC7 News that it was completely unnecessary.

"This bottom part is where a fragment of the bullet came out," said Dave Billing, a roommate.

The Concord police officer shot Kirby, a 13-year-old cocker spaniel mix, with his 40 caliber pistol.

"He yelped and just stopped moving for a second. I really thought he was dead," said Zach Grimm, Kirby's owner.

There's a bullet fragment lodged near Kirby's spine and his recovery is still questionable. Concord police would not speak on camera, but they say officers responded to a burglary call last week. One of them went into the backyard of this home where Grimm lives with his two roommates.

Read More


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How Can We Trust Perjurers?


by Jacob G. Hornberger

President Obama says that we just need to trust him and national-security state officials with the power to secretly monitor our telephone calls and emails. He says that while it's true that they've been secretly keeping data about our telephone calls, he assures us that no one is recording our telephone calls or indiscriminately reading our emails.

But how do we know that he's telling the truth about any matter relating to "national security," given that it's considered okay to lie about secret matters relating to "national security"?

In other words, if the national-security state is, in fact, secretly recording people's telephone calls and vacuuming up emails, President Obama and national-security officials aren't about to disclose that fact to us, given that disclosure would threaten "national security" by letting the terrorists know that their calls were being recorded and emails being read.

How do we know that the president and his national-security team would lie to us about secret programs relating to ?national security?? We have proof in the form of the perjury committed by the president's very own director of national intelligence, James Clapper.

Consider Clapper's sworn testimony last March before the U.S. Senate:

QUESTION: Does the NSA collect any type of data at all on millions or hundreds of millions of Americans?

ANSWER: No, sir.

QUESTION: It does not?

ANSWER: Not wittingly. There are cases where they could, inadvertently perhaps, collect--but not wittingly."

Of course, Clapper was testifying long before Edward Snowden made his revelations. The last thing on Clapper's mind was the possibility that anyone would ever discover that he was committing perjury and that the NSA was, in fact, knowingly, intentionally, deliberately, and wittingly collecting data on millions or hundreds of millions of Americans.

So, why hasn't Clapper been indicted for perjury? After all, there isn't any doubt whatsoever that if this had been a private citizen like Martha Stewart or Roger Clemens, U.S. Justice Department attorneys would be jumping up and down, screaming about how the integrity of our free and democratic system requires truthful answers in official federal investigations, including those before Congress.

The answer lies in the extraordinary power that the national-security state apparatus has acquired in the last 60 years. That's why the Justice Department, the Congress, and the federal judiciary are rolling over on Clapper's perjury. None of them has any desire to jack with the Pentagon, the CIA, and the NSA, which is why they have been so deferential to them for so long and especially since 9/11.

How do they justify not going after Clapper for perjury when they go after private people like Martha Stewart and Roger Clemens?

They don't have to justify anything to anyone. But the answer for their inaction lies in the two most important words in the lives of the American people in our lifetime: "national security," the two words that have absolutely no objective meaning, aren't found in the Constitution, and whose sole purpose is to expand the power and reach of the national-security state over the American people.

The large concentration of power in the Pentagon, the CIA, and the NSA has obviously given rise to an informal grant of immunity for crimes committed in the name of "national security," including murder, assassination, torture, kidnapping, and perjury.

All that national-security state officials have to do when accused of criminal wrongdoing is cite "national security" and they will be let off the hook, notwithstanding that no U.S. law provides that "national security" shall be a defense to criminal conduct.

An interesting question, one that the mainstream press, not surprisingly, isn't asking, is: What did President Obama know about Clapper's testimony and when did he know it? Did the president and Clapper discuss what Clapper should say if he were asked under oath about the existence of a secret NSA surveillance scheme on the American people? Did the president order Clapper to lie about the program if he were asked about it during his testimony? If so, that would make the president guilty of the crime of subordination of perjury.

At the very least, President Obama almost certainly had to have known about Clapper's false testimony after the fact. It defies credulity that the president would have not known about the details of his own director of national intelligence's sworn testimony before Congress.

If that's the case, then rather than order Clapper to return to Congress to correct his testimony or rather than issue a corrected statement himself, Obama let the perjury stand.

Why would the president of the United States do that? Because he would have been taking the same position Clapper obviously took: That keeping a national-security secret is more important than speaking the truth, even under oath, especially if "national security" is at stake.

And that's precisely why no one can trust that Obama or any other national-security state official is telling the truth on anything they say about secret programs relating to "national security."
_
Jacob G. Hornberger is founder and president of The Future of Freedom Foundation. He was born and raised in Laredo, Texas, and received his B.A. in economics from Virginia Military Institute and his law degree from the University of Texas. He was a trial attorney for twelve years in Texas. He also was an adjunct professor at the University of Dallas, where he taught law and economics. In 1987, Mr. Hornberger left the practice of law to become director of programs at the Foundation for Economic Education. He has advanced freedom and free markets on talk-radio stations all across the country as well as on Fox News' Neil Cavuto and Greta van Susteren shows and he appeared as a regular commentator on Judge Andrew Napolitano's show Freedom Watch. View these interviews at LewRockwell.com and from Full Context. Send him email.


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Wednesday, July 17, 2013

The State Doesn't Define What is True or Right


by Will Grigg

Two days ago, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down a provision of the Voting Rights Act requiring federal supervision of local elections in some southern states. Because it was seen as outdated and unnecessary, that provision was considered an unwarranted intrusion by the Feds in an area of state responsibility. That ruling prompted universal lamentation and outrage on the Left.

This morning, the same Supreme Court struck down the federal Defense of Marriage Act, which prohibited states from recognizing the novel social arrangement called ?same-sex marriage.? As a result, the same Leftists who assailed the Court as a citadel of oppression are now celebrating it as the vanguard of progress.

Marriage is a covenantal institution, rather than a political artifact. The Feds have no authority to define it, any more than a government can decree that a triangle can have four sides or be round.

Whiplash is an affliction to which statists must be uniquely susceptible. For people of that persuasion, the only moral absolute is the belief that the State is the ultimate arbiter of all truth. This is why their moods will oscillate wildly from one day to the next, depending on whether or not a government institution has validated their political prejudices and granted a temporary victory to their faction.


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Sorry Mr. Grigg, but the institution of marriage pre-dates any convenantal artifice: It is not, and never has been, an institution defined solely in religious terms having originated in pre-Judaeo-Christian contexts. That marraige was subsequently re-defined as requiring ordination and sacralisation by temporal religious authorities merely denotes an arbitrariness in its specificity.

Marriage was first conceived as a contract of sale; then defined as a religious rite; and subsequently redefined in the era of the nation-state as a legally-binding and state-sanctioned institution homologous of contact law (even if churches retained the "authority" to ordain religious marriage ceremonies as sacred and holy vessels for the transmission of the word of whichever god save all the rest). Hence, this "convenantal institution" is an inherently political artifact, having been continuously redefined over time as societal needs and values have progressed. The issue of LGBT marriage equality should transcend the conflicting values inherent in the left-right division purely on grounds of constitutionality and the respect for the constitutionally protected liberties of the individual, and it is this that the US Supreme Court has affirmed: They should be, and rightfully are, being applauded for having come to this majority decision. (Upholding the constitution is something conservatives usually clamour for, so their inconsistency on the grounds of LGBT marriage equality is duly noted).

In characterising this as an example of left-wing (if such a thing truly exists anymore; I have my doubts) oscillations of mood, and/or some Statist impulse, is grossly misleading. The Supreme Court is an institution of state, true, but it is not coterminous with the State: Its political and constitutional independence guarantees this. Your retrograde attempt to assert a simplistic assault upon the perceptions and values of "Leftists" on the grounds that such individuals cling to a misplaced notion that the State is the final arbiter of truth is a non sequitur: If it were, what need for the US Suprem Court? Similarly, the accusation is misplaced since conservatives share a similar affliction: National Security and an excessive attachment to a radical nationalism expressed via an ugly militarism.

Thank you for sharing your opinion, but on this, you are mistaken.

Sincerely,

A Rational-Humanist.

...

"Marriage was first conceived as a contract of sale; then defined as a religious rite; and subsequently redefined in the era of the nation-state as a legally-binding and state-sanctioned institution homologous of contract law (even if churches retained the "authority" to ordain religious marriage ceremonies as sacred and holy vessels for the transmission of the word of whichever god save all the rest)"...

Edited.

..."
In characterising this as an example of left-wing (if such a thing truly exists anymore; I have my doubts) oscillations of mood, and/or some Statist impulse, is grossly misleading. The Supreme Court is an institution of state, true, but it is not coterminous with the State: Its political and constitutional independence guarantees this. Your retrograde attempt to assert a simplistic assault upon the perceptions and values of "Leftists" on the grounds that such individuals cling to a misplaced notion that the State is the final arbiter of truth is a non sequitur: If it were, what need for the US Supreme Court? Similarly, the accusation is misplaced since conservatives share a similar affliction: National Security and an excessive attachment to a radical nationalism expressed via an ugly militarism"...

Second edit.

Point well made Mr. Grigg. The government interjecting itself in every aspect of our lives doesn't improve anything. The agendas to be promoted and the direction of the political winds constantly changing ensures inconsistencies in the policies emanating from Washington and the lesser overlords.
Twisting definitions of words and state promotion of particular behaviors doesn't necessarily make something healthy or right. God's nature demonstrates it takes a male and female to procreate. Marriage is an institution established by God. People clamor for a king. They are free to cede their rights to the state if they choose, even having the state condone their affiliation between themselves and whatever object of their desire.
Whenever government decides it is their duty to define marriage as anything other than the union of a man and woman, it is in err. They can shout and fine and jail people as they are able but they cannot make an erroneous decree right and they cannot negate the righteous authority of God. Marriage is under attack, and they don't even bother hiding it anymore The government continues to practice age-based discrimination when it comes to marriage and sex. Stupid fucks.
I was told, by a network node (nonetheless) that it was the "Puritains," which handed over the RELIGIOUS doctrine, that is "marriage," to the State's descretion. Am I , (not to be confused with: "I Am"), the only one who sees the contradiction in this? (Puritans murdered a lot of Mormons, did they not? Where T F was Romney then?)

Red and white = pink; doesn't take a M)aster M)ind to piece the puzzle together. The "blue" is the key / has the key. Though, the (somewhat), people who want control, don't want the sheep to start thinking objectively / logically; stars could make that happen. I wonder... The ram, the one mentioned in the bible-tale... Wasn't there a star constellation that resembled it?

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