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"Someone accused me the other day of being an 'armchair anarchist.' And I guess I am. I suppose most of us who call ourselves anarchists are. We rant. We rave. We blog. Then we open a Guinness and watch the tube. But I think being an anarchist means less doing something than it means avoidance of certain actions."
http://wconger.blogspot.com/2007/09/living-in-spirit-of-anarchy.html
"UW-Madison freshman Mollie Overby, of Plymouth, who was gathering student contact information for the Campus Antiwar Network, was familiar with UW-Madison's long history of anti-war movements and was delighted, in some small way, to be part of it."
http://www.madison.com/wsj/home/local/index.php?ntid=247029&ntpid=2
"It’s in the manual. They wouldn't listen because they were obeying the Presidential Advance Manual that details how protesters at presidential appearances must be 'deterred' and, if possible, kept out of the sight of the president and press. I am able to tell you about the manual because the American Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit in federal court on behalf of the Ranks and the First Amendment. In the course of this legal action, the White House's instructions on how to safeguard the president of the United States from peaceful protest, even on the Fourth of July, were obtained."
http://www.cantonrep.com/index.php?ID=376871&Category=14&subCategoryID=
"Richard Paey, the chronic pain sufferer prosecuted and imprisoned as a 'drug trafficker' for securing the medication he needs to treat his condition, has been exonerated. Florida Governor Charlie Crist granted him a full pardon, allowing him to return to his family with his rights restored."
http://www.tuccille.com/blog/2007/09/paey-freed.html
"[T]asers can kill people, or cause very serious injury; tasers are "commonly used...to gain compliance" -- from people who are usually unarmed and who pose no serious threat whatsoever; and tasers are frequently used on suspects who have already been subdued and immobilized."
http://powerofnarrative.blogspot.com/2007/09/nation-on-edge-of-final-descent-i.html
"Government interference with consenting adults is not the only objectionable thing in the world. The idea that an employer would require workers to have an ID chip implanted in their bodies -- a high-tech version of a tattooed serial number -- is repulsive."
http://www.fee.org/in_brief/default.asp?id=1586&year=2007&month=9
"What is the lesson for us from this and from other closing societies, some of them democracies? You can have a working Congress or Parliament; newspapers; human rights groups; even elections; but when ordinary people start to be hurt by the state for speaking out, dissent closes quickly and the shock chills opposition very, very fast. Once that happens, democracy has been so weakened that major tactical and strategic incursions -- greater violations of democratic process -- are far more likely. If there is dissent about the vote in Florida in this next presidential election -- and the police are tasering voters' rights groups -- we will still have an election. What we will not have is liberty."
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/naomi-wolf/a-shocking-moment-for-soc_b_64909.html
"I spent this past weekend at the 11th annual Earthdance celebration, a global festival for peace held in northern California, just north of Laytonville on 101, uniting with over 250 locations in 50 countries, providing a wide variety of live music, workshops, speakers, inspiration and a worldwide sense of community."
http://www.counterpunch.org/krasner09192007.html
"Tell it, Alice ! If more people would raise their fist and yell, this world would be a better place. Don’t wait until you figure out what to yell or what to rail against, or how to object 'properly.' Make some goddamn waves already! "
http://www.strike-the-root.com/72/fontana/fontana4.html
"Despite the rampant insanity by which we continue to organize human society, most people still regard anarchists as unrealistic and strange, and politicians as practical visionaries. Perhaps this is to be expected when people evaluate one another’s conduct by normative standards (e.g., in a cannibal society, a vegetarian would be looked upon with distrust). Nonetheless, I remain optimistic that the state is in decline."
http://www.lewrockwell.com/shaffer/shaffer162.html
"Should a state, which is an abstraction, be said to have rights? Certainly, international law is sometimes framed in such terms such as a 'right to self defense', and Israel claims that it has a 'right to exist'. But from an anti-state perspective, I reckon that it is counterrevolutionary to reify states in this manner. States don’t have rights; they are organizing and legitimizing principles for the exercise of power by and on behalf of individuals acting under color of law. State actors do what they can get away with in view of the powers of other state actors and domestic political constraints."
http://emergencybackupdog.blogspot.com/2007/09/states-dont-have-rights-or-moral.html
"When anarchists theorize, perhaps ironically, about how an anarchic society would organize or function it tends to look and sound similar to how the Somalis were organized. The same general structures and law structures are common to places like ancient Ireland and Iceland and probably others."
http://pintofstout.wordpress.com/2007/09/20/i-hate-to-say-%e2%80%9ci-told-you-so%e2%80%9d/
"Opponents of the idea link the term 'partition' to the bloodbaths of Palestine and South Asia, and fear a repetition of those episodes. Yet there have also been successful partitions – for example, Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union after the Cold War. Thus, the problem is not with the inherent concept of partition, but the way it is carried out."
http://antiwar.com/eland/?articleid=11645
"The story of the bison shows that private property rights and a market demand can be powerful forces for conservation. Not all animals are as valuable as bison, but this approach could likely be extended to many others."
http://www.abetterearth.org/blog/id.4359/news_detail.asp
"The Saudi central bank said today that it would take "appropriate measures" to halt huge capital inflows into the country, but analysts say this policy is unsustainable and will inevitably lead to the collapse of the dollar peg. As a close ally of the US, Riyadh has so far tried to stick to the peg, but the link is now destabilising its own economy."
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2007/09/19/bcnsaudi119.xml
"Although babies seldom die from birth complications or errors in judgment by doctors and midwives, this can and does happen on rare occasions both in hospitals and at home. Birth is not an illness but a normal biological process that works pretty well on its own without intervention."
http://www.registerguard.com/news/2007/09/20/ed.col.homebirth.0920.p1.php?section=opinion
"[Military bases] ... are the engine of American imperialism: 737 American military bases, by official count, in over 130 countries. That's the form the American empire takes: It's not colonies, not necessarily economic imperialism, though there's a good deal of that. Above all it is the domination of the world through military force."
http://www.pasadenaweekly.com/article.php?id=5114&IssueNum=90
"[W]here do people get the idea that the Nation is something to be served? Despite Stengel’s invocation of the Founders, this is a profoundly un-American concept. It’s far more consistent with the European despotism of the first half of the twentieth century. You don’t have to look hard to find quotations by Mussolini (dare I mention Hitler?) about the duty of the individual to serve the Nation."
http://www.fff.org/comment/com0709f.asp
"[W]ith Alan Greenspan coming out and speaking the unspeakable – that it's all about oil – there is another thing that we might as well say: Iran, given the opportunity, will create a nuclear weapon. It has been proven to be the ultimate insurance against regime change and invasion. If we hold this to be true, then there can be only two courses: either befriend Iran, as China and Russia have, and make money, or go to war. The U.S. and Israel are choosing war."
http://www.antiwar.com/matuszak/?articleid=11630
“At a Justice Department meeting last month, a range of civil-liberties lawyers asked administration officials if the president would agree to be limited by even the hugely expanded powers in the new Protect America Act, which allows his administration to engage in warrantless spying on Americans' e-mails and phone calls. It became alarmingly clear that the answer was no: The president remains convinced that he has an inherent constitutional power to do whatever he (and he alone) considers necessary to protect the national security."
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0738,hentoff,77839,6.html
"After Bush pretended to deliberate over whether he would agree to his own policy as presented by his general in well-rehearsed performances before Congress -- 'President Bush Accepts Recommendations' read a headline on the White House Web site -- he established an ideal division of responsibility. Bush could claim credit for the 'Return on Success,' whenever that might be, while Petraeus would be charged with whatever might go wrong."
http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2007/09/20/bush_draper/
"Back when workers traveled in beelines from homes in the suburbs to offices in a city center, it was relatively easy to design successful transit systems. Today, old fixed-route systems don’t serve most travelers. Yet officials still prefer to fund snazzy rail lines over buses because for them transit’s primary use isn’t transportation but a backdrop for photo ops: Cut the ribbon, huddle around the others who fought for funding, smile, and then jump back into your SUV."
http://www.reason.com/news/show/122541.html
"Washington has proved that it is unable to run the world, despite its attempts to do so. But ability and competence are not the most important considerations. The wealth and especially the lives of Americans should not be squandered in national crusades, no matter how grandiose or humanitarian they might sound."
http://www.antiwar.com/bandow/?articleid=11652
"[T]he delightful thing about the fundamentalist worldview (and, for that matter just about any strict religious worldview you can name), the thing that absolutely and forever guarantees its frequent and eventual downfall: It can never be sated. It's true. No matter how clamped down we as a culture become, no matter how much misinterpreted Biblical dogma we're forced to swallow, no matter how many insidious laws are passed limiting behaviors and restricting independent thought and repressing sexuality and banning dildos in Texas, it will never be enough."
http://sfgate.com//cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2007/09/21/notes092107.DTL
"The former Federal Reserve Chairman bums Jon out with his thesis on human nature." [Stewart asks some extremely good questions in this interview.]
http://www.comedycentral.com/motherload/?lnk=v&ml_video=102970
"You may recall that a spirited discussion ensued at this blog-fifty comments have been posted, as of today-some of it unfortunately misguided by the discussant's assumption that my post had been written to express a substantive view about anthropogenic global warming, an intention I expressly disavowed at the start."
http://hnn.us/blogs/entries/42829.html
"It's not easy making a human. Getting from a fertilized egg to a full-grown adult involves a near-miracle of orchestration, with replicating cells acquiring specialized functions in just the right places at the right times. So you'd think that, having done the job once, our bodies would replace cells when required by the simplest means possible. Oddly, they don't. "
http://www.nature.com/news/2007/070917/full/070917-11.html
"By allowing individuals and firms to search for and employ the best pollution controls they deem fit for their given situation, market competition would spur more innovation in pollution control technologies...."
http://www.abetterearth.org/blog/id.4358/news_detail.asp
"My private thoughts remained mine alone. All the public and the politicians got was gobbledygook, but for good reason. They would not have wanted to hear what I really thought. So I did not tell them. For I knew well and good what generally happened when politicians and central bankers got their hands on soft money and a compliant central banker. I was not born yesterday. They use their control of the money to cheat people. It is as simple as that. (I explained this early in my career; fortunately, no one bothered to read it.)"
http://www.lewrockwell.com/bonner/bonner336.html
"These rate cuts, and most likely at least one more before year’s end, will result in the long-coming crash of the U.S. dollar index. As the inevitable is carried out, a complete overhaul in the financial world will ensue. On the winning end of the stick will be anyone who holds gold and gold shares, and on the losing end will be U.S. citizens and everyone else who owns U.S. dollar-denominated assets."
http://www.whiskeyandgunpowder.com/Archives/2007/20070920.html
"We expect no better from politicians and their consultants. ... Joining them ... are the corporate elite, specifically the Partnership for New York City, 'a select group of two hundred CEOs (“Partners”) from New York City’s top corporate, investment and entrepreneurial firms' and its constituents. David Rockefeller founded the Partnership in 1979 with a chilling objective: to 'allow business leaders to work more directly with government and other civic groups to address broader social and economic problems in a “hands on” way.' Who knew that CEOs stranded in traffic is a 'broader social and economic problem'? No doubt they will glide about town more pleasantly when everyone else is banished to the subways."
http://www.fee.org/in_brief/default.asp?id=1577
"Both vouchers and tax credits fund school choice, but there are big differences between them. Only tax credits let taxpayers control their own money — they get to spend it directly on a child's education or donate it to a scholarship fund. In a voucher program, taxpayers send their money to the government and it decides how to spend the funds."
http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=8692
"What most conservatives and all too many libertarians failed to consider in all this condemnation of the welfare state could be summed up in a three-letter word: war. The warfare state has always been the greatest single threat to American constitutional liberty." [Main link goes to Part one, which provides a link to Part two.]
http://www.fff.org/freedom/fd0706g.asp
"The rivalry between capitalism and communism turned out to have been a race to the bottom. The price of winning the fight against communism was the loss of the principle at stake in the fight. Liberty holding up the torch of reason to guide the state became liberty torching reason in abject service to the state."
http://mindbodypolitic.com/?p=407
"Matt Taibbi of Rolling Stone magazine discusses the unbelievable extent of the Republicans’ corruption in Iraq and the complete and total lack of accountability."
http://www.antiwar.com/blog/2007/09/21/matt-taibbi/
"The vision of a monolithic Islamic movement hostile to everything we value is equally warped. We usually associate the religion with Arab militants, but the world's biggest Muslim populations are in Indonesia, Bangladesh, Pakistan, India and Nigeria, not the Middle East. Some Muslim countries, such as Turkey, Indonesia and Senegal, are free and democratic. The others vary greatly in political openness and personal liberty—sort of like non-Muslim countries."
http://www.reason.com/news/show/122527.html
"On his deathbed he warned his son -- the sober, eloquent, and noble man known as Chief Joseph -- about the serpentine dishonesty and implacable opportunism of the white man's government. Don't take the government's money, Tuekakas warned, and refuse even so much as to touch a document presented by a government official, lest it be said you agreed to what was printed on it."
http://freedominourtime.blogspot.com/2007/09/liberation-then-and-now.html
"By 1969 in the Haight in San Francisco when people referred to themselves as freaks rather than hippies a rumor started that the government was building concentration camps in the south of Texas and Arizona to throw us freaks into. The idea seemed credible — the police had started to come down pretty hard on a lot of us particularly the Panthers over in Oakland. ... The big revolution which we assumed would result in many of us being carted off to camps did not materialize. Still, there was a prescience to the idea itself. Sooner or later the government did build them. Only they're for Middle-Eastern people, Hispanics, African-Americans."
http://www.counterpunch.org/liddell09172007.html
"Christiania holds the mantle for most enduring utopian community of the 20th century. It was born out of the revolutionary tumult of the 1960s and 1970s, when a group of young protesters, disillusioned with growing materialism, conservative politics and stifling social expectations, tore down a barbed wire fence around the abandoned military encampments of Christianshavn and declared themselves an independent state. ... The gradual eating-up by flowering vines and blackberry bushes of these imperious stone ruins lends Christiania an epic beauty most attuned to the original vision of its founders: martial structures put to a peaceful use."
http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/harriet_riley/2007/09/farewell_to_freetown.html
"[T]he fires of the ’60s, which gave rise to so much social upheaval and change, owe themselves to a cadre of brave men and women who were unafraid to, as the church folk say, 'cast their lot on the water.' I might add that they were also unafraid of throwing caution to the wind."
http://www.portfolioweekly.com/Pages/InfoPage.php/iID/3331
"Here is the grisly bottom line: more than one million people have been murdered in Iraq since the US invasion, according to the ORB. ... In Baghdad, where the US presence is most pronounced, nearly half of households report having lost a family member to a killing of some sort. Half the deaths are from gunshot wounds, one-fifth from car bombs, and one-tenth from aerial bombs. The total number of dead exceeds the hugely well-publicized Rwandan genocide in 1994. ... Aside from the astonishing detail, what jumps out at me is the number of dead who are neither Sunni nor Shia. It is also striking how the further geographically you move from US troop activity, the more peaceful the area is. Americans think they are bringing freedom to Iraq, but the data indicate that we are only bringing suffering and death."
http://www.mises.org/story/2715
"What do we do if and when the Iraqi government asks us to leave? The answer is: depose them and install more compliant sock puppets, ones who don't talk back (or bite the hand that manipulates them, to mix a metaphor). "
http://www.antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=11638
"We have heard Bush administration officials express optimism for a reduction in the U.S. military presence many, many times before. Indeed, the Pentagon's original plan envisioned — quite astonishingly — having no more than 50,000 to 60,000, and perhaps as few as 30,000 troops remaining in Iraq by the end of 2003."
http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=8707
"The reality is that—as the 9/11 Commission concluded and as numerous polls conducted throughout the Islamic world show—they do not hate us for our freedoms, way of life, culture, accomplishments, or values. Rather, the growing tide of Muslim anti-American hatred—the basis for the radical Islamists to cultivate terrorism—is fueled more by what we do, i.e., U.S. policies, than who we are."
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=2027
"Faraday studied the magnetic field around a conductor carrying a DC electric current, and established the basis for the magnetic field concept in physics. He discovered electromagnetic induction, diamagnetism and electrolysis. He established that magnetism could affect rays of light and that there was an underlying relationship between the two phenomena. His inventions of electromagnetic rotary devices formed the foundation of electric motor technology, and it was largely due to his efforts that electricity became viable for use in technology."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Faraday
"During the Golden Age of animation Jones helped bring to life many of Warner Bros. most famous characters—Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Elmer Fudd and Porky Pig. ... When Warner Bros. closed, and after a very short stay at the Disney Studios, Jones moved to MGM Studios, where he created new episodes from the Tom and Jerry cartoon series. While there, in addition to The Phantom Tollbooth and Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas, Jones directed the Academy Award winning film, The Dot and the Line. ... One of his films, the Wagnerian mini epic, What’s Opera, Doc? was inducted into the National Film Registry for being 'among the most culturally, historically and aesthetically significant films of our time'."
http://www.chuckjones.com/bio.php
"His mother brought Roddy and his sister to the US at the beginning of World War II, and he soon got the part of Huw, youngest child in a family of Welsh coal miners, in John Ford's How Green Was My Valley (1941), acting alongside Walter Pidgeon, Maureen O'Hara and Donald Crisp in the film that won that year's best film Oscar. ... In addition to making many more movies (over 150), McDowell acted in television...."
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001522/bio
"Denny Doherty had joined John and Michelle Phillips ... Cass subsequently joined them and the four began to sing together in mid-1965. Thus the superstar group The Mamas and The Papas was born. From 1965-1968 the Mamas and Papas recorded a series of top ten hits including 'Monday, Monday,' 'California Dreamin' ' 'I Saw Her Again,' and 'Dedicated to the One I Love.' "
http://www.casselliot.com/about.htm
"The crowd was heavy with men, this sort of thing not being a woman's sport. But Jennifer was there to support her brother, and a few bolder, hard-bitten women came with their men to show they had the stomach for a real fight. To one side stood Gael Carolina, rapier lightly in hand, stance springy and elegant. Fifty feet away, Tonio clutched its twin as if it were a two-by-four."
http://www.backwoodshome.com/columns/wolfe070917.html
"When the spunky young guy dropped me the corny line, 'So what’s a nice girl like you doing here?,' instead of the usual retorts someone my age might use in my position, I thought I’d answer with the truth. 'I'm here because my father loves me.' There! That should wipe the smug authoritative look from his face."
http://www.sunnimaravillosa.com/node/1200
"The flip side of any argument against so much violence and cruelty is that nothing Nispel can show us is beyond what actually happens in the world. The harsh, unrelentingly sadistic character of the Vikings not only contrasts strongly with the peaceful and compassionate character of the Indians, it describes a horror so commonplace throughout history as to make one wonder how the human race has survived to this point – and whether we can survive for long in the future. "
http://www.strike-the-root.com/72/allport/allport12.html
"For the most part, Goldman is presented as a sui generis revolutionary, wholly as one with her ideology and unencumbered by any trace of humanity. Even as a child, Rudahl would have us believe, Red Emma was not so much a little girl as a single-minded champion of justice and equality, a condition that seemed to worsen as she moved on in years. And while Rudahl does make an effort to bring Goldman’s personal life to light — more than one panel features a naked Emma in the arms of this lover or that — her personality remains almost entirely unilluminated."
http://www.forward.com/articles/11638/
"Maybe it's time to pull out of Iraq - we need those troops to invade America."
http://www.comedycentral.com/motherload/?lnk=v&ml_video=103062
"According to a team of female researchers who all recently sustained injuries due to various accidents, domestic abuse does not exist."
http://www.theonion.com/content/video/domestic_abuse_no_longer_a
"I rudely barged ahead by saying, 'What we are going to learn is that the "wages of sin" may be death, as the Biblical saying goes, but the "wages of economic stupidity" are where actually dying is taking the easy way out'"
http://dailyreckoning.com/Writers/Mogambo/DREssays/MG091707.html
Animated flash video w/audio
http://www.markfiore.com/cheney_chief_0
“Actually, one can believe 'if it feels good do it' is a bad way to run your life while still believing in the political principle of people being free (from outside coercion) as long as they aren’t hurting others. So those two ideas are as far removed as 'I don’t think it’s good for you to do this' is from 'I should use violence to prevent you from doing this.' If you don’t understand that distinction, it’s not just that you haven’t kept up with supposedly wacky radical modern libertarians such as Karl Hess and Murray Rothbard. You haven’t even kept up with John Stuart Mill.”
http://reason.com/news/show/122555.html
"Most libertarians I’ve met, and I’ve met many, believe that strong and supportive families and communities should and would thrive without state subsidy. Does Hymowitz think it’s a bad thing to believe that families, churches, and all the institutions of civil life can be maintained and in fact would flourish brighter than ever without police and jails backing them up?"
http://www.lewrockwell.com/gregory/gregory146.html
"Certainly, there are libertarians moved by a vision of life without any constraints, despite the fact that life under such conditions appears similar to a game in which any move whatsoever results in a goal and all the participants always win, in other words, lacking the very elements that make human existence so engaging. But such a fantasy has no inherent connection with the libertarian political program endorsed by many more sober thinkers."
http://www.strike-the-root.com/72/callahan/callahan1.html
"On September 8 the world's geekiest geeks gathered at San Francisco's Palace of Fine Arts to talk about what happens if/when we make machines that are smarter than we are. 10ZM.TV was there just in case The Singularity came early, though as far as we could tell, things are more or less the same as they were a few weeks ago. So we think it's still safe to flip off your TV when Geraldo comes on."
http://www.10zenmonkeys.com/2007/09/21/rodney-brooks-robots-are-fast-cheap-and-out-of-control/
"Everyone, everywhere uses the U.S. dollar as a reference, and a substitute, for wealth. It is taken by plumbers as well as by military contractors, drug merchants and oil drillers. It fills the coffers of Asian central banks and the mattresses of Ukrainian grandmothers. But what are these dollars really worth? And if you don't know what they are worth…how do you know what anything else is worth?"
http://www.dailyreckoning.com/Issues/2007/DR092107.html
"The demise of World Trade Center 7 isn't cause for much sadness; it paved the way for increased rescue efforts even as it destroyed offices for the FBI, DoD, IRS, SEC, and the Secret Service (no doubt making some high-profile criminals very happy). What it does do is raise the spectre of conspiracy for the rest of the events of that day."
http://www.thesimon.com/magazine/articles/canon_fodder/01435_was_wtc7_controlled_demolition.html
"Biology or not, this phenomenon is fraught with potential romantic peril. For example, even some people in committed relationships had difficulty pulling their attention away from images of attractive people of the opposite sex. And fixating on images of perceived romantic rivals could contribute to feelings of insecurity."
http://www.fsu.edu/news/2007/09/17/attraction.study/
"There is both a lot at stake in this case and a very fundamental underlying issue. What's at stake is about $500 million, which is what Burst feels it is owed by Apple for patent infringement to date. That's a lot more than the $60 million Burst got from Microsoft and for a good reason: Microsoft generally gave away the technology they stole from Burst while Apple sells it. Those six billion iTunes song downloads, for example, are claimed by Burst to infringe its patents. The underlying issue here is whether only big companies should get to benefit from owning patents."
http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/2007/pulpit_20070921_003001.html
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