Tuesday, July 10, 2007
Saturday, February 17, 2007
The Neoconservative Empire
The Neoconservative Empire
by Ron Paul
Statement on the Iraq War Resolution
Before the U.S. House of Representatives February 14, 2007
| ||
This grand debate is welcomed but it could be that this is nothing more than a distraction from the dangerous military confrontation approaching with Iran and supported by many in leadership on both sides of the aisle.
This resolution, unfortunately, does not address the disaster in Iraq. Instead, it seeks to appear opposed to the war while at the same time offering no change of the status quo in Iraq. As such, it is not actually a vote against a troop surge. A real vote against a troop surge is a vote against the coming supplemental appropriation that finances it. I hope all of my colleagues who vote against the surge today will vote against the budgetary surge when it really counts: when we vote on the supplemental.
The biggest red herring in this debate is the constant innuendo that those who don’t support expanding the war are somehow opposing the troops. It’s nothing more than a canard to claim that those of us who struggled to prevent the bloodshed and now want it stopped are somehow less patriotic and less concerned about the welfare of our military personnel.
Osama bin Laden has expressed sadistic pleasure with our invasion of Iraq and was surprised that we served his interests above and beyond his dreams on how we responded after the 9/11 attacks. His pleasure comes from our policy of folly getting ourselves bogged down in the middle of a religious civil war, 7,000 miles from home that is financially bleeding us to death. Total costs now are reasonably estimated to exceed $2 trillion. His recruitment of Islamic extremists has been greatly enhanced by our occupation of Iraq.
Unfortunately, we continue to concentrate on the obvious mismanagement of a war promoted by false information and ignore debating the real issue which is: Why are we determined to follow a foreign policy of empire building and pre-emption which is unbecoming of a constitutional republic?
Those on the right should recall that the traditional conservative position of non-intervention was their position for most of the 20th Century-and they benefited politically from the wars carelessly entered into by the political left. Seven years ago the Right benefited politically by condemning the illegal intervention in Kosovo and Somalia. At the time conservatives were outraged over the failed policy of nation building.
It’s important to recall that the left, in 2003, offered little opposition to the pre-emptive war in Iraq, and many are now not willing to stop it by de-funding it or work to prevent an attack on Iran.
The catch-all phrase, “War on Terrorism,” in all honesty, has no more meaning than if one wants to wage a war against criminal gangsterism. It’s deliberately vague and non definable to justify and permit perpetual war anywhere, and under any circumstances. Don’t forget: the Iraqis and Saddam Hussein had absolutely nothing to do with any terrorist attack against us including that on 9/11.
Special interests and the demented philosophy of conquest have driven most wars throughout history. Rarely has the cause of liberty, as it was in our own revolution, been the driving force. In recent decades our policies have been driven by neo-conservative empire radicalism, profiteering in the military industrial complex, misplaced do-good internationalism, mercantilistic notions regarding the need to control natural resources, and blind loyalty to various governments in the Middle East.
For all the misinformation given the American people to justify our invasion, such as our need for national security, enforcing UN resolutions, removing a dictator, establishing a democracy, protecting our oil, the argument has been reduced to this: If we leave now Iraq will be left in a mess-implying the implausible that if we stay it won’t be a mess.
Since it could go badly when we leave, that blame must be placed on those who took us there, not on those of us who now insist that Americans no longer need be killed or maimed and that Americans no longer need to kill any more Iraqis. We’ve had enough of both!
Resorting to a medical analogy, a wrong diagnosis was made at the beginning of the war and the wrong treatment was prescribed. Refusing to reassess our mistakes and insist on just more and more of a failed remedy is destined to kill the patient-in this case the casualties will be our liberties and prosperity here at home and peace abroad.
There’s no logical reason to reject the restraints placed in the Constitution regarding our engaging in foreign conflicts unrelated to our national security. The advice of the founders and our early presidents was sound then and it’s sound today.
We shouldn’t wait until our financial system is completely ruined and we are forced to change our ways. We should do it as quickly as possible and stop the carnage and financial bleeding that will bring us to our knees and force us to stop that which we should have never started.
We all know, in time, the war will be de-funded one way or another and the troops will come home. So why not now?
February 15, 2007
Dr. Ron Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
Thursday, February 15, 2007
President's Budget: *Everything* Is A Priority
Sounds pretty impressive, doesn't it? The president is proposing to eliminate or reduce all programs that aren't "top priorities." Wow!
But hold on. Chris Edwards of the Cato Institute has done the math.
Says Edwards: "Total federal outlays in 2007 will be $2.784 . Thus, programs that are "top priorities" of the Bush administration account for 99.6 percent of all spending."
So Bush proposes to ruthlessly chop away at all that non-top-priority federal spending -- the whole "whopping" 0.4 percent of it. Meanwhile, the 99.6 percent that is "top priority" will continue and grow. After all, it is a top priority.
Source: Cato Blog: http://www.cato-at-liberty.org/
More on budget shenanigans:
http://www.reason.com/news/show/118632.html
READ MY LIPS:
Surprise: The Laws of Economics Work!
Increase the price of labor by imposing a minimum wage, and jobs -- especially low-paying entry level jobs -- are destroyed. The law of supply and demand.
Last month Arizona raised the minimum wage to $6.75 per hour from $5.15 per hour -- a 31 percent increase.
The results? This headline from the Arizona Republic newspaper tells the story:
New Wage Boost Puts Squeeze on Teenage Workers Across Arizona: Employers Are Cutting Back hours, Laying Off Young Staffers.An excerpt from the story:
Some Arizona employers, especially those in the food industry, say payroll budgets have risen so much.... that they're cutting hours, instituting hiring freezes and laying off employees.These anecdotes only affirm what minimum wage critics have been saying for 60 years. A new study by the non-profit Employment Policies Institute (EPI) finds that for every 10% increase in the minimum wage:
Mark Messner, owner of Pepi's Pizza in Phoenix, says he plans to lay off three teenage workers and decrease hours worked by others.
"I've had to go to some of my kids and say, Look, my payroll just increased 13 percent. Sorry, I don't have any hours for you."
Tom Kelly, owner of Mary Coyle Ol' Fashion Ice Cream Parlor in Phoenix, voted for the minimum-wage increase. But he said, "The new law has impacted us quite a bit."
It added about $2,000 per month in expenses. The store, which employs mostly teen workers, has cut back on hours and has not replaced a couple of workers who quit.
Kelly raised the wages of workers who already made above minimum wage to ensure pay scales stayed even. As a result, "we have to be a lot more efficient" and must increase menu prices, he said.
- Minority unemployment increased by 3.9%
- Hispanic unemployment increased by 4.9%
- Minority teen unemployment increased 6.6%
- African American teen unemployment increased by 8.4%
- Low-skilled unemployment (i.e., those lacking a high school diploma) increased by 8%
Source: Arizona Republic
http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/0210biz-teenwork0210.html
http://www.epionline.org/news_detail.cfm?rid=95
More Money For Failed Drug War Ads
A nearly five-year-long, $47 million investigation -- carefully reviewed by the federal Government Accountability Office (GAO) -- found that the program failed to reduce teen drug use.
Worse, "greater exposure to the campaign was associated with weaker anti-drug norms and increases in the perceptions that others use marijuana." After seeing the ads, non-marijuana-using teens were actually more likely to try the drug!
That's a spectacular failure by any standards. And how does the government reward failure?
With more money, of course. President Bush has proposed a huge increase -- a "surge," one is tempted to say -- in funding for the ad program: a 31 percent increase that would raise the budget to $130 million.
Sources: The Politico: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0207/2673.html
http://www.theadvocates.org/liberator/vol-11-num-11.html
GAO Report: http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d06818.pdf
Friday, February 09, 2007
Accountability and Culpability - Theirs and Ours
Accountability and Culpability - Theirs and Ours
by Pauline Rocco
The Christian seers reliability quotient has been on par with Enron's CEO and accounting department, but at least the Justice Department is investigating Enron. We can't say the same about any major Christian leader or organization. They are never held accountable for their misinformation, their disinformation, their blatant lies.
Once upon a time we may have believed we could dismiss this end of the world blather as laughable nonsense. I assure you this is no laughing matter. An outbreak of war in the Middle East will affect all of us.
Recently French Ambassador Daniel Bernard asked a rather succinct question at a dinner party in London. He described Israel as, "that shitty little country," and asked, "Why should we all be in danger of World War Three because of these people?"
Why, indeed! Could it be because we have allowed Christians to wield their illegitimate power over our foreign policy? When was the last time you heard the United States' unqualified support of Israel questioned in the context of separation of church and state? How many politicians manipulate their power and authority in support of Israel based on their belief that it's the least we can do for God's "chosen people?" America is filled with people living in fear of the bible's threat of woe to those who aren't nice to the Jews. Isn't it time WE said, "Whoa" to the sheep gleefully hoping to bring on Armageddon so Jesus will come back and move into the White House? Can't you just imagine that while listening to George Bush bray about 'rooting out the evil ones', Ariel Sharon must be thinking,
"I, like Samson, am having great success using the jawbone of an ass!!"
Really! Aren't you getting fed up with Christian interlopers laying claim to our heritage and our destiny?
Our kindred spirits of the Enlightenment expect more from us! The Founding Fathers risked everything they had and more to give us what we take for granted: The freedom to govern our country based on the use of reason. They gave us freedom from the tyranny of the church that had used (and still uses) its power to enslave people with guilt and fear. Be inspired by Thomas Jefferson's words,
"There is not a truth existing which I fear, or which I would not want known to the whole world."
One truth we should help make known to the whole world is Jefferson's description of the bible's Book of Revelation as...
"...the ravings of a maniac, no more worthy nor capable of explanation than the incoherences of our own nightly dreams."
But don't just sit there thinking about all this... DO something about it! Be encouraged by Johann Goethe's words,
"What ever you do, or dream you can do, begin it! Boldness has genius, power, and magic in it."
Friday, January 05, 2007
The Next Big Property Rights Battle?
"Bart Didden wanted to put a CVS pharmacy on his property in Port Chester, N.Y. He even obtained approvals from the local planning board.
"But because a portion of the CVS site was in a blighted redevelopment zone, Mr. Didden was told that planning board approval wasn't enough. He'd have to reach an understanding with a private company that had been selected by Port Chester officials to control all construction inside the renewal zone.
"The developer, Gregg Wasser of G&S Port Chester, told Didden he'd have to pay $800,000 or give G&S a 50 percent stake in the CVS business. If Didden refused, Mr. Wasser said, he would have Port Chester condemn and seize his property and instead of a CVS he'd put a Walgreens drugstore on the site.
"Didden refused. The next day, the Village of Port Chester began legal proceedings to seize Didden's land by eminent domain."
So begins a Christian Science Monitor story on what is shaping up as the next big U.S. property rights battle. The case has made it to the U.S. Supreme Court, which will decide whether a local government can give a private company like G&S the power to extort payment from a property owner by using the threat of seizing that property.
The fight to defend Didden's property rights is being led by the Institute For Justice (IJ), a libertarian public interest, non-profit law firm that defends individual rights. IJ became nationally famous for fighting the notorious Kelo eminent domain case, which they ultimately lost. In the Kelo decision, the Supreme Court ruled that local governments could seize private property and turn it over to favored private developers. That case set off a firestorm of protest across the country, leading many state legislatures to pass laws prohibiting Kelo-type seizures.
IJ hopes to persuade the Supreme Court to rule against the kind of extortion being used against property owner Didden.
"We want the Supreme Court to rule that the Constitution does not permit governments or citizens acting on their behalf to demand money in exchange for allowing property owners to keep what is rightfully theirs," said Dana Berliner of IJ. "The very fact that we have to ask the highest court in the land for such a ruling underscores how precarious and threatening things are getting for ordinary American landowners."
"My case is about extortion through the abuse of eminent domain; it is about payoffs and government run amok," says property owner Didden. "It took me years of hard work to buy that property, pay off my mortgages and really feel like I own it. How dare the Village of Port Chester and this developer threaten me in this way. Unless the Supreme Court takes up my case, I fear for anyone else who owns a piece of property -- not just in Port Chester, but anywhere a politically connected developer is eyeing it."
This case, and the Kelo case, illustrate the ugliness of the sleazy deals local governments are making with developers to deprive property owners of their most basic rights. Let's hope that the Supreme Court rules against this practice.
Otherwise, government-connected developers across America will be given a green light to threaten property owners: "Your money or your land."
Sources:
Christian Science Monitor http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0102/p02s01-usju.html
Institute for Justice http://www.ij.org/private_property/didden/12_18_06pr.html
Wednesday, December 27, 2006
John McCain’s War On Blogs
John McCain has made clear that he doesn’t like the blogosphere. Always an enemy of real freedom and the U.S. Constitution McCain has introduced legislation to disparge and nullify the U.S. Constitution's guarantees of the people's RIGHTS to freedom of speech and freedom of the press ---WITHOUT AMENDING THE CONSTITUTION as required!
Click on the title for the full story.
Iraq: Fighting continues, McCain babbles nonsense
The whole truth:
http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2006/12/14/ap/headlines/d8m0kgv80.txt
Bring them home NOW. ---Russ
Sunday, December 10, 2006
FL: Real gun trumps fake
More about this victory for freedom:
http://tinyurl.com/yeakz9
Seven million in US "justice" system
http://tinyurl.com/y4eeqd
My health care is making me sick
by Donna Mancini
The rest of the article:
http://www.libertyforall.net/?p=399
Back to basics
by L. Neil Smith
Full story:
http://www.ncc-1776.org/tle2006/tle395-20061126-07.html
Sunday, December 03, 2006
Brittany K. Behne injured in a head-on collision.
Full story:
http://www.chronotype.com/newarticle.asp?T=L&ArticleID=11240
Thursday, November 30, 2006
The Energizer - Amory Lovins' Oil Free Vision
The U.S. economy keeps going and going and going—
without any oil !
By Cal Fussman
"AMORY LOVINS is a physicist, economist, inventor, automobile designer, consultant to 18 heads of state, author of 29 books, and cofounder of Rocky Mountain Institute, an environmental think tank. most of all, he's a man who takes pride in saving energy. The electricity bill at his 4,000-square-foot home in Old Snowmass, Colorado, is five dollars a month, and he's convinced he can do the same for all of us. His book Winning the Oil Endgame shows how the united states can save as much oil as it gets from the persian gulf by 2015 and how all oil imports can be eliminated by 2040. And that's just for starters." (Feb 06)
Full article:
http://discover.com/issues/feb-06/features/energizer/
Wednesday, November 29, 2006
Let's End Flat Earth Politics!
You've probably seen it in textbooks and newspapers. It looks something like this:
<-------------- left ------------ center ------------- right -------------->
Or, when expanded a bit:
<-crazies-communist/socialist-far_left-liberal-centrist-
-conservative-far_right-fascist-crazies->
This model is misleading and fatally flawed. It doesn't have a place for many millions of people who don't fit neatly into some variant of liberal or conservative. In effect, it disenfranchises the millions of Americans who don't feel that "left," "right," "liberal," "conservative" etc. accurately describe their views. Thomas Jefferson, for example, wouldn't fit comfortably on that chart under any of those labels. Neither would Jesse Ventura or Huey Long or Pat Buchanan. America's real political spectrum is more complex than this simplistic Crossfire model allows.
Nor does the "left-right" line give any useful insight into the differences between the various political categories. It doesn't tell us what the important differences are between liberals, conservatives, fascists, and so on. It tells us nothing of the views of these and other groups.
Furthermore, the left-right model is inherently illogical. The model implies that if you "go too far" (i.e., are consistent) with any political idea, you end up, in some weird and unexplained way, at totalitarianism or anarchism (or maybe both!). Pursue conservative thought to its logical extreme, according to this model, and you somehow end up at fascism (which is national socialism), or white supremacy or some other authoritarian position. If you pursue liberal thought too far, you supposedly end up at socialism or communism. This is inconsistent, and ignores gigantic philosophical differences between, say, liberalism and communism, or conservatism and fascism.
To see another major reason why this model is irredeemably flawed, try to fit libertarians on that line. Libertarians believe that people should be free to live as they choose, in both the economic and personal realms, as long as they don't harm others. So libertarians believe in a free market -- which should put them on the "right," right? Nope. They also oppose censorship, the drug war and other attempts by government to control the personal lives of peaceful individuals. Does that put them on the left? Well, no. Does it put them in the "middle"? No. There's just no place for libertarians on that map.
Consider that millions of Americans are libertarian or libertarian-leaning. Libertarians and libertarian thought are a large and important part of American politics, and have been since the country's founding! Indeed, libertarian ideas have played a central role in world history for centuries. But the left-right line simply pretends that libertarians don't exist. It does the same for others as well.
No wonder, then, that many Americans -- used to thinking about politics with this familiar left-right map -- couldn't figure out what libertarians were. Libertarians weren't left-wing, they weren't right-wing, they weren't centrists -- so they, in effect, didn't exist. Libertarians literally weren't on the map!
The left-right model thus gives a skewed, distorted, inaccurate picture of American politics. It's a "flat earth" political map -- inaccurate and misleading.
World's Smallest Political Quiz
Source: http://www.theadvocates.org/quiz-faq.html#faq02
Without just compensation
by Timothy Sandefur
Entire story:
http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=6776
Free money against "inflation bias"
by Thorsten Polleit
Entire article:
http://www.mises.org/story/2373
Senator McCain: When and why did you sell your soul?
by Doug Herman
Complete article about `Insane-McCain':
http://www.strike-the-root.com/62/herman/herman4.html
US v. Bush, et al.
by William Fisher
Entire article:
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/112706M.shtml
Police defense falling apart
by "CLS"
Entire article:
http://tinyurl.com/y2g45c
Congress to ponder conscription?
by (R-TX)
(Congress' only sane congressman -Ed.)
Entire article:
http://www.antiwar.com/paul/?articleid=10069
War on Drugs expands to catnip
by Fred E. Foldvary
Complete article:
http://www.freeliberal.com/archives/002448.html
Taking from Peter to pay Paul
by Chris Claypoole
The full article:
http://www.ncc-1776.org/tle2006/tle395-20061126-05.html
Should Your Internet Provider Spy On You?
Should search engines like Google be required to keep permanent records of your Web searches?
Many in the federal government -- Democrats and Republicans alike -- say yes. And renowned CNET tech reporter Declan McCullagh says this is going to be one of the hottest privacy battles of the coming year.
Look for the FBI and other government agencies to push hard for this legislation when the new Congress convenes in early 2007.
The idea was recently endorsed by the International Association of Chiefs of Police. FBI director Robert Mueller praised that endorsement, saying:
"Terrorists coordinate their plans cloaked in the anonymity of the Internet, as do violent sexual predators prowling chat rooms... All too often, we find that before we can catch these offenders, Internet service providers have unwittingly deleted the very records that would help us identify these offenders and protect future victims," Mueller said. "We must find a balance between the legitimate need for privacy and law enforcement's clear need for access."
It's to be expected that this privacy grab, like so many others, will be cloaked under the guises of fighting terrorism and protecting children. And of course, our "legitimate need for privacy" -- or rather, our right to privacy -- must be "balanced." ("Balanced" is too often a government euphemism for "obliterated.")
This is the classic government rhetoric we've come to expect before a major curtailment of our rights.
What might such laws require? CNET's McCullagh gives some possibilities:
- Require your Internet service providers (ISP) to keep permanent records of your Web surfing habits. (Currently ISPs keep this information for varying lengths of time, until it is no longer needed for business reasons such as network monitoring or stopping fraud.)
- Require registrars (companies that sell domain names) to maintain permanent records of your searches and requests.
- Require search engines to keep permanent traceable logs of all your searches.
Thus, notes McCullagh: "Industry representatives say that if police respond to tips promptly instead of dawdling, it would be difficult to imagine any investigation that would be imperiled" by the lack of mandatory retention of your personal Web surfing history.
But since when has reason and common sense stopped the government from trying to expand its snooping powers?
Friday, November 24, 2006
Deism versus Islam - Problems with the Qur'an
The Book of Terror
Muslims are quick to criticise the Bible’s authenticity and authority; and make the most of the writings of liberal Christian scholars in doing so. But what of their own scriptures? The Qur’an has, in the past, been protected by a kind of doctrinal embargo - but now its historicity, claimed inimitability and historical accuracy are facing a blistering attack from contemporary scholarship.
Missing Manuscripts
According to Muslim tradition the Qur’an was received by Muhammad between AD 610 and 632, recorded by his companions, collected by Zaid-Ibn-Thabit, standardised by Uthman the third Caliph, and then distributed to Baghdad, Medina, Basra, Kufa and Damascus in AD 646-650.
Where then are the original manuscripts? The Qur’anic manuscripts Muslims regard as their earliest; the Topkapi manuscript in Istanbul, Turkey, and the Samarkand manuscript in the Soviet State Library in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, bear the marks of a date of authorship of ~AD 850. They are written in a form of Kufic script which arose in the Abbasid period (~AD 750-850) and are adorned with 9th century embellishments.
The oldest Qur’an, according to forensic dating, is in the British Library. It dates to around AD 790; almost 150 years after Muhammad’s death.
Muslims defend their inability to produce early manuscripts by saying that the Qur’an was originally passed down orally and that early copies have disintegrated. But Muslim tradition itself tells us that the Qur’an was written down 20 years after Muhammad died and we have other Arab literature that has survived from the 7th century. We know that there were secretaries during the Ummayad Dynasty (AD 660-750) and that Muhammad himself worked on a caravan where written records of transactions would have been kept.
The defence of disintegration can be applied to the early New Testament documents which were written on papyrus. However the earliest Qur’ans were written on parchment, a far more robust material. Many of the early Christian parchment manuscripts (such as the Codex Vaticanus, Codex Alexandrinus and Codex Sinaiticus) have been preserved in extremely good condition despite predating the Qur’an by several centuries.
The missing manuscripts are a huge embarrassment to Islam and raise serious questions about whether what Muslims now have are accurate copies of the original. Some scholars are proposing that the Qur’anic text was not standardised until the Abbasid period (AD 750).
Imitable Style
The Qur’an bases its claim of divine authorship on its supposed inimitability. Christians who question the book’s origin are challenged to ‘Bring then a Sura (chapter) like unto it’ (Sura 10:38). The Qur’an’s literary beauty is supposed to prove that it could not have been ‘produced by other than Allah’ (S 10:37).
But is the Qur’an beautiful? Many genuine seekers find its haphazard arrangement, jumbled chronology and endless repetition an insurmountable obstacle. Muslims usually object that the real beauty can only be appreciated in Arabic; and yet great works of literature like Solzenitsyn’s Gulag Archipelago and the Hebrew Psalms retain their beauty in English translation. (If in doubt compare Psalm 23 and Sura 109 in English translation and judge for yourself).
Even if we give the Qur’an the benefit of the doubt, is beauty proof of divine origin? Many people would agree that Shakespeare’s plays, Hopkins’ poetry and Vivaldi’s music are magnificent. Indeed, they may lead us to worship God as the giver of such creative talent, but we don’t therefore conclude that only God’s supernatural dictation could have produced these works of art.
In any case, beauty is to some extent subjective an the final judges will always be Muslims, duty-bound to reject any challenge out of hand.
Gerhard Nehls has produced an impressive list of ‘beautiful suras’ in English in his book Christians ask Muslims as noted in the last issue of Isa Masih. A selection of Arabic suras was recently removed from the internet after America On Line faced a barrage of Muslim protests.
Borrowed Stories
Those reading the Qur’an for the first time cannot help but be struck by the number of stories about biblical characters which do not tally with what we know from other historical sources. The usual Muslim defence is to say that the Bible has been changed. However, now we are beginning to identify the real sources for the Qur’an’s mythology.
The account of a raven showing Cain how to hide his brother’s body (S 5:30-32) has its origins in the Targum of Jonathan-ben-Uzziah, the Targum of Jerusalem and the Pirke-Rabbi Eleazar; all apocryphal Jewish writings from the Talmud dating from AD 150-200.
The story of Abraham breaking the idols (S 21:51-71) comes from a set of second century Jewish folktales called the Midrash Rabbah; and the bizarre account of the Queen of Sheba lifting her skirts to walk across a mirrored floor (S 27:44) is derived from a second century apocryphal document called the Targum of Esther.
Equally strange stories from the childhood of Jesus, such as his making real pigeons from clay (S 3:49), and speaking from the cradle (S 19:29-33) originate in the History of Nativity, the First Gospel of the Infancy of Jesus Christ and Thomas’ Gospel of the Infancy of Jesus Christ, further fanciful fiction from the early Christian era.
Contradictions and Inaccuracies
The contradictions in the Qur’an are well recognised and have been extensively documented elsewhere.
But perhaps even more damaging to Islamic beliefs about the Qur’an are the factual errors that litter the text. Mary, rather than the Holy Spirit, is identified as the third person of the trinity in Sura 5:119. She is also called the sister of Aaron (Moses’ brother) despite the fact that the two lived 1,500 years apart in history (S 19:28).
We are told in Sura 20:85-87 that a Samaritan was responsible for casting the golden calf of the Exodus, when in fact the Samaritans did not come into existence until after the Jewish exile hundreds of years later. In a similar vein Haman (Esther’s Persian enemy) is identified as a servant of the Egyptian pharoah at the time of Moses.
Once we appreciate that the Bible was not available in Arabic until the mid eighth century, it becomes clear how such glaring fallacies may have found their way into the Qur’an through corrupted oral tradition and hearsay.
Conclusions
Could God really be responsible for a book for which there is so little early manuscript evidence and containing so many inaccuracies? Surely the evidence speaks for itself.
Bible & Koran - Deist Warning Labels
The problem her reading it has caused is that she now says that she is an atheist. An atheist! --- because of what she read. She is still too young to properly analyse and understand what she read, and so she incorrectly assumed that either everything she read is the infallible truth (including that God is a monster that would order crimes like the genocide, murder, and robbery that the bible says the Jews committed in his name,) or that there is no God.
She chose the latter, when she should have chose a third option: that there really is a God, but just not the false one depicted in the books of revealed religions. Christians say that their book is or was "inspired" by "the word of God", but there is no claim at all that any of these many books of "sources" of Hebrew Scripture was inspired or was in any sense the "Word of God"; they were commonplace lay chronicles and books of history or literature; so that very large and material portions of "inspired" Hebrew Scriptures are from entirely uninspired and human sources. But I say that only nature is the true, unchanging "Word of God", that God reveals himself through science and natural laws. Thomas Paine said,
"The Creation speaketh an universal language, independently of human speech or human language, multiplied and various as they may be. It is an ever-existing original, which every man can read. It cannot be forged; it cannot be counterfeited; it cannot be lost; it cannot be altered; it cannot be suppressed. It does not depend upon the will of man whether it shall be published or not; it publishes itself from one end of the earth to the other. It preaches to all nations and to all worlds; and this word of God reveals to man all that is necessary for man to know of God."It's shameful the damage that reading the bible does to people's minds. Because of the horrors and perverted logic that readers are exposed to, I believe that if we must have bibles they should all come with warning labels to warn readers of the dangers that exposure to its contents may cause, particularly in young people during their formative years. To this end I have created a PDF file which contains eight warning labels that you can cut out and paste to the inside cover, (and anywhere else you can find space inside,) of all bibles, korans, and other superstition books of revealed religions. You can get it for free by clicking here. and send copies to all your friends and relatives!
OTOH: If you disagree and still believe that children should be taught the bible, then at least make it easy for them to understand. Show them
It's pretty impressive for an illustrated Bible made entirely of Legos. Rev. Brendan Powell Smith has spent the past four years staging and photographing particularly intense biblical scenes in the living room of his home. The thirty-two-year-old son of an Episcopalian Sunday-school teacher insists his project is meant to explore the Scriptures, not mock them. "My version of Noah's Ark focuses a little more on the people who didn't make it onto the boat." See more at The Brick Testament.
|
Thursday, November 23, 2006
Minimum Wage Hike: You Can't Keep A Bad Idea Down
Take the minimum wage.
The newly-elected Democratic congress has announced that one of its top priorities is to dramatically increase the federal minimum wage. Prominent Republicans -- including the president -- agree.
It's a wretched idea, however. An increase in the minimum wage will inevitably cause harm to huge numbers of the very low-income workers it is supposed to help. It will destroy many entry-level jobs, cause significant unemployment and poverty, and have many other negative effects.
This used to be the common wisdom. Indeed, a 1978 survey taken by the American Economic Review found that fully 90% of economists agreed or partly agreed with the statement, "a minimum wage increases unemployment among young and unskilled workers."
In 1987 even the liberal New York Times called for the total abolition of the minimum wage, declaring, "There's a virtual consensus among economists that the minimum wage is an idea whose time has passed. Raising the minimum wage by a substantial amount would price working poor people out of the job market."
However, the minimum wage fallacy was snatched from the graveyard of dead political ideas in the 1990s by two highly controversial studies that claimed to find little or no job displacement from the minimum wage. Those studies relied on "fantastically faulty methodology," according to a new study by the non-profit Employment Policies Institute. (See links below for more on this study.) But that was enough to revive the idea politically.
Hoover Institution economist David Henderson, an expert on the minimum wage, recently summed up the fundamental arguments against it in the Wall Street Journal:
"In raising the minimum wage, the government doesn't guarantee jobs. It guarantees only that those who get jobs will be paid at least that minimum. But precisely by requiring this, the government destroys jobs. Someone to whom an employer was willing to pay only the current minimum wage of $5.15 might not produce enough to be worth paying, say, $7.25."Raising the minimum wage, Henderson says, "will help only a subset of the people it is thought to help, and will help them only a little -- while hurting some of them a lot."
According to Henderson, the proposed increase from $5.15 to $7.25 -- a 40% increase -- could mean the loss of up to 1.6 million jobs, especially entry-level jobs that allow young people to gain valuable work skills that let them move on to better-paying jobs.
Recent history bears this out. A 1997 National Bureau of Economic Research study estimated that the federal minimum-wage hike of 1996 and 1997 actually increased the number of poor families by 4.5 percent.
Other studies indicate that employers, faced with having to pay more for labor, cut back benefits such as health insurance or on-the-job training. Others cut back hours, force employees to work harder, replace workers with automation, or simply eliminate jobs altogether. (Remember movie ushers, elevator operators, and gas station attendants?)
Is there a better way to help low-wage workers -- without harming so many of them? Yes, says Jim Cox, author of the booklet "Minimum Wage, Maximum Damage," published by the Advocates. [www.theadvocates.org] De-tax them!
The working poor are hit with taxes everywhere they turn, including taxes on such essentials as food, clothing, housing and transportation. They must also pay Social Security and Medicare taxes. Free these workers from this government-imposed burden. Let them keep the full wages they earn. This would benefit them far more than the minimum wage -- without the minimum wage's disastrous effects.
Sources:
David Henderson, "If Only Most Americans Understood," Wall Street Journal (subscription required): http://users1.wsj.com/lmda/do/checkLogin?mg=wsj-users1&url=http%3A%2F%2Fonline.wsj.com%2Farticle%2FSB115439870173323067.html
Employment Policies Institute: http://www.epionline.org/news_detail.cfm?rid=72#
NCAC: http://www.ncpa.org/pub/ba/ba550/
Columnist Stephen Chapman: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/columnists/chi-0610220346oct22,1,7142202.column?coll=chi-news-col
"Minimum Wage, Maximum Damage," by Jim Cox: http://www.theadvocates.org/mw.html
Sunday, November 12, 2006
Xian mysteries
- The phrase ``Jesus of Nazareth'' is a mistranslation. The original Greek text actually says ``Jesus the Nazarene''. The Nazarenes were one of the three major religious sects in Jesus' time, the other two being the Pharisees and the Sadducees. You can find a Greek-English interlinear text in any Bible shop, and probably in many public libraries. Read Mark 14:67, John 19:19, and Acts 2:22 in the interlinear to see what it really says.
- Acts 24:5 confirms that Nazarenes were actually a sect, not people from "Nazareth" a town which didn't exist until some 400 years after the alleged crucifiction. In Acts 24:5 "Saul of Tarsus" (known to Xians as Paul, and whom is the actual founder of Christianity,) is accused of being a member of that sect, but he himself claims to be a member of the Pharisee sect (Acts 23:6) and a Roman citizen (Acts 22:27).
- `Jesus' is a poor translation of `Yeshua' from the New Testament that went from Hebrew to Greek to Latin to English. In the Old Testament `Yeshua' was translated directly into English as `Joshua'. Thus Yeshua, Joshua, and Jesus are the same name, and a very common name at that. Joshua, or Jesus, means ``Jehovah is Salvation''.
- The Jesus story has elements of several different ideas combined into one myth. It is my belief that there probably was an actual man named Jesus, but quite unlike what Christianity describes.
- First of all, he was a Nazarene - (not from Nazareth, since he was born in Bethlehem.) As a Nazarene he followed the Torah, and neither was he ever a `Christian, nor a God-incarnate, nor did he found a new religion.
- The `Nazarene' of the New Testament are also the same as the `Nazirite' of the Old Testament, A Nazarene being a member of the sect, and a Nazirite being a Nazarene under an obligation of a holy oath. (Read Numbers 6:1-21) It's similar to the O.T.'s `Philistines' who today are called Palestinians; and are actually the same people. Samson was declared a Nazirite from birth. (Read Judges 13:2-7) Thus, the Nazarenes are the oldest of the 3 major sects that existed in Jesus' time.
- The word Nazarene, as best I can determine, came from an Aramaic phrase that means ``Keepers of the Covenant''.
- The `Ministry' story of Jesus was taken from Solar worship and astrology and applied to the Jesus myth. (Read, no, study http://members.cox.net/deleyd/religion/index.htm)
- The wisdom sayings came from another source, refered to by biblical scholars as ``The Book of Q'' The `Q' comes from the German word `Quella', which means `source'. No evidence exists that a man named Jesus actually said those words of wisdom that are attributed to him in the Bible.
- The so called `miracles' attributed to Jesus were embellishments that were commonly added to stories about religious leaders of that time, and have no more basis in reality than the Greek myths.
- The Gospel stories do not date to Jesus' time, but allegedly date to the time between the two major revolts, around 66 to 74 and 132 to 155 A.D. according to most scholars. However, keep in mind that no extant copy of any Gospel predates the fourth century!
- In 325 A.D. Constantine, the Emperor of Rome, ordered the convening of the first Council of Nicaea. At the Council the attendees voted to deify Jesus. The results were 218 for and 2 against making Jesus into god incarnate, like the Emperor. Thus, Jesus became God-incarnate by the vote of men! After the Council, the Emperor ordered that all documents mentioning Jesus were to be sought out and seized from whereever they were, taken to Rome, and sequestered from the public. Six years after the Council Constantine ordered the Gospels rewritten to include the decisions made by the Council. All the originals were then burned, which explains why no existing copies of the Gospels predate the fourth century.
- Emperor Constantine's own `virgin birth' story was also incorporated into the Gospels at that time.
- My conclusions after years of biblical study are that a man we call Jesus perhaps actually did exist, that he was a Nazarene, that he followed and taught the Torah and the other scriptures of the Old Testament, that he was anointed twice, first as the King of Judea, then a second time as King of Israel, (in imitation of King David's two annointings,) that he attempted to organize a revolt, ordering his followers to arm themselves (Luke 22:36) and they did use their weapons (John 18:10), but the revolt failed to materialize.
- Nothing was wrote about Jesus in his lifetime - all stories being passed down by word of mouth, miracles and solar worship stories were blended into his true, albeit boring biography, spicing it up so as to make it more appealing, to make him seem more important, more successfull, and to preserve elements of solar worship by blending them into a biographic account, giving birth to the Jesus myth.
They Deserved to Lose
For years, Republicans have used libertarian rhetoric in their political campaigns. “We favor freedom, free enterprise, limited government, and responsibility,” Republican candidates have so often proclaimed. “We’re opposed to big government,” they loved telling their constituents.
People believed them, but it was all a lie from the get-go.
What Republican Revolution?
What Republican revolution?
We can see the results in history of revolutions like the American Revolution, the French Revolution, and the Russian Revolution, but what evidence is there of a Republican revolution?
Habeas Corpus: R.I.P
"No court, justice, or judge shall have jurisdiction to hear or consider an application for a writ of habeas corpus filed by or on behalf of an alien detained by the United States who has been determined by the United States to have been properly detained as an enemy combatant or is awaiting such determination."
This is a stunning step backwards for human rights. The right of habeas corpus, which is enshrined in the U.S. Constitution, is not just for U.S. citizens. It is fundamental for all human beings. Indeed, the principle of habeas corpus predates the founding of the United States by centuries. "The Great Writ," as habeas corpus is called, dates back to England's Magna Carta of 1215.
Habeas corpus was written into our Constitution because, by the time the United States was born, it was considered the bedrock of a free and just society.
This new law doesn't just affect people living abroad. There are millions of residential aliens living and working in America. Because the bill says the U.S. government can determine who can be arrested as a possible "enemy combatant," it removes all protections from false arrest and imprisonment for non-U.S. citizens both in the U.S. and abroad. They can now be "disappeared" indefinitely at the president's wish, and, under other provisions in this wretched bill, subjected to torture in secret prisons.
Further, some commentators (see the link to libertarian Justin Raimondo's article, below) argue that language buried in the bill may allow the president to designate *U.S. citizens* as "unlawful enemy combatants" and strip them of habeas corpus protection and other rights. We will have to wait and see.
The respected human rights organization Amnesty International, after the passage of this bill, noted that America has changed in ominous ways: "The past five years have seen the U.S.A. engage in systematic violations of international law, with a distressing impact on thousands of detainees and their families." Human rights violations have included:
- Secret detention.
- Enforced disappearance.
- Torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment.
- Outrages upon personal dignity, including humiliating treatment.
- Denial and restriction of habeas corpus.
- Indefinite detention without charge or trial.
- Prolonged incommunicado detention.
- Arbitrary detention.
- Unfair trial procedures.
The bill has been denounced by writers across the political spectrum.
Conservative constitutional scholar Bruce Fein wrote in the Washington Times: "The legislation passed by Congress last week turns the Constitution's philosophy on its head. It authorizes the government arbitrarily to spy, to detain, and to punish without making Americans one whit safer. It curtails liberty for the sake of curtailing liberty."
Liberal syndicated columnist Garrison Keillor joined other critics in hoping that the Supreme Court will throw out the worst aspects of this bill. But he added:
"If, however, the court does not, then our country has taken a step toward totalitarianism. If the government can round up someone and never be required to explain why, then it's no longer the United States as you and I always understood it. Our enemies have succeeded beyond their wildest dreams. They have made us become like them."
Libertarian writer Justin Raimondo of antiwar.com put it bluntly: "Congress has now granted the president the powers of a dictator."
Does this sound like the America of the Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights?
The passage of this bill should set off alarms. Libertarians must reach out to, and join with, pro-liberty liberals and conservatives in a massive new effort to preserve and restore civil liberties. The American political debate is no longer about left versus right. It's about freedom versus tyranny.
Sources: Amnesty International
New York Times (September 28, 2006)
Justin Raimondo at antiwar.com
Future of Freedom commentary by Jacob Hornberger
Garrison Keillor commentary
Bruce Fein commentary