Archive for the ‘WarOnPeople’ Category

What Planet Do My Senators Represent?

Sunday, July 16th, 2006

No, make the “What Fucking Planet Do My Fucking Senators Fucking Represent!?”

Both of them, Bob Menshevek Menendez and Frank “The Replacement” Loutenberg, voted against Victims Rights and for police abuse.

That’s right. My two ignoble “Sinators” believe that in a disaster such as existed in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina struck, when some 90% of the police force took off for high ground, leaving those left in the city to fend for themselves, whether either too poor to get out of the city themselves, and unable to, due to Mayor Nagin’s incompetence in failing to follow his own damn emergency plan, or able to but too stupid to do so, that these people left in the aftermath of chaos and criminality, should have their best, perhaps only, means of self defense summarily confiscated by any bossy little shit with a badge.

Perhaps they believe that those that populate Nagins “Chocolate City” are not to be trusted with guns? Many have thought that as well, in the past right up through today. The fact that these rich, white, men, who live lives of privilege in wealthy, well protected suburban communities with large police forces and near zero crime rate, also believe this does not surprise me at all. After all, aristocrats and royalists throughout the ages have objected to the arming of the peasantry, and always oppress the right to arms of those they deem potential threats to their power.

Please note that this bill would not prevent the confiscation of guns from those already prohibited by law from having them, (big help for DC residents, not!).

All this bill will do, (yes, ‘will’, since it passed OVERWHELMINGLY, provided it remains in the bill during conference), is forbid the few law enforcement authorities left from disarming the decent people that are just trying to defend what little they have left in the face of almost certain massive looting. The looters sure wont care about any law, hell, they’re LOOTERS, predatory scavengers taking advantage of people when they are at their most desperate and defenseless moment. I guess N.J. Sinators care more about the advancement of their plan to subjugate the populace of the country to the Progressive Agenda than they do about the lives of those beset by disaster.

Joined by the usual suspects in “hidiocies” like these, they once again show their true colors, the colors of the slave market, the red flag later adopted by socialists and progressives of all stripes.

Gun Control, Drug Control, Sex Control, Thought Control, Wage and Price Controls: They are all about CONTROL.

Hat tip: John Lott.

Flag Burning

Monday, July 3rd, 2006

Recently, an Amendment to the Constitution was barely defeated. This Amendment would have authorized Congress to pass laws prohibiting the physical desecration of the flag.

The Text:

The Congress shall have power to prohibit the physical desecration of the flag of the United States.

This would have been only the third time in U.S. history that the Constitution was used to oppress the rights of people under the jurisdiction of the Federal Government. The defeat was a good defeat, and hopefully this will not come up again. The upcoming elections in November will change the configuration of Congress, so that this will have less chance than ever of passing. At least it should if we have any respect for freedom.

Does anyone remember the two times violations of human rights were written into the Constitution?

The first time was at it’s very creation, and officially became law upon ratification on June 21, 1788 with that first and most egregious oppression of human rights, the Three fifths clause that institutionalized slavery in the US. The delegates knew that it would lead to conflict later on, but without it the slave states would not join a union, and fearing a division of strength in the face of the global powers of the day, not to mention the threat of mother England trying to regain control of her former colonies, the abolitionists relented.

And it did. A mere 73 years later, within the lifetime of many alive as youngsters when ratified, this bastard clause led to the Civil War in 1861. One of the bloodiest battles in history, the bloodiest in U.S. history so far, Antietam, occurred during that war. Wounds were created that still fester to this day, generations later.

The second time rights violations were written in was when Alchohol Prohibition was enshrined by way of the 18th Amendment. An attempt at human social engineering the world had not yet seen the like of in modern times, until the truth of the horrors of the Soviet and Red Chinese revolutions that were hidden at the time, saw light.

This rasp of idiocy led to a decade of violence, corruption and cynicism on the part of the American populace. It started the tear in the fabric of trust the public had in government, a tear that has grown ever larger as the decades since have rolled on. But we did learn one big lesson form that mistake. Never put these things into the Constitution, a lesson learned well by Franklin D. Roosevelt when he implemented his rape of the Constitution during his New Deal. A lesson learned by those that later went on to wage “wars” on Poverty, Drugs and Guns.

Both of these attempts to restrict rights through the Constitution led to violence and death. It could be argued that Prohibition still does, through the never abandoned idea that simply banning something potentially harmful, can make society all better.

What could be the consequences of a ban on Flag Burning?

The first erosion of the hard won victories in free speech, for one. After all, if we can ban something as offensive as flag burning some people, what can we ban next? Gay porn is offensive, so ban that. Next could be Heterosexual porn of certain genre’s and then of course all of it.

How about offensive political speech? I could certainly stand to see less of Rick “Gays ‘R Bad, mmkay?” Santorum, Ted Stevens, Cynthia McKinney, Jabba the Kennedy.

Those folks all spout stuff offensive to many, can we ban them next?

How about Intelligent Design nonsense? Can we ban that? No? Not enough support? Well Evolution then, that pisses a lot of people off.

What kind of response will we see from the population when more and more speech is banned as a desecration by more and more Amendments, provided the bother of further Amendments is even pretended. This would seem to be a perfect laboratory for the Law of Unintended Consequences. I, however, do not care to be a rat in that maze.

Flag burning is such an infrequent occurrence that to pass a Constitutional Amendment to ban it, it is clear, is nothing more than a cynical attempt to pander to the most rabid right wing ideologs in a manner that will intimidate the weak-kneed on the left to go along.

And it almost worked.

Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty.

Tax Return: 24,000 pages long

Wednesday, May 31st, 2006

You read that right: 24,000 pages. Twenty Four Thousand.

From the May, 31 2006 issue of IRS Newswire, (IR-2006-084):

The Internal Revenue Service today announced significant progress in its corporate e-file program, including the successful May 18, 2006 e-filing of the nation’s largest tax return from General Electric (GE).

On paper, GE’s e-filed return would have been approximately 24,000 pages long. After filing, GE received IRS’ acknowledgement of its filing in about an hour. The file was 237 MB.

“Having GE file electronically shows the program is working,” said IRS Commissioner Mark W. Everson. “Having the largest tax return is a major milestone for the corporate e-file program. I appreciate GE’s work to get this done.”

(I just received this at 11:41 AM NJ time, it is not posted online that I can find yet).

Is there any better evidence that the tax code needs reform than that?

If my tax form costs me $200 for an “easy” one consisting of four little pages, it must cost GE well over a million dollars for this. At two cents a page to print it, it would cost almost $500 just to printit, plus copies for their own records, then the shipping cost…this is nuts.

I have some arguments with the Fair Tax, but they are fairly minor. It has some political momentum behind it, and with all its flaws, I think getting rid of this huge, invasive implement of torture and corruption that the income tax has become is imperitive.

No wonder so many companies and people are moving their legal residence to contries other than the US.

American Stasi?

Thursday, May 11th, 2006

The revelation of the extent of the NSA’s molestation of the rights of U.S. citizens this morning by USA Today is outrageous.

From the article:

The NSA program reaches into homes and businesses across the nation by amassing information about the calls of ordinary Americans — most of whom aren’t suspected of any crime. This program does not involve the NSA listening to or recording conversations. But the spy agency is using the data to analyze calling patterns in an effort to detect terrorist activity, sources said in separate interviews.

So every call you have made is now part of a single database under control of the governments most secretive and unaccountable agency. At least of the agencies we know about. Every call you have made to your mother, your pharmacy, your doctor, your local hobby shop, the golf course, radio call in show, CSPAN, or any call you made involving a harmless but illegal activity, like to your bookie or, of concern to certain Congressman, your local pimp escort service defense contractor.

The White House would not discuss the domestic call-tracking program. “There is no domestic surveillance without court approval,” said Dana Perino, deputy press secretary, referring to actual eavesdropping.

Oh, well that’s OK I guess, unless:

In the case of the NSA’s international call-tracking program, Bush signed an executive order allowing the NSA to engage in eavesdropping without a warrant. The president and his representatives have since argued that an executive order was sufficient for the agency to proceed. Some civil liberties groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union, disagree.

Oops. Guess it is only required except when inconvenient. When did the office of the President gain the authority to unilaterally amend the Constitution? Did I miss something? I have been busy lately, what with being unemployed and all…

AT&T, when asked about the program, replied with a comment prepared for USA TODAY: “We do not comment on matters of national security, except to say that we only assist law enforcement and government agencies charged with protecting national security in strict accordance with the law.”

In another prepared comment, BellSouth said: “BellSouth does not provide any confidential customer information to the NSA or any governmental agency without proper legal authority.”

Verizon, the USA’s No. 2 telecommunications company behind AT&T, gave this statement: “We do not comment on national security matters, we act in full compliance with the law and we are committed to safeguarding our customers’ privacy.”

Qwest spokesman Robert Charlton said: “We can’t talk about this. It’s a classified situation.”

In other words: “We can not say anything, and we welcome our new NSA overlords”.

Qwest was the only company to not comply and participate in this abortion of civil rights. At least Qwest understood the problems here, yet the others just complied, like paid prostitutes. I worked for a while for Bell Atlantic, which was later renamed as Verizon. I was in union spot, (CWA), and, for a short while, was a Group Manager in a Directory Assistance office . One cardinal rule was that no government law enforcement officer was allowed on the property without a warrant. If they showed up at the door, and demanded entry, we were to refuse unless they had a warrant to search, or to arrest someone on the property. And in the case of the arrest warrant we were to attempt to get the target of the warrant to leave the building first, before allowing the officers entry. I guess only Qwest still has this sort of concern for the law or the Constitution.

The article save me from spending a month or two looking this up:
Section 222 of the Communications Act prohibits the phone companies from releasing customer data under penalties that can range over $100,000 per violation. If this turns into a violation per customer, these companies are toast.

The NSA tried to con Qwest by claiming refusal to cooperate would compromise national security. When that did not work, they tried threats against future government contracts. When Qwest asked the NSA to go to the FISA court to get authorization, NSA refused, saying the court might not agree with them. RING RING ALARM BELLS! That alone should have been enough for Qwest to shut down talks, and they did. Yet the quisling, sniveling, Igors of the NSA’s Frankenstein program were all to glad to go grave digging in their databases to hand over parts to the monstrous conglomeration the government was assembling.

The companies will no doubt say they were just doing what authorities told them to do. Just following orders. Where have we heard that before?

I really hope that the ACLU and other civil rights groups step up on this one. This kind of massive fishing expedition into citizens peaceful activities must not be permitted to go unpunished.

“Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.” William Pitt

Balkos Bleg

Tuesday, March 14th, 2006

Radley Balko over at The Agitator needs some help getting some new equipment. If you have appreciated his work as much as I have, not the least on the Drug War, no-knock raids, and eminent domain issues, please stop over and contribute.

Anonymous welcome

Tuesday, March 7th, 2006

ASSemblyman Peter J. Biondi, Repugnantican from the Somerset/Morris area of New Jersey, has introduced a bill to forbid anonymous posting on public Internet forums, and to require identification of those that do post.

2. The operator of any interactive computer service or an Internet service provider shall establish, maintain and enforce a policy to require any information content provider who posts written messages on a public forum website either to be identified by a legal name and address, or to register a legal name and address with the operator of the interactive computer service or the Internet service provider through which the information content provider gains access to the interactive computer service or Internet, as appropriate.

It is clear from this that Biondi is ignorant of current technology that does not involve paper, boots and brown shirts, and that he is ignorant of the needs of free speech in a free society, and is irrelevant to modern society after about, oh, say 1970. Your papers please!

This man is a laughingstock to anyone capable of programming their own VCR, which is all the more sad, considering that VCRs are nearing obsolescence.

Just as Democrats make themselves irrelevant by continuing to call for bankrupt ideological laws on gun control, socialized medicine, and the drug war, so Republicans throw away any credibility they have by promoting clueless ignorance such as this, along with anti-evolution, anti-gay laws. There are many other things these two old parties do to drive away good people of reason, but those are enough to list here.

If this should pass and be signed into law by our fuhrer governor Corzine, NJ would become the butt-pit of free speech, in complete accord with the goals of the federal authoritarian McCain-Feingold act.

Whether or not this passes, I hereby declare this website private. Membership is open only to members species whose genetic code is within 99.01% of the genome of Homo Sapiens. While I realize this is an extremely exclusionary requirement, excluding over 99% of the life-forms on the planet, I believe that this will make for a much more manageable site for the primary readers.

I will also consider auxiliary memberships for non-human sentients that are capable of making a cogent request for membership, in English, via the on-line registration process. I expect such requests to be very few, but none the less, welcome.

via drudge

Your not-so-friendly local storm troopers

Saturday, February 25th, 2006

Ever want to file a complaint against a police officer? I have. Now, after seeing the report below, I wonder how I walked out of the station at all, let alone uninjured.

(Lauderhill P.D.
tester: Yeah, I wanted to find out how to file a complaint against an officer. I just want to find out how you do it. Do you guys have a form or something that I could take with me.
officer: Well, you got to tell me first, and then I got to hear what’s going on. You’ve got to tell me what the complaint is.
tester: Do you have a complaint form that I can, like, fill out or something like that?
officer: Might not be a legitimate complaint.
tester: Who decides that?
officer: I’m trying to help you.
tester: Like, if there’s a form, why can’t I just take it and leave, right?
officer: No, you don’t leave with forms. You tell me what happened, and then I help you from there. Do you have I-D on?
tester: Why?
officer: You know what? You need to leave.
tester: Why?
officer: I’m going to tell you one more time, because I can’t do this anymore with you, okay. You’re refusing to tell me what you want to do, okay. You’re refusing to tell me who’s involved, where it happened, what transpired. You’e not cooperating iwth me one bit.
tester: I was just asking if you guys have a complaint form, like if there’s some way for me –
officer: Out of my way.
tester: To contact Internal Affairs.
officer: You can do whatever the hell you want. It’s a free country.
man” You’re cursing at me.
officer: Where do you live? Where do you live? You have to tell me where you live, what your name is, or anything like that.
tester: For a complaint? I mean, like, if I have –
officer: Are you on medications?
tester: Why would you ask me something like that?
officer: Because you’re not answering any of my questions.
tester: Am I on medications?
officer: I asked you. It’s a free country. I can ask you that.
tester: Okay, you’re right.
officer: So you’re not going to tell me who you are, you’re not going to tell me what the problem is.You’re not going to identify yourself.
tester: All I asked you was, like, how do I contact –
officer: You said you have a complaint. You say my officers are acting in an inappropriate manner.
officer: So leave now. Leave now. Leave now.
tester: I’m not doing anything wrong.
officer: Neither am I. It’s a free country.
officer: I’m not in your face. I’m standing on the sidewalk. It’s a free country. One more step forward, and you’ll see what happens. Take one more step forward.)

Just after the officer says “It’s a free country”, he reaches to his gun, releases the retention strap and loosens the weapon in his holster, then challenges the reporter, “One more step forward, and you’ll see what happens”.

These are the people that the liberal left wants to have exclusive control of all firearms. If the liberal left has it’s way, and all guns are confiscated from all citizens, just how do you think these little storm troopers will act then?

Every cop in this tape that gave any hassle to someone asking how to file a complaint should be summarily dismissed form the force. No suspensions, no reinstatement, fire the sons of bitches. They have no place holding the kind of authority they currently do. There is no excuse for this threatening and bullying behavior From those we have entrusted with lethal weapons and the authority to arrest and incarcerate people.

I just hope the videos stay linked on the stations page, please watch both.

Police: The Good, The Bad and the Ugly, at The Police Complaint Center.

via boingboing

Update added links to two reports. Also, they work in ALL states, including New Jersey.

ACLU has a 1984 nightmare

Friday, February 24th, 2006

Via Andrew Sullivan, a dystopian version of the near future presented by the ACLU:

The Pizza Order. Safe for Work, has sound.

If only they could see reason on Gun Rights.

Minorities, Guns, Rights and Storm Troopers: ATFE

Monday, February 20th, 2006

Gun registration is bad for this very reason: Minorities, of any kind, can be targeted for harassment, and the lists used for confiscation.

If you think that is paranoid how about this: Last summer Federal Agents targeted women and young Black males for harassment at Virginia gun shows, who were making perfectly legal purchases. Apparently, this occurred in the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area as well. They were followed, harassed, and visited at their homes days after the fact by more agents. Some were arrested without authority.

Agents of the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), allegedly acting without warrants or legislative authority to do so, seized firearms from at least 50 gun show patrons in Virginia according to congressional testimony and an agency document made public Wednesday. Witnesses also testified that African-American and female gun buyers in Richmond, Va., and Pittsburgh, Pa., were profiled based on their race or sex and some in Pittsburgh were threatened with arrest by ATF agents for alleged actions that are not violations of law.

The message is clear: If you are a minority of any sort, the government does not want you armed. All you folks in blue states where government restrictions on gun purchases are the most severe, California, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, and others, think about this.

In states with large minority populations, why do they want to keep you unarmed? Why is it that the politicians in those areas that you have allowed to co-opt your political allegiance have also convinced you to give up your guns?

Every minority group in this country, racial, (Blacks, Hispanics, etc), religious, (Jews, Atheists, etc), social, (Gays), political, (Greens, Libertarians), should all be arming themselves and most importantly learning to use those arms. Wherever possible, this should be done using private sales that are not under the scrutiny of the government. In some states, like NJ, this is legally impossible, but in many states, private purchases are unregistered.

Think this is paranoid? Go back and read that story again.

Via John Lott.

Culture?

Wednesday, February 15th, 2006

Kevin over at the smallest minority has a gobsmackingly good post up on the reasons for poverty and violence in our underclass. He finds parallels between what is happening here and in the UK. His thinking matches my own in many respects, so closely it is scary. Rather long, but meaty and well worth the time. And done far better than I could have done.

A quote from the middle of the piece:

So, after decades of knowing that education has no economic value, and further decades of lack of employment opportunity, what is the result? A population that is willfully ignorant, desperately poor, generally promiscuous, disillusioned and angry and willing to use whatever drugs are available to escape (however briefly) their reality, but not willing to study or work to escape permanently, now that the opportunity actually exists.

They are also often violent. These characteristics are shared by both the American and British underclass. The biggest difference? The British underclass doesn’t kill anywhere near as often. Gun control enthusiasts point to that differential and claim that it proves that “gun control works,” but they always neglect to consider that homicide in Britain has always been a fraction of that in the U.S., even when neither country had any gun control laws.

Again, it’s a matter of culture: killing, in Britian, just isn’t “cricket.” Never has been. But beating people bloody seems to have gained a lot of popularity since the weapons laws were implemented. However, for immigrant Jamaican gangs, violence is just part of the business of dealing drugs, so much of the lethal violence in Britian is committed by - and often on - these immigrants. Culture, again.

Read, read and then read again.

VA. Police Murder Harmless Man

Thursday, January 26th, 2006

Police murdered a peaceful man down in Virginia. They claim it was an accident. Tell me. When you bring ninja-clad, para-military stormtroopers pointing loaded guns to a non-violent situation, and one of you kills an unarmed, non-threatening, peaceful optometrist, who’s only crime was liking to run a few bets, what do you call it? ‘oops’?

Fairfax County’s police chief said yesterday that one of his officers accidentally shot and killed an optometrist outside the unarmed man’s townhouse Tuesday night as an undercover detective was about to arrest him on suspicion of gambling on sports.

As Radley Balko points out:

“Tactical officers” is a eumpemism for SWAT team. So yes, the Fairfax County police department dispatched the SWAT team to arrest an optometrist suspected of gambling. They had their guns drawn. The descended upon him. And one of them killed him.
.
.
.
SWAT teams don’t diminish the risk of violence. They escalate it. In rare situations — hostage crises, barricades, or violent crimes-in-process, for example — escalation is necessary to stave off immediate harm. In inherently nonviolent, routine police work — like serving warrants on optometrists — they’re needlessly provocative and dangerous. A growing pile of bodies testifies to that.

And until spineless lawmakers put an end to this idiocy (and yes, risk being called “soft on crime” as a result), the pile is only going to get larger.

As has been said before, when only the police have guns, you live in a police state. I say disarm all police while they are on duty. Make them rely on armed civilians when they need it. I’ll bet you deaths involving police, whether dead officers, suspects or bystanders, will drop 90% the first year.

Rape, or Just Wrong?

Thursday, January 26th, 2006

The latest Media Meme/WitchHunt in the past few months appears to be adult female teachers having sex with under-18 male students. There was a similar, though brief, fad last year over male teachers and female students.

WorldnetDaily has a list of these activities in this story about the latest case, a female substitute teacher that met with a male student after class.

All I can say is, where were all these babes when I was in High School?

OK, that was a bit flip, but I use it to point out that most people look at this in a similar way.

Young men having sex in their mid to late teens is joked about or even approved of. I suspect this is based on old attitudes about masculinity and responsibility. It was masculine to ’spread some wild oats’, especially since it was possible to avoid the ‘burden and expense’ of the consequences of such behavior, namely offspring. A woman claiming a male fathered her child could be disparaged as a loose woman without proof of the child’s parentage. At least this was true before blood tests, and now the far more certain use of DNA testing.

The reverse situation, with an adult male and a mid to late teen female, is looked at differently. Often as a predatory action, and not without some cause for such concern. Though I suspect much of this concern is based on worries over pregnancy and the costs that can bring to a family, left over from the days when women were considered little more than property. When a female was considered an expense to be born until they could be married off, along with a dowry to help the new family with the ‘burden and expense’ of a new female.

But now we are hearing cries of ‘rape’ in these cases. But is it?
So I ask myself; Was force used? No. Were threats or blackmail used? No.
So how can it be rape?

Are we not dumbing down the term? Using what was once a description of a brutal act of violence to label behavior that is consensual, even if it is inadvisable?

Now I am not talking about creeps like Mark Hulett, or John Couey. Or Couey’s family, who hid him even after they knew what he was wanted for, for that matter. As I posted earlier, someone that is attracted to prepubescent and pubescent children has something broken in them, and they need to be removed from society permanently, for the protection of current and future victims.

But once people look physically mature, almost every state, and almost every country, recognizes that consensual sex is a normal human behavior.

Searching on Google will get you a list of various sources for how the law currently treats this.

The two most legitimate seeming are here and here, at Wikipedia.

Most seem to settle on 16 as the age of consent, with 17 common, and 18 less common. At least for US states. Some countries set the age far lower. Too low in my opinion, but I am not an expert, and I do not live there. So, depending on state, any old geezer or geezerette could legally prowl the malls looking for willing 17 year old crumpet and be legal. Again, not that it is advisable for a teenager to engage in this, but we all have to make our mistakes and learn from them. Being 17 is not an excuse from life. And any geezer(ette) doing this should certainly be ready for some back-alley discussions with pissed off parents.

But what about this seeming rash of student-teacher relationships? Are they more frequent or just more reported?

I suspect both, from my memories of high school 30 or so years ago. I think people are more willing to report such goings on, and I also think that this is not going on more than it was in society overall, but that teachers are less willing to control their own behavior. Note I said less willing, not less able. This may also have something to do with the quality of people attracted to teaching. The best people seem to be driven away. But that is a separate issue.

The willingness to report sex crimes is a good thing. Perhaps we are finally starting to lose the attitude that victims somehow ‘asked for it’.
The less willingness to control their own behavior is not a good thing. Why this is happening is complicated, I think.
Conservatives blame TV and Hollywood, as well as secular liberal society.
Liberals blame male hegemony and the objectification of women in porn.

They are both right to some extent, and both wrong to some extent.

TV and Hollywood reflect society, and at the same time affect and change it. They then reflect this change, affecting and changing it some more. It is a reinforcing feedback loop. But people are starting to tire of this, and box office receipts are, I think, reflecting this.

Religion, or the lack of it, can have an effect, but this can work both ways.
Look at what religion causes in mohammedan societies, where women can be raped, and then killed for being the victim of rape, where children can be rented from parents for temporary marriages, sometimes by the hour.
Look at what religion causes in the case of fundamentalist mormons. Where again, women are treated as property, married off at very early ages, even in violation of law. Traded from male to male, sometimes even to close relations like uncles, cousins and grandfathers, like they were part of some sort of living collection of sex toys.

Morality has nothing to do with religion. Indeed, as pointed out above, religion can be used to enforce some of the most immoral behavior imaginable. It can also be used for good, sometimes, but it is far from a panacea.

Male hegemony has something to do with it, though less and less in western liberal society, except in hierarchical religious societies and communities. If it did, why are we seeing so many female adults having it off with teenage males?

Porn, I think, does not lend itself to this any more than TV or Hollywood do. It is a reflection of attitudes though.
If anything, porn depicts teen sex less than TV and Hollywood, since they make sure everyone is an adult. Yes there are some fetish videos, but they all use adults and depict adults, and make it clear that they depict adults. Paradoxically, it is TV and Hollywood that show more teen sexual activity than porn does. Perhaps because the porn industry knows it is a target of opportunity for politicians and moral crusaders, it keeps itself as clean as it can be.

However, I think a big part of this is that this is the latest media fad. Just as preschool child molesters were all the rage a decade ago, (remember the McMartin Pre-school witch hunt?), and school shootings were quite the fashion for the well intended reporter for a few years during the Clinton presidency, followed by a brief infatuation with male teachers taking off on cross-country jaunts with female students

But we now have predatory older babes preying on adolescent male boy toys. The mass media are in a self righteous fervor. Shouting out the news of immoral behavior by women forcing themselves upon unwilling and helpless boys. The fact that this plays into male fantasies of eager women seeking them out for a change, and female fantasies of sexual empowerment, has nothing to do with it, of course. Nothing at all. Really. They swear. It is all out of legitimate concern and sincere worry over the course our society is taking. They promise. Cross their hearts and hope to be canceled.

Uh-huh. Riiiight.

The ultra-liberal establishment would have us believe that a lot of it has to do with our victim society, or something like it. We are all supposedly victims, helpless to control our own lives, powerless to change the course of society, pawns at the hands of big media. We are victims of our biology, held in bondage to our social conditioning by a heartless globalized corporate state. No one is responsible for their own behavior, but is a victim that can hold someone else responsible.

Uh-huh. Riiiight.

But what about this: Just plain human nature.

Every other species mates as soon as it is physically old enough to do so. We are the only species, to my knowledge, that tries to delay this activity in some way. And not without reason. There are some good reasons to delay it, more so in the past than now. Reasons of educational opportunities, economics, wealth, career advancement, all these and more, are still very much valid reasons to delay, for at least a while, childbearing, and the activities that lead to it. Since the advent of birth control, the problem of children arriving when not convenient, and the dangers of childbirth are now controllable. The dangers of disease were largely eliminated until the advent of HIV/AIDS in the 1980’s, and may be again relatively soon.

So it seems to me that part of the problem is that our society no longer conforms to how we have evolved biologically. Trying to control the onset of sexual behavior is as difficult as trying to control the onset of gray hair, baldness or menopause. At best it is so difficult as to be futile. Mostly it is just hopeless.

So what to do?

First, I think a lot of this is an argument for single sex schools, for at least part of the time spent in school, perhaps starting sometime around when kids get into double-digit ages. Males teach males. Females teach females. So it’s not PC, but there is some evidence this helps, though whether it actually does work is controversial.

It may also be an argument for home schooling, for those with the gumption to do it.

It is also an argument for some sort of school choice, so that parents can choose what is appropriate for their child, and to move their child to another school if they suspect something is wrong, without needing to beg an administrator for attention and action, or needing to uproot the family and move, or taking the law into their own hands.

What should be done with teachers case they get involved in an inappropriate relationship?

Well, this dad did something:

An angry father who marched into a classroom and punched a teacher’s assistant in the face said Wednesday he was protecting his 15-year-old daughter, who had accused the man of inappropriately touching her.

If I was on the jury, I sure would not convict him.

Teachers, and others in a position of authority should be treated like all others in this situation, with some additions

Additional penalties are justified because they have a responsibility to the parents that have entrusted them with the care of their children. A breach of that trust should be punishable by loss of job, and professional status and whatever fines a contract can stipulate. This is one of few areas where I think some sort of licensing is a good idea. But a simple one. A child care or “in loco parentis”, license. You screw up once, you lose it permanently, no second chances.

I am not so sure I agree that jail time is a good idea. Punishing people for normal human behavior is useless, and wrong in my opinion. (Remember, we are talking about 16-17 year olds, not 6-7 year olds). I think that needs to be addressed by behaviorists, to see whether it would make any difference. If we avoid making it a crime, we may get more control over the situation. After all, someone facing only loss of a job may be more willing to admit to misbehavior than someone facing prison time. By making sure it is not condoned, but at the same time not so harshly punished as to make covering it up, (or worse), the best option, we may get better control of any situations that do arise before they get out of control.

If jail time is warranted, it should be in proportion to what went on. Imprisonment for any time, let alone life imprisonment, for consensual sex with a 16-17 year old seems way out of line to me, teacher, clergy, or not. Though such conduct with a 6-7 year old makes life imprisonment seem lenient.

At the same time, condoning, hiding, assisting or enabling such activity on the part of an institution, should be punishable. Why school administrators and church officials have gotten a pass so far is an outrage. They should face the same charges if they in any way positively help someone engage in this kind of activity, again, teacher, clergy, or not.

So, back to the title. Are these cases of rape or are these just wrong?
Rape, no. Without violence or threats or blackmail it is not rape to me.
Wrong, yes. Definitely. Punishable? By loss of job and profession and career, yes. Punishable by prison time? Yes, if it involves someone under the age of consent. Other wise I think they just acted the way any normal human might have, just in an inappropriate situation. Permanent removal from that situation should be enough.
But I am open to argument on that.

So, when do we get the numbers tattooed?

Tuesday, January 24th, 2006

In the name of “safety”, we now need to be registered and scanned to access our own children.

When a parent arrives to pick up their child at one of three grade schools in the Freehold Borough School District, they’ll need to look into a camera that will take a digital image of their iris. That photo will establish positive identification to gain entrance into the school.

Funding for the project, more than $369,000, was made possibly by a school safety grant through the National Institute of Justice, a research branch of the U.S.

So rather than allow parents and teachers the ability to defend their children with lethal force, we should instead be registered like domestic dogs or endangered species?

While I am not sure he intended it as such, remember the words of Roger Waters:

…did they get you to trade
your heroes for ghosts?
hot ashes for trees?
hot air for a cool breeze?
cold comfort for change?
and did you exchange
a walk on part in the war
for a lead role in a cage?

Yup. We have traded strong, defensive parents, neighbors and communities, for the cold, mechanized false comfort of locked doors, barred windows, machines and bureaucrats wielding regulations.

We have traded the small everyday risks of freedom, for the cowardly comfort of a cage, dependent on the good will of those that control the feed trays, water jars and doors. Woe to him who sings the wrong tune or squawks too loudly.

And now we are training our children to accept this without a question or a whimper.

Free Market ‘Frolicking’

Sunday, January 22nd, 2006

MSNBC has an item detailing online consumer review sites for the worlds oldest profession. No, not politicians, but close.

Before review sites came along, hobbyists had no way to protect themselves, said David R. Elms, president of The Erotic Review, which began in 1999 and claims that it gets 350,000 unique visitors a day.

Prostitution has gone on for as long as there has been humanity. There is no culture or civilization we have found where it has not existed. Attitudes towards it have varied, from complete condemnation to complete acceptance. Yet no matter what the attitudes or laws, it had continued.

And from the prices listed in the article, I am both the wrong sex and in the wrong business. Someone could retire after only a few years, as opposed to the decades required for most jobs. Maybe that is also why it is illegal. No sense in letting women get that financially and personally independent, especially by exploiting men.

And from the comments on Fark, where I first saw this, this is nothing new, nor uncommon, with resources like this in the US, Canada, the UK, and no doubt elsewhere.

Of course that is tax free. And there are the police and probably organized crime to deal with.

So why is it illegal? I do not know, though oppressing women is probably part of the reason. But I suspect it is primarily due to Abrahamic religions, since other religions do not seem to have so much of a problem with it.

If anyone can give me non-religious reasons for it to remain illegal, please let me know, but read what follows first.

It exploits women. Really? Who pays the money and who gets the money? Men pay, women keep it. Pimps and madams only get a cut when it is illegal, or legal but highly repressed as in parts of Nevada. So keeping it illegal actually CAUSES the exploitation of women, as well as men. Legalizing it shifts that exploitation solely onto the woman.

Women are trafficked into. Yes, that is horrible. It is the closest thing the chattel slavery that exists in the world, outside of the Sudan. But if it is legal, how would this occur? If we create minimal licensing, we can ensure that those involved are doing so voluntarily. No business or customer would want to be involved with what amounts to kidnapping and slavery if they can avoid it by working with legal establishments. And all the penalties for kidnapping and slavery would apply to the illegal operations.

Children are involved. Yup, when it is illegal we have no controls. A case is going on now in Pennsylvania, involving a 17 year old from NJ. But if it was legal and licensed, we can make sure all involved are adults.

Drugs are involved. Probably, though whether they are involved more than in any other part of society, I do not know. Probably so. But again, if it is legal, this can be controlled. What employer wants a drug user on the payroll? What patron wants to patronize a drug user if there is a safe, legal, alternative?

It spreads disease. Yes, it does. Part of licensing can be periodic health checks. Can you do that now, while it is illegal? In Nevada, the last I heard, there has not been a single case of a licensed sex worker contracting a Sexually Transmitted Disease. Yet what is reported for illegal sex workers in NYC is HIV infection rates above 50%. This should terrify us. ( I can not find a link, sorry). Further more, even if you are not patronizing prostitutes, can you guarantee those you know are not? Your girlfriends previous boyfriend? Your boyfriend? The date you have planned for this weekend? How about them? Do you know every one they have ever had sex with? Again, from the comments on Fark, marriage is no shield.

Keeping it illegal spreads disease, exploits women, encourages the trafficking of women and the involvement of children, enriches criminals and corrupts society.
Over all, keeping it illegal makes it far worse than it needs to be, for everyone.

I do not know if the Nevada model is the best, or if there are other models, such as those in Europe or elsewhere that may work better. But something needs to change.

Don’t get me wrong, I am not advocating legalizing streetwalkers. I do not want them in front of my house any more than you do.

Here is what I propose:

License it off the street, behind closed doors, away from homes and schools. By licensing we can also make sure minors, illegal aliens, trafficked women, and people with disease or a history of crime or violence are kept out of it.

So legalize it, regulate it, license it and make it safe for everyone, but, most importantly, for those of us not involved with it.

Comments welcome.

Well it’s ABOUT STINKIN’ TIME!

Saturday, January 21st, 2006

People are starting to object to our budding police state:

Several people broke into the police chief’s house and burned it down early Friday, a few hours after a man died in police custody, authorities said.

So, when will the people of Prentiss, Mississippi do something about the Cory Maye Case?

Is the US a Fear Based Society?

Tuesday, January 17th, 2006

Andrew Sullivan, (at his new blogHome at Time magazine), points to a quote from Condi Rice during her confirmation hearings, and rightly states that, regrettably, Iraq is still a fear based society:

To be sure, in our world there remain outposts of tyranny — and America stands with oppressed people on every continent: in Cuba, and Burma, and North Korea, and Iran, and Belarus, and Zimbabwe. The world should apply what Natan Sharansky calls the “town square test”: if a person cannot walk into the middle of the town square and express his or her views without fear of arrest, imprisonment, or physical harm, then that person is living in a fear society, not a free society. We cannot rest until every person living in a “fear society” has finally won their freedom.

At most US colleges, campuses are fear based, in that those opposed to socialism or Marxism, are banned, punished, assaulted and otherwise harrassed. Good thing the colleges do not have the powers of arrest and imprisonment.

As well, there are still places in this country where gays fear to tread, and even more where atheists are still targeted by laws denying them rights, such as the ability to hold elective office.

So by Sharansky’s criteria, is the US a fear based society?

Worthwhile

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2006

Go read:

Among all the democide estimates appearing on this website, some have been revised upward. I have changed that for Mao’s famine, 1958-1962, from zero to 38,000,000. And thus I have had to change the overall democide for the PRC (1928-1987) from 38,702,000 to 76,702,000. Details here.

I have changed my estimate for colonial democide from 870,000 to an additional 50,000,000. Details here.

Thus, the new world total: old total 1900-1999 = 174,000,000. New World total = 174,000,000 + 38,000,000 (new for China) + 50,000 (new for Colonies) = 262,000,000.

Just to give perspective on this incredible murder by government, if all these bodies were laid head to toe, with the average height being 5′, then they would circle the earth ten times. Also, this democide murdered 6 times more people than died in combat in all the foreign and internal wars of the century. Finally, given popular estimates of the dead in a major nuclear war, this total democide is as though such a war did occur, but with its dead spread over a century.

Ignoring Itallian Irony

Monday, January 2nd, 2006

I have a love-hate relationship with David Horowitz. Much of what he says is spot on, much just pisses me off.

In this, he is spot on: FrontPage Magazine’s Woman of the Year: Oriana Fallaci

After spending most of the last century fighting against fascism, Oriana Fallaci continues to demonstrate the enduring grip of Orwellianism: she is to be tried in Italy for thought-crime. For spending her childhood fighting Hitler and Mussolini, and for dedicating the last four years of her life to rousing the West to the danger posed by Islamofascism, she more than merits designation as FrontPage Magazine’s Woman of the Year.

Oriana Fallaci has rebelled against fascism most of her life. She is not an ideologue, bound to implement any given ideology. Hers is a defensive mission. She is, by her own designation, neither a conservative nor a leftist, finding defects with both.
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The plaintiff, Adel Smith, president of the Muslim Union of Italy, could as easily be charged by the loose anti-religious discrimination statute that has snared Fallaci. He calls on fellow believers in the Religion of Peace to “eliminate” and “die with Fallaci.” He also refers to Christianity as a “criminal association” and has demeaned the Crucifix as a “miniature cadaver.”

However, Europe is Europe, and now for refusing to live according to Shari’a law, a woman who helped free Italy from Il Duce is on trial for speaking her conscience about the next impending, Islamofascist threat.

Read the entire thing, to learn about this courageous woman. It is about one solid print page long, 5 minutes is not too long to spend.

Cory Maye atrocity

Thursday, December 22nd, 2005

Radley Balko is doing yeomans work digging into what is starting to look like a complete abortion of constitutional protections, the judicial process and the legal system. All involving the drug war, no-knock warrants and the militarization of police. He has obtained and is posting all relevant documents in the case, warrants, autopsies, etc.

I’m also hoping to get a copy of the third search warrant issued in the case. This was the warrant issued after the initial raid, and after Jones’ death. It’s with this warrant that police allgedly found the less than one ounce of marijuana in Maye’s apartment.

Here they are:

If you read anything today, hell, anything this week, go through the rest of the story: here, here, here, here, here, here, with more early posts to be found as well.

As well as more on the viscious stupidity of no-knock raids: The Folly of Knock-and-Announce, Knock-and-Announce Folly, Ct’d…

I know he needs no help with traffic from a little guy like me, but if I can educate one more person on the evils of the drug war, the visciousness of the legal system created to support it and the erosion of our Constitutional rights due to it, including our gun rights, I will be happy to help.

Socialist Freedom…NOT

Thursday, December 22nd, 2005

I have long argued that the concentration of power into only a few hands that is required for any sort of socialist government to work at all, is dangerous and will lead directly to loss of freedom and then to warranty tyranny. (openOffice spell check needs some work…as does my editing)

A new national surveillance system will hold the records for at least two years.

Using a network of cameras that can automatically read every passing number plate, the plan is to build a huge database of vehicle movements so that the police and security services can analyse any journey a driver has made over several years.

So all you progressives that point to the U.K. as an example of how socialism can work: What do you say to this?