During my time in Congress, I regularly introduced legislation
forbidding organizations that perform abortions from receiving federal
funding. The US Government should not force taxpayers to subsidize an
activity they believe is murder....
The federal government has no constitutional authority to permit, fund,
or even outlaw abortion. Therefore, efforts to make abortion a federal
crime are just as unconstitutional as efforts to prohibit states from
outlawing abortion. A Congress that truly cared about the Constitution
would end all federal funding for abortion and pass legislation
restricting federal jurisdiction over abortion, thus returning the issue
to the states....
One factor hindering the
anti-abortion movement's ability to change people’s minds is that too
many abortion opponents also support a militaristic foreign policy.
These pro-lifers undercut their moral credibility as advocates for
unborn American lives when they display a callous indifference to the
lives of Iraqi, Iranian, and Afghan children....
[A]ll those who wish to create a society of
liberty, peace, and prosperity should join me in advocating for a
consistent ethic of life and liberty that respects the rights of all
persons, born and unborn.
-- Dr. Ron Paul (from his website) Aug. 2, 2015
Sunday, August 2, 2015
abortion politics
Labels:
civil rights,
death,
government,
humanity,
innocence,
life,
politics,
society
Thursday, July 16, 2015
finite resources
Beyond a critical point within a finite space, freedom diminishes as
numbers increase. This is as true of humans in the finite space of a
planetary ecosystem as it is of gas molecules in a sealed flask. The
human question is not how many can possibly survive within the system,
but what kind of existence is possible for those who do survive.
-- Pardot Kynes, First Imperial Planetologist of Arrakis (Dune by Frank Herbert)
-- Pardot Kynes, First Imperial Planetologist of Arrakis (Dune by Frank Herbert)
Labels:
environment,
freedom,
future,
humanity,
overcrowding
Sunday, May 31, 2015
your life is a lie
Here's the deal -- open your eyes -- your life is a lie
Don't say a word. I'll tell you why you're living a lie
Your life is a lie, but you deny you ever lied
Wondering why. Barely alive
Count your friends on your hands.
Now look again -- they're not your friends
Hold your breath. Everyone left. No surprise. Living a lie....
Nobody wins. Try not to cry. You'll survive on your own
Lessons in life: your life is a lie
Now there's no time wondering why
Where in the world is that girl who knows it's alright to live a life waiting to die?
Not knowing that your life is a lie
Wondering why nobody writes
Hollow inside. Bitter delight. Fire and ice.
Your life is a lie
-- MGMT (2013)
Don't say a word. I'll tell you why you're living a lie
Your life is a lie, but you deny you ever lied
Wondering why. Barely alive
Count your friends on your hands.
Now look again -- they're not your friends
Hold your breath. Everyone left. No surprise. Living a lie....
Nobody wins. Try not to cry. You'll survive on your own
Lessons in life: your life is a lie
Now there's no time wondering why
Where in the world is that girl who knows it's alright to live a life waiting to die?
Not knowing that your life is a lie
Wondering why nobody writes
Hollow inside. Bitter delight. Fire and ice.
Your life is a lie
-- MGMT (2013)
Labels:
alienation,
existentialism,
life,
loneliness,
philosophy
Thursday, May 14, 2015
Bubble Financialization
[C]entral bank bubble finance has fostered an existential crisis in
what remains of American capitalism.... [A]s the main street economy of
work and production has been going nowhere, the financial system has
erupted skyward.... How did this massive inflation of the financial
sphere happen? Since the time of Greenspan’s abject panic in the wake
of Black Monday
in October 1987, the Fed has chronically pegged the money market rate
below market-clearing levels. In doing so, they fueled an embedded
carry
trade that has mushroomed relentlessly....
In an honest free market, gamblers would have to pay more for their carry funding. They’d face much greater uncertainty as to its price and availability and dissipate far more of their winnings hedging their portfolios than is required under the current central bank-driven regime of bubble finance.... When debt is priced drastically below its economic cost and receives a deep tax subsidy to boot, a variation of the supply side theorem manifests itself. Namely, when the cost of servicing debt capital is made artificially low, you get a lot more of it -- from the public and private sectors alike....
[T]he debt was overwhelmingly used for financial engineering.... The relentless trading, churning and synthesizing of assets and derivatives within the giant bloated system of finance has almost nothing to do with raising or allocating capital for productive use. Instead, this giant $95 trillion pool is where honest savings from the household and business sectors go to be scalped, appropriated, and stolen by the hedge funds, dealers, financial engineers, and gamblers which populate the casino....
And the denizens of the Eccles Building keep their heavy foot on the monetary accelerator as they witlessly inflate a $95 trillion financial bubble.... This is a clear and present danger to American capitalism fostered by an unelected monetary politburo in thrall to its own lust for power and mesmerized by its own doctrinaire group think. The tragedy is that nothing can stop them except the thundering crash of the gargantuan bubble they have single-handedly enabled.
-- David Stockman (The Daily Reckoning) May 14, 2015
In an honest free market, gamblers would have to pay more for their carry funding. They’d face much greater uncertainty as to its price and availability and dissipate far more of their winnings hedging their portfolios than is required under the current central bank-driven regime of bubble finance.... When debt is priced drastically below its economic cost and receives a deep tax subsidy to boot, a variation of the supply side theorem manifests itself. Namely, when the cost of servicing debt capital is made artificially low, you get a lot more of it -- from the public and private sectors alike....
[T]he debt was overwhelmingly used for financial engineering.... The relentless trading, churning and synthesizing of assets and derivatives within the giant bloated system of finance has almost nothing to do with raising or allocating capital for productive use. Instead, this giant $95 trillion pool is where honest savings from the household and business sectors go to be scalped, appropriated, and stolen by the hedge funds, dealers, financial engineers, and gamblers which populate the casino....
And the denizens of the Eccles Building keep their heavy foot on the monetary accelerator as they witlessly inflate a $95 trillion financial bubble.... This is a clear and present danger to American capitalism fostered by an unelected monetary politburo in thrall to its own lust for power and mesmerized by its own doctrinaire group think. The tragedy is that nothing can stop them except the thundering crash of the gargantuan bubble they have single-handedly enabled.
-- David Stockman (The Daily Reckoning) May 14, 2015
Thursday, April 2, 2015
equilibrium interest rates?
A similarly confused criticism often heard is that the Fed is somehow
distorting financial markets and investment decisions by keeping
interest rates "artificially low." Contrary to what sometimes seems to
be alleged, the Fed cannot somehow withdraw and leave interest rates to
be determined by "the markets." The Fed's actions determine the money
supply and thus short-term interest rates; it has no choice but to set
the short-term interest rate somewhere. So where should that be? The best strategy for the Fed I can think of is to
set rates at a level consistent with the healthy operation of the
economy over the medium term, that is, at the (today, low) equilibrium
rate.
-- Ben Bernanke (Brookings Institution blog posting) March 30, 2015
There is no affirmative case that control of interest rates spurs a magic elixir called more debt and higher leverage ratios which, in turn, generate improved economic performance and greater societal welfare and wealth. Accordingly, the Keynesian central banking remit, perforce, rests on the default case of prevention of business cycle instability and warding off the alleged suicidal tendency of capitalism toward depressionary swoons.... [But] the blinding empirical reality is that since the arrival of Keynesian central banking under Greenspan and his successors we have had the "Great Immoderation," not the nirvana of stable, endless growth and a recession-free world....
The Fed does not need to manage interest rates, and therefore does not need to embrace Bernanke’s spurious answer to the question of "what rate." Bernanke’s comments on the "equilibrium real interest rate" ... amount to pure gibberish -- academic jargon for unbounded, plenary power to manage the entire pricing machinery of the world's $300 trillion financial system. Indeed, lurking in the intellectual mush ["healthy operation of the economy, full employment of labor and capital resources"] ... is the true rationale for the greatest exercise in mission creep during the entire history of the modern state....
There is nothing in [the Fed's justification] that can be objectively measured or tangibly pegged.... [T]he real world of capitalism is far, far too complex and dynamic to be measured and assessed with the exactitude implied by Bernanke’s gobbledygook. In fact, what his purported necessity for choosing a rate "somewhere" actually involves is the age old problem of socialist calculation. It can’t be done -- and most especially not in the most fluid, complex and fastest moving markets known to man. That is, the global financial markets for debt, equity, loans, commodities and all their derivatives.
-- David Stockman (The Daily Reckoning) April 1, 2015
-- Ben Bernanke (Brookings Institution blog posting) March 30, 2015
There is no affirmative case that control of interest rates spurs a magic elixir called more debt and higher leverage ratios which, in turn, generate improved economic performance and greater societal welfare and wealth. Accordingly, the Keynesian central banking remit, perforce, rests on the default case of prevention of business cycle instability and warding off the alleged suicidal tendency of capitalism toward depressionary swoons.... [But] the blinding empirical reality is that since the arrival of Keynesian central banking under Greenspan and his successors we have had the "Great Immoderation," not the nirvana of stable, endless growth and a recession-free world....
The Fed does not need to manage interest rates, and therefore does not need to embrace Bernanke’s spurious answer to the question of "what rate." Bernanke’s comments on the "equilibrium real interest rate" ... amount to pure gibberish -- academic jargon for unbounded, plenary power to manage the entire pricing machinery of the world's $300 trillion financial system. Indeed, lurking in the intellectual mush ["healthy operation of the economy, full employment of labor and capital resources"] ... is the true rationale for the greatest exercise in mission creep during the entire history of the modern state....
There is nothing in [the Fed's justification] that can be objectively measured or tangibly pegged.... [T]he real world of capitalism is far, far too complex and dynamic to be measured and assessed with the exactitude implied by Bernanke’s gobbledygook. In fact, what his purported necessity for choosing a rate "somewhere" actually involves is the age old problem of socialist calculation. It can’t be done -- and most especially not in the most fluid, complex and fastest moving markets known to man. That is, the global financial markets for debt, equity, loans, commodities and all their derivatives.
-- David Stockman (The Daily Reckoning) April 1, 2015
Wednesday, February 18, 2015
destiny
veins are shaped like lightning,
like the roots of a tree,
and like rivers that flow down to the sea.
-- melissa swingle (trailer bride) 2003
like the roots of a tree,
and like rivers that flow down to the sea.
-- melissa swingle (trailer bride) 2003
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
crossed out name
I kiss her mouth, and I know
For everything there is a word.
For everything but this.
I like the dresses, the shoes, and the clothes
And everything you know that goes
With loving a girl, I suppose.
I wish I could tell you just how I'm hurt.
Pinpoint the location -- it's in another universe.
When I close my eyes, I see a fire so plain
And my crossed-out name.
-- Ryan Adams (2008)
For everything there is a word.
For everything but this.
I like the dresses, the shoes, and the clothes
And everything you know that goes
With loving a girl, I suppose.
I wish I could tell you just how I'm hurt.
Pinpoint the location -- it's in another universe.
When I close my eyes, I see a fire so plain
And my crossed-out name.
-- Ryan Adams (2008)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)