Anthony Martin’s Weblog

A blog about some guy. 
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A Tribute to the Polish People | The Freeman | Ideas On Liberty

This movement should create a situation in which authorities will control empty stores, but not the market; the employment of workers, but not their livelihood; the official media, but not the circulation of information; printing plants, but not the publishing movement; the mail and telephones, but not communications; and the school system, but not education.

An excellent article about where we're headed in the US. Check out the whole article when you get a chance.

Filed under  //   History   Liberty  

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Suspicionless Checkpoint, Addendum

Lieutenant Stephen D’anjou says that the suspicionless checkpoint (covered previously) was announced to the Daily Breeze on September 2nd.  Again, I find no mention on the Daily Breeze website, so we still have an effective Internet blackout of this information.

The Lieutenant  believes it was also posted on Torrance Police Department website, but he said the website program never published it.  An honest mistake.  I've seen first hand that this can be a common mistake in any web publishing environment.

But there's something else I'd like to point out.  See if you can tell the difference between the two announcements.  One announcement was for the 11th, the other was for June 19th.

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The information published about June 19th, 2009 listed the intersection as well as the time.  But the information published about September 11th, 2009 does not list the intersection.

It's already beyond recognition of what it was originally.  They're just going to keep tweaking and modifying this.

If you still don't understand why this is bad, please review my previous article on the subject.  Also consider an article called "Bloodsuckers in Blue" on Lew Rockewell's web site.

 

Filed under  //   Liberty   Local   Memory Hole   Resistance   Rule of Law   Torrance  

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Last Night's Suspicionless Checkpoint

Last night, I observed a suspicionless checkpoint on Artesia going eastbound toward Van Ness.  All eastbound traffic was being stopped.  A lot of cars were being towed.

I contacted Torrance Police Department to inquire as to why these activities were not announced ahead of time.  The initial response from Lieutenant Stephen D’anjou (via Blackberry) was that the press release was sent out last week.

I believe Lieutenant D’anjou is mistaken.  I checked the Torrance PD web site and no such press release was listed on their press release page.  Maybe a press release was sent out but just not posted on the web page.  The local paper would have gotten a copy if that's the case.

But this is not the case from what I can tell.  Daily Breeze (the local newspaper in Torrance) has announcements for other such activity in the past, but not the one regarding last night.  Was it announced only in hard copies of the newspaper?  Is this an Internet blackout?

Yet indeed, here is a view of the actual suspicionless checkpoint from the corner of Artesia and Van Ness, looking back to the west:

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This is a shot of the parking lot next to the activity:

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Torrance Police Department believes the "DUI" checkpoint is a proven effective method for increased awareness of the dangers of impaired driving.

In the past, by publicizing these enforcement and education efforts, Torrance Police Department believes motorists can be deterred from drinking and driving.

Typically, funding for these kinds of operations is provided by a grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

But last night, they broke from their previous motivation and imposed the suspicionless checkpoint without even prior notice.

Whatever your belief of the effectiveness of these suspicionless checkpoint, know this.  It is a violation of the 4th Amendment of the US Constitution to demand evidence of a crime without probable cause.  The suspicionless checkpoint, by definition, lacks probable cause.

It is much easier to introduce an intrusive measure by watering down the most intrusive aspects.  It is harder to be against suspicionless checkpoints when they are announced ahead of time.  But is easy to just stop announcing them once they become commonplace.

We are no longer on our way to a police state.  We live in a police state now.  It's only going to get worse.

Filed under  //   Liberty   Local   Memory Hole   Resistance   Rule of Law   Torrance   Video  

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Understanding the Voluntary Society

Let's imagine I have extremely troublesome neighbors living next door to me.  And they're not just troublesome, they are downright rotten and they violate my private property with nuisances like noise, smells, occasional vandalism, and verbal threats.

If there was no government solution to everything, there would pretty much always be a voluntary market solution.  Government gives you one-size-fits-all, so that's why they can only think of dumb ideas.  They also have no incentive to avoid waste since they take their resources by force.

The above simple answer is usually not enough for people, so a more detailed solution is as follows:

Protection (Insurance) Agency Example

In my scenario, since there is no government solution, I would hire a private insurance agency to deal with the problem neighbor matter.  I would agree to pay a monthly premium to the agency that they decide on after observing my situation.  They would have an interest in setting the premium to the right level depending on how the neighbors act when they do their inspection(s) before we sign the contract.

I may have a high premium because my neighbors are unusually difficult.  If I have a high premium, I might tolerate my neighbors until I feel I have evidence that they have sufficiently transgressed against my property.   When my neighbor transgresses against my property, I will make a claim and let my agency will decide how to handle it in the most effective manner.

So I don't have to personally think of ways of dealing with the problem because I have paid experts who have a financial incentive to get it done for my particular situation.

If my agency cannot deal with the problem, my contract stipulates that my agency will pay to move me to a new location, lock, stock, and barrel.  So they have a huge incentive to figure out a creative solution.  Either way, problem solved.

Arbitration Agency

I outlined that the contract was between me and my insurance agency. Let's assume this would be a reputable, well know insurance agency. If I have any disputes with them, we both agree to take our dispute to an arbitrator.  If either of us are unhappy with the decision, we can appeal the first arbitrator to a second.  If the first arbitrator is overturned, the first arbitrator pays, so they have an incentive to do it right the first time.  In fact, it would always be "loser pays" for any dispute.

If the loser cannot appeal and does not make the winner whole, they are financially ostracized, which can ruin a business and an individuals who want to make future contracts.  So civilized people would want to avoid it at all costs; they will abide by the arbitrators decision.

This is called a "voluntary society."  As opposed to a society that operates on coercive violence.

You may wonder if police still exist in this scenario, and I think they certainly could, as long as they keep to themselves when there is no calls out for them and when people have other arrangements.

The less we look to government solutions, the better off we'll be.

In this scenario I describe, it would be highly unusual to look to any kind of government judges after already agreeing to a private solution.  Someone who appeals to government after a getting a private arbitrator would also be ostracized.  They don't mix well unless all parties agree to mix them.  It's like using baseball rules in a game of cricket.

Take the SMS ban while driving.  That should most certainly be an insurance arrangement.  Your insurance company should ask if you intend to SMS while driving.  If you say yes, you should pay more.

The Altruistic Body

It might be hard to believe that it is never necessary to look to government for any reason.  Maybe you are looking for a wise, altruistic, disinterested body with unlimited resources that knows the likely outcomes of the great many schemes of man?

This person knows if you've been bad or good, right?  I think I have heard of him.  He wears a red coat and has a white beard, right? Rides a slay, I think.

Yeah, I stopped believing in Father Christmas a long time ago.

I joke.  But I don't.  I'm sorry if that seemed glib or condescending, but that's what I think of the "all seeing eye" of government.  It's fiction.  It's Santa Claus.

Yet I do believe there is a set of overarching laws that all market actors must follow without exception.  They can be boiled down to:

  1. All parties do what they agree to do.
  2. Non-aggression Principle is in play (which means do not initiate force).
  3. Failure to follow 1 or 2 will result in ostracization.


You may wonder if the above rules I set out require a governing authority.  I do not believe they do.  That's the point.  Enforcement turns completely on the idea of ostracization.

P.J. O'Rourke said, “When the legislature controls what is bought and sold the first thing that is bought and sold is legislators.”

Therefore it follows that if ostracization controls what is bought and sold the first thing that is bought and sold is ostracization.  Meaning you will do everything to protect against, and buy protection from, whatever limits you in the market place.  It becomes a commodity.

At Least Repeal Regulation

In America, Vice Presidente Dan Quayle once talked about how something like 100 or 100,000 regulations being eliminated in a particular government agency.  I can't remember the details.  But it resulted in a net savings of $20 or $25 billion for the businesses being deregulated.  How much do you think would have been saved if they just got rid of the whole ball of wax?

Regulations cost money to implement and enforce.  Obviously someone has to benefit or else why would regulations come about?  Government is one body that benefits.  But market competitors also benefit.  So they lobby to regulate their own industry.

Regulation is really just government backed "cartelization" (as in "to make a cartel").  A private cartel that has no government privileged to back it cannot last very long.  Someone in the cartel will lower their prices to take advantage of the other cartel members who made a pact to keep their prices high.  Once one member lowers his prices, the whole thing falls apart.

Government regulations have the same effect, but they are harder to bust than cartels because government regulation carry the "color of law."

For example, in Virgina, there's a town that requires professional photographers need get a special license.  Illegal photographers cannot advertise their business in the paper or the phone book. Regulation was supposed to improve the industry but all it did was increase the capital required to start.

Another example, in 1934, the last taxi license was issued in New York City for $10.  A fixed number of licenses traded back and forth from then on.  Now, those licenses trade for around $100,000.  So taxi drivers cannot start their own business without very heavy capital.The little guy has been excluded and the big guy likes this arrangement.

That's all regulation does.  It makes people feel good (a false sense of security) and gives the big guy a huge advantage.

I think private (for profit) certification is a better option instead.  We have the Better Business Bureaus and Consumer Reports, but their role is undermined by government regulations that overlap with them.  Ever hear of the UL?  That's the private body that tests and certifies electrical equipment.  The UL is successful *because* the government never really got into that field.  Many people think the UL *is* a government agency, but it's nothing of the sort.

The certification companies position their business so that they profit by their expert opinions.  They spend limited funds judiciously to test and certify.  If it turns out they fudged something, they are putting their name and business on the line.  Without regulation, someone is always ready to compete with them, just waiting for the smallest slip-up.

Child Molesters

You might ask, "Do I really think a voluntary society can deal with things like child molesters?"

I think the incentive to fix problems is there if you look and are free to innovate.  Remember, if I knew exactly how the free market would handle each opportunity, I could be dictator.  There are innovative solutions we could never dream of.  The way it might work is thusly:

Imagine there exists a child with only one parent and that parent is pretty much the only one who knows the child exists.  So for the most part, nobody cares if the child exists or not.  Then assume the child is abused by his or her parent.

Let's suppose a private protection agency is formed to seek out evidence to suggest children like this could exist.  Let's further suppose that this protection agency could put together evidence by using investigative technique like interviewing neighbors and going through people's garbage, etc.  These techniques are not aggressive techniques and therefore do not violate the non-initiation of force principle.  And *if* they are perceived by anyone as a violation, they can go to arbitration.

The protection agency has to take risks, but they have to also weigh the risk against losing settlements in arbitration.

The protection agency weighs the evidence and the risk against the incentive to put their reputation and livelihood on the line to break into the suspected house of a child abuser to rescue the child.  They then go to arbitration with hard evidence and an actual perpetrator in their custody.

For the initial incentive, we need to assume there is a standing bounty for child abusers in this voluntary society.  Voluntary charities can put up money and resources to give incentive to protection agencies.

The child will grow up and might eventually need protection agencies for him or herself.

This protection agency could be thinking of the long term goals of saving children in order to build a well known and successful brand, thereby offering service back to the children it saves.

This is just one isolated line of reasoning.  I think this line of reasoning can be adapted to a lot of different scenarios or even ignored and approached in a completely different, voluntary way.

No Utopia

I make no claim that any voluntary society would be utopia.  But wild-cards like serial killers would have to deal with an armed society.  And an armed society is a polite society, which would certainly be an improvement.  Neighbors would know each-other and look out for one another because they know they only have each-other and any mutual protection pacts they've developed.

I don't see how charity is Utopian.  Charity is something conservatives point to whenever they make arguments against high taxes.

I don't see how voluntaryism is Utopian.  Voluntary interaction is a very fundamental form of free association.  The notion of "unlimited contract" is just another way of talking about voluntary interaction.

There may in fact be situations where it's not lucrative to participate in a particular market.  That is called a wasteful enterprise.  Unfortunately, our current system keeps us in the dark about exactly which situations are lucrative and which ones aren't.  It's not a conspiracy, it's just how socialism works.

So if there's no money in belly-button-lint-removal, nobody should be trying to make a living doing it.  But if there's a government paying people to do it, they'll do it, even if it's wasteful, to the detriment of other tasks.  That's basically socialism.

Socialism distorts market signals.  Like right now, the cash-for-clunkers program is distorting market signals.  Car companies think there's demand for certain models, so they will move capital* to produce those models in order to meet the "demand."  But the demand is artificial.  If the distortion stops, the demand will fall.  It has nothing to do with real resources being traded.  It's all artificial.

* (Moving capital is a HUGE SERIOUS BIG deal.  Over time, it is where financial bubbles come from.  Moving capital, by definition, makes it hard to "go back" to another capital position.)

In a free society, it might not be lucrative to start a daisy-picking agency.  So if it's not lucrative, or if it's not mildly rewarding, it won't be pursued as a profession.  To suggest it should be perused by force for *any* reason, and force funds to be allocated to that pursue, is the very definition socialism.

So if catching a really smart serial killer is a wasteful enterprise, it shouldn't be anyone's profession.  Maybe it can be someone's hobby.

By the way, may I ask how police in our society, who are paid by force, can catch really smart serial killers who can not be caught in a voluntary society?

Filed under  //   Best Of   Economic   History   Liberty   Political   Rule of Law  

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Amby Baby Hammock

Is it safe or legal?  That's what parents usually asks.  We have an Amby Baby hammock, and I have to say it's one of the best inventions ever.  Both Hannah and Titus agree it is comfortable.  When we used it with Hannah, it enabled her mother to have her first full night of sleep.  I had to attend to her, but I didn't have to wake mommy.  This is Titus' first day using it, and he seems to approve.  We'll see if it is as effective on him, although he almost seems too big for it already.

Anyway, back to "safe or legal."  If you have to ask the authorities, then you deserve "no" for an answer.  Be an adult and do your own research.  Decide for yourself and for your family.  Our kids are comfortable and happy in these contraptions.  Your mileage may vary.

Filed under  //   Home Front   Liberty   Photo  
Posted from Torrance, CA

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My Gadsden Flag On Display

I pulled out my yellow "DONT TREAD ON ME" flag at the park yesterday when they started up with the patriotic stuff. I'm sure it just confused people who saw it. It's more of a New England symbol and has little connection to California.

         
Click here to download:
My_Gadsden_Flag_On_Displaytag_.zip (13510 KB)

Filed under  //   Liberty   Photo  

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I say it's no longer a free country, so stop saying it is.

Everything we do is governed even though we're supposed to be the "land of the free." We are not free. We haven't been for quite a while. No, having the right to vote does not make anyone free. Having free speech doesn't either. Those things are nice to have. But if voting was really effective, they would have banned it long ago.

If you have the choice to vote for a pile of crap on the right and a pile of crap on the left, guess what? That's not freedom. If you have the right to voice your opinion but you can't act upon it, that's not freedom either.

But even free speech is being eroded. Just search for "first amendment" on YouTube. I first started doing that in 2007 and I was shocked even back then and it's only getting worse.

What kind of tolerance should we have for the loss of freedom? Is it alright to lose 1%? 2%? What percentage are you willing to lose? 50%? I think any amount of freedom anyone is willing to lose is proof of forfeiture of all freedom.

Think of it this way. How much of your child are you willing to lose?  1%? 2%? Is that a finger or a toe of your baby? If you are willing to part with a piece of your own flesh and blood, you don't love them.  You don't deserve them at all.

How do you feel when a cop is driving right behind you? Do you feel safe? Be honest, it's anxiety. That anxiety is what just a little lack of freedom feels like. Our government is good at one thing. It's good at trying to show people how to keep from feeling anxiety as long as they obey. That's not freedom either.

A person in a free society would only feel anxiety from protectors if he or she has harmed another person. But you and I feel anxiety from law enforcement even without harming another person. This is because we know laws no longer require a personal victim. Since laws allow society to be victims, we are all guilty. In a free society, cops only bother criminals who harm people, not society.

This is because society cannot be a victim. Only people can be victims. A victim or advocate of the victim must be able to face the one being accused. A victim should be a party that can be sued if a false accusation is made. Society cannot be a victim because no one can put society on trail. Since it can't work both ways, it can't work.

Fifty percent of your wage is taken by taxation, if you count all forms of taxation. And the price of everything is at least twice what it would be if corporations didn't have all their tax breaks (aka corporate welfare). Economically, we are nowhere near freedom.

Can you eat a peanut-butter sandwich without breaking some law? Somewhere? Guess what, you can't. There is a law against eating peanut-butter sandwiches, but you never knew it. You would actually have to research this in order to know when and where it is appropriate.

Here's another example. Can you eat oranges in your bathtub without breaking some law somewhere? Nope. It's illegal somewhere. But where?

These are silly examples, I know. However, a serious approach to deal with this is for law abiding citizens who try to proactively avoid breaking the law. They think they can just get a permit to eat their peanut-butter sandwiches or oranges in their bathtub. Great idea, right? If there's a law, surly they wouldn't issue a permit.

But if you have to ask for a permit, that's just like asking for permission. In a free society, nobody asks for permission. In a free society, you have responsibility for your actions and deal with the ramifications without needing law to guide anyone. We can no longer do this, therefore, we are no longer free.

The exception in a free society to asking for permission is when you're on private property. But private property is a total fiction today if government can tell you not to smoke on private property. If they really have jurisdiction on private property, then that's just proof it's not private property.

The truth is, unlike most of the world and most of history, we are as free as we want to be, here in the US. Apparently we just don't want to be free because when freedom is outlawed, only outlaws will have freedom. Most people want to be law abiding, so there goes that. But there are unjust laws. In fact, most laws are unjust by their very framing.

So just ignore your rights and they'll go away.

Filed under  //   Best Of   Economic   Liberty   Political   Rant   Resistance  

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Sam Kicked Out of Jail #fsp #tlot #tvot #tcot #freekeene #liberty

Have you ever heard of anyone being kicked out of jail?  I have.  Sam Dodson of Keene, NH was kicked out of jail yesterday.  Here are the details from Ridley Report:



Here is Sam's victory call, right after he got kicked out:

Hello free staters! This is SamIam and the jail has just thrown me out. The forced me to agree to PR terms that I’m already in violation of, I told them I did not understand.  That I did not agree to them. I did not sign them. I requested my attorney who’s going to be here in 10 minutes. And they pushed me out the door, in the orange close. I guess I get to keep them. And gave me all my stuff. I was escorted out. They would not explain anything or put anything in writing. They were told just to release me and so I’m out of jail. Thank you guys for everybody who’s helped me, sent letters, cards, emails, done all the things you had to do to support me along the way and  I’m looking forward to getting back to life and challenging a lot of this in court. Thank you, glad to be out, looking forward to talking all soon. Goodbye.

PR stands for "Persona Recognizance."  When Sam said he was already in violation of the PR terms, he was referring to the fact that the terms required that he not own fire-arms, for example.  He could not agree to the terms because it would immediately result in his violating the terms upon agreement.  He was unable to magically disown the guns he owned by agreeing to the terms, therefore, it would have been a violation.

The officials in the prison could not get him to sign the agreement so they read it to him and asked if he understood.  Sam told them he did not understand, so he did not agree to the terms.

I've heard of release terms like this.  Some require that the prisoner "agrees to obey all of the laws."  How can anyone agree to that, especially someone who was originally in jail for civil disobedience?  Sam risked being held longer if he didn't agree to the terms.  Instead, they just kicked him out.

WOW!  Way to stand your ground, Sam!  If you'd like to read more of my writings about Sam, click here.

Filed under  //   Liberty   Resistance  

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Abortion Common Ground? #abortion #liberty

Today, the president said:

... when we open our hearts and our minds to those who may not think like we do or believe what we do -- that's when we discover at least the possibility of common ground.

He was talking about the abortion "debate."  At first, I believed there was no way to discern "common ground" on the abortion debate.  But then I realized, the common ground is the use of force.  US Presidents either advocate the use force to ban abortion or they advocate the use force to perform them.  I object to the use of force for both situations.

I am being taxed to perform abortions.  If abortions were illegal, I would be taxed to prevent them.  It is a form of welfare either way and it is wrong.

For the record, I object to being taxed to prevent things like rape and murder too.  Law enforcement doesn't do a very good job at preventing it anyway.  I would rather protect myself with my own resources, not the resources of someone else.

Filed under  //   Liberty   Political  

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"Balkanize"- Dada Orwell music vid

Filed under  //   Liberty   Political  

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