Wednesday, November 16, 2011
can’t touch this
Meanwhile, I am "subscribed" to a developing internet service that you'll never be able to regulate. There is no danger to this form of net neutrality. No ISP is going to limit my bandwidth. No corporation will subvert its usage for its own pecuniary purpose. The democratic principle of this service is guaranteed to be forever ubiquitous. Its very nature is the quality that prevents usurpation. Want to know what it is and how to get online?
Well, if you don't already know, it's not likely you will ever find out. Even if I would tell you (which I won't), you're not likely to ever access it unless you already know how, because that is something I can't tell you. It's something you have to learn how to do all by yourself. And you won't, because what you fail to understand is that your own attitude and behavior precludes your participation.
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Sunday, January 16, 2011
not all bad
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Sunday, December 19, 2010
the corruption of power
I don't know if Assange did the criminal things he's accused of doing (apparently legal entities in the UK believed he hadn't, since they released him from custody), but I do know what our government does to people, I know how it lies to hide truth that it finds inconvenient, I know how it corrupts bureaucrats into doing its dirty work.
[In fact, there is no 'it' in the government; 'it' does not act, corrupt agents of the government act, against the ideals of our democracy. Higher up agents corrupt lower agents to act in a conspiratorial fashion to subvert the rule of law. Politicians and quasi-governmental agents (corporate goons) put their own interests ahead of the people.]
Under the broadest definition of terrorism, which our government chooses to use all the time to characterize fanaticism and computer malfeasance, the government itself is a terrorist organization. Yeah, it doesn't actually kill people...well, now wait a minute...yes it does. Maybe we don't need so broad a definition after all.
I'm less and less happy with this government as time goes on. I thought we elected Obama to end this shit. Meet the new boss... The US government is a terrorist organization in the same way as local cops are the most powerful street gang in any given area. Authoritarianism claims its privilege to overpower any dissent. What democracy?
Gotta Revolution.
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Friday, December 3, 2010
moral concerns
Lives are being lost, lives of people who might have one day contributed significant knowledge and wisdom to our great adventure, who might have acted to relieve much suffering and further death, who might have advanced us much farther along toward becoming the benevolent and humane species we are capable of being, who might have found a way to more effectively negate the nastiness strain that currently runs through our basic human nature.
And an incredibly enormous amount of money is being wasted on campaigns and munitions, money that could be used to advance us in the same ways as people who are dying might have, that could be used for medical and genetic research, that could raise humanity up to levels previously unthought of, not only some few of us, but everyone. Those of us who think this is a bad idea, who smugly claim that wars (and poverty) kill off the worst of us, can go to hell (and will).
President Obama: You are responsible here. You market yourself as a caring politician, which is why we elected you, despite the intense opposition of warmongers, greedmongers, and bigots. And yet you allow their policies and practices to proliferate, you even adopt them and adapt them to your own political agenda. This is not acceptable. You are selling the future of the planet and its populations for present day political convenience. Stop it! Come out from among them.
Actually, now that I think back on it, these are moral concerns.
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Wednesday, November 24, 2010
insurance tax
There's only one reason that I have car insurance: because I'm required by law to have it; because the insurance companies conspired with the state legislature to guarantee them a little bit more income. If you believe that the legislature passed the law in order to protect the consumer, then grow up, you naive idiot.
If I weren't legally required to have insurance, I would not have it, because insurance companies are rip-off companies who greedily suck up your premiums but do everything they possible can to get out of paying off on claims, and when they think they can't possibly not pay off, they delay payments for as long as possible.
I think of car insurance as just another tax that the state levies for the privilege of driving a car. But it's a tax that has been privatized, with the proceeds going to insurance companies instead of benefiting state citizens. It's way past time for state-run automobile insurance. "But that's...socialism!" Yeah, like we're not a socialist country already.
Support Corporate Dismantlement
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Wednesday, November 17, 2010
false advertising
These advertising "techniques" offend me. They suggest to me that stores think I'm stupid. Maybe these ads do con some (stupid) people into believing they are getting some kind of great bargain, but if they do, is it right that the stores take advantage of people's ignorance in this way? What's wrong, I'd like to know, with simply stating the price of a single item outright, with no complicated mathematical formula to work out? That way buyers would be able to detect immediately who has the cheapest prices and a true competitive marketplace would prevail. Oh...excuse me; that is what's wrong with it. Can't have any of that kind of truly competitive capitalist stuff going on. That would be a betrayal of our great system of corporate pseudo-capitalism.
Support Corporate Dismantlement
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Thursday, September 9, 2010
mutual destruction
On the other hand, if you were an establishment-minded, right-wing bureaucrat who agreed with the idea of burning the Quran but, public sentiment being what it is, were too afraid to speak out, sending in the FBI just might turn out to be the tipping point:
People disgusted with the would-be Quran burner, using the logic that, if the government is out to silence him, then he must be doing something right, might turn around and defend him (like I almost did) when they see him being harassed by federal agents.
Meanwhile:
In Pakistan, about 200 lawyers and civil society members marched and burned a U.S. flag in the central Pakistani city of Multan, demanding that Washington halt the burning of the Muslim holy book.
Ah, isn't that, like, calling the kettle black? If burning their holy book is offensive to them, then refusing to burn the U.S. flag would be the appropriate response, because the message sent would be, "Look at us. We're not like you. We're not the offensive assholes you are."
As it is, they are.
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