Government Archive

Too good not to share

Posted January 4, 2012 By Landis V

How to Explain Gay Rights To an Idiot

Simple, humorous, straightforward.  Could probably be stretched to include other rights, but it would dilute the simplicity and the clarity.

Be the first to comment

Iowa Caucuses

Posted January 4, 2012 By Landis V

Some good things and some bad things from the Iowa caucuses. Opening with some humor, one commenter I read noted the misfortune that Santorum didn’t pull it out in the end, providing the amusement of “Comes From Behind” headlines. In all honesty, Rick “If You’re Going To Live Under My Roof When I’m In The White House You’ll Do As I Say” Santorum is the only candidate who’s a marginally worse choice for your vote than Obama. Romney’s victory is sad and disheartening, though it would have been equally disheartening to see a Gingrich or Perry victory there – these candidates are such a minimally better choice than the status quo that we might as well at least keep what rights we have (as long as, heaven forbid, the current nimwit doesn’t get to appoint any more Supreme Court justices) and save a few million in redecorating costs for the White House.

On the plus side, Michele Bachmann is finally out of the race, though I fear the votes that remained behind her will shift to InSantorum as I see them as the two candidates with the greatest parity on the ticket (with Paul/Johnson as the second closest and Romney/Gingrich rounding out the pairings IMO). Seeing Perry and Gingrich satisfyingly distant is encouraging, but it’s still the first caucus and I’m not sure either of them put any real focus on Iowa. Perhaps best, while Ron Paul came in third, he’ll still get the same seven delegates as the top two vote-takers.

What’s the takeaway? Whatever else you do, don’t vote for Santorum. Or Obama.

Be the first to comment

Cartoon Overanalysis

Posted December 26, 2011 By Landis V

I was watching an episode of Super Readers on PBS Kids with my daughters this morning, and they based the story upon a derivative of the story of The Emperor’s New Clothes, simplified a bit so as to perhaps be more easily followed by younger minds and focusing less on the social aspects of not wanting to be singled out by the flock as less competent (and thus going along with ridiculous suggestions so as to “appear intelligent”). The simplification of the story was OK, but it did make me think about the impact of the first time we hear a story, song, etc, and our very common acceptance of that as “right”, and versions we hear later as being “wrong”. I think the adaptation angle of that is OK, and it’s a good mental exercise.

What really got me thinking, though, was the aspect of puppetmastery exercised by a lower level advisory body (in this case, the tailor) to the decisionmaker. I never really caught it in the original story, nor even thought about its being there. But it was somehow exacerbated in this version, such that the tailor seemed to hold the emperor in contempt and believed his importance to be higher than that of the emperor. While that happens in everyday life (look at what some of the advisory councils and cabinet members have been able to push our presidents and congresspersons to do), I hadn’t directly thought before about the subtle or subliminal impact some of these observed relationships – even in entertainment as simple cartoons – can have on kids; I was focused more on the “higher level” message of the programming (in the case of this particular episode, the message was clearly stated as “speak up” – let people know your thoughts and feelings). My real problem in this particular episode was the subjugation of the emperor, and the assimilation into “flock thought”, especially of someone who should be a thought leader and decisionmaker, and thus putting this in the realm of being even more acceptable and appropriate for John Q. Public.

I’ll admit our kids watch some cartoons, and in a perfect world they would watch less and we’d have greater real interaction with community, family, and friends, rendering cartoons and shows to a merely “entertainment” scenario. I will also acknowledge that there is a decent amount of educational value in many of the shows. I know it’s overthinking a simple cartoon, and I suspect I’m reading a lot of what I see as societal problems into my interpretation. I do think there is too little thought put into the decisions we’re making and the direction we’re heading, and it disturbs me and leads me to overanalyze cartoons.

Be the first to comment

Property rights – allodial or fee simple?

Posted December 1, 2011 By Landis V

The proper right of ownership of land or other real property is something I’ve wrestled with for some time, and will probably continue to do so in the future. I certainly won’t solve it tonight.

Essentially, possession of property exists in one of two states: allodial title or fee simple. What’s the difference? To paraphrase, fee simple grants absolute ownership of property, except as “limited by the four basic government powers of taxation, eminent domain, police power, and escheat”. Allodial title grants absolute ownership of property, but for the decision of the sovereign. Hobbes would argue that these two are essentially the same, as the decision of the sovereign is law, and that as such, the sovereign has reign to at any time to exercise the same government powers which limit fee simple ownership (see Leviathan, audio and Project Gutenberg links at bottom of article).

Fee simple bothers me, because that for which one has already paid or has taken by some reasonable force (I will not sidetrack on what might be a reasonable use of force right now, suffice to say I believe such exists), should not be subject to loss due to one’s inability to contribute or perhaps temporary hardship. Your ownership should be absolute to the extent that you require no access to common services and infrastructure, and that you are able to provide completely for your own welfare within the confines of your own property. Difficult in any case, I’m not sure whether it’s possible or not.

This is in direct conflict with my belief that the primary, and almost sole (again, will not diverge here) purpose of government is the defense of the property of its jurisdiction, and that the contribution to such defense is the responsibility of all property holders under the sovereign. Perhaps it would be reasonable that those who do not pay are subject, then, to the loss of defense of their property from within. That is to say, the right or worthiness of the individual to hold said property in lieu of remittance for sovereign defense of ownership then falls to the community – the peers, if you will – of the owner. They then have a decision to allow the propertyholder to continue his allodial title, and perhaps even to provide defense for said title of their own volition in the event of other internal or external attack on right to hold, or to take – by force or by lack of protection – the property as their own, and to take over responsibility for payment of its defense to the sovereign.

A related idea that I have considered is that a man should be free to offer for sale to another the fruits of his labor at his own discretion – specifically, this would be counter to the provisions of the Civil Rights movement. Not to advocate that discrimination based upon any arbitrary characteristic is reasonable, indeed it’s generally a stupid precept. However, at least in our current society, there are certain members whose presence is generally not desired within certain communities, and I have considered at some length whether it would be reasonable for merchants to be able to refuse goods and services to those they consider undesirable, such that it would be an impediment to the undesirable’s ability to remain within a region where their presence was not desired. If there were sufficient merchants who collectively agreed that a person or persons’ presence was unwanted, it would provide strong incentive for that individual to either find more accommodating residence. Alternatively, I cannot find fault in violent uprising from one who is oppressed in order to take what is required to provide for himself or his family.

Now I have wandered much farther from the topic of property rights than I had intended, but I’ve at least shifted some of these thoughts and ideas to copy. These are simply theories, and always evolving, but it gives a reference for me to reflect upon in the future and see how they may have evolved.

Be the first to comment

5/27

Posted May 27, 2011 By Landis V

Do you want to know who you are? Don’t ask. Act! Action will delineate and define you. — Thomas Jefferson

“Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe to assure the survival and the success of liberty.” –John F. Kennedy

Write congressmen about debt ceiling, PROTECT IP act.

http://homepage.mac.com/steveklein/hangman.html – poem

Be the first to comment

5/19

Posted May 19, 2011 By Landis V

http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/3612AbuM154/CDC-Warns-of-Zombie-Apocalypse Looks like an amusing read.

http://thatwhichis.tumblr.com/post/5616002323/20-stats-about-the-us-housing-market-that-will-make-you

http://steveg769.bizland.com/spiralsbysteven2/ Wooden gears

http://idle.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2170514&cid=36185434 A great idea for a honeypot FTP

http://www.lexinter.net/LOTWVers4/restatement_(second)_of_contracts.htm http://www.ali.org/

Really, really need to take some time to play with cfengine.

Had a funny thought about Apple (of the garden) being treated like a religion, “meticulous management of customer experience” (i.e., “herding the flock”), and suddenly it’s now the Rapture.

openssl s_client -connect #Command-line SSL connections

Would be nice to have a ping command with a configurable (via command line switches) exponential weighted moving average for packet loss. That way, you could watch some statistics on loss over intervals while running from a command line, and not just be interpreting loss for the time since you started the command an hour (day/week/whatever) earlier.

http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2011/03/diy-cellphone-microscope/?pid=1112&viewall=true I’m a little more interested in the spectrometer.  I always thought it would be interesting to have one of those.

Be the first to comment

5/18

Posted May 18, 2011 By Landis V

http://dailypaul.com/159129/ben-bernanke-gets-schooled-about-andrew-jackson-currencies-and-federal-debt

” Post-Gutenberg, the scarce resource is knowledge and insight, not access to data.” — Seth Godin, http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2011/05/the-future-of-the-library.html

Be the first to comment