Quote

"For like a shaft, clear and cold, the thought pierced him that in the end the Shadow was only a small and passing thing: there was light and high beauty for ever beyond its reach." -- J.R.R. Tolkien

Monday, December 19, 2016

50 Things You Can Do Now

I follow a libertarian/anarchist at The Last Bastille, whose views go considerably further into the realm of hope than I do.  This week, however, he reposted a list from Anarplex, which I will repost below, because it is wholesome and well worth republishing.

  1. Become a part-time entrepreneur, garage-market-dealer, urban farmer, welder, whatever. Just be productive under your own command. It doesn’t matter what it is; just be directly productive, and directly deal with suppliers and clients. You’ll find it awesomely liberating and it will be highly useful for the free underground market.
  2. Switch off the TV. Read books!
  3. Socialize with people that share your ethics and that are productive and respectful. Eat together, discuss, challenge each other, help each other, have a good time.
  4. Get a safe or safe deposit box. Start moving all the cash you can get in there, convert at least 30% of your cash to silver and/or gold coins.
  5. Invest in trust. Do minor deals for people on a trust basis. Taking others at their word, and let yourself be challenged by yours.
  6. Start looking for matches. When you talk with people, memorize what they do, and if an opportunity comes up, connect them with someone else for a minor finders fee (a burger, a few beers, whatever).
  7. Join your local LIMA house (We’ll explain this in a future post.)
  8. Travel, but don’t go sight-seeing – spend your time getting to know the people there. Think about business opportunities with them.
  9. Start using aliases and pseudonyms. Get comfortable using them in real-life situations.
  10. Learn to use cryptography.
  11. Learn ethics and law (not the government law!).
  12. Study logic, especially the fallacies.
  13. Put more cash aside. Use your part-time job as the source of saved cash.
  14. Start to invest cash with people you know, in off the books projects. Start making micro-loans to people or buy shares in their operations.
  15. Learn basic double-entry book-keeping. Don’t waste effort on the account-numbers they teach you – under the concept and use it.
  16. Learn to write in code. We all have to use recording, bookkeeping, contact books, transaction notes etc. These should be hard to decipher for someone taking a quick glimpse, and even hard for someone taking time to analyze them. Use tricks like date-shifting, shorthand, making up your own terms, etc. Or, if you want to spend a little more effort, learn to use memorized ciphers, such as memorizing some longer text, then apply it as a simple shifting-key to what you write, with the page number or marker as a keypart.
  17. Tell other producers, entrepreneurs, traders etc that you appreciate what they do.
  18. Buy primarily from others like you, stay away from the on-the-books market as much as you can.
  19. When in conflict, ask someone to mediate. Solve conflicts yourself wherever you can. Use a mutually respected and trusted third party when necessary. Stay away from state ‘justice’ whenever you can.
  20. Start respecting secrets. Secrets are good most of the time; transparency is bad most of the time. Detox yourself from the ‘everything should be in the open’ propaganda.
  21. Slowly make your part-time, off-the-books business, your main line of income. Things like underground dental hygiene are very cool.
  22. Learn that ‘off-the-books’ means that you really have to excel in what you do. You have to provide quality.
  23. Don’t invest in single deals; invest in relationships with the market.
  24. Get over it; Voting doesn’t help at all.
  25. Work with friends to create buying associations and selling associations. This will give you and others lots of money to save and lots of money to hide.
  26. Harbor a fugitive (Good ones, obviously).
  27. Help someone cross a border without documents.
  28. Offer small merchants silver or gold rather than fiat currency.
  29. Sell your products in silver or gold.
  30. Accept and use digital gold, such as Pecunix or C-gold.
  31. Start a community currency in your town.
  32. Use digital cash, such as eCache.
  33. Use Loom, Truebanc.
  34. Get serious about protecting your Internet traffic.
  35. Get comfortable working your will in the world.
  36. Learn how to work your will beneficially. This is not about being ‘right,’ it is about causing benefit.
  37. Fix your mistakes (you will make them). Learn not to repeat them.
  38. Learn how to communicate effectively. Again, this is not about proving that you are right – this is about getting true ideas into other minds effectively.
  39. Stop obeying the State in some new way. Tell your friends about your success doing so.
  40. Get comfortable with the term ‘Economic Civil Disobedience.’
  41. Spread the idea that the State is not magic – it is nothing more than a collection of your neighbors – no more ethical and noble than the lamer next door.
  42. Learn how to find the false assumptions in arguments. Most public lies sound okay if you don’t find their unspoken assumptions. If they pass too quickly, find their written version and search for the lie it contains.
  43. Learn how to disagree with kindness.
  44. Accept the fact that most people are confused are just barely hanging on to their last shreds of self-esteem. Understand that State intellectuals like this condition, as it makes people easier to keep in line – a little shame goes a long way.
  45. Don’t waste your energy on the political crisis de jour. Busy your mind with more substantial things. Daily political dramas are a time-sink, and the statists like it. Stop following their script.
  46. Use jurisdictional arbitrage to deprive the State of your money. Work with friends if the setup costs are too large for you.
  47. Learn to defend yourself, your family, your neighbors and your town. No State means no military. Until you take this upon yourself, your plans will always have a gaping hole in their middle. There is no free lunch here either. Get weapons and be mentally prepared to use them. Decide in advance how and when you would use them – do not leave it to the emotion of the moment – that will make a shipwreck of the whole venture. Learn how to use them safely.
  48. Do something nice for your neighbor. The people who live near you are a far more important part of your environment than any other.
  49. Help people who suffer undeservedly. No State means you are responsible for charity. Sure, it will be much easier when the State isn’t stealing all your extra money (or chasing you in hope of theft), but do what you can now and get used to the process.
  50. Watch over your friends. Notice when they are having a bad day, show some kindness and concern. If they are overloaded, carry some of their burden. We all have bad times, and your bad day may come too. Help one another. Restore one another.

Monday, December 5, 2016

The Dangers of Collectivism

I read a very wide variety of articles from across the political and economic spectrum, and I read Doug Casey's stuff with a grain of salt.  However, this article from him is spot on.  It is an incomplete but poignant review of near-history results of collectivist (both socialist and fascist; both authoritarian in nature) outcomes in countries.

There is a very clear pattern that the author identifies that I am going to repost here.
In each of the above countries, the pattern has been roughly the same.
  • A formerly prosperous country experiences a period in which the standard of living for the majority of citizens drops significantly.
  • The voters react by electing a new leader who promises a chicken in every pot (in essence, collectivism, although it is not always called that at the time of the election).
  • The new leader begins to rob the producers of wealth to provide largesse for those with less. This has a direct positive benefit for those with less, resulting in an increase in voters supporting collectivist promises over a period of years.
  • Over time, the free market experiences a permanent loss of wealth, resulting in diminished largesse for those who are now dependent upon it.
  • The government imposes increasing capital controls and other regulations, which deteriorate the free market more severely, causing inflation, shortages of goods, loss of jobs, and eventually starvation and systemic collapse.
  • The voters choose a new leader who promises fiscal responsibility.
  • With a return to a freer market, prosperity slowly reappears.
I have zero doubt that the U.S. will follow this path exactly if we do not recognize the dangers of the false siren call of socialism and reject it soundly.  The timeframe for a full socialist collapse in the U.S., assuming we run full speed ahead into socialism is maybe ten to twenty years.  The U.S. has a lot of wealth for parasites to consume.

 The link to the original article is here: http://www.internationalman.com/articles/a-chicken-in-every-pot
Or you can read it below, for people who don't like auto-play videos...

Thursday, December 1, 2016

A more progressive and libertarian society

After watching yet another authoritarian be elected to the presidency of the United States of America, I have been turning my thinking towards how we can build a better society.

First, I should say that I define 'progressive' in a much different fashion than most liberal thinkers and non-thinkers.  Specifically, I am using the 1b definition according of the Merriam-Webster Dictionary, "making use of or interested in new ideas, findings, or opportunities."

I have a very unique view of how I think that U.S. society should be run.  My view is very heavily influenced, but not dominated, by the libertarian ideals laid out by Murray Rothbard in "A New Liberty," which conveniently you can download and read for free if you want to understand my sociopolitical base.

First and foremost, I believe firmly in the non-aggression axiom except in the upholding of individual property rights.  When a person violates another person's right to life or property then violence must be used to restrain the aggressor.  The government must exist to exert the sum total of individual violent force that any man is entitled to defend his life and property.  The problem is that the government crosses this line and often exceeds the instances that individuals can use violence to protect life and property and thus becomes tyrannical by definition.

For example, if you were to go into your neighbors home and hold them up at gunpoint and demand they give you 30% of their income, it would be appropriately considered assault and robbery.  However, when the Internal Revenue Service raids your neighbor's home with a SWAT team and holds your neighbor at gunpoint to demand remittance of 30% of their income in taxes, it is suddenly perfectly acceptable to most people.   How is it that we consider the same action criminal if an individual does it and 'business as usual' when a government does it?  That is a serious problem in our society today.  A government that exceeds the limits of individual force is a tyrannical government.

So, the first step in freeing society from the grip of tyranny is to limit government to its role of exerting the sum of individual forces.

"But how will we collect taxes?" you say, and you are correct to ask the question.  Taxation will be voluntary and earmarked by the taxpayer.  This accomplishes three things, first it frees the taxpayer from the tyranny of government robbery.  Next, it gives the taxpayer a sense of ownership and invests them in their programs.  Lastly, it removes the budgeting debates from Congress and allows the budgeting process to be automatically handled by the taxpayers.  Congress would only be responsible for creating and publishing programs that are available to be donated to.  From there, the taxpayers would earmark their taxes to the programs which they believe in and want to see funded would be funded, and those which taxpayers believe are frivolous and wasteful would simply not be funded.  This system would make all of the government beholden to the taxpayers and also force them to deliver on the services that they are supposed to, because no one will earmark money for programs that don't benefit them in some way.

"How would justice be maintained?" you might ask next.  The judicial branch would be run by private individuals who operate on a fee system, much like the rest of the private sector.  The BAR Association would be reduced to a legal standards organization, but their power to 'certify' lawyers and judges would be permanently revoked.  As such, anyone would be allowed to serve as a judge, assuming anyone will agree to allow them to adjudicate their disputes.  Judges would be chosen by both parties in a dispute, and both parties would pay the judge to adjudicate the dispute.  In criminal cases, trials by jury would continue as they do now, except that juries would be voluntary and funded by a taxpayer judicial pot.

"How would we build roads?"  All public projects could be funded at the state level by having a public works pot of money that is contracted out to private companies to build roads, bridges, etc. much like it is now.  People who are unhappy with the state of the infrastructure would donate to this pot of money in their respective state.

"How would we defend ourselves?"  The military would be separated along state lines and paradigms.  The military would consist of one national research, development, and materiel command whose sole job it is to provide advanced equipment for all of the state fighting branches, a national space/intelligence command who would manage the information and intelligence for all states, and the national transport command who would facilitate global transportation of state fighting forces all of whom would be run by an elected civilian director on four year terms with a two-term limit.  There would be no "Air Force", "Navy", "Army," etc. each state would possess a self-contained fighting force across air, sea, and land.  When a war was declared by the Congress, they would appoint a supreme commander from one of the state commands whose state would respond first to the external threat.  From there, states would rotate in and out of the combat zone once every three months to allow soldiers to recuperate and be ready to roll again.  All of the national branches would be funded by one pot of money and all of the state fighting forces would be funded by each respective state.

The Congress would serve the same number of years as they do now, but would be limited to two terms for Senators and four terms for Congressmen.  This would ensure that fresh ideas are enforced in the Congress and keep stagnant group think out of Washington.  All Congressional health insurance and retirement programs would be dissolved and they would be forced to utilize the private market, as all of their constituents must.

The Federal Reserve, Treasury, and Federal Deposit Insurance Company (FDIC) would all be rolled into one department with a seven-member elected board each serving four year terms with two-term limits.  This new Finance Department would be responsible for ensuring that the money supply is maintained and that all deposits in U.S. banks are insured and would be authorized to print and disperse money to reimburse all clients of U.S. banks.  This way, when a bank fails, the Finance Department would print U.S. dollars up to the deposit balances of all customers of the failed bank and make those funds available to the customer to deposit in a new bank.  That way, when banks fail, the bank will simply go bankrupt and the money will be dispersed by the Finance Department to a bank of the depositors choice.  In this way, the depositors will be protected by the money-printing power of the Finance Department.  The fractional reserve system that modern banks use would be backed up by the full faith and credit of the U.S. and printing money up to the depositors amount would fill out the slack in the fractional system without creating inflation since they are simply backing up money that is already in the system.  The banks would create the money in the form of loans to individuals and businesses and the Finance Department would be the guarantor of all funds in the entire U.S. banking system regardless of which bank it is contained in.  That way, banks in the U.S. become expendable middle men who are incentivized to manage their bank well.

All other government functions would be divided up into departments to which people would be free to earmark their taxes for.  Each department would have an elected director on four years terms with a two-term limit and thus be wholly responsible to the taxpayers for making good on whatever service the department exists to provide.

This would be a far superior way to run our government and society, and thus will probably never happen because too many people's feathered beds would be turned upside down.  But the point of this post is to get people thinking about how a libertarian society could run.

Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Romans 13 Misunderstood

I was shown a very interesting article describing how Romans 13 has been reliably misinterpreted over the centuries since the book of Romans was written by Paul.

The incorrect interpretation of Romans 13, which is in all of the standard translations, including the King James, NIV, ESV, etc. states that we should submit to all authorities regardless of their behavior.  This article very strongly rebukes this idea and presents that all authority is only legitimate when it is under God's authority.  Authority that diverges from God's authority (the author uses the example of Hitler) is illegitimate and should not be submitted to.

He may go a bit too far in saying that all human law is illegitimate, because there are certain strands of God's law woven into the laws of men.  But this leaves the process of seeing which laws are legitimate and which are illegitimate up to us.

Either way, it is an article well worth reading.

Sunday, July 31, 2016

Libertarianism: An Introduction

I am going to preface this article with saying that my reading, comprehension, and understanding of the entirety of the Libertarian ideal is presently incomplete.  I am still reading more on it, but I feel that I have a sufficiently broad grasp that I can write an introductory primer on the Libertarian ideal and some application possibilities.

Libertarianism, as an ideal, is a form of self-governance that relies on self-ownership and labor-induced property ownership.  So, in the fundamental sense, you possess exclusive ownership of your body and you own any of the natural world that you retrieve and improve.  There is no government involved in this process, nor do they have any say in it.  Private property rights are equivalent to natural human rights and are not to be violated by any person or organization, government included.


Government is only introduced when property disputes begin.  The government in the Libertarian ideal is voluntary and highly distributed on as local a level as possible.

A body of law is maintained by elected representatives with a rotating sun-setting of all laws such that the legal filth does not accumulate over time.  The only legitimate laws are those that prevent men from injuring one another or transgressing against another person's private property.  Laws are enforced by elected sheriffs and neighborhood committees of safety.  The only laws that are enforced are those that you are willing to kill your neighbor over.  In a Libertarian society, everyone is a law enforcement officer.  If you cannot be bothered to interrupt your life to enforce law, then the law will not be enforced.  The committees of safety manage the community security on a local level and ensure that residents respect one another's private property.

Government agencies are staffed with elected directors on set and term limited terms of service.  There is no retirement packages for civil servants, they are paid and save for retirement like any other citizen.  The directors hire management and all necessary personnel beneath them for executing the task at hand much like is done in our current government.

Taxation is completely voluntary and budgets are determined by what community non-profit organizations that people donate to.  Organizations like the military industrial complex, the community infrastructure, community research, standards organizations, welfare, etc are budgeted according to how many people donate to their cause.  Each governmental agency is essentially a non-profit organization meant to fulfill a given purpose.  The budgets will change automatically in accordance with the needs of the community as a whole and the quality of the service provided.

The military is broken up into three main bodies, the wartime command, the training command, and the contracts command.  The training command is further subdivided along state lines and branch lines.   The wartime command only exists when a war is declared by the representative governing body, otherwise the training command dictates soldier's activities during non-wartime situations.  All wars are declared with achievable goals and specific authorities for the wartime command.  The contracts command is responsible for maintaining military research for all of the training commands equipment and technology.

Infrastructure, such as roads, rails, communications lines, etc are maintained by an infrastructure agency (or agencies) who collects donations and completes projects based on local demand.

Order is maintained by private arbiters who access the public body of law maintained by the representative body.  Arbiters are paid fair market price to resolve disputes between citizens.  They are not approved by any centralized organization like the BAR Association, but are selected by both members of a given dispute who both pay a portion of the fees of the arbiter.  Any arbiter that is not seen by the community at large as giving out fair rulings will not be patronized.  Unfair and corrupt judges will be automatically weeded out of the system by the free market.

 The primary weaknesses that I presently see in the Libertarian ideal so far are the unity of people across different sectors, unity of law across different regions, and indecision at council levels.  Libertarianism is sound philosophically for the most part, but it has a lot of wrinkles to work out in practice.


However, the Libertarian ideas are far superior to anything either the authoritarian right (Republicans) or authoritarian left (Democrats) have put forward.  This is why I endorse Gary Johnson for President, despite the oxymoronic nature of this proposal.

For more reading, see:
http://www.thelastbastille.com/2016/01/24/the-state-is-not-great-how-government-poisons-everything/ - Quick read
https://mises.org/system/tdf/For%20a%20New%20Liberty%20The%20Libertarian%20Manifesto_3.pdf?file=1&type=document - Not quick read

Tuesday, June 14, 2016

A Brief Overview of the Past Seventy Years of U.S. History

George Friedman posted an article on the foreign policy stances and options for both Trump and Hillary.  But it is his brief overview of recent U.S. history that I found most curious.

He says:

A Series of Aftermaths: War Ends, Soviets Fold, Towers Fall

The US emerged from World War II having learned two lessons. The first was Pearl Harbor. It taught that an enemy can strike at any time without warning.
The second was the price of delay. Had the US entered the war earlier and opposed Hitler before the Munich Agreement, much suffering could have been avoided.
Global involvement would be the first line of defense. Cheyenne Mountain, home of the North American Defense Command, would be the ever watchful second line. It made sense yet was exhausting.
During the Cold War, this approach seemed right because the Soviet Union had to be blocked on the ground. It had to be deterred from nuclear war as well. The Soviet Union fell, but the military and economic structures the US had created remained.
The United States intervened in Somalia, Haiti, Kuwait, and Bosnia in the 1990s. The Soviets were gone, but the US still saw itself as the global guarantor of security.
Then 9/11 happened, and the classic American fear was made real. It was an attack out of nowhere. As the US awaited more attacks, it went on the offensive in the Islamic world. It built a coalition that has fought wars for 15 years.
 This is the most compact and informed view of recent U.S. history that I have seen.  This helps us to understand where we have been, where we are, where we are going, and why the U.S. behaves like it does many times.

Friday, June 10, 2016

Doug Casey on Facism in America

Doug Casey has a new article which is surprisingly balanced for him from an optimism standpoint.  All of the reasons that he lists for both optimism and pessimism are well-founded according to everything that I have read and he lists his basic recommendations which I am in the process of executing, despite my somewhat limited resources.

It is well worth a read:
http://www.internationalman.com/articles/how-fascism-comes-to-america

I have it copied below for brevity and long term storage.

Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Designer Babies will be a Reality Soon

With the coming Biotech Age of humanity of which we are standing on the cusp of, the philosophical question of genetic modification of humans is suddenly a real question.  I am going to throw my two cents into the debate.  Patrick Cox has a fascinating article that raises scientific philosophical concerns.

I like the idea of genetic modification in humans, at least conceptually.

What, you say!?  Aren't you a devout Christian? 

Well, yes, I am, and there is nothing in the Bible about genetic modification, as much as I cannot find anything related to transgenderism either.  So, my judgments will be based on a scientifically informed Judeo-Christian viewpoint.

My first observation is that generational genetic changes are random.  Randomness is both good and bad, obviously.  Randomness is the source of creativity, among other intrinsically human things.  Designer babies mean limiting randomness to what we define as 'positive.'  Therein lies the rub.  What is actually positive both now and going into the future?  I am against genetically modified organism (GMO) food, because I believe it is having barely attributable, but distinct differences in our collective health, not all of which are positive.  I do not doubt humans view of what are 'positive' biological traits now, I doubt whether we will have the foresight as a species to avoid very decidedly bad aftereffects in the future.  Humans as a race are notoriously bad at predicting the future.  I am often no better --although I am often vindicated as time moves forward, sometimes to my great dismay-- but when you are dealing with revolutionary, civilization age-defining technologies a little self-doubt is a very healthy thing.

So, where is the balance?

Human genetics is random.

I think that pursuing genetic modifications to eliminate the decidedly negative things in genetics that we can see and know with fairly good certainty ahead of time is good.  Curing genetic diseases that cause death, good.  Preventing conditions that retard, incapacitate or otherwise, probably good.  Pursue an individual risk vs reward analysis.

Will this genetic disease kill this baby if left unaltered?  Yes?  Then fix it.
Will this genetic disease leave a baby retard or paralyzed?  If yes, then fix it.

Because even if we screw up their genetics in some initially imperceptible but hugely significant way, they were going to die or be physically or mentally retarded anyway, so the alternative was probably worse.
That is akin to trying to improve the average randomness like this.

You start small.  Watch these kids grow up, become productive adults.  Make sure we did not make some catastrophic error in genetics.  Wait 10-15 years and then try something more extreme.

Will this genetic modification make this person more resistant to common diseases? Yes?  Then do it.
 So, wait 10 to 15 years and see if these more extreme modifications don't result in any long term catastrophic consequences for these individuals.

By the time we have been doing genetic engineering of humans for fifteen years, hopefully fringe cases will pop up and the science will be fixed and tweaked to alleviate these cases before we engage in trying to actually positively modify our genetics.

So my thought is this.  Let's avoid the genetic enhancements and focus exclusively on curing diseases.  From that foundation we can begin enhancements that focus exclusively on reducing disease chances in the future.

If you start on enhancements and designer babies, you risk doing something very adverse inadvertently.  We want to take this genetic modifications thing slow to avoid the Asgard problem.

Jumping straight to designer babies is as likely to result in,
than in anything immensely positive to the human race as a whole.  Just ask the U.S. Federal Reserve about trying to control market prices...

So, caution is always good.  The only way to eat an elephant is one bite at a time.

Thursday, May 26, 2016

Trump

This is going to be a two-part post because I have been neglecting my blog lately, despite my head brimming with topics to write about.  The two topics are completely disparate and have little to do with one another, aside from AI affecting the technology fabric underlying a Trump presidency.  So, sorry, keep your mental compartmentalization ready.

First, Trump.  I don't like Trump.  He is a big government guy and I am a libertarian.  He wants to do all kinds of expensive things with other people's money, which makes him only marginally better than Bernie Sanders and only morally superior to Hillary Clinton.  Currently, we have over 19 trillion USD in sovereign debt, not even considering unfunded liabilities like government pensions, social security, and Obamacare... I have read estimates in excess of 100 trillion USD in unfunded liabilities going forward.

100 trillion.  100,000,000,000,000,000!

Let that sink in for a bit...

Except that this number is so astronomical that most people cannot even conceive of it, let alone begin to fathom the consequences of this number.  But the debt will be paid.  It has to be, because the consequences of not paying it are world-ending (at least in the short term).  And it will be paid, even if other countries take it out of us in blood, which I imagine that they will be more than happy to do if we default on tens of trillions of USD in sovereign debt.

But we can't default, you say!

Technically, yes... you are correct, but a hyper-inflationary money printing extravaganza qualifies as a 'default,' just ask Zimbabwe, Argentina, and now Venezuela.

These countries are examples of unbounded spending on anything... defense, social entitlements, whatever...  eventually you run out of other people's money.   And if you don't think that this will happen here in the U.S., think again.  It doesn't matter how powerful you think you are, the piper must always be paid.  And Trump has all kinds of expensive plans including building walls, tax cuts, tariffs, and boosting defense spending, which I am in favor of, so long as we stop this military adventurism nonsense.  But you cannot do all of that at once without funding it, and there are only two sources of funding, debt and currency.  You can issue debt until you can't when the rest of the world figures out that the emperor has no clothes, then you must print... or cut spending.

Debt is one reason I do not like Trump.

A second reason that I neither trust nor like Donald Trump is that all of his solutions revolve around tariffs.  A tariff is a sanction or penalty on incoming goods from other countries.

That $2000 TV you envy in the electronics store?  $4000 after Trump sanctions the country that manufactures it.

Those $20 clothes at Walmart?  $30-40 after Trump sanctions countries that manufacture them.

Those $50 car parts that you buy from Mexico to keep your jalopy running?  $100+ after Trump sanctions Mexico to force them to pay for the wall.  To say that Mexico is going to pay for the wall is technically true, but in reality you are going to pay for it.

And this is just the beginning. 

Tariffs start trade wars.  That is simply how it works.  So, China will put tariffs on our iPhones and start chasing US companies out of China and ramp up their cyber- and economic espionage campaign to steal IP from us in order to continue making our shit for less than we can.  So, we lose anyway.

 This post is already running way longer than intended, so I guess I will close with the Hillary/Bernie alternative which is equally dim.  You'll have to wait for comments on AI-theism.

A Hillary/Bernie presidency would consist of free shit for everyone.  Great, you say!  I love free shit!

Except that nothing is free.

If we have close to 100 trillion in already unfunded liabilities, why not throw on another 20 trillion.  No big deal, right?  So, sure, we can enjoy our social entitlements until our civilization collapses under the crushing debt load.

So, the Bernie/Hillary presidency, which also has this penchant for big government and spending other people's money, will run out of money long before a Trump presidency will...  and I think there is at least some small modicum of hope that Trump will see the error of his ways before he actually screws us all over.  Hillary and Bernie will be screwing us as a matter of principle, so I don't see any hope down that path.

So, long story short, I am not voting.  I am preparing to run for the hills, so that when the inevitable shit hits the fan I will be protected.  And you would be wise to do the same.

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Draw a Secret

Here are some test images from my draw a secret program.

I am, as always, following my simple and stupid methodology.

This post has almost no text and a lot of images, expand at your risk.

Friday, May 6, 2016

The Exploits of the Demopublican Party

Doug Casey is a pessimist, but a pessimist on solid grounds.  The problems that the U.S. faces are real, serious, debilitating, and potentially catastrophic.

The U.S. debt is not going to simply disappear, unless we print our way out of it --which with all of the discussion about helicopter money going around would not surprise me-- and there are severe consequences if this debt is not dealt with.

But the true rot of our country is not purely economic.  The economics are merely following the social and cultural rot that is decaying our country from the inside out.  This rot has its source at the philosophy of humanism, and we are seeing the results of humanism applied and lived out on a mass scale.  And it will only get worse as the idiocracy takes hold.  Our learning institutions are pushing out droves of mindless slaves, who probably couldn't reason their way out of the brown paper bag, while the entitlement culture is eroding what little prosperity was left in the system.  Eventually, the only buyer left in the U.S. Treasury market will be the U.S. Federal Reserve who relies on printing money to fund their purchases.  Japan is already there; the U.S. is only a few steps behind.  The coming economic collapse is very sure, the only uncertainty is the timing.

So, what is the solution?

I am not sure that there is a solution that will actually prevent this, barring major cultural shifts, which I do not see happening.  So, I reluctantly admit that Doug Casey may very well be correct when he says, "the only thing that you can do is protect yourself."

So, to protect yourself against currency collapse (the result of excessive money printing), buy gold, silver, real estate, guns, even Bitcoins might work.   Anything that is not reliant on the U.S. government for it's underlying value.

I really think that Christians should begin banding together and preparing a set of local church arbitration courts to replace the judicial system that will collapse when the government collapses.  At least then some sense of justice will be maintained on a local level, and we can simply arbitrate amongst other Christians for now, and pagans can use it when it becomes necessary.

For European Christians, they need to prepare to care for and protect Muslims when the next holocaust comes; because everything is in place now for the holocaust of Muslims in Europe, all that is required is the spark that lights the keg.

As with all predictions though, the exact timing is very difficult to determine, but this is why we are to remain watchful and keenly aware of the world around us.

You can read Doug Casey's thoughts on the political election in the U.S. here.  Be warned though, there is an auto-play video that will load on the page.  You can read it below if you want to avoid the auto-play video.  And if you feel so inclined, he offers his solutions for purchase, which are very pragmatic solutions.


Friday, April 29, 2016

What is time? World Views and the Basis of Knowing

This was the question posed by this article in Aeon.

Being a physicist -- at least by education -- and a philosopher at heart, I have pondered this question for many years now, and I have an answer that I use in my own systemic narrative.  My concept of time very much plays into my world view.

The author says, "To declare that question outside the pale of physical theory doesn’t make it meaningless," and he is correct.  This question is outside of the pale of physical theory.  Physics and the theories underlying it do not care about whys.  Science exists to answer how, what, where, and when... not why.  Why remains firmly in the realm of philosophy and theology.  But like the author says, that does not reduce the necessity of an answer to this question, particularly when it plays intimately into framing our world view.

Time, in my mind, is a sequence of events, derived from the continuity, consistency, and cause and effect nature of reality.  This idea plays closely with Julian Barbour's Heap concept, and is effectively a relational model of singular universal time.  Things change and the very act of changing defines time.  Change in the spatial dimension does not count, as in a change in the "properties over space as in a house's change from red on the roof to white on the sides." 1  The directionality of time is produced by entropy and the many one-way processes of the universe.  Hot water grows cold.  Houses degrade and eventually decay.  Order degrades to chaos.
Side note: Entropy is why I believe Darwin's theory is absurd.  This world never tends toward increasing order, no matter how long the time scales.
The author goes on to discuss the narrative quality of time with two very helpful videos.  Time, while not being defined by narrative, displays the narrative that is reality.  Events occur and are only memorable, relatable, and understandable in time.  The fact that reality tells a story implies that there is a story teller -- or perhaps many.  There is definitely intelligence behind the narrative quality of time.

He also goes on to address the epistemological grounds of how we know and how we tie that knowing into meaning.  He says that "most threads would follow isolated paths that are without sense or meaning," and while that may be true, it is not necessarily true.  Being a systemic thinker, I believe that every action -- no matter how insignificant or remote -- has universal consequences and thus eternal meaning.  Your choosing to patron McDonald's or Starbucks tomorrow morning may not seem like a significant choice, but this choice may predicate you meeting a future mate or business partner or someone whose interaction changes your life and theirs and perhaps many more for the better.  Even if it does not result in a significant meeting, the event still has consequences which may be unseen, perhaps even forever, yet still play into weaving the grand tapestry of heaps that form reality.  Each action that we do matters enormously.

He continues by noting the breach between science and our concept of reality, which is an area that most scientists fail at.  He notes, "We tend to fence off science from other areas, imagining that a quantum wave function or a set of relativistic field equations express a fundamentally different aspect of time than the kind of time that is embodied in old family tales."  But they are not. Reality is unity.  It is contiguous, rational, and understandable because of the underlying intelligence in the design.

Another author, Francis Schaeffer, whose book "How Should We Then Live?" I am just finishing now, addresses this disconnect similarly.  He addressed the gap by defining two elements that exist, the particulars -- that is you and I and the dog down the street and the lily pad in the bog in Thailand -- and the universals or absolutes.  He points out the chief problem with humanism and humanist thought is this gap.  As he says,
Beginning from man alone, Renaissance humanism --and humanism ever since-- has found no way to arrive at universals or absolutes which give meaning to existence and morals.
All of humanist philosophy, from the Renaissance up until the 19th century, was devoted to attempting to bridge this gap, unsuccessfully because the only crossing that exists is the one thing that they are completely unwilling to even consider, a personal God.  Eventually, philosophy devolved into simply ignoring reason and rationality, and from the end of the Enlightenment up until now has been a violent thrashing between rational observation of reality and the corresponding despair and nihilism or seeking meaning in the irrational arenas of spiritualism, drugs, music, and art.  Everyone you meet will fall somewhere into this paradigm, and all of their actions and motivations are derived from their underlying world view and the corresponding beliefs and standards derived from it.

Either way though, the world is understandable, rational, and relatable, and I ascribe this intelligence of design to the God of the Bible, because what is stated in the Bible correlates mostly smoothly with what I see in reality.  Because of this rationality, I can know and can expect that answers to all questions do exist and that seeking is a worthy endeavor.  There are some inconsistencies between the Bible and reality, but none that I cannot attribute to my own incomplete understanding of this reality of which I am a part.  Belief in the God of the Bible also has a broad host of other beneficial effects such as certainty of purpose, certainty of self and proper place, and an absolute moral standard by which to judge first myself and secondly everything else in this reality.  This moral standard is the basis of order and harmony in society, and compliance with the moral standard is the only means by which utopia will ever be achieved.  All of society, law, and justice revolve around this absolute moral standard, and thus it forms the foundation of just and civil society.

Ultimately, though, our perception of this absolute reality is subjective in many ways, and so deception is widespread and easily confused with truth, which is why it is key that each of us be keen of mind and able to sort out truth from fiction by comparing any narrative that we are presented with against what we know and what we believe to be true.  In this way, I suppose I identify with Pascal who said, "If I believe in God and you do not; and you are correct, we both lose.  However, if I believe in God and you do not; and I am correct, you still lose while I gain everything."  Truth is absolute, but our perception of it is not.  However, enough hints slip through that we can build a partially complete narrative that God had the kindness to mostly fill out in the Bible.  Because of these facts, I can know, I have distinct meaning, and I can judge myself and others accordingly.  It is beautiful to begin to see the world as the system that it is, and it certainly makes me regard God even more because of it.

Monday, April 25, 2016

Brexit: Further Analysis

After talking to more people and finding this article which added more information to the additional dimensions regarding the Brexit option, I have to offer apologies for oversimplifying the Brexit issue in my last post.

So, to my British readers, I am sorry for over-simplifying the issue.  The cultural and sovereignty issues are significant, and I did not consider these in my previous post discussing Brexit.



However, the added complexity has not changed my overarching opinion, simply nuanced it more.  The trade benefits that the EU offers are worth remaining the EU for, but national sovereignty must be maintained.  I still think that they should remain part of the EU, but they also need to make it very clear to the EU that in the event of a disagreement between EU and British policy, the EU policy will simply be ignored.  That way, they avoid having to renegotiate all of the trade agreements with the EU.  They can pull the same card from their own history with the U.S., namely the "f**k you stance."

The British are in a real bind now, not completely of their own doing.  The stipulations foisted upon them by the EU are probably going to force them to exit the Euro system and even that will be a long and vindictive process.  This is better than tying the British train to the EU just as it goes off of the fiscal cliff.  If they do decide to remain with the EU, a healthy and readily usable pool of "f**k you" needs to be at hand to tell the EU to go jump in the lake on issues of national sovereignty.  At least if they are forced out by the EU, it will hopefully expedite the process, and leaving the ball in the EU's court will force the EU to do their own soul searching.

Monday, March 21, 2016

The Naked Emperor

I found an article in The Atlantic that details very intimately the events and circumstances surrounding the Syrian "red line," and Obama's blunder in not fulfilling his word and other foreign policy events of his presidency.

I suppose I should be fair and say that most of Obama's foreign policy has been prudent, and I agree with his assessment that a lot of the world has been "free riding" on America's willingness to intervene.  However, the Syrian "red line" event completely obliterated any path for me to assess his foreign policy as "successful."

It's like Hillary Clinton said here, "If you say you’re going to strike, you have to strike. There’s no choice."  If he wanted to pull this 'put it before Congress' trick, he should have asked Congress BEFORE laying down a red line.  You cannot lay down a red line and not enforce it if you want to be taken seriously.

Obama, with this one act, did incalculable damage to his and America's credibility abroad.  By the time Obama "found himself recoiling from the idea of an attack unsanctioned by international law or by Congress," it was already too late to be feckless.  He had his opportunity to exhibit prudence prior to his "red line" speech and blew it by laying the red line.

Obama will be remembered as the emperor who bluffed; and when Assad called his bluff, everyone saw that he had no pants on.

Read it on their website first.  I am keeping the article below for backup in case this link goes bad in 20 years.
http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2016/04/the-obama-doctrine/471525/

Thursday, March 17, 2016

Israel and Salary Caps

I've suggested exactly this idea before, so I will be most interested to see how it works out in Israel: capping salaries at a given percentage of the lowest paid person in the company.

http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/business/.premium-1.709326


Friday, February 26, 2016

Being a Delta Rat

So, I was coding earlier today when I received an email from Doug Casey's International Man, which I reservedly follow.  He is good at describing the problems.  The title of the email was "Top Five Reasons Not to Vote."

The problem is political myopia induced by the enforcement of party lines and overarching political philosophies, which push out divergent, independent thought.

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Fiat Currency: A Nation's Store of Wealth

Fiat currencies are a curiosity that has arisen in the last 40-50 years that has existed as a secretive matter-of-fact.  It is like the benign secret that all of the folks who created it felt was scandalous, when in reality it is a non-issue.  There are no new problems that are introduced by a fiat currency, simply new forms of the same old problems.  Problems with fiscal prudence, honest dealing, and straightforward politics are the same issues that existed before fiat currencies, but the crooked powers that be now have new ways to steal from people that they did not have available to them before.

For a brief review, fiat currencies are imaginary money issued by a government that backs up the industrious efforts of its people.  The intrinsic value backing a fiat currency is not dictated by the government, it is derived from the faith of the governed (and many times others not governed) who choose to use it.

There is another property of fiat currencies that I have been chewing on for some time that is slowly crystallizing for me.  Fiat currencies represent a store of wealth, in the form of faith and the wealth that follows it, that a country can use in lieu of debt or taxation as source of working capital.  The mechanism by which a country can use this capital is via the printing press, or really today by a central bank mainframe server into which more zeroes are simply appended to the end of a long-type value in a database somewhere.  It is literally as simple as making 1,000,000 into 1,000,000,000,000.

However, the ease of this creation of money should not be confused as a creation of wealth for the consequences of this action are severe if not carefully managed.  First, the government doesn't create wealth.  It never has, and it never will.  People create wealth and the government monetizes and uses a portion of that wealth to accomplish its tasks.  If the government prints too freely, above the wealth creation of the people of the country, then the value of the fiat currency will drop accordingly, thus lowering the relative value of the currency with respect to other nations' floating currencies.  If it is printed vastly beyond the wealth creation of the people, then you enter into hyper-inflationary territory, such as happened many times in the past in places like Wiemar Germany in the 1920s , Hungary in the 1940s, Argentina in the 1980s, Yugoslavia in the 1990s, and Zimbabwe in the 2000s.  And despite the Federal Reserve's incompetence in the past, I am glad that they are mostly allowing our currency to float upward in relative value, despite the trade penalties that are paid as a result.

source: www.bloomberg.com/quote/DXY:CUR
U.S. Dollar Index over the past 5 years.
The fiat currency as a store of wealth can be accessed, much like a bank account for a nation state, to withdraw working capital from in times of need.  It is a good thing to let your currency float upwards and accrue wealth to store up for times of need.  So, despite all of the negative press that our strong currency is getting, I want to ensure that this message gets out.  A strong currency is not a bad thing.  In fact, I would argue strongly that it is a very positive thing, especially for countries who can produce everything they need themselves, especially food and fuel, since those are the two limitations that harm countries who have to import or export large quantities of to survive.  This is a stark contrasting view from Trump who views currency devaluation as a "smart" thing to do.  Sure, it is smart until you need to print money to actually mitigate an existential economic crisis.  If you devalue your currency during stable times, you invite hyper-inflation in the event of a real crisis.

However, this is not to say that the U.S. is on good footing.  As some of the economists that I follow have said, "The U.S. is the least ugly girl at the dance."  We are still ugly, but less so than most other nations in the world.  Since all fiat currencies are ultimately imaginary, it is difficult to measure it's true intrinsic value.  However, if one considers gold, a metal that possesses every property necessary to be used as a substitute for money, you can get a feel for the value of the U.S. dollar against something more permanent.  And although the dollar value of gold has been declining over the past 5 years, it took place before the significant rise in the exchange rate of the U.S. dollar, meaning that the dollar was accruing real value in 2013, while the 2015 exchange rate change is merely a worsening of every one else in the DXY currency basket.
source: http://goldprice.org/
Gold Price in U.S. dollars over 5 years.
This chart is especially significant since many other nations were buying up gold in copious quantities in 2013, most notably Russia and China, so a drop in the price of gold in the face of extreme demand accentuates the potency of this point.

Ultimately, though, the increase in the value of the dollar means that you, dear reader, get a stealth raise as your U.S. dollar-denominated salaries and bank accounts buy more than they did in 2012, although I am sure you already noted this at the gas pump.  I, for one, hope that the Federal Reserve stays out of the way and allows the U.S. dollar to continue to accrue value, as I expect will happen given all of the various crises around the world.  The U.S. is seen as a financial safe haven, despite all of our very serious fiscal and debt problems.

Friday, January 22, 2016

A Compact Guide to Biblical Values

This is the most direct, compact, and insightful image I have seen in a long time.  It is well worth saving here:

Wednesday, January 20, 2016

Police Brutality in America

This is the kind of shit that is happening right now in America.  Police are killing and raping people with no repercussions.  This kind of behavior is abominable and deplorable and shows how sick our society is today.

Don't be part of this sickness.

http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2016/1/19/sexual-violence-the-brutality-that-police-chiefs-ignore.html


Peruse News Around the World: Oddities of Today

So, I was perusing the world news today when two article titles caught my attention.  Both are absurd, just in different directions.

First, apparently Kim Jong Un and his North Korean crazies have managed to produce "hangover-less" booze.  To my knowledge, this is not possible, but it would certainly put North Korea on the economic map if they actually succeeded.  It might even rescue them from destitution assuming they could get trade sanctions lifted, lol.

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/jan/18/north-korea-invents-hangover-free-alcohol
http://fortune.com/2016/01/20/north-korea-hangover-free-alcohol/

The next article is more political correct nonsense... "Whiteness History Month".

Look... I appreciate that you are trying to be fair and whatever, but seriously... quit with the PC insanity.  I don't like Black History Month or Asian History Month or White History Month... just stop.  This kind of absurdity only breeds contempt and hate.

We are all human beings.  We all eat, sleep, and poop; so get over it.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/grade-point/wp/2016/01/20/why-one-oregon-college-is-planning-a-whiteness-history-month/

Saturday, January 9, 2016

Age of Aging

I received a new article from Patrick Cox of Mauldin Economics regarding the 2015 advancements in anti-aging technology that is slowly blossoming.

This article covers two primary drugs that have been around for a while but were never tested for the specific purpose of slowing down cellular aging.  These two drugs alone have the pontential -- at least based on current testing already completed -- to increase human lifespans by 10-15%.  It would be curious to do a statistical study of people who have taken the drug metformin for diabetes and see if they possess any measurable differences in cellular degeneration.

And I am sure that these drugs are only the vanguard of what may materialize as science advances to testing and marketing.  By some estimates, I am slated to live to 120 healthfully and 150 to 180 before I die.  That is curious to consider and something that I will keep chewing on.

There are plenty of dismal things that I have read and always keep in mind, but I want to share interesting or hopeful things also.

The article is here, or I have a copy of it transcribed below.  The online copy has all of the charts and images though, so hit that up first.