08/31/18 Quote of the Day

…is from Bernard Mandelville’s 1705 poem, and powder keg that ignited the creative explosion known as the ‘Scottish Revolution’ that saw the publication of the masterworks of Adam Ferguson, Adam Smith, and all the way to Carl Menger, Hayek, and, in my mind at least, Shackle, Lachmann, and Schutz. That poem is Fable of the Bees:

“The Root of evil Avarice,
That damn ill-natur’d baneful vice,
Was slave to Prodigality,
That Noble Sin; whilst Luxury
Employ’d a Million of the Poor,
And odious Pride a Million more.
Envy it self, and Vanity
Were Ministers of Industry;
Their darling Folly, Fickleness
In Diet, Furniture, and Dress,
That strange ridic’lous Vice, was made
The very Wheel, that turn’d the Trade.”

Mandeville’s poem was considered, in its day, to be a heretical attack on Christian virtues. To serve the myriad “vices” of human nature, markets arose that in turn employed far more than the moral hectoring of the impoverished Church. It is a wonder to read, and can be found in full online. Reading it, it’s easy to see its role as progenitor to the works of Smith, Ferguson, and Hayek.

08/30/18 Overnight Links

National Review: No, the government should not interfere with Google’s search results

The Federalist: Even newly-corrected data doesn’t support claims that Scandinavia is socialist

FEE: A future of perfectly efficient traffic law enforcement? No thanks.

Ars Technica: UK cops used facial recognition at show, found someone with outstanding warrant Ed: I prefer an inefficient police state, thanks.

Cato: U.S. citizens targeted by Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Texas

Washington Post: Our fruit is rotting in the trees as laborers are kept out of the country

WSWS: UN panel cites massive war crimes in US-backed war on Yemen

The American Conservative: Corporate welfare lives on and on

Reason: Federal survey wildly overestimates number of school shootings

Techcrunch: Privacy groups ask senators to confirm US surveillance oversight nominees

ACLU: ACLU seeks more info on Los Angeles subway body scanners

EFF: Appeals court asks the right questions in NSA surveillance case

DANIEL LARISON: Why the U.S. never learns from foreign policy failures Ed: Actually, “failure” is in the eye of the beholder. If money, debt, and the consolidation of power through tyrannical legislation are the true goals of endless war, than it should be seen as a success. And, if these are the goals, then they have been wildly successful. For the US foreign policy Establishment that is enriched by endless war, they learned the lesson long ago that endless war is the path to endless riches. For them.

High Times: Rasta Relish: The ultimate cannabis-infused condiment

08/29/18 Overnight Links

08/28/18 Overnight Links

Reuters: One in seven US adults used marijuana in 2017

Reason: ‘Cannabis-involved’ traffic fatalities fall in Colorado

Never thought I’d be linking to the Weather Channel, but…Police dog dies after being left in hot car for 6 hours

Defense One: What I learned by studying militarized policing

The Guardian: US bombs are killing children in Yemen. Does anybody care?

JUSTIN RAIMONDO: John McCain and the warrior spirit in American foreign policy“In his person, and his public pronouncements, McCain was the perfect representative of the nascent imperial class: born in the Panama Canal zone, the son of an Admiral, he was almost fated to become what he did indeed become – the archetypal Praetorian, the veritable embodiment of America’s post-World War II empire. A paladin of the cold war while it lasted, and a tireless advocate of post-cold war hegemonism, his favorite phrase was “boots on the ground,” and he championed this as a policy option for virtually every foreign policy problem confronted by US policymakers.”

The Intercept: A little-known story about John McCain and his fantasies of benevolent U.S. foreign policy

Independent: Vietnam demands Monsanto pay compensation for Agent Orange victims

Gray Zone Project: Big Tech corporations now banning Iranian social media accounts. A censored journalist speaks out.

DAVID FRENCH: Protestants should care deeply about the Catholic catastrophe

Spectator: Socialism, a crime against humanity

The Federalist: The murder of Mollie Tibbetts is a reason to loosen immigration laws, not restrict them Ed: This is an important perspective, but not quite the one I’ve had in mind as I’ve pondered the meaning of the murder. Restrictive immigration laws, along with an entire bureaucracy devoted to the intimidation and dehumanization of every person within 100 miles of the US/Mexico border creates similar outcomes to the Drug War: a black market, but this time in human labor. It incentivizes the dangerous and amoral to brave the border-hopping ordeal. The solution would be fairly simple: do a simple, quick background check for criminal history and let them in immediately. Don’t inquire where they’re going, or who they know, just let them in. Mexican immigration is an organic phenomenon: most of those who come over have relatives here and have an immediate employment opportunity. Let them in. The decent and law-abiding will then come over.  Nice people who work hard are what this country appears to need. Inciting some jingoistic “protect our borders” nationalism radiates from the same source as “spread American values!”. The wonderful thing about this immigration is that these people are assimilating into the Hayekian catallactic web: they are inserting themselves into the market economy, thereby strengthening the “invisible hand” of the market, creating all sorts of wealth that will never be attributed to them by anyone in power. And, to be honest, to better protect our border, we must open the border up.

MIKE MUNGER: The origin and meaning of profits

FEE: Chicago’s electronic surveillance of food trucks is ridiculous. And probably Unconstitutional.

Big Think: We live in a zombie galaxy that died and came back to life, claims new study

GQ: Why psychedelic drugs are entering the psychiatric industry

The purpose of Republic Reborn.

Today has seen a huge spike in pageviews for RR, which appears to be clicks initially checking out the most recent Quote of the Day. Much appreciated, but this page is focused on the philosophy of liberty and thoughts on a path toward realizing liberty in our lifetime. Personal stories digressive of this goal will be rare. Aside from that, welcome! There will be new content every day, along with quotes I’ve found interesting and relevant. Most quotes come from writers that have influenced my thinking the most: Hayek, Mises, Shackle, Lachmann, Shutz, and even the occasional Keynes quote. Keynes’s fame is due more so to his location in history: 1930’s Cambridge, England, rather than any original contribution to economic thought. His policy prescriptions made him famous, because they provided the hitherto lacking academic justification for massive state intervention into the market economy. Shackle is the far superior thinker and writer whose felicity of phrase articulates the strange and kaleidic world we move through without even noticing.  I post quotes from these relatively obscure thinkers because their ideas contain the weapon to be used when the State’s coven of intellectual class descends into battle. Every government in history has surrounded itself with priests, shamans, and wavers of incense, to give the State an aura of consecration and protection.  Modern governments are no different, but now they surround themselves with economists, historians, philosophers, to protect the rationale for total government.

That priestly class must be defeated in the realm of ideas, and for all to see, if the Oz-like mystique of the State is to deliquesce. That means a combination of philosophy and action, a combination that I’ve found to be too rare. Rare in the sense that, almost every theoretician of liberty abstains from activism, and the activists abstain from theory.  There must be a fusion if there is to be success. I don’t consider myself much of an activist, or theoretician, but I am actively working to remedy both, applying equal emphasis. That involves discipline, and the development and utilization of daily systems.

I can’t imagine a greater goal, or greater endeavor, than the pursuit of liberty. It’s an intellectual pursuit foremost, but its realization in the present day should be kept always in mind. Not in some distant future, but now. The time for compromise is over, for voting for someone who might throw a bone or two to the liberty movement. It means living up to the legacy of the Ron Paul Revolution. It means dusting off the optimism and sense of limitlessness that we felt when we campaigned for him.

For me, the past year has felt like one that has been spent slowly climbing out of a dark well, one I’ve been stuck at the bottom of for five years. I was made to feel that I should be happy and content there, with every attempt to escape met with a deepening, and darkening of that well. I realized that there is nothing wrong with wanting my own freedom, and returning to my former passions, the ones I’d left at the entrance to the well. I’d found my old passions waiting patiently for me in the sunlight, along with several new faces, and one beautiful one in particular that has offered something much more than an Annie Wilkes-esque locked room.

And so this blog is a chronicle of one individual’s pursuit of liberty in the dual spheres of theory and action.  Theory must precede action, but I’ve focused far too much on theory. It’s only recently that I’ve realized how powerful action can be when focused like a laser in the pursuit of liberty. Marijuana in Oklahoma, can you believe it? It was the result of action, but of philosophically focused action, with the goal in relentless pursuit. Liza Greve’s vaccine choice group single-handedly unseated an incumbent state senator. This is philosophically-focused action, and it is the key to the path to liberty reborn. To a republic, reborn. The name of this blog implies that this republic can be born again, that the spirit of liberty that created it can be revived. But philosophically-focused and informed action is the only path. Let that be our lantern and goal to lead us out of the dark-as-night well and into liberty’s eternal sunlight.

 

08/27/18 Overnight Links

The American Conservative: The Pentagon is building up its troop presence…in Norway

FEE: Seven things I’d do if I wanted to keep poor people poor

MAJ. DANNY SJURSEN: Dying for what?: A tour of fruitless American killing and sacrifice

GRACY OLMSTEAD: Our civic institutions are self-destructing

Truthdig: The contradictions of John McCain

PETER VAN BUREN: See ya, John

KEVIN WILLIAMSON: The exquisite sensibilities of the outrage industry

Scientific American: The paradox of Karl Popper Ed: Despite the tone of the article, it sounds like Popper was an exceedingly charming genius of a man.

08/26/18 Overnight Links

08/26/18 Quote of the Day

Wisdom from Robert Greene’s 48 Laws of Power, specifically law 10, ‘Infection: Avoid the Unhappy and the Unlucky’:

“You can die from someone else’s misery—emotional states are as infectious as diseases. You may feel you are helping the drowning man but you are only precipitating your own disaster. The unfortunate sometimes draw misfortune on themselves; they will also draw it on you. Associate with the happy and fortunate instead.

Those misfortunates among us who have been brought down by circumstances beyond their control deserve all the help and sympathy we can give them. But there are others who are not born to misfortune or unhappiness, but who draw it upon themselves by their destructive actions and unsettling effect on others. It would be a great thing if we could raise them up, change their patterns, but more often than not it is their patterns that end up getting inside and changing us. The reason is simple—humans are extremely susceptible to the moods, emotions, and even the ways of thinking of those with whom they spend their time. The incurably unhappy and unstable have a particularly strong infecting power because their characters and emotions are so intense. They often present themselves as victims, making it difficult, at first, to see their miseries as self-inflicted. Before you realize the real nature of their problems you have been infected by them.

Infectors can be recognized by the misfortune they draw on themselves, their turbulent past, their long line of broken relationships, their unstable careers, and the very force of their character, which sweeps you up and makes you lose your reason. Be forewarned by these signs of an infector; learn to see the discontent in their eye. Most important of all, do not take pity. Do not enmesh yourself in trying to help. The infector will remain unchanged, but you will be unhinged.”

This is a law that I unfortunately have had to learn by experience. I’ve read Greene’s book a number of times, and never considered this one to be of great importance. Laws 3, 4, 16, 18, 20, 28, and 30, have been the ones I’ve given the most thought to. But, some lessons must be learned by experience, not from a book.

Happy, content people are usually good-natured, friendly, and willing to help. But they do have a flaw: their sense of guilt. That guilt is the thumbscrew that is turned by the unhappy individual into keeping their target tethered to them.

Another thing I’ve noticed is the truth of the phrase ‘misery loves company’. Happy people seek out solitude, the congenitally unhappy person needs a constant audience, a constant source of supply. I have no idea why this is. You’d have to experience the reality-warping unhappiness that the truly miserable feel.

It’s really not until you’ve been free of the unhappy individual for an extended period of time that you realize the debilitating effect they have had on your life. You’re former interests and passions return. You sleep better, the nagging feeling of having to buoy the spirits of the persistently miserable is gone, and replaced with a sense of freedom that you haven’t felt in several years.

I think that the goal, whether subconscious or not, is for the miserable person to successfully duplicate their unhappiness in their target. Their inability to accomplish this initially manifests in bizarre emotional states and behavior. When this person begins behaving in a satisfied or content manner, it’s probably time to look in the mirror, and get away as fast as possible.

Quote of the Day

Ponder the abyssal strangeness of this nugget from the introduction to G.L.S. Shackle’s Epistemics and Economics:

“Economics is thought endeavoring to understand a world of action based upon thought.”

Writing like this is what draws someone to study economics, not the sterile discussions of the opportunity costs of choosing an apple over an orange, or indifference curves. But Shackle belongs in the Philosophy Department, not the current math/physics-infested Econ departments. Economics itself deserves to be placed entirely within the Philosophy department, because it is philosophical. There is nothing quantifiable about economic life. Ironically, it is the very antithesis of quantifiable activity. An entire graduate program could be developed that would be devoted to the works of Shackle, Henri Bergson, Alfred Shutz, Husserl, Hayek, Lachmann, and Keynes. A program that returns to the ideas of radical subjectivism, that conceived of time as a prison, and us as the prisoner, trapped in the ever-vanishing “present”, between a walled-off “past” and an unknown future. A program that removes the “science as measurement” prejudice from a field that contains nothing measurable.

 

08/25/18 Overnight Links