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. . . promoting capitalist acts between consenting adults.
Labels: Blog Stats
Susan Ryder explains how she became Libertarianz Sus, and what now for Libz.
There was no specific time as to when I became involved with the Libertarianz. I just sort of drifted into it.
It started after I returned to New Zealand permanently in 1995 after a long absence. Music radio left me cold, (the announcers, really, having been one in a past lifetime), so I started listening to Radio Pacific out of respect for friends who worked there.
The then morning host had a degree in Political Correctness and a Masters in Wetness, which saw me quickly seeking refuge in Leighton Smith’s pro-capitalist programme on Newstalk ZB. It was either that or succumb to the temptation to commit grievous bodily harm with my bare hands.
Listening at work allowed me to initially fax my opinions prior to email coming into existence. There was plenty to discuss. The cloth-cap lefties of old had alarmingly morphed into professional, well-organised, publicly-funded feminazis with a clear and chilling agenda. And the so-called right-wingers were also socialist at heart, parting company with the left only where they deemed it necessary to additionally mind others’ personal business. However the left has since ventured into that sphere, too, with the passing of legislation such as the Anti-Smoking/Smacking Acts. That’s the thing with authoritarians: there’s just no end to their interference.
They all seemed to be big-government advocates and I just wanted them to go away and mind their business. But nobody else seemed to think the way I did – or so I thought.
Ranting to a friend from Radio Pacific one day over a drink, he grinned and said “Why the hell aren’t you listening to Lindsay Perigo?” My eyebrows couldn’t have shot up faster had I been to the Botox clinic. “But he’s a communist!” I said. “Not anymore,” said John, “he’s had something of an awakening. I think you’ll approve!”
I suspiciously returned to Pacific at the appointed hour and thought I’d died and gone to heaven. “He thinks like me!” I thought. “I must be whatever he is!”
Back to ZB where I was quick to broadcast my allegiance to this party of small government devotees even though I hadn’t joined anything and didn’t know a soul. I didn’t care. They were opposed to state interference in all its manifestations and that was good enough for me. That they also rubbished political correctness and its proponents was a delicious bonus; a bit like winning Lotto and scoring the Powerball as well!
I joined the stable of regular correspondents, including my particular favourite, Barry the Garbo, a Warriors fan, rubbish collector and poet of some repute. As a result, a Libertarianz stalwart made herself known to me a few years later at a private function which marked my introduction to the party proper. I remain committed to its philosophy of free minds and free markets to this day.
Lately, there’s been discussion as to the ‘effectiveness’ of the Libertarianz. In so doing, it is necessary to look at the party and libertarianism separately.
Commentary on this and other blogs has unearthed numerous suggestions, many of them worthy of consideration. What has emerged is a call for a simplification of “the message.” I say “simplification” because the message – or philosophy – itself has never changed. By definition, it cannot. But that doesn’t mean to say that it cannot be streamlined or presented differently.
There is no denial that our voting numbers have decreased since the early days. And this is a good place to elaborate on the difference between the party and its principles.
Without rehashing past commentary, I believe that the voting numbers do not reflect dissatisfaction with libertarianism per se in that having embraced the principles of freedom and limited government, it is impossible to desert them. But there are two factors at play here that must be taken into consideration:
They alone frightened many into voting for larger parties whose policies they may not have fully supported, just to be rid of the previous government. The “wasted vote” theory, if you like. And we can harp on all we like about what really constitutes a wasted vote, but for these voters, the fear of another Labour-lead victory was greater than any perceived failings of John Key and National.
But the chickens are already well on their way to roost. The Key government is nine months old and, abolition of the reviled Electoral Finance Act notwithstanding, little has really changed. The size of the state has barely altered while private sector jobs disappear every day. Essential services remain firmly in state clutches and Key has thumbed his nose at the upcoming Citizens Initiated Referendum in a style worthy of Helen Clark.
What better time, then, to capitalise on the current situation. “Nanny State” is a well-known term these days. It certainly wasn’t ten years ago, but – as the left knows all too well; Lord knows they’ve been at it long enough – constant repetition has done the trick.
This is where simplification of what we’re about comes in. I disagree with the notion that this is diluting or selling out our principles. On the contrary, it’s a clarification for newcomers and potential newcomers, who are sympathetic to the idea of less state control and/or dissatisfied with the status quo. Any salesman worth his salt knows that you never sell something; you find out what the customer wants and then you provide it. You talk your customer’s language.
The suggestion has been made to talk “reduce” rather than “abolish” and “free market” instead of “capitalism”, etc. After all, language revision has been a powerful tool for the statists, so there is some satisfaction in using their own proven method to attack them.
I therefore suggest we concentrate on a handful of issues and take it from there. And we could do worse than focus on the RMA and its connection with the assault on property rights and increased compliance costs, Climate Change and Social Engineering to start with. Others will have their own ideas.
We are unique in that we would prefer our ideas be adopted by other parties rather than be in power ourselves; a difficult fact for voters to grasp. We cannot expect people to “get it” straight away; it can take time. But I’ve long been of the opinion that I’d rather concentrate on the areas in which we share agreement as opposed to the reverse. Those already sympathetic to the concepts of personal freedom, personal responsibility, limited government and tolerance – thank you, Richard McGrath! – will eventually come around.
They have nowhere else to go.
* * Read Susan Ryder’s column every week here at NOT PC * *
Labels: Earth Hour, Libertarian Sus, Libz, Socialism
Green shoots in the US? You have to be kidding, Mr Economist – not when investment has continued its fall off the cliff. [Hat tip Jeffrey Tucker at the Mises Blog.]
“The green shoots that people think they see,” says economic expert Peter Schiff, “don’t reflect any genuine economic growth. They reflect the initial reaction to the stimulus. If you shoot someone up with heroin, you’re gonna get a reaction before there is a withdrawal.”
And just notice how each of the “investment-led booms” of recent decades correlates to a period in which “The Fed” was pumping up the money supply. And how each of the busts – each of which those periods of monetary pumping were intended to fix – has been progressively larger than the last one.
You really can’t fake economic reality, can you. No matter how large your printing press.
Labels: Economics, Peter Schiff, Politics-US
Hey, this is very cool. The Ayn Rand Institute’s annual Objectivist conference, OCON, is being “twittered” live – which means that even from ten-thousand miles away you can keep up with all the fascinating speakers over the coming week-and-a-bit at Twitter simply by hooking into it all here via #OCON. Here are just some of the ideas-that-can-save-the-world that you can lap up:
Recent months have poignantly demonstrated the importance of philosophy in human life, as current events seem to spring directly from the pages of Atlas Shrugged. As most Americans look towards government to rescue them, our speakers show what alternative solutions Ayn Rand's philosophy can offer to today's world with presentations such as
- "The Separation of Church and State," by Onkar Ghate;
- "Principled Leadership," by BB&T’s John Allison;
- “'Humanity’s Darkest Evil': The Lethal Destructiveness of Non-Objective Law," by Tara Smith;
- "Free Minds and Free Markets," by Peter Schwartz; and
- "Property Rights—and Wrongs," by Thomas A. Bowden.
Other stimulating topics will be available as well, including history, psychology, drama, epistemology, mathematics, and the nature and necessity of friendship.
UPDATE 1: Oh, a few other blogs are summarising the presentations as well, including The Crucible, Titanic Deck Chairs and Noodle Food. Check them out too, especially if you want to see what you’ve already missed, or you simply prefer your summaries less fractured.
UPDATE 2: An attendee sums up day 3 in 140 words:
Day 3 Recap: Metaphors !=Concepts; Chocolate Fondue = delicious; We are the new intellectuals; I need to start writing; Optimism 4 ARI
And offers a reflection:
If evil is impotent, are good men the equivalent of viagra?
Labels: Objectivism
It’s not here yet, more’s the pity, but this life-size bronze sculpture 'Spring’ by contemporary Colorado sculptor Victor Issa is as delightful as we might hope for.
Check out more of his work here at his website.
Rather than conceding the errors in their flawed “social costs of alcohol” report (reported here, here, here and here), the alleged economists at BERL are resorting instead to rationalistic nonsense to support the report whose conclusions they were paid to find. Their alcohol study's lead author, Mr Adrian Slack (whose photo at right, I think, tells you as much as you need to know about how his mind works), begins by arguing that they weren’t paid to study the benefits of alcohol, only the costs -- to do a full cost-benefit study would have cost the client another $135,000 says Mr Slack – and ends by talking palpable nonsense:
”So for example someone who murders someone, from the individual’s point of view, Eric would be, I presume, quite comfortable with that.
The person who decides to murder someone else makes an evaluation of what are the benefits and costs to me of this action? Society says ‘well some people do murder other people’, but society says ‘that’s not good.’”
The argument is as tangled as the grammar. Perhaps it was something Mr Slack was drinking ?
In response to what BK Drinkwater calls “a pretty damn strong candidate for non sequitur of the year,” Eric Crampton (who co-authored the intellectual destruction of Mr Slack’s work) kicks Slack again while he’s down: Of externalities, elbows, and knowing one from the other.
And Paul Walker also responds to Slack’s rationalistic nonsense, saying in part "I may have had some doubts about what goes on at BERL before now but after reading the National Business Review I really do wonder what goes on inside a BERL economists head.” He has much, much more as well.
One begins to wonder if someone should commission research on the cost to consultants of a failed reputation. I suspect it would be much greater than $135,000.
UPDATE: Eric Crampton clarifies:
“I wasn't so much trying to kick someone when he's down as put on record that I'm not in favour of murder, lest someone down the track say something like ‘Eric Crampton, who has never rebutted allegations of being pro-murder, also ...’ "
Labels: 'Social Costs' of Alcohol
The Chinese government, the world’s leaders in intellectual piracy, are seeking to shut down their citizens’ access to the internet by installing pirated software on every Chinese computer. Bruce Simpson has the story.
One of the chief evils of offices of political advocacy is that taxpayers opposed to views which they hold to be wrong-headed, destructive or plain vicious are required, nonetheless, to dip into their pockets and pay for bureaucrats to promote those views. Paid political activists whose time is paid for by their opponents – what could be more outrageous!
Latest example of this outrage is a magazine issued by the Families Commission which fiercely upholds the power of government employees to enter your home and tell you how to discipline your children. While Families Commissioner Christine Rankin has been told by her bosses to keep her mouth shut on matters pertaining to the anti-smacking referendum, you and I and and the opponents of the anti-smacking legislation are having our pockets picked to pay for advocacy which we oppose. Advocates like Bob McCoskrie of Families First and his supporters are required to find the money to promote the “No” vote campaign, while all the while being required to up the tab for their opponents as well.
Such is the evil of offices of political advocacy like the Families Commission, which opposes the sanctity of the family, or the Children’s Commissioner, which under Cindy Kiro favours the nationalisation of children.
Into this debate steps Stephen Franks, arguing that things have gone so far that it is time to consider the heresy of “a new publicly funded agency to remedy failure in the marketplace of ideas”: an Office of Devil’s Advocacy – and office paid to provide opposition to the paid political advocates of the “dreary anointed.”
Sounds like a job I might enjoy – if, that is, I could stomach the heresy of picking my opponents’ pockets to pay for the unpalatable advocacy I’d be required to promote. :-)
Labels: Christine Rankin, Cindy Kiro, Families Commission, Free Speech, Smacking
New blog just being added to the sidebar is The SovereignLife Blog written itinerant Kiwi David McGregor, principal of Sovereign Life and author of popular guest posts here at NOT PC. Add him to your regular reading.
UPDATE 1: NBR editor Nevil Gibson summarises the state of climate play:
Did you stop worrying about climate change when the credit crunch and global recession got serious? Then listen up, things have changed for the better.
In the past year or so since you last worried about it, the climate change debate has moved on. In fact, it is in danger of extinction as the scientific “consensus” disappears and international agencies and governments backpedal on draconian measures to stamp out use of carbon.
UPDATE 2: One of the primary points to be understood here is that climate pseudo-science and pronouncements thereon are being used to advance a clearcut and deadly political agenda. On this the excellent Micky’s Muses blog quotes UK Labour MP Tom Harris who says
"...for some environmentalists the fight against global warming has another aim: the defeat of capitalism, of economic growth, of prosperity.Which is why I find their arguments so nauseating..."
And so say all of us.
UPDATE 2: If you have never really gotten into the economics of climate change, and want an accessible introduction, here you go.
Labels: Cartoons, Global Warming
As most New Zealanders will have completely ignored, today (our time) is American Independence Day -- and tomorrow (our time) it's their time. If you see what I mean.
New Zealanders might like to ignore it, but the events that Independence Day celebrate are as important to us down here as they to those up there. July 4 isn’t just a day to celebrate American independence, but our own as well.
What do I mean? Why does it matter to us down here at the bottom of the South Pacific that a bunch of gentlemen over two-hundred and thirty years ago pledged their "lives, fortunes and sacred honour" to constitute the first government in history dedicated to the task of protecting individual rights -- as expressed in Thomas Jefferson's magnificent Declaration of Independence, the rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness?
Why should that matter to us? As Michael Berliner explains, "Jefferson and Washington fought a war for the principle of independence, meaning the moral right of an individual to live his own life as he sees fit." The principle of independence for which they fought is universal.
The United States of America was the first and still the only country on earth to be founded upon the specific idea that human life and human liberty are sacred. July 4th is that day when freedom's anthem is heard around the world!
Despite its occasional breaches in upholding the principle of human rights and human liberty consistently, it is nonetheless for this that we all celebrate (or should celebrate) Independence Day. That for the first time in human history a country was founded on the idea of human rights and human liberty; upon the notion that "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" are sacred; upon the intention to constrain government to act only in defence of those rights.
This was not just a unique event in human history, it also worked like all hell for nearly a century-and-a-half; it worked because protecting those rights gave individuals the moral space, the freedom, within which to act and to flourish. It was not just that this made America and the world freer and more prosperous (which it did); it was not just that this protection for liberty gave a platform to criticise and remedy the breaches of the principle (which it did, most notoriously the regarding of some human beings as the property of others); it is also the profoundly important illustration that a country founded upon reason, individualism and freedom works. That liberty is moral. That liberty is right.
In that very important sense, The Declaration of Independence that Americans celebrate today was made on behalf of every human being on this earth.
Said Thomas Jefferson in the last letter he was to write, reflecting fifty years later on the Declaration of Independence and the July 4 celebrations that commemorate its signing:
May it be to the world, what I believe it will be (to some parts sooner, to others later, but finally to all), the signal of arousing men to burst the chains under which monkish ignorance and superstition had persuaded them to bind themselves, and to assume the blessings and security of self-government. That form which we have substituted, restores the free right to the unbounded exercise of reason and freedom of opinion. All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately, by the grace of God. These are grounds of hope for others. For ourselves, let the annual return of this day forever refresh our recollections of these rights, and an undiminished devotion to them.Amen. And let those thoughts be heard around the world! For as one commentator said on this day last year, July 4th is not just a National Day for Americans because the Declaration of Independence really is "freedom's anthem heard around the world":
Whenever you hear news of people fighting for democracy, pause and give thanks for the Declaration of Independence. I am thankful every day that by blind luck I was born in this country. I want the whole world to have the comforts and the opportunities that have so enriched my life. When they tear down a wall in Berlin, when an oppressed group is granted a right in Latin America, when a business is allowed to exist in China, a protest is allowed in a former Soviet satellite, a woman attends a school in Afghanistan or a purple forefinger is raised in Iraq, I think to myself, “the world may not know all the lyrics, but they are definitely singing our song.”
And he's right. America's creation was the great political achievement of the Enlightenment: the full political implementation of the concept of individual rights, with a government constrained to protect them. [What are individual rights, and why do they need the protection of government? Ayn Rand explains. What specifically was the nature of the government the American founding fathers tried to erect? Ayn Rand explains that too.]
With the exception of just a few words, the words could hardly be bettered today (although some of us have tried):
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness...
To really celebrate Independence Day, Americans must rededicate themselves to the principles of 1776, and particularly to the absolute importance of individual rights – not the pseudo-rights imagined by proponents of the welfare state, but the genuine rights (properly understood) of individuals to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. We must also rededicate ourselves to the Declaration’s standard for the legitimacy of government – a government that is limited to the safeguarding of these rights, not to their destruction – and, with this, an acceptance of the principle that outside this sphere of legitimacy, individuals have the freedom (and the responsibility) of governing themselves.
If Americans are to use this day to re-dedicate themselves to the principles of 1776 as Mayer invites, then non-Americans might use it to take up Thomas Jefferson's challenge "to burst the chains under which monkish ignorance and superstition had persuaded [us] to bind [ourselves], and to assume the blessings and security of self-government."
Human liberty is the most sacred thing in the universe, and today is the pre-eminent day in which to celebrate it, and to salute the authors of America's Declaration of Independence.
To America's heroic founders, I salute you!
NB: Some final July 4 snippets for you:
Labels: Thomas Jefferson
Beer writer Neil Miller borrows a headline to pump a local favourite.
Wikipedia, the much maligned website so beloved of students writing last-minute essays and bar staff trying to settle pointless arguments between their customers, has this to say about the humble Tuatara:
“The tuatara is a reptile endemic to New Zealand which, though it resembles most lizards, is actually part of a distinct lineage, order Sphenodontia. The two species of tuatara are the only surviving members of its order which flourished around 200 million years ago… Tuatara have been referred to as living fossils. This means that they have remained mostly unchanged throughout their entire history, which is approximately 220 million years.”
This means that, theoretically speaking, a mighty Tyrannosaurus Rex (if they still existed, which they don’t) could today go to a Police line-up and easily recognise a humble Tuatara (if the Tuatara had done something illegal, which seems unlikely). The Tuatara is, in many ways, an eloquent rebuttal to the old adage “evolve or die” having seen many of its proudly evolutionary colleagues completely disappear (The Moa, The Dodo, Georgie Pie and Jim Anderton’s Progressive Coalition to name but four).
Fortunately, the Tuatara brewery is both evolutionary and very much still here. It is indeed exciting times for the Tuatara team with a new beer (Helles), an expanded brewery (four times more power), the prospect of exporting (to Auckland and Melbourne), a website (finally) and a funky new outlet (the Wellington City Market).
Helles, by the way, was brilliantly covered in an earlier blog post. Head Brewer Carl Vasta has also indicated that he is looking at doing some “big, special beers” in the coming months including possibly a stout, a nice American Pale Ale and even a bottle-conditioned Belgian triple.
He can afford to contemplate these new brews because recent extensions and upgrades have seen Tuatara Brewery’s capacity increase four fold. Carl said that made them the same size as Mac’s Wellington. With their new toys, Carl and Dion can produce 4,000 litre batches using multi-step infusion mashes. Carl explains to me (in very small words) that the multi-step rests help the protein profile, get the best out of the malt and make the beers consistent.
Availability around town is improving also though the best place to enjoy a Tuatara around Wellington is still Malthouse, the Official and Spiritual Home of Tuatara, and around Auckland it’s either Galbraith’s or Hallertau (the unofficial while still quite spiritual pied-à-terres). New Tuatara Global Distribution Manager Louise Matheson (Global including Levin, but not Auckland or Christchurch!), reports that stores and restaurants are really keen to give Tuatara a try. She says that people love the fact that Tuatara is a local beer and Champion Brewery 2008 which means the beer really sells itself. For the first time Tuatara is going national and, in a couple of months, should even be in select Melbourne bars.
Someone needs to ring Al Gore. The internet is now complete - Tuatara has a website. It’s not easy for a writer who has had broadband for exactly three weeks to get on his technological high-horse though. The official site is a bit of a holding page but readers of this blog can get exclusive behind-the-scenes access and can have a sneak peak at the real deal.
Finally, Tuatara has a regular stall at the new Wellington City Market which has been set up by Chef Martin Bosley. Every Sunday, some of the region’s best food and beverages are on sale at the market. I went there on the first day and had Tuatara Helles and Duck Rillettes. Sunday mornings will never be the same.
Now, before alert readers flood Neil or myself with angry letters, emails and tweets, I am fully aware that later in the Wikipedia article on Tuatara it clearly states:
“However, taxonomic work on Sphenodontia [Tuatara] has shown that this group has undergone a variety of changes throughout the Mesozoic [period] and a recent molecular study showed that their rate of molecular evolution is faster than of any other animal so far examined.”
It just didn’t fit in with my introduction.
Cheers
Beer Writer
Real Beer New Zealand
Beer and Brewer Magazine
Malthouse Facebook Group
Tuatara Facebook Group
This post is cross-posted from The Malthouse Blog
NB: Special prize to the first one to note from where and from whom Neil borrowed the heading.
Labels: Beer and Elsewhere, Wellington
This is very sad. The recession depression is affecting more than just the big American auto companies. MG enthusiast John Twist of University Motors in Michigan, whose MG tips and tricks on YouTube have made him a popular figure with MG owners everywhere, is closing down his own business restoring and maintaining MGs after thirty-four years in the trade, due to declining economic conditions. Below is the sad day when the signs come down. And here’s the video of his sad announcement, which includes a neat look at the classic sports cars from right across the States he’s restoring as the shutters come down.
Labels: MG
In his latest newsletter, Owen McShane points to a crowd called the Cordillera Institute, “dedicated to promoting achievement in Local Government” – which sounds rather unpromising to me, unless by “achievement” is meant good things like “immediate redundancy.”
Nonetheless, the Cordillera Institute publishes a regular newsletter “read by municipal leaders on four continents” that Owen recommends, particularly the latest issue which “ focuses on the issue of local government mergers – or amalgamations.”
“We found the paragraph "Why the Difference between Predictions and Reality?" particularly interesting,” says Owen using the Royal ‘We,’ “and certainly provides some ‘lessons to be learned.’ The last paragraph – The Bottom Line – also seems to be packed full of common sense,” he says. Here then, for supporters of Auckland’s amalgamation of bureaucrats, are the common sense lessons Owen mentions. Here’s the first paragraph:
Why the Difference Between Projections and Reality?
In theory at least, it would seem that the economies of scale and their resulting savings should be there. And, there have been many studies produced by reputable firms which project significant savings if mergers occur. The only problem is that these projected savings never seem to materialize. This is not a slap at the consultants who did the studies. As a former consultant myself, I understand how an exhaustive study that showed potential annual savings of $400 million could be used by others to promote a merger which, in fact, resulted in no savings. And, it generated transition costs which are said to have exceeded the amount of those projected savings. That example is the 1998 Toronto amalgamation. The reason for the 180 degree difference between the projection and the actual is the product of the decisions made by those – both elected and employed – charged with mandating the merger and those charged with carrying it out. Cost-benefit analyses are rarely able to quantify this factor. Nor do most terms of reference given to consultants even request that input. So, the most comprehensive and diligent studies can be rendered valueless if policy-makers and central planners follow a different script. In Issue 01.26, there are more explanations of why municipal mergers have failed to measure up. [You can read the summary of that commentary here.]
There’s a very good lesson right there: when a consultant says don’t believe consultants, you know that for once the consultant might know what they’re talking about.
Anyway, here’s the second paragraph mentioned:
The Bottom Line
Just because mergers have failed to live up to their billings doesn't mean that we should give up trying other ways to achieve economies of scale. The economies which seem to have eluded amalgamations are much more likely to be realized by sharing services and by other means of inter-municipal co-operation -- as long as these arrangements stop short of political union.
At this stage you might be thinking something like, “so what’s the point of political union then?” and if you are I will enthusiastically join with you in saying you might well have a point. A very good point.
There’s no hope at all that the sophomoric fantasy of “taking power permanently away from the left,” which seems to be the wet dream of so many supporters.
There’s no plan to remove from the councils the “power of general competence” that minister Sandra Lee gave them to turbo-charge your rates bils.
Mayoral font-runner John Banks has already said he expects few staff to lose their paid sinecures.
And Rodney Hide has just today promised there is “no intention to privatise any asset as part of these reforms.”
So what the hell is the point? While we might all hope that both these gentlemen are lying, as gentlemen in their profession are wont to do, we also have increasing compelling evidence that no local government amalgamation anywhere has achieved anything except higher rates for residents and increasing bureaucratisation of the centre.
So really, what the hell is the point? As I’ve said before (and John Carter now appears to concede) there's nothing "super" about the Auckland super city.
Woefully inefficient.
Governed by ego-driven noddies.
A boot camp for left-wing politicians.
It will take the 'local' out of local government.
And be opposed to the way NZers most want to live.
One city, one neck, one noose.
Absolutism limited only by inefficiency.
We don't need council expanded, we urgently need it contained. We don't need more central planning: we urgently need less. We don't need to make it easier for uber-planners to 'plan' the city, we need much greater freedom so we can plan our own lives for ourselves.
There endeth the lesson.
Labels: Auckland, John Banks, Local Government
Deborah Hill Cone asks an obvious question in this morning’s Business Herald: Why are dentists so gosh-darned expensive?
I see a lovely dentist who “cares for cowards,” plays hot jazz and gives me nitrous oxide – it’s fabulous, like going to a pleasant nightclub where you can’t talk or dance because someone is fiddling with your mouth. Until you get the bill. Open wide, wallet. Last time it cost $3300 for a crown and a filling.
Ouch!
I have tried and tried but I don’t understand why dentists are so expensive. If I go privately to see another sort of medical specialist who has trained for a squillion years – a neurologist or a dermatologist, say – they are likely to charge me about $400 an hour. Even factoring in the fact that the dentist has an assistant, a whizzy chair and more technology the, difference in fees seems startling.
Yes, it does – especially to one whose profession would kill to charge $400 an hour!
And dentists only have to tell people to floss, not that they have a brain tumour.
True.
Now, I have a confession to make. I’m a coward when it comes to dentists too – I blame a bad experience back at the school murder house many years ago at the hands of one of its badly-trained institutional torturers – and the twin pains of drill and wallet-ectomy have made me a very reluctant visitor to dentist’s offices since. I’m sure I’m not the only one.
So here’s your chance to talk up your own favourite angel of dentistry: who can you recommend to readers like me who need their fangs fixed, but are reluctant to pay through the nose for another pain in the mouth?
And feel free to explain why all the others are so gosh-darned expensive.
“Free Bernie Madoff,” says Jeffrey Tucker this morning.
Instead of rejoicing at his 150 years of captivity, he says, why not reflect instead that “those educated by the sociologists [are] forever soft on real crime but oddly tough on financial crime.”
And no fear arguing that Madoff’s actions were “unusually evil.” As Tucker says, they’re not that unusual at all.
In fact, the whole notion of paying off past investors with the funds of present investors is at the very core of the Social Security system. At least Madoff sought the consent of his investors who let him care for their money based on their own volition. And at least he didn't attempt to defend himself with the claim that he was conducting wise public policy.
I’m not sure why it comes as a surprise that Treasury made an error in their figures. After all, they’ve made an error every year for the last nine when they projected how much tax the government would collect, giving Michael Cullen an excuse not to deliver the tax cuts that were then (and still) so desperately needed.
They’ve made an error every year when they’ve “predicted” the country’s growth. Or the effects of the Reserve Bank’s economic dictation.
So frankly, the very phrase “Treasury credibility” looks increasingly like an oxymoron -- their credibility is almost on a par with that of their colleagues in BERL who they were so recently beating up.
At least this time, for once, their error has caused some belt-tightening where it’s most needed.
UPDATE: The inimitable Jamie Whyte, the NZ philosopher whose best-selling book Bad Thoughts: A Guide to Clear Thinking is around here some place, writes in the London Times on the effects of central banks’ economic dictation.
Rather than giving the Bank of England more powers as Bank of England governor Mervyn King is calling for -- just as every other central bank and central banker around the world is calling for more powers for their bailiwick -- they should instead be given less power, says Whyte, who’s clearly been boning up on the Austrian Business Cycle Theory. Just like you should by reading his column: Strip the Bank of England of its power.
“The existence and rivalry of two parties, even such as they are, is the last protection of the (approximate) honesty of elections. It is obvious what sort of rigging would go on, if the government were given the power to finance elections. They call it "public financing," which means that you would be deprived of the right to decide which candidates you want to support, if any, and that the politicians would make that decision for you. . . In today's situation, you'd better pray for the survival of plain, old-fashioned grafters: when they vanish, you'll get a Robespierre or a Hitler, both of whom were anti-materialistic and incorruptible.
The solution, of course, is to eliminate both kinds of predators, material or spiritual, by eliminating their breeding ground: the government's power over the economy.”
Labels: Electoral Finance Act, Quotes
Intended for the 1886 Boston Public Library, the staid Bostonians told architect Charles McKim it was too racy for their conservative tastes. “Vulgar” and “immoral” it was called. “Drunken indecency” the Christian Temperance Union called it.
The bronze now finds a permanent home in the just re-opened American wing and sculpture court of NY’s Museum of Metropolitan Art. Check out this video at the Nearby Pen to see more of this and many other great sculptures. (Photo by Trish Mayo.)
Labels: Architecture, Art, Sculpture
That is, “might get me off with manslaughter.” I refer, if you hadn’t guessed, to the chamber of horrors appearing on our TV screen every night direct from the Christchurch court house. I don’t know about you, but I feel disgusted every time that killer and his lawyers appear on my TV screen.
I’m as disgusted with the “defence” put up by his legal team as I am with their trawling through Sophie Elliot’s sexual history to find “provocation” – as I am disgusted with the law that allows such a defence to be run, and with the type of lawyers that would choose to run it.
He killed her. He slaughtered her. The defence for this piece of human filth is essentially that he killed her because she called him names – because she "made him do it" - so that she is somehow responsible for her own cold-blooded slaughter! This is a defence that wouldn’t even stand up in a school playground! Whatever names she called him – whatever “provocation” she might have offered – nothing, nothing at all, justifies taking a knife to her bedroom and stabbing her 216 times.
And there’s very little either to justify the media’s breathless sensationalising of the trial. If this is the best they can do in terms of news reporting, then all concerned should take a good hard look at themselves and their industry.
Labels: Law
Last night New Zealand MPs voted overwhelmingly against a law change that would allow patients to use cannabis for specific medicinal purposes. They thought they knew the interests of these patients better than the patients and their doctors -- and knew the issue better than legislators in Canada, Spain, Germany, the Netherlands and in fourteen states in the US, all places where medical marijuana is legal. They told those patients essentially to go to hell, because that describes the pain that some are in.
The Green Party bill [says TV3 News] would have allowed doctors in New Zealand to prescribe cannabis for 22 approved illnesses and eligible patients would have been given an identification card allowing them to grow, possess and consume marijuana.
ACT MP Heather Roy says that the stance is supported by science.
"There's very good scientific evidence to show that some medical conditions are improved by the use of cannabis," she says.
Evidence that would have been presented at Select Committee, but 86 MPs, a clear majority said with their vote that they didn’t want to even hear.
ACT were all for, including their conservatives. So too were the Greens, whose bill this was. For Maori, all but one were against. Labour was split. And the Nats were all against – very revealing that as a conscience vote not a single Nat broke ranks for the bill. Not one apparently had enough of a conscience to even cross the floor.
Here’s who Voted For:
Ardern, Jacinda Labour Party, List
Beaumont, Carol Labour Party, List
Boscawen, John ACT New Zealand, List
Bradford, Sue Green Party, List
Burns, Brendon Labour Party, Christchurch Central
Chadwick, Steve Labour Party, List
Chauvel, Charles Labour Party, List
Cunliffe, David Labour Party, New Lynn
Delahunty, Catherine Green Party, List
Douglas, Roger ACT New Zealand, List
Dyson, Ruth Labour Party, Port Hills
Fenton, Darien Labour Party, List
Fitzsimons, Jeanette Green Party, List
Garrett, David ACT New Zealand, List
Graham, Kennedy Green Party, List
Hague, Kevin Green Party, List
Harawira, Hone Maori Party, Te Tai Tokerau
Hide, Rodney ACT New Zealand, Epsom
Hipkins, Chris Labour Party, Rimutaka
Hodgson, Pete Labour Party, Dunedin North
Jones, Shane Labour Party, List
Kedgley, Sue Green Party, List
King, Annette Labour Party, Rongotai
Lees-Galloway, Iain Labour Party, Palmerston North
Locke, Keith Green Party, List
Mackey, Moana Labour Party, List
Moroney, Sue Labour Party, List
Norman, Russel Green Party, List
Pillay, Lynne Labour Party, List
Prasad, Rajen Labour Party, List
Roy, Heather ACT New Zealand, List
Sepuloni, Carmel Labour Party, List
Street, Maryan Labour Party, List
Turei, Metiria Green Party, List
Twyford, Phil Labour Party, List
Metiria Turei, whose bill this was, wrote in support of her bill in a recent Free Radical. Here’s what she had to say.
Medicinal Cannabis Vote Coming Soon!
by Metiria Turei, MP
Compassion for ill New Zealanders is a core New Zealand value. Many campaigns for legislative or policy change have been about supporting and protecting the ill. My campaign enabling doctors to prescribe medicinal cannabis to patients supports thousands of ill New Zealanders who may benefit from this option, relieving the pain of (for just a few examples) nail-patella syndrome, muscle spasms, phantom limb pain, chronic pain, multiple sclerosis, fibromyalgia and the wasting syndrome from HIV/AIDS.
The world is increasingly recognising the value of medicinal use of cannabis. Fourteen US states now allow medicinal use, with similar systems in Canada, Spain and the UK. New South Wales is developing a four-year trial for medicinal cannabis. International health organisations supporting medicinal cannabis include the American Medical Association, US Institute of Medicine, Federation of American Scientists, the WHO and the UK Royal College of Physicians. All these jurisdictions and organisations base their support on evidence from highly regarded international medical research teams and institutions.
There is a process for medicinal use in New Zealand which has never been used because it is simply unworkable. The application must be made by your GP, involving extensive negotiations with both the Ministry of Health and Customs. The patient must purchase the pharmaceutical version of medicinal cannabis, which is extremely expensive. One constituent, who has a very low tolerance for cannabis, was quoted a price of $300 per week for the pharmaceutical cannabinoid preparation Sativex. In effect, ill New Zealanders, especially those who have the least resources or are the most ill, are denied access to potential relief.
My Bill proposes a system whereby patients grow their own cannabis and are registered with both the Ministry of Health and local police. It is the most accessible and cheapest model for ill New Zealanders. (There are other models that have greater and lesser degrees of control, many of which are used in other jurisdictions. I am open to the discussion on those other models.)
My campaign enabling doctors to prescribe cannabis is based on medical evidence. Research from the UK, Israel, Germany, Canada, USA and numerous universities and medical associations demonstrates cannabis can provide relief to some patients where mainstream pharmaceuticals have failed. In New Zealand, the NZ Medical Association supports research into the benefits of cannabis for medicinal use, and the NZ Pharmaceutical Guild told the 2001 Cannabis Inquiry that it considers it perfectly possible to safely distribute legal medicinal cannabis.
Our proposal adds cannabis to the tool box of medical interventions available to doctors. To hear more from the medical profession the Greens conducted a survey of doctors in 2003 to find out exactly what sort of professional support there is for medical use. The results were revealing, showing medicinal cannabis has been widely discussed or considered by doctors and/or patients. The potential use of medicinal cannabis is very high. Doctors were asked to rate their knowledge of medicinal cannabis: we found that those with a high level of knowledge were more likely to consider prescribing cannabis. 6% said that they have recommended their patients try cannabis; 10% said they currently had patients who would benefit from using cannabis; and 32% said they would consider prescribing cannabis if it were legal to do so.
Thirty-two percent demonstrates a “silent epidemic” of ill New Zealanders searching for alternative relief that the pharmaceutical industry simply cannot provide. Their silence should be cause for shame amongst those who make decisions about laws that prohibits this relief. They are silenced because they fear prosecution – and it is a real fear. Our courts have sent to jail for cannabis use people with very serious medical conditions for which the jails are simply not equipped -- and because these people have no other form of relief, they are by their very nature repeat offenders, attracting longer jail sentences. Regardless of one’s view of recreational use of cannabis, medicinal use is clearly a question of compassion.
There are a number of arguments against medicinal cannabis. Many are worried about the effects of smoking. Many are concerned about controlling dosage. And many are worried about enforcement of the law. Let’s address those in turn.
There are concerns smoked cannabis will contribute to lung damage -- this was a real concern of doctors surveyed. But the health risks of smoking are meaningless for patients with terminal conditions, especially if the drug relieves suffering during the remaining stages of their lives.
For non-terminal patients there are many different forms of ingestion with few negative health effects. One constituent of mine makes a tea; others use vaporisers, tinctures or even massage oil rubbed on damaged muscles or stumps. With good information, doctors can work through the various options for ingestion that work best for the patient. And in terminal cases, compassion has to be the dominant concern.
As for the question of dosage, patients say they do not want the euphoric effects, but rather to simply be free of the perpetual pain that confines their lives. GPs work out dosage issues all the time with other pharmaceutical drugs, and with appropriate information can do that with medicinal cannabis as well.
The third major concern is continued law enforcement against recreational marijuana use, a real concern that should be taken very seriously. Some are concerned about pharmacy break-ins, for example, but the NZ Pharmaceutical Guild say they can manage the storage and distribution of any legal medicinal cannabis product – and in this respect, medicinal cannabis can be compared to any drugs or medicines. The police already have systems for managing misuse of drugs such as barbiturates, sleeping pills, and pain medications such as morphine and anti-depressants, some of which – unlike the case with cannabis -- are fatal if misused.
In New Zealand there is increasing research on medicinal marijuana. Otago University research for example explores the use of cannabis in minimising damage caused by strokes, as well as in pain relief. More New Zealand-based pharmacological research is one benefit of freeing up medicinal marijuana. If we can enable a doctor-directed process rather than a ministerial one, researchers will have greater incentives to engage in that research, and patients will have another treatment available to them.
What she neglected to say is that this is a clear-cut issue of personal freedom.
And what she neglected to do was campaign for her bill. But now, with this vote, this issue of personal freedom has been put back years.
UPDATE 1: Plenty of reaction around the place, the pithiest perhaps being Russell Brown who says, “It's hard not to see MPs' rejection of Metiria Turei's medical cannabis bill as the result of a desperate desire to avoid talking about the issue, rather than a genuine exercise of conscience.” It sure does.
UPDATE 2: Alright, this from Danyl at Dim Post is pretty pithy too:
It’s a measure of the hysteria about drugs that we can have ‘medicinal heroin’ (diacetylmorphine, or other morphine derivatives) prescribed by Doctors but medicinal cannabis would simply be beyond the pale! And with the highest rates of cannabis abuse in the world I think its safe to say the drug is already present in mainstream New Zealand society.
Labels: Conservatism, Health, Politics-ACT, Politics-Greens, Politics-Labour, Politics-Maori_Party, Politics-National, Sue Bradford, Victimless Crimes
Now that the Foreshore & Seabed Act faces repeal, I don’t feel the need either to repeat what I’ve said over the last several years on the subject, or to change it.
What could possibly be wrong with recognising the right of people to claim the property in which they have a right?
What could possibly be wrong with the protection of property in which people can prove that right?
Isn’t that all that a repeal of the Foreshore and Seabed Act will do?
I think this is a fantastic step forward for property rights. I think it’s a great way by which to privatise the commons. I just think there should be more than one race who has this right protected. As an individual right. You know, like One Law for All?
How ‘bout you?
UPDATE: BK Drinkwater rounds up reactions to the repeal report.
UPDATE: Chris Trotter is continuing to repeat the big lie that Don Brash is somehow to blame for Labour’s panicked introduction of the Foreshore and Seabed Act. Journos such as Radio Live’s James Coleman, who I just heard taken in by Chris’s self-serving myth-building, should avail themselves of David Farrar’s timeline on the subject. As David points out, Don Brash wasn’t appointed National leader until some 127 days after Labour’s panicked announcement; and the Orewa Speech (which Trotter cites as proximate cause for the panic in an attempt to diminish what was said there) wasn’t delivered for a full 218 days after Clark and Wilson went for the “nuclear option.”
UPDATE 3: It always starts with common law. Readers who’d like to get their heads around this issue would be well advised to get to grips with the concept of common law, and the process by which common law can recognise long established use as a means by which to recognise a property right. Two of those methods, which you can read about in any book of tort law (or, no doubt, in any decent Google search) are acquisition by prescription, and by ‘the doctrine of lost modern grant.’
That’s the simple process which Ngati Apa had initiated in Marlborough, success in which caused the panic in Helen Clark’s private dressing room.
You would also do well to realise that this process of rights acquisition cuts both ways; that is, it’s eminently appropriate for both property owners and property users – which is to say, in this case, it’s an appropriate from by which the rights of both the owners of the foreshore and seabed and those who desire access to it can be registered and protected. If I may quote myself:
Common law. Common law has hundreds of years of demonstrated success in protecting property rights, as well as being practical and cost effective. It's common sense. [And it’s what Maori are asking for here.]
Under common law, the right of access is just one of many 'sticks' in the bundle of rights associated with your land. Groups (or individuals) can only acquire such rights by either purchase, or by long unchallenged use (as per 'prescription,' or the doctrine of 'lost modern grant'). Such groups might for example be tramping clubs, angling organisations, hunting clubs, skiing clubs, botanical societies, canoe clubs etc. Such rights, if they exist, would be specific, clearly defined and circumscribed, and would appear on title deeds as a specific easement in favour of specific groups, which property-owners would know about when property was purchased. Common law is clear, certain, and protects your property rights (the exact opposite of the RMA, for instance.) And best of all, common law is simple, and thus doesn't require hoards of bureaucrats to administer it.
I invite you to explore the concept.
Labels: Common Law, Don Brash, Foreshore and Seabed Act, Property Rights
This week Bernard Darnton pretends to get all fired up.
For millennia people have gazed into the fire and pondered. I ponder why we went to all the effort of inventing gas fires only to put fake ceramic logs in them.
The flame effect gas fires aren’t quite as naff as the “flame effect” bar heaters with the red lightbulb and rotating tin foil in the back that I remember from my childhood, but it’s still an odd thing to do.
Gazing into the flames, I realise that the attraction is gazing into the flames. But what irks me is that those flames come at a hefty price, namely that they stop the heater from heating anything. In technical terms: blue flames are hot, orange flames are not.
Fake-log gas fires aren’t quite as inefficient as real open fires but they’re as bad as you get down here, with Environment Canterbury (that’s marketing bollocks for “Canterbury Regional Council”) banning wood fires. They may be inefficient but it’s unfortunately rare to run into an old mate down at the pub who has a trailer-load of old electricity going spare.
Our previous house had a much better gas heater. It wasn’t much to look at but it chucked out the heat like a Syrian nuclear reactor during an Israeli Air Force visit. Sadly, that house was afflicted by the fake log heater’s cultural cousin, the light fitting shaped like a candlestick, with all those little lightbulbs shaped like flames. Seriously – what sort of befuddled Jim Anderton think-alike looks at a lightbulb and says, “Bloody Thomas Edison. I wish we could go back to candles.”
A thing should do what it does well and good design should enhance that, not counter or cripple it. So many things are backwards-looking, ill thought out, or come from Korea and play silly tinkly tunes the moment they do anything, looking for praise like an attention deficient child, that it’s an absolute joy to see, hear, or touch something that has been well designed.
However, even things that are famous for their great design have failings. My iPod for example: it has this desire to “shuffle” the tracks it plays, i.e. play them in whatever order it feels like. This is great if you just want music as background noise but it’s a pain in the arse when you’re listening to Teach Yourself Italian lessons. One moment you’re stumbling through “buongiorno!” and “arrivederci!” and the next moment all hell breaks loose: Nel mezzo del cammin di nostra vita mi ritrovai per una selva oscura che la diritta via era smarrita. You what? You’re not the only one who’s lost.
For all the iPod’s cleverness in only having one button it could do with another “just do what I bloody expect you to” button.
Actually, the iPod design should stay just as it is otherwise it would end up looking like every other cheap knock-off MP3 player that needs a space shuttle licence to drive it. But you can’t please everyone all the time. Especially not grumpy buggers who like to rant about how crap everything is just to stay warm. If only I could download a flame effect program from the iPhone App Store…
* * Read Bernard Darnton’s column every Thursday here at NOT PC * *
Labels: Bernard Darnton, NOT PJ
“In view of the magnitude of the current world economic crisis, I still haven’t dared ring the bank to find out if I’m still solvent. . . . As I understand it, which is to the minimum extent compatible with earning a living, there is nothing inherently wrong with a market economy. As long as people make money by making things, and then invest the profit in making more things, an economy can boom forever. Trouble starts when people start making money out of money itself. Then the whole deal comes tumbling down and finally lands on the less well-off, which at this rate might effectively mean everybody less well-off than the Sultan of Brunei.”
From a Melbourne-based photo blog of Art Deco Buildings by photographer David Thompson [hat tip Butter Paper].
Labels: Architecture
I don’t know about you, but every time Peter Schiff talks I’m prepared to listen, so when he talks about New Zealand, which he still recommends as a “commodities stock,” I’m fully prepared to sit back and listen very seriously. Here’s what he says in his latest newsletter:
Featured Investment Recommendations
Australia and New Zealand: Investment Recommendations in Gold Mining (Aus) and Agri-Business (NZ)We continue to like the fundamentals of Australia and New Zealand. While the global economic downturn has left its mark on every nation, we believe Australia and New Zealand retain better positioning than most developed nations of the West. First, GDP growth estimates, government balances and corporate valuations look to be better than peers. Second, higher interest rates and reasonable inflation expectations should continue to attract investors seeking a higher yield. Finally, both nations have significant exposure to natural resources and Asia Pacific nations, likely fostering growth in trade as the region experiences continued growth in export and consumer activities.
The Fiscal Outlook for Australia and New Zealand Remains Positive. 2009 GDP growth estimates for Australia and New Zealand, at -1.4% and -1.9% respectively, are certainly favorable in light of a global slowdown and when compared to other developed nations such and the US and United Kingdom at -2.8% and -4.1%, respectively. Further, Australia and New Zealand have maintained a positive government balance for the majority of the past five years and although they are expected to run a deficit in 2009 of -2.3 percent and -2.8 percent respectively, this is low compared to the US and United Kingdom at -13.6 percent and -9.8 percent, respectively. Finally, from a valuation standpoint Australia and New Zealand appear to remain attractive compared to other developed nations, particularly if a rebound in commodities happens before economists expect.
Interest Rates Support a Stronger Australian and New Zealand Dollar. While we believe recent comments from leaders in Australia and New Zealand, expressing worry over the rapid increase in their currency's valuations (up 26% and 29% against the US dollar since March 2009, respectively) increases risk that policy action may put a short-term lid on the currency's appreciation, over the long-term we believe fundamentals support further appreciation of the Australian and New Zealand Dollars. Current policy interest rates in Australia and New Zealand are 275 and 225 basis points higher, respectively, compared to the US, while at the same time the IMF expects inflation rates in 2010 to remain relatively equal amongst the three countries. We believe these higher interest rates will support an inflow of capital as investors seek greater yields, improving the valuation of the Australian and New Zealand dollars versus the US dollar over the long-term.
Australian and New Zealand Economies Should Benefit from Their Resources and Geographies. We believe Australia and New Zealand's exposure to natural resources and their close vicinity to the Asia Pacific region will serve both economies well. Any economic recovery will likely induce a renewed demand for natural resources, including coal, oil, natural gas and minerals. With both Australia and New Zealand having access to an abundance of natural resources, we believe a recovery in demand will have positive implications for both GDP growth and their currencies.
Figure 4. Recent Performance of Rogers International Commodity Index
We also believe that Australia and New Zealand's close vicinity to economies in the Asia Pacific region will be a benefit moving forward. Besides importing natural resources to fuel export growth, we believe Asia Pacific nations will also import more finished goods as the region experiences a secular shift towards increased consumer spending. In 2008, Australia and New Zealand sent 14.6% and 5.9% of their exports to China, respectively. Australia has recently renewed negotiations with China for a free trade agreement, while New Zealand and China signed an agreement in April of 2009. Further, Australia is currently negotiating free trade agreements with Malaysia, Japan and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) while New Zealand is negotiating free trade agreements with Malaysia, Hong Kong, Korea and ASEAN. In addition to China, New Zealand has agreements in place with Singapore and Thailand. . .
Head to his newsletter for the recommended investments, one each for Australia and NZ.
UPDATE: Meanwhile, in stark contrast, over at Bernard Hickey’s blog:
Two top financial analysts in Australia and America have highlighted New Zealand’s overblown house prices and high foreign debts in detailed criticisms of the structural imbalances in both Australia and New Zealand. One described New Zealand as “Australia’s Eastern Europe” . . .
Labels: Economics, Inflation, New Zealand, Peter Schiff
Dubai has gone from one of the most exciting booms of recent years to “its worst crisis since the UAE's founding 40 years ago,” with failing entrepreneurs now fleeing the country to escape debtors prison, with one back predicting “the city's 1.4 million population could shrink by almost a fifth.”
And yes, you read that right. Debtors’ prison. "According to police there are 450 people in Dubai's central jail imprisoned as debtors which highlights how seriously the UAE authorities view bankruptcies,” says Nick White of Dubai-based Trowers & Hamlins.
Labels: Dubai

Pragmatist or ideologue? That is the question being asked about Obama. Says Jeff Perren at Shaving Leviathan:
“It certainly seems Obama is a pragmatist, given how he careens from crisis to crisis. Yet, there is an internal consistency to his positions — all of them hard Left — that suggests there is indeed a driving ‘ideology’ behind them.”

Evidence in abundance here.
UPDATE: Evil or stupid? That was the question Gus Van Horn was asking back in March. Now Drudge appears to confirm it's the former:
BEWARE THE OBAMA 'EVIL EYE' Tue Jun 30 2009 07:43:56 ET As the summer begins, White House watchers have spotted a new look by President Obama: The Evil Eye!

Staffers have joked about the menacing glance, which comes when the president meets with world leaders who are not aligned with his progressive view.
White House photographers have captured the "evil eye" in recent weeks, during sessions with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Colombia's Alvaro Uribev.

Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi got hit with the commander's malocchio last week in the Oval office.
And at least one White House reporter has been on the receiving end of the daggers during a press conference. Developing...

Further substantive evidence [hat tip Gus Van Horn again]: Recently, Myrhaf successfully predicted that Obama would choose the wrong side in the so-called coup in Honduras and afterwards, Alan Sullivan commented that in explicitly aligning the US with Castro and Chavez "Obama’s true affinities are now exposed for all to see."
Labels: Barack Obama, Quotes