A Video
MHD’s latest vid - an in-person/shadow interview with Liberty Pile about the climate of freedom in Portland and his journey to the ideas of liberty.
A Quote
LiveLeak is one of the most eclectic video sites on the Web today. You can use LiveLeak to find the latest political speeches, reports from various war zones around the world, as well as the most recent celebrity hijinks.
The ad for LiveLeak from a Google-returned site for “top video sites by views.”
Is that really what keeps most folks’ attention today? Being entertained by thugs that steal your money to pay their salary and to spend on things with which you morally disagree? To be entertained by the unquestioning eternal war these thugs have waged - usurping your liberty under the auspices of security? To be entertained by some gossip about pretty people?
Escape this matrix. Think for yourself.
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A Link to FFF's Hornberger to be guest on Napolitano's Freedom Watch tmrw 5-6PM EST at Drexel Univ.
Here’s a piece FFF head Jacob “Bumper” Hornberger recently wrote about Napolitano, Freedom Watch’s host.
Tune in!
A Video
When in Portland last Wednesday we had the chance to chill with Nick “Nicky the heel” Puglia - the co-editor of Fr33AGENTS.com. As is clear, he’s a cool dude.
A Post Entitled Thoughts on ‘End the Fed’ by Ron Paul
When at MHD’s Minneapolis meetup earlier this month my Aunt Kathy, who lives in neighboring St. Paul, handed me a copy of Ron Paul’s newest book - End the Fed. Though I was initially thinking about passing it along to someone that hasn’t yet been exposed to the harms caused by the Fed I decided to first read it myself.
My main motivation was to gauge the level of arguments proffered by Dr. Paul as this book - like most of his other recent books - are aimed at an audience of people interested but not-yet experts.
As I do with many books, I dog-eared many of my favorite quotes and thought-provoking points. And, after Dr. Paul responded positively when questioned about his thoughts on self-government when we interviewed him back on Mother’s Day, I was especially interested to read his comments on black markets.
Thought-provoking points:
I always assumed that the IRS would never accept for tax purposes true exchange at the face value of new coins. [U.S. Mint had made silver coins with dollar amounts - less than the value of the metal itself - stamped onto them] But some enterprising and brave constitionalists challenged this law in Las Vegas and paid the employees in silver and gold coins, and taxes were reported at the much lower level. Many paid no tax due to the lower minimum wage. As expected, it was challenged in court, and miraculously, litigants ‘won’ their case in a hung jury (pg. 78).
That is one thing they [politicians/bureaucrats/the Fed] are not interested in: irrelevancy. Politicians must justify their existence in managing the affairs of the state. They first create the problems and then they are delighted with all the activity in expanding government and solving the very problems they created (pg. 110).
The Federal Reserve should be abolished because it is immoral, unconstitutional, impractical, promotes bad economics, and undermines liberty. Its destructive nature makes it a tool of tyrannical government (pg. 141).
Few understand or decry the immorality of the redistribution of wealth through government force. The fact that many merely desire to help the helpless and create an economically ‘fair and equitable’ society should be irrelevant (pg. 153).
The failure of the economy and the loss of the moral foundation have now set the stage for nationalization (pg. 160).
If we are not vigilant, we will see fascism thrive while liberty is sacrificed (pg. 163).
Fear, misinformation, and ignorance allowed government to ram bad policies down the throats of the American people (pg. 170).
… absent such change, we should be prepared for hyperinflation and a great deal of poverty with a depression and possible street violence as well. The worse the problem, the greater the chance a war will erupt, especially as protectionist sentiments around the world grow (pgs. 207-208).
Agorism-inclined quotes:
Our disastrous tax code has contributed substantially to the need for the underground economy. This need will surely grow as the economy further deteriorates. In economic terms, all this activity is beneficial in the underground, despite politicians’ cries that the government is cheated out of hundreds of billions of dollars in tax revenue. If the market quits functioning, the underground economy will expand exponentially. In some other countries the underground market is responsible for keeping the economy afloat (p. 37).
Defying market forces can only work temporarily. The market, or the black market if necessary, will always set the real prices of everything (p. 49).
There is another force that cannot be ignored: the market. It can overrule even the power of central bankers and government agencies. If nothing else, once the system brought on by the central banks becomes dysfunctional, the underground (real) economy always grows (pg. 118).
I felt like I already had a pretty decent grasp on the issue and the arguments after reading related books by Rothbard and others (I’d even had a chance to tour the Fed in DC when a Cato intern back in the spring of ‘05, which, with its amble use of astrological-laden light fixtures and wall murals, underscored to me that its operations were not based on objective science but the whims of a handful of men), but after finishing End the Fed, I was glad that I took the time to read it and would encourage others to pick up their own copy. Especially insightful about just how unaccountable the Fed really is are the chapters entitled “Conversations with Greenspan” and “Conversations with Bernanke.”
I think it’s fair to say that Dr. Paul has done more than anyone to advance the freedom movement in recent history and if he’s talking about black markets being a good thing it could help move some who were active in his campaign/Revolution (aka politics) to reject the violence of the State entirely and start self-describing as Agorists.
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A Link to In Chicagoland and looking to take your fitness to the next level?
My long-time best friend Dan Wilk is getting his new company - Fusion Fitness - off the ground in Chicago. He’s hands-down the most knowledgeable person I know regarding nutrition/health/training (I turn to him with my questions) and I have no doubt that this venture will be a success.
If you’re in the Chicagoland area and are looking to get in shape or take it to the next level (he works w/ folks that have their pro cards) I strongly encourage you to get in touch with him. He’ll help push/motivate you well past your limits.
A Post Entitled Running around Portland, OR!
Leaving the ‘bucks at 15th/Broadway to go eat in MARV then drive w/ Adam to the Cascade Policy Institute to interview Todd Wynn then to a laundromat (we haven’t done laundry since St. Paul, MN!) before we meet-up with our good friend Nick “Nicky the heel” Puglia (also an anarchist fulltimer active and editor of http://fr33agents.com) before our meetup tonight. Should be fun!
A Video
At our Seattle meetup last Friday we had the chance to meet and talk with Rachel Hawkridge, the chair of the Libertarian Party in the State of Washington. She’s a great person - very outgoing and exited to introduce more people to the ideas of freedom/responsibility.
Among other things, in this video she tells the story about how Norm Stamper’s police department ruined the business and livelihood of Oscar McCoy and his wife. Honestly, I was surprised to hear Stamper allowed such things to happen under his tenure as I know of him through the drug policy movement (the issue that brought me to libertarianism).
In the drug policy world Stamper is looked to as someone “on the right side” - advocating for decriminalization (in fact, when we got to Seattle we contacted Stamper for an interview but learned he was overseas at the moment). Yet, at least in this very real case, it’s clear that wasn’t always true…
A Video
When in Seattle the http://motorhomediaries.com guys were told by Rachel Hawkridge, chair of the http://lpwablog.blogspot.com/ about the http://www.givoice.org/coffeestrong, just outside of Ft. Lewis, which acts as a hub for area anti-war activists/enlisted personnel/vets. There, they happened to run into Josh Stieber and Conor Curran from http://contagiousloveexperiment.wordp… who shared a bit about their backgrounds and what led them to walk/bike across the country.
A Video
“Terrorism is a crime … Report it … Let the experts decide …”
WTF! Strip personal responsibility, create a climate of fear and grant more authority to the police state? No thanks.
According to the LAPD, iWATCH “is a community awareness program created to educate the public about behaviors and activities that may have a connection to terrorism.”
Thanks to @Allison Gibbs for putting this on my radar.
About this site and its Author
the tumblr feed of pete eyrevoluntaryist
liberty on tour co-founder/crew
motorhome diaries co-founder/crew