Month: July 2011

  • “82 days per killing”

    While I guess it should come as no surprise, I just learned that the longest prison sentence Anders Breivik can receive is 21 years: The fact that Norway’s maximum penalty for any crime is 21 years in prison is facing rising criticism in the wake of the twin attacks that killed 93 people, with many…

  • Once again, ideas are not guilty by association!

    One of the many people quoted in Anders Breivik’s manifesto was Bruce Bawer, a gay American writer living in Norway. In a recent PJM column which Glenn linked, Bawer (who is understandably very upset) discusses what Breivik said about him in web site comments.  Among other things Breivik had called Bawer “a liberal anti-jihadist and…

  • Not civilians, but “traitors” to be executed

    I’m continuing to slog through Anders Breivik’s 1500 page “A European Declaration of Independence” (easy to read Word doc file here), and I think the following speaks for itself in terms of both the motive for the crime and the willingness of the author to kill large numbers of people: 3.44 Traitor – classification system…

  • Does ideology become discredited by killing in its name?

    I’ve been slogging through “A European Declaration of Independence” (said to be confirmed as having been written by Anders Breivik, aka Andrew Berwick) and while I am not about to attempt to dissect it point by point, several things stand out. Whoever the “author” (editor, really) may be, he is completely fluent in writing English,…

  • Deficit, Debt, And Depression

    Notably absent from both Krugman’s and this post about deficits and debt: spending numbers.  Federal spending more than doubled between 2000 and 2009. Total gov’t spending is now at ~40% of GDP, which has destroyed any hope of growing our way out of this mess (yes, the GOP deserves lots of blame for this too)…

  • In solidarity with conservatives

    A conservative I am not. (The reasons are complex, but for starters, I am utterly missing the third leg said to be vital to supporting the conservative “stool.”) So I typically call myself a small-l libertarian, or libertarian conservative, but even those terms have their limitations, as I just don’t fit any mold entirely.  I…

  • It Can’t Happen Here

    Arnie Gunderson and friend explain why It Can Happen Here. From the blurb about the video at Arnie’s site: The well-known safety flaws of Mark 1 Boiling Water Reactors have gained significant attention in the wake of the four reactor accidents at Fukushima, but a more insidious danger lurks. In this video nuclear engineers Arnie…

  • Ideas are harmless. People are not.

    People always say that ideas have consequences, but I disagree. Ideas themselves do not have consequences. It is the implementation of an idea that has consequences, which means that those responsible for implementing bad ideas are to blame, and not the ideas themselves. So the hell with ideas. In and of themselves, they are harmless.…

  • A scorcher — but not for everyone!

    This weather makes me understand why people like California despite all the problems. Here’s the national picture Drudge linked earlier: Notice that the California coast is absent from the measurements on the Drudge picture. So is the Pacific Northwest…. Here are today’s highs. Quite predictable to anyone who has lived there. Other people have to…

  • Up from freedom?

    “If you’re involved in the gay and lesbian lifestyle, it’s bondage. It is personal bondage, personal despair and personal enslavement.” Michele Bachmann allegedly said the above in 2004. That remark, along with the many others that are being repeated all over the Internet, will not endear her to gay voters, 25% of whom generally vote…

  • When bottom feeding goes too far….

    The stealing of things like plumbing or wiring out of buildings is what I would call “bottom feeder” crime, because it is the lowest form of crime. So-called “scrappers” do incalculable damage by making houses completely uninhabitable and shutting down power for entire communities. It cheered me to see that occasionally cops will devote genuine…

  • AOS FTW on MJ in NJ

    Over at Ace of Spades, re medical marijuana being legalized in New Jersey: As I wrote I just no longer have any interest in using the coercive power of the state to impose my personal preferences on recreational drug use on anyone else. Well said. I think this sort of law winds up undermining respect…

  • Your Tax Dollars At Work

    How could this possibly have gone unnoticed? What’s scary is that this was really really obvious fraud. Apparently the bar for successfully defrauding taxpayers is appallingly low. There must be thousands of cases where the perpetrators weren’t this stupid about it and so evaded detection. Yet another concrete example of why GDP growth is negatively…

  • Frontiers of Insanity

    What is going on with airlines? I clearly don’t have all the facts, don’t even know where to start investigating, but something IS wrong with airlines in the US. Years ago, when reading PJ O’Rourke’s Eat The Rich, I came across his description of train travel in Siberia, where the train seemed to have been…

  • Too Good Not To Link

    From Glenn: LEFTISM DEFINED? “He prefers the inequality that comes from a government hierarchy, over inequality that comes from voluntary trade.” I always figure that people who feel this way do so because they think they’re better at sucking up to authority figures than at creating value on their own. And my guess is, they’re…

  • Government gore may be habit forming

    While government safety Nazis have a love affair with warning labels, what they are mandating with cigarettes makes the usual warning labels look lame. In California I found a discarded Kent cigarette pack on which the warning label occupies more space than the brand name. I was so amused I picked it up and put…

  • No more acetylene?

    While this might only seem to be of interest to welders, I just learned about a huge nationwide acetylene shortage only because I recently acquired some welding equipment, and looked into getting tanks refilled. It is nearly impossible (and much more expensive) to get acetylene. This has not been in the news because ordinary people…

  • “COCAINE-RELATED DEATH”

    It isn’t every day I find a “three-fer,” but in today’s Detroit Free Press I found a story which touches on why so many people are willing to surrender freedom. Drugs, dogs, guns. Clearly, some people cannot handle any of them. So they must all be taken away from everyone. Just think! If we could…

  • 800 miles later, and the slavery people won’t let me sleep!

    Yes, I am still on the road, and exceeding the government-imposed driving quotas mentioned by an earlier commenter. But hey, that’s probably because I’m a “slave” to my driving. Or to the evil automobile/oil industry which enslaves and oppresses us all! I am a victim, doncha know? Liberals think they can free us from this…

  • The Mae and Mac Mess

    I somehow nearly missed this Tyler Cowen crushing of the argument that Fannie and Freddie did not play a major part in driving the financial crisis: 1. It is not denied that the mortgage agencies were guaranteeing about half of all U.S. mortgages right before the crisis (Yet somehow they had not so much to…