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Archive for the 'Authoritarian' Category

Obama’s Latest Bow Should Sicken Every American

November 15th, 2009, 5:35 pm by Thomas J. Lucente Jr.

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There he goes again.

On Saturday, President Barack Obama performed a deep bow when greeting the emperor and empress of Japan. The royal couple, of course, did not return the bow.

This sickens me to no end. Americans do not bow to foreign monarchs. EVER. This especially applies to the president.

Such bowing is a sign of subservience, not a sign of respect as Obama apparently thinks. Heads of state do not bow to each other. It is a breach of international protocol. In fact, if you look at this bow, the emperor and empress seem uncomfortable or mildly amused by Obama’s despicable behavior.

Even beyond international protocol, it is distinctly un-American.

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China: 60 years of slaughter

September 30th, 2009, 3:40 pm by by Alan Bock, Register editorial writer

I was going to remark the irony that they plan to light the Empire State Building in red and yellow to commemorate 60 years of communism in China, but my friend the Wine Commonsewer has said much of what I would have said and perhaps more eloquently. Sixty years of mass murder and near-genocide? At least 48 million people killed to establish utopia? If that’s worth celebrating . . .

The other irony, of course, is that China is becoming more capitalistic even as the U.S. has been going in the opposite direction, and China may have more of a free-market system than the U.S. does. But those gerontocrats, now only interested in hanging onto political power and seeing a CP monopoly on power as the best way to do so, still claim to be communist. We should deny — as is realistic given history — that communism has anything to do with idealism and more to do with slaughtering people to hang onto power, thus taking a step toward denying them whatever shred of legitimacy they get by being associated with something once erroneously viewed as idealistic.

Suspicions confirmed, Chapter 3,452

August 21st, 2009, 1:39 pm by by Alan Bock, Register editorial writer


So in his new book (forthcoming in September, being leaked for publicity now) former Homeland Security adviser and first head of the Department of Hooha and Scaremongering Tom Ridge says that during election season in 2004 he was pressured to issue Code Reds and terrorist alarms in ways designed to bolster Bush and do political damage to Kerry. Ridge names Rumsfeld and Ashbrook as doing the pressuring (spokescritters for the two have denied it). Does this really surprise anybody? I’m willing to entertain the possibility that there were some legitimate terrorist scares, but it seemed transparent most of the time that Code levels were raised and lowered largely to manipulate the American public, not necessarily for direct electoral purposes always but  to keep us alarmed.

The Department of Homeland Security, cobbled together from existing, sometimes unrelated agencies with the glue of paranoia, strikes me as one of the worst excesses of the Bush years (though there are many candidates to choose from). Of course it was a bipartisan outrage; Bush endorsed the idea after Democrats proposed it in Congress and it seemed likely to get done whether he liked it or not. The only thing to be said for it is that the use of the word “homeland” made it pretty clear that the United States is now an empire, not a republic.

H.L. Mencken had it figured out in the 1920s: The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary.

The Right to Be Rude

July 24th, 2009, 8:01 am by sshackford

Here’s a great quote from Ta-Nehisi Coates that really speaks to the subtleties of how police arrogance continues to damage the relationship with law enforcement representatives and the people they (are supposed to) serve while explaining why he is reluctant to call the police in many situations:

“I think the source of a lot my reasoning is the cop’s own response to Gates. A lot of us here believe that is possible that Gates was, at least, rude. We also aren’t sure what — if any — role race played in all this. That said, the cop not only thinks Gates was rude to him but he handled the situation exactly right. Given that dude thinks police should be arresting citizens for rudeness, he is not the guy I’d want dealing with the kids in my neighborhood — even the ones who need to be in custody.”

It really blows my mind, though it shouldn’t at this point, that police are defending the right to arrest people for being rude to them and failing to grasp how this thoroughly damages their social contract with the public. Who wants somebody with that poor sense of proportion to be around their children? It teaches children a dangerous lesson — that personal offense is an acceptable reason for retribution under the color of authority.

Here is an utterly horrifying response from David Holway, president of the International Brotherhood of Police Officers: “What we don’t need is public safety officials across the country second-guessing themselves.” If public safety officials are considering arresting people for being rude to them then yes, actually, we really, really do need public safety officials second-guessing themselves.

P.S. If you’re the kind of libertarian who thrives on having smart arguments presented by non-libertarians to hone your views, I can’t recommend reading Coates’ blog enough. He comes from the left and writes about race issues, but with a deft grasp of how racism plays out in the real world, with a sense of personal humility, and without excusing anybody’s behavior on any side. He has a great knack for calling out racist statements and actions without resorting to the shrill, mind-numbing tactics of those who have made a career of being victims. If you need a guy to (figuratively) smack you aside the head when you say somethng stupid and explain why rather than trying to lay a collegiate jargon-laden guilt trip on you, he’s the one. Also, he has some of the best commenters on the Web. And he plays World of Warcraft.

Scott Shackford

Editing to add: Jacob Sullum over at Reason has an analysis of how disorderly conduct laws are written and how they easily allow for police abuse.

Pre-Crime Comes to England

July 17th, 2009, 11:09 am by Bill Goodwin

Thinking about hosting a summer BBQ? Fine. Thinking about inviting 15 friends? That’s cool. Put up an announcement on Facebook? Here come the SWAT teams.

Brit Andrew Poole organised a simple barbeque to celebrate his 30th birthday party. He expected a total of 17 guests, so he bought a lot of burgers, rented a marquee and put some batteries into the portable MP3 player, as anyone with an impending significant birthday and an unused BBQ stove would. But his first mistake was to create an events page on Facebook. His second was to send out invitations to join the BBQ in a Devon field owned by a friend.

However, Minority Report became real when when eight police officers, some dressed in body armour, swooped in via a helicopter and a riot van. Police claimed they received reports a “large-scale” dance rave organised via something called the Internet. Police said local residents had tipped them off about a possible rave, which suggests that the “red ball” in this case was the people Poole is connected to on Facebook who tipped off the authorities.

Said Poole: “The thing (the helicopter) hovered over us for about 25 minutes, watching 15 people eat. They told us to take down the sound system and said everybody has got to leave. It was 4pm and we had not plugged in the music. What effectively police did was to stop 15 people eating burgers.”

More on this ridiculous story of police “anticipating crime” here.

Will This Be the Summer of Police Harassment?

June 29th, 2009, 11:58 am by sshackford

The budget crunch is making the law enforcement pursuit of “low-hanging fruit” in order to justify their taxpayer burden an even bigger source of fear for the average resident.

Over the weekend, two very strange police raids — one on a gay bar in Texas and one due to a noise complaint at a political fund-raiser in California — made me wonder what if an already bad authority abuse trend is going to get even worse over the hot summer.

Here in Barstow, we got a press release from the city over a weekend raid and roundup of parolees, et cetera. (they’ve promised regular sweeps throughout the summer). They even kindly provided the names of all the folks they’ve arrested (more than 20 of which appear to live in the same apartment complex). However, when my reporter started looking up names in the county’s arrest tracker, she can only find evidence that three of these guys were actually charged with anything. Don’t know the details of the rest yet. There could be a perfectly logical explanation.

Right before I sat down to write this, we had a homeless resident come in to ask if we’d do a profile of him. I took down his name and number of out of politeness and went back to work. A few minutes later, the sales staff informed me that the police stopped by (nobody here called them) and picked the guy up, leaving his belongings, and apparently his dog, on the sidewalk right outside our office. We have no idea why they took him. His dog is sitting here right outside the door waiting for him to come back. We’re giving him water, as it’s supposed to get up to 108 degrees out here today.

Again, could be a perfectly logical explanation, but it’s a bit disconcerting. Why am I more concerned about what the police in my neighborhood are doing than I am the drug dealers?

Scott Shackford

Iran and Freedom

June 26th, 2009, 8:29 am by Bill Goodwin

Daniel Flynn has a piece over at the City Journal website, warning fans of the Iranian protests not to read too deeply into the revolutionary stylings of the protesters.

With the 1979 Iranian revolution so close in the rearview mirror, the mistakes of Western observers then bear remembering today, as the seeds of something momentous may be again at hand. In the late seventies, some intellectuals, enamored with the idea of revolution in general and the anti-Western outlook of the Iranian revolutionaries in particular, projected their political values on the shah’s deposers. When, instead of embracing the ideology of Harvard Square or Telegraph Avenue, the revolutionaries exported terror, exhibited a toxic anti-Semitism, persecuted homosexuals, and pursued nuclear weapons, many of these intellectuals emerged with egg on their faces. As Mother Jones editor Adam Hochschild candidly admitted after Iranian reality had dashed Western dreams: “The Left is always better at seeing what leads to revolutions than at seeing what may follow them.” Though criticisms of the shah of Iran for human-rights abuses and other crimes seemed on the mark, Hochschild conceded in 1980 that his magazine had been “embarrassingly nearsighted about [the shah’s] successors.”

Of course, the Left in America has a weakness for “rebels” who are actually rotten characters (Che Guevara springs to mind), but in this case, the Wilsonian “freedom agenda” of the GOP has come roaring back. Between the political points McCain and company tried to score, and the earnest well-wishing of just about everyone who has ever heard of Twitter, we’re losing perspective.

It’s a good thing that Iranians are standing up to protest a fraudulent election. And Iran is a nation of bloggers, with much of the population champing at the authoritarian bit. But just as the booting of the shah failed to usher in a new birth of freedom, we should be no more than cautiously hopeful. For once, I find myself agreeing with our president:

President Obama, who undermines his credibility by vacillating between remaining strategically outside of the fray and inserting himself in it by telling Iranians that the whole world is watching, nevertheless seems to understand the danger of getting Western hopes up too high: “Although there is amazing ferment taking place in Iran, the difference in actual policies between Ahmadinejad and Mousavi in terms of their actual policies may not be as great as advertised,” the president explained on CNBC last week. “I think it’s important to understand that either way, we are going to be dealing with a regime in Iran that is hostile to the U.S.”

Read the whole piece here.

Eyewitness Account of Violence in Tehran

June 24th, 2009, 2:38 pm by Bill Goodwin

CNN interviews an Iranian women who was present at the violently suppressed protestets in Iran today. A must watch:

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China’s “Green Dam” Flood

June 23rd, 2009, 9:41 am by Bill Goodwin

China’s mandatory censorship software, which will be preinstalled on every computer sold after July 1st, is even more terrible than first thought. According to Wikileaks, the software creates vulnerabilities that could allow the government to remotely control any computer:

Green Dam … “complements” the existing internet censorship system, and extends it to many third party applications, such as Skype and text editors which are monitored for the use of forbidden phrases such as “falun gong”. This ZIP file provides a web page and associated computer code that can be used to remotely take control of any computer system running the Green Dam software. The only requirement is that the user is enticed to look at a site hosting a copy of the exploit page. The technique used is a buffer-overflow using Microsoft’s “.net” encoding.

Imagine a massive botnet controlled by evil hackers hell bent on making your life miserable (and penniless). Now imagine that same army of slave computers controlled by a Communist regime. Staggering, no?

Open letter to Barack Obama

June 18th, 2009, 8:59 pm by Thomas J. Lucente Jr.

4175_photo_117200560608pm_pritchett_lounewwebThis is a letter written by Lou Pritchett, a former vice president at Procter & Gamble, to The New York Times.

As of Thursday, the Times has not published this letter, but it has been making the rounds on the Internet.

Snopes and other hoax-watching sites have confired this is a legitimate letter written by Pritchett. It states succinctly what many Americans are feeling these days.

Some of you may have already seen this, but I thought I would share it anyway:

AN OPEN LETTER TO PRESIDENT OBAMA

By Lou Pritchett

Dear President Obama:

You are the thirteenth President under whom I have lived and unlike any of the others, you truly scare me. 

You scare me because after months of exposure, I know nothing about you. 

You scare me because I do not know how you paid for your expensive Ivy League education and your upscale lifestyle and housing with no visible signs of support. 

You scare me because you did not spend the formative years of youth growing up in America and culturally you are not an American. 

You scare me because you have never run a company or met a payroll.

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