More wisdom from Hayek

More from Chapter 1 of the too-little-read masterpiece, The Constitution of Liberty:

“It is often objected that our concept of liberty is merely negative. This is true in the sense that peace is also a negative concept or that security or quiet or the absence of any particular impediment or evil is negative. It is to this class of concepts that liberty belongs: it describes the absence of a particular obstacle—coercion by other men. It becomes positive only through what we make of it. It does not assure us of any particular opportunities, but leaves it to us to decide what use we shall make of the circumstances in which we find ourselves.

But while the uses of liberty are many, liberty is one. Liberties appear only when liberty is lacking: they are the special privileges and exemptions that groups and individuals may acquire while the rest are more or less unfree. Historically, the path to liberty has led through the achievement of particular liberties. But that one should be allowed to do specific things is not liberty, though it may be called “a liberty”; and while liberty is compatible with not being allowed to do specific things, it does not exist if one needs permission for most of what one can do. The difference between liberty and liberties is that which exists between a condition in which all is permitted that is not prohibited by general rules and one in which all is prohibited that is not explicitly permitted.”

Our collective impatience for the alleviation of some social ill is too often capitalized upon by government, which directs that impatience into a distrust of the seemingly slow-working forces of the market, and molds a voting block large enough to procure greater power to intervene, and therefore hamper, the forces at work within a market.  But before we give in to an impatience-turned-politicized-outrage, we should remember that only through the elimination of coercion within society will everyone be fed, clothed, housed, and living a life not constantly threatened by famine, disease, or war.  Only nations that attempt to eliminate market forces will you find authoritarian governments, bread lines, starvation, disease, and mass death.

03/27/18 Overnight Links

EFF: One response to the Cambridge Analytica scandal: Block Facebook’s tracking with Privacy Badger Ed: Go to the Electronic Frontier Foundation website, install Privacy Badger on your browser, and watch the number of cookies and sites that would’ve otherwise been tracking you go up.

The Intercept: The father of Pulse nightclub massacre killer was an FBI informant. Did he convince the Bureau to stop investigating his son?

Also The Intercept: ICE uses Facebook data to find and track suspects, internal emails show

CNN: It’s not just Facebook. Thousands of companies are spying on you.

History.com: Communications companies have been spying on you since the 19th century

Reason: Mitch McConnell wants to take hemp off the Controlled Substance list

PAT BUCHANAN: Is Trump assembling a war cabinet?

Defense One: The decision to sell arms to foreign nations shouldn’t be about creating jobs at home

Atlas Obscura: With musical cryptography, composers can hide messages in their melodies

Hayek on the proper meaning of “liberty”

From chapter 1 of his book, The Constitution of Liberty:

“This confusion of liberty as power with liberty in its original meaning inevitably leads to the identification of liberty with wealth; and this makes it possible to exploit all the appeal which the word “liberty” carries in the support for a demand for the redistribution of wealth. Yet, though freedom and wealth are both good things which most of us desire and though we often need both to obtain what we wish, they still remain different. Whether or not I am my own master and can follow my own choice and whether the possibilities from which I must choose are many or few are two entirely different questions. The courtier living in the lap of luxury but at the beck and call of his prince may be much less free than a poor peasant or artisan, less able to live his own life and to choose his own opportunities for usefulness. Similarly, the general in charge of an army or the director of a large construction project may wield enormous powers which in some respects may be quite uncontrollable, and yet may well be less free, more liable to have to change all his intentions and plans at a word from a superior, less able to change his own life or to decide what to him is most important, than the poorest farmer or shepherd.”

Our ability to choose with whom we wish to interact, the range of voluntary interactions we are free to engage in without threat of arrest and imprisonment, the degree to which our voluntary interactions are protected by the legal system, are the true hallmarks of liberty.  Liberty is the shield that prevents others from wielding power over us, and that in itself is the only virtuous incarnation of power, that used in self-defense.

03/26/18 Links

Guns.com: Second Amendment groups react to YouTube gun policy changes

Stuff: Government must pay $90,000 to Kim Dotcom after tribunal rules it breached his privacy

Telegraph: Ten-year ‘fake news’ jail term proposed in Malaysia

Futurism: Amazon’s latest patent would make their delivery drones responsive to yelling and arm-flailing

FEE: The War on Drugs is far deadlier than most realize

Big Think: It’s time to integrate psychedelics into therapy

Cosmos: Ancient megaflood created a mile-tall waterfall

03/26/18 Morning Links

The Verge: The shady data-gathering tactics used by Cambridge Analytica were an open secret to online marketers

ZDnet: New data leak hits Aadhaar, India’s national ID database

Zero Hedge: “Dumb f–ks”: Julian Assange reminds us of what Mark Zuckerberg thinks of Facebook users

TechCrunch: Facebook denies it collects call and SMS data from phones without permission

ShadowProof: Greyhound urged to not permit border patrol to conduct indiscriminate raids against passengers

TheFreeThoughtProject: Horrifying video shows Israeli military target civilians with chemical weapon drone

The Intercept: The only good thing about John Bolton in the White House is that he’s not a general

JUSTIN RAIMONDO: Singing the Bolton Blues

Mirror: Meet the robot who can read minds and human emotion

Weekend Links Vol. 2

USA Today: Congress gives police in other countries easier access to U.S. data, raising privacy concerns

Redundant, but important: Engadget: President signs overseas data access bill into law

Wired: The Cambridge Analytica data apocalypse was predicted in 2007

Global Times: ‘Skynet’ facial recognition tech fast enough to scan Chinese population in one second: Report

The Verge: Facebook has been collecting call history and SMS data from Android devices

The National: Deleting Facebook will not stop your data from being accessed

Activist Post: 10 decentralized social media networks to use instead of Facebook

03/24/18 Weekend Links

Probably should keep this story posted every day now: Google’s new, $300 million fight against news it doesn’t like

Motherboard: State Department seemingly buys $15,000 iPhone-cracking tech GrayKey

Washington Times: Report: Police routinely using dead people’s fingerprints to unlock iPhones

Salt Lake Tribune: As YouTube bans firearms demonstrations, Utah firm launching its own pro-gun video platform

Reason: Obama harvested data from Facebook and bragged about it.  Why are we only freaking out about it now?

The Guardian: Seven days that shattered Facebook’s facade

Borneo Bulletin: ‘To prison for singing?”: Spanish rappers to serve time for their lyrics

Quartz: China’s censorship body keeps ruining fun on the internet

SHELDON RICHMAN: The Iraq War after 15 years: “Now we mark the 15th anniversary of a foreign-policy decision that rivals Woodrow Wilson’s entry into World War I in its recklessness and cruelty — yet a proper assessment of the atrocity perpetrated by the George W. Bush presidency, aided and abetted by the most prestigious newspapers and television networks in the land, is as elusive as ever. If anything, things have regressed. In an eagerness to paint Trump as the most evil person who has ever lived, many pundits, including Democrats, have found it expedient to look with favor on the execrable Mr. Bush despite the chain of disasters he set in motion in March 2003. As readers well know, my respect for Trump is at far less than zero, but I don’t think anyone looks good merely by comparison to him. Trump may end up doing something worse than Bush’s invasion of Iraq — here’s one reason why — but he hasn’t so far. Trump is bad, but that is no reason to blur history. All that does is help people forget Bush’s many victims.”

Important- FEE: Why one economist abhors Earth Hour

Cato: Small marijuana growers squeezed out by the regulation that follows legalization

National Review: Sociologist claims veganism is connected to ‘White Masculinity’

03/24/18 Morning Links

Bloomberg: Apple’s Tim Cook calls for more regulations on data privacy

Techdirt: New Orleans’ secret predictive-policing software challenged in court

BoingBoing: A tour of the manipulative, creepy BS that Facebook pulls to stop you from deleting your account

Zero Hedge: The digital-military-industrial complex exposed

MintPressNews: Google and corporate news giants forge alliance to defeat independent journalism

Quartz: Scientists who want to study magic mushrooms have to pay $7,000 per gram

Truthdig: School district arms teachers and students with…rocks

 

03/23/18 Links

Motherboard: Congress enacts garbage surveillance legislation by attaching it to must-pass spending bill

Reason: The omnibus spending bill is a fiscal embarrassment

Every city needs this: East Bay Times: Berkeley law requires council approval of surveillance tech

Activist Post: Federal ruling could set dangerous precedent allowing law enforcement access to WhatsApp

The American Conservative: Was destructive ‘Slingshot’ malware deployed by Pentagon?

Too much to hope for, probably: ZDnet: Stingray spying: 5G will protect you against surveillance attacks, say standard-setters

Smithsonian: A brief history of surveillance in America

Common Dreams: Outrageous’: With $700 billion for Pentagon, nearly half of $1.3 trillion budget headed for more war-making

Techdirt: Spain’s hate/anti-terrorism speech laws doing little but locking up comedians, artists, and dissidents

JUSTIN RAIMONDO: Lost near the Beltway: Whatever happened to the libertarian movement?

High Times: NYPD must publish marijuana arrest demographics under new bill

Old but relevant: Salon: School is a prison–and damaging our kids

03/23/18 Overnight Links

Gizmodo: Congress rushes to pass spending bill packed with disastrous global surveillance measures

The Register: U.S. Congress quietly slips cloud-spying powers into page 2,201 of spending mega-bill

Reason: 9 ridiculous things about the omnibus spending bill

VICE: Dutch voters just shut down a major spying law that would allow DNA database

CNET: Apple must warn about China privacy risk, says Amnesty International

JUSTIN RAIMONDO: Bring back Bricker!

The Verge: CDs and vinyl are more popular than digital downloads once again

Forbes: Why do we think quantum mechanics is weird?

BoingBoing: John Hopkins University seeks DMT users who have encountered “autonomous beings” after taking the psychedelic