Am I imagining things, or does it seem that males who use the internet are invariably libertarian?
not quite invariably, but there sure does seem to be a touch of it. i'll have to check out the friedman clips, i'm still kind of on the fence.
A disarmed population is basically defenceless against future dictatorships
there are some very interesting observations by america's early founders on the subject. with apology, not that there hasn't been erosion in some of the progress here, the modern bumper sticker is, an armed man is a citizen; an unarmed man is a subject. and i admit my paranoia enough just to get a little suspicious every time an event feeds neatly into legislation. few people know that the absolutely ridiculously named "usa patriot act" over here was not a reaction to 9-11, it was drafted and ready to go a little bit in advance of it. but don't get me started
BTW, Andrew Jackson was a badass!
with respect to the banking interests he was pretty amazing. with respect to the indigenous native population and a few other things, rather less so, politics is rarely a neat business of white hat black hat, but full marks, as you would say, where they're due.
Break it up into tiny pieces and sell it to private enterprise I say!
i have to defer to your expertise and experience on the subject. unfortunately as i mentioned, to a fair degree we have the appearance of a free market here without the true accountability that really makes it one. there's another bumper sticker over here that reads something like i support separation of corporation and state.
mainly through listening to American web talk-shows, such as Jeff Rense
now there's a badass. and yeah i wince when i hear rush, besides being a pretty disingenuous panderer, his double standards extended to drugs too -- bust all those druggies and lock them away -- except me when i get caught
Erm, I think April 29th probably gave a small boost to pro-monarchy sentiment
i was probably just hoping people might shake their heads at some of the excess, i guess not. i certainly wish the pair of them well, but while they sound like good candidates for helping that entity endure, i think that's partly due to their helping put a small starter crack into the long outdated concept of superior class and hereditary nobility itself, you almost wondered if they were hoping it might forestall some future erosion of their institutional footing.
If we all simply supported the parties who we truly want, rather than voting tactically, the political landscape would be completely different.
i've definitely swung more in this direction. however i also become extremely suspicious about two elections ago (diebold president quote about delivering an election, princeton study of hackability, etc.) of the ease in subverting electronic balloting machines. fwiw, while i like the idea of mitigating "mandates" by voting against winners, i believe the real power interests behind the scenes, like those reflected in the synarchist bilderberg lists and many others behind the scenes who don't dare attend, definitely dialectically game two party systems pretty effectively.
Oh BTW, Ron Paul 2012!
that would be way cool, but the moneyed institutional republican party would fight it like heck. he probably had technical victories in at least two state primaries if not more last time, and the party machinery shut his people out. i withhold judgment on the son rand till i know him better, i hear his ideas are in the right place but he's still getting his bearings. that said, i remain very wary of any kind of family dynastic effect, though since ron only got so far, little worry there
Tell me what you guys think about the tea party? I've heard that it started out as a genuine grass-roots organisation but has been taken over by the Republican party.
i think that's essentially correct, i used to identify with it, but the way you can tell it got hijacked was the degree to which fundamentalist theocracy started to appear in it, which is completely alien to a religion-neutral libertarian outlook. you could tell things were tanking when they solicited that pseudoconservative semiliterate beauty queen (clever/politically astute, but not even close to truly intelligent or principled) sarah palin, i think she tried to demand a half million us cash to speak at their last event. i don't want to be unfair to the more honest elements in it, but any emerging third party entity has to carry the hopes of both the sane and the somewhat around-the-benders both, and any political force really has to watch against, for want of a better way to put it, infiltration and subversion of its core principles. but that's always been the struggle and probably will remain so for a long time, you take the incremental progresses you can get. i do think that for all our problems today, including being turned into a imperialist influence off and on over the years (in the ascendency again today it seems), the framers of the constitution would have been ecstatic that we (a) finally shook off slavery in the normal sense and (b) survived as well as we did for this long. however, as they put it, eternal vigilance is still the price of liberty.