INTERESTING: have peace among men of good will by just doing it?

Monday, December 25, 2006

This is passing along the “gun nut” groups:

*** begin quote ***

The Surfing The Apocalypse Network
THE CHRISTMAS TRUCE
Posted By: pjbuk
Date: Saturday, 23 December 2006, 4:49 p.m.

The Christmas Truce – 1914

On Christmas Day, 1914, in the first year of World
War I, German, British, and French soldiers
disobeyed their superiors and fraternized with “the
enemy” along two-thirds of the Western Front. German
troops held Christmas trees up out of the trenches
with signs, “Merry Christmas.” “You no shoot, we no
shoot.”

*** end quote ***

Which is most interesting. Do you suppose we can have peace among men of good will by just doing it?

I also liked this snip:

<begin snip>

My name is Francis Tolliver, in Liverpool I dwell
Each Christmas come since World War I, I’ve learned its lessons well
That the ones who call the shots won’t be among the dead and lame
And on each end of the rifle we’re the same

<end snip>

Ain’t that the truth? The politicians that decide our fates live high on the hog for selling us down the river.

Where are the George Washingtons, the Jeffersons, and the dollar a year men?


RANT: over-the-counter meth laws claim an early innocent

Sunday, December 24, 2006

http://reason.com/blog/show/117494.html

Man Arrested for Allergies
Radley Balko | December 24, 2006, 9:06am

*** begin quote ***

Those stupid over-the-counter meth laws claim an early innocent victim

*** end quote ***

If this wasn’t so serious, it would be funny.

It makes no sense. Makes criminals out of good people. Kills children through “ad drugs” and collateral damage. AND, it takes away all our rights.

Let’s let the drug dealers compete with WalMart. Let everyone worry about their own problems. Get the gooferment out of our medicine chests. Prohibition of Alcohol didn’t work! It only took less than a decade for the people to recognize it.

End the “Drug War” now! It’s a bad joke.


LIBERTY: putting all your money in gold and burying it will at least keep you whole

Sunday, December 24, 2006

http://reinkefj.newsvine.com/_news/2006/12/24/
494600-reviewjournalcom-opinion-vin-suprynowicz
-a-mission-for-further-economic-ruin?threadId=63373

http://tinyurl.com/yk9mqm

 

VIN SUPRYNOWICZ: A mission for further economic ruin

***Begin Quote***

How do we know the dollar supply is going up at 10 percent a year? We can’t be positive — Mr. Bernanke’s gang decided last February that we peasants no longer need to see this number, known as the “M-3 monetary aggregate.” But 10 percent is a reasonable extrapolation from other numbers still reported, and from what the Fed was doing 10 months ago — with even more furious printing activity likely to follow, as the proud authors of the Washington Fiscal Death Spiral seek to inflate their way out of the actuarial bankruptcy of Medicare and Social Security.

***End Quote***

Of the three things we need — honest money, private schools, and ending the dole — this article address the dishonest money we are currently using. At 10% inflation, we can’t keep anything. No wonder that real estate, stocks, collectibles, and commodities are off the chart!


TECHNOLOGY: Free book summaries from WikiSummaries

Sunday, December 24, 2006

http://wikisummaries.org/Main_Page

WikiSummaries

***Begin Quote***

Free book summaries from WikiSummaries, that anyone can edit! WikiSummaries.org provides free summaries of books, plays and other written documents. This complements Wikipedia, which is already an excellent source of information on authors and brief book summaries. Where Wikipedia leaves off, WikiSummaries will continue with character profiles, detailed chapter summaries, study questions, important quotes, analysis of metaphor and symbolism, etc.

***End Quote***

Neat idea. Only 37 titles to start but … look at wikopedia!


TECHNOLOGY: The technology of Obituary Guest Books

Sunday, December 24, 2006

http://www.legacy.com/TimesDispatch/GB/GuestbookEntry

http://www.legacy.com/

http://obit.edwardsanddowdle.com/

Hey morbid topic, but technology is where you find it!

I do my “alumni news”. Part of doing that is reporting obits.

(Side note: Some folks have accomplished great things. Some have pages written about them. Some sadly have nothing. Don’t you wonder what yours will be? That’s a ghoulish idea for a biz!?!)

In doing this duty, I usually put in a small note as a fellow alum. (many times it’s the only one!), and I notice that Legacy is the big player. By my eye and unstatistically, they have 80% of what I see. They’ve even figured some different ways to monetize the biz. Extra charge to post a photo. Extra charge to keep it up for a year. Extra charge to keep it up forever. I’ve wondered what they charge. Just out of curiosity.

But today, I found a Funeral Home that has essentially duplicated the function. SO it was cheaper for them to pay to do their own then to pay Legacy.

Interesting?

Was to me.


RANT: Yes, by all means, preserve the ”dignity and decorum” of the House

Saturday, December 23, 2006

http://www.elpasotimes.com/election/ci_4887745

Pelosi says no to C-SPAN request on floor proceedings
Associated Press
Article Launched: 12/22/2006 04:38:28 PM MST

*** begin quote ***

WASHINGTON — Speaker-to-be Nancy Pelosi cited the need to preserve the ”dignity and decorum” of the House as she rejected a request Friday that C-SPAN operate its own cameras in covering the chamber.

*** end quote ***

Yea, we wouldn’t want to see the bozos oggling the young girls and boys. Or, sell themselves like the whores they are. And, that is really insulting all the whores out there. No politicians make used car salesmen look like the paragons of honesty.

This is a joke!

The serfs have no right to see their “elected” representatives in action!


LIBERTY: High School Football … another broken glass fallacy?

Saturday, December 23, 2006

This is (imho) an excellent indictment of “public skools” and their “teams”.

When everyone is forced by threat of violence, and that’s what taxes are, people have to scrimp on things they would rather do. The fact that they get the short end of the stick doesn’t make it any less painful. Like Basat’s “broken glass” fallacy, where everyone can see the beneficial economic activity in repairing a broken window, few if any see the thing that were precluded.

High School Football also creates a peer pressure. Don’t dare gripe about having to pay for it because those who want it will dump on you.

The essence of a free marketplace is that two people can make an exchange because they each perceive that they are better off after the exchange.

In the example of High School Football, where I am forced to exchange my money for the “benefit” of the team, is of little comfort if I don’t have enough food for my children to eat. It doesn’t matter if it is pennies. Let the High School Football team “tin cup” around the community and beg for funds. The alternative is there are armed thugs (the tax collectors, as bad as in the movie Robin Hood) will rob you a gun point for them. Suppose that the High School Football tax is what I need to send my child to art class, pay my magazine subscription, or contribute to my favorite charity. It really does NOT matter what I choose to do with what I would pay in the High School Football tax, it’s MY choice. Not yours!

Here in NuJerzee, we are driving people out of the state with socialism and its taxes. I’m sure that when I become a senior citizen I’ll be leaving as well. And it won’t be the weather that drives me away, it’ll will be socialism, its taxes, and its rules.

read more | digg story


XPfails – luggable – mouse goes nuts!

Saturday, December 23, 2006

For the last two days, the mouse has been screwed up. It would page down on its own. Wouldn’t double click. I reloaded the software for it several times. Rebooted innumerable times. Never figured out why, but it seems to be working now. Arghhh!


LIBERTY: High School Football … another broken glass fallacy?

Saturday, December 23, 2006

http://www.mises.org/story/2419

http://tinyurl.com/wl2cy

 

Is High School Football a Public Good?
By Jim Fedako
Posted on 12/21/2006

Jim Fedako, a former professional cyclist who lives in Lewis Center, OH, is a member of the Olentangy Local School District and maintains a blog.

***Begin Quote***

The problem with the concept of public goods is that it misdirects the debate. In modern society, every action I take has a perceived positive or a perceived negative external effect on other members of society, and most of the time there are perceived positive and negative external effects occurring simultaneously. When I mow my lawn, one neighbor perceives the noise as a negative — reducing calm and tranquility — while another neighbor perceives my well-kept lawn as a benefit — invoking calm and tranquility.

I use the qualifier “perceive” because the whole public goods argument for coerced funding of football teams is based on the perception of the observer. The parents of the football player, the player himself, as well as local high school football fans, perceive the team and games as a positive for the community. Some say that it benefits the kids, while others say it strengthens the community. Both views see tax-funded sports, football in particular, as a winner for the community.

Yet the parent struggling to make ends meet each month, the retiree living on an inflation-robbed pension, the lover of freedom, etc., see their ever-increasing tax bill as a negative. For the parent, a child’s dental appointment goes wanting for the sake of the football team; for the retiree, the higher tax bill comes at the cost of a colder house in the winter; for lovers of freedom, additional money lifted from their wallets is another slap in the face by collectivists.

***End Quote***

This is (imho) an excellent indictment of “public skools” and their “teams”.

When everyone is forced by threat of violence, and that’s what taxes are, people have to scrimp on things they would rather do. The fact that they get the short end of the stick doesn’t make it any less painful. Like Basat’s “broken glass” fallacy, where everyone can see the beneficial economic activity in repairing a broken window, few if any see the thing that were precluded.

High School Football also creates a peer pressure. Don’t dare gripe about having to pay for it because those who want it will dump on you.

The essence of a free marketplace is that two people can make an exchange because they each perceive that they are better off after the exchange.

In the example of High School Football, where I am forced to exchange my money for the “benefit” of the team, is of little comfort if I don’t have enough food for my children to eat. It doesn’t matter if it is pennies. Let the High School Football team “tin cup” around the community and beg for funds. The alternative is there are armed thugs (the tax collectors, as bad as in the movie Robin Hood) will rob you a gun point for them. Suppose that the High School Football tax is what I need to send my child to art class, pay my magazine subscription, or contribute to my favorite charity. It really does NOT matter what I choose to do with what I would pay in the High School Football tax, it’s MY choice. Not yours!

Here in NuJerzee, we are driving people out of the state with socialism and its taxes. I’m sure that when I become a senior citizen I’ll be leaving as well. And it won’t be the weather that drives me away, it’ll will be socialism, its taxes, and its rules.


RANT: Thus, I too no longer fly commercial.

Saturday, December 23, 2006

http://www.townhall.com/columnists/WalterEWilliams/
2006/12/20/racial_profiling

http://tinyurl.com/ykr3vz

Racial profiling
By Walter E. Williams
Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Dr. Williams serves on the faculty of George Mason University as John M. Olin Distinguished Professor of Economics and is the author of More Liberty Means Less Government: Our Founders Knew This Well.

*** begin quote ***

You say, “Williams, are you justifying religious and racial profiling?” No. I’m not justifying anything any more than I’d try to justify Einstein’s special law of relativity. I’m trying to explain a phenomenon. By the way, I think some of the airport screening is grossly stupid, but I’m at peace with the Transportation Security Administration. They have their rules, and I have mine. One of mine is to minimize my association with idiocy. Thus, I no longer fly commercial.

*** end quote ***

Neither do I! It’s “security theater”! When the airlines come to their senses, (they welcomed all this security because it prevented resale of the tickets; most notably the frequent flyer awards!), and stand up to the government, (“err, Dear TSA, we don’t want your stinkin’ security. We’ll do our own”, Arm the pilots. Screen the employees, airport workers, baggage, and cargo.), then I’ll consider it. Till then, a plague on all their houses.

[And, on an editorial note, I’m glad to get back to where I can agree with Professor Williams. The last two disagreements with an esteemed authority, made me think “could I be wrong?”, but I came to my senses and said “of course not”! A “know it all” wrong? Unthinkable!]


INTERESTING: Lessons Learned from watch gamblers lose (including me)

Friday, December 22, 2006

This week I formulated a theory about gambling. Gamblers lose for three reasons:

  • They don’t understand the game.
  • They have no limits.
  • They have no money management scheme.

Regardless if it is slots, table games, or something else, gamblers lose because they really don’t understand the “rules”. Both the published rules, the implied rules, and the common sense ones. For example, on slot machines, do you even know what the bonus that you (me) are chasing will pay. Dropping big bucks chasing what turns out to be a small bonus is a losing gamble. You have to understand what you can take away. I see hunch players at the Let It Ride game chasing everything, even low hands with no reasonable expectation. Pumping bills into a slot machine where the expectation is low is also demonstrating not understanding what you are doing.

People often have no limits other than when they are “tapped out”. Very early in my gambling career, I learned about limits. Lots of limits. I divide my trip limit stake into day, session, and game limits. We used to use envelopes, but they are NOT needed now. With the envelopes, I used to actually put all the change back into the envelope and total up at the end of the trip. Using that system, I was surprised at how it averaged out well.

Gamblers lose becasue they have no money management scheme. For example, yesterday, I met a lady who hit a straight flush earlier in the day with one five dollar bet (An example of flaw number one!) who won $1,000. She had played it ALL back. Did she think she was going to get another one? You have to play with a way to get YOUR money out of the game, off the table, back to your pocket, wallet, or envelope. I use a money management schme with Let It Ride that sets a game stake that will allow me to pay for six losing hands in a row. When my “front row” is full, any winnings go to my “back row”. Once in the back row, they are never risked again. Frau plays roulette with her game stake on the table. When she wins, she carves out her original stake. If she’s doing really well and they pay here in “real chips”, those go right into her pocket never to be seen again.

Comments?


FUN: Some Plainsboro carolers were out Friday night

Friday, December 22, 2006

I took a few pictures of some carolers at the Plainsboro shopping center (by the “good” chinese restaurant).

http://www.kodakgallery.com/ShareLandingSignin.jsp?
Uc=xiwgp6n.c7ff01k3&Uy=-29yltk&Upost_signin=
Slideshow.jsp%3Fmode%3Dfromshare&Ux=0

http://tinyurl.com/ygtzu6

It was serendipity.

This group showed up and start singing. They weren’t collecting. I guess they were just doing it for the joy, or for practice.

I had my camera as usual.

But the clincher was that there was a little girl there with her birthday balloon who was absolutely enthralled with the show.

Now maybe if I was a better  camera operator or had better gear, I could have gotten a better picture.

In any event it was a great moment.


RANT: What important and what’s not!

Friday, December 22, 2006

http://www.accesshollywood.com/news/ah3204.shtml

Trump To Rosie: You’re Sued!

*** begin quote ***

NEW YORK, NY (December 20, 2006) — Donald Trump is set to sue “The View” host Rosie O’Donnell, Access Hollywood can reveal.

*** end quote ***

Who cares?

Here imho are two people that don’t deserve serious consideration.

Rosie earned her way onto my “don’t care” list when she showed that the “Queen of Nice” was all an act. She put herself out in her morning show as an ordinary person, with some liberal politics, doing good for ordinary folks. When she was finished, she demonstrated that it was all an act. She was not an authentic person! Anyway, as Gandhi said “one can not do wrong in one department of life”.

Donald also earned his way on to that list with several actions. His perversion of the eminent domain laws to displace those AC families for “his” underpass violated my sense of fair play on several levels. So, I won’t patronize his efforts voluntarily.

So, like Jane Fonda, Barbara Striesand, and many politicians, I choose to ignore them and urge you to do the same.

This isn’t “news”. Our boys and girls dying in Iraq, while “our” politicians spend a quiet Christmas at home, that’s news! The Federal Reserve inflating us to poverty, that’s news. The socialist education system dumbing us down as a nation, that’s news. And, the alleged “wars” (i.e., terrorism, drugs, etc. etc.) reducing us to slaves, that’s news.

Rosie and Donald ain’t news!


RANT: Gubamint skool want to “go in a new direction”. How about out of business?

Thursday, December 21, 2006

http://pacpub.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=17620494&BRD=1091&PAG=461&dept_id=425716&rfi=6

http://tinyurl.com/yhsuz6

District fires grid coach
New direction sought for team
By: Bill Greenwood, Staff Writer
12/21/2006

*** begin quote ***

Mark Prelewicz, head coach of the South Brunswick High School football team, will not be returning to the sidelines next year.

Athletic Director Elaine McGrath said Wednesday the school decided to “go in a new direction” and seek a new head coach for the 2007 season. Mr. Prelewicz was informed of the decision Monday, she said.

*** end quote ***

Doesn’t anyone see a problem in the government running a school; let alone a school’s football program?

First, my earnings are stolen by taxes to support this activity in which I get to pay but have no voice in. Maybe Coach Mark was a terrible coach. But where does the Athletic Director get to say in my name, and all the taxpayers, that “we” want to go in a new direction. Maybe we don’t care if the team wins or loses, but maybe we value if the children are having fun, learning something, and safe.

Second, government schools are a queer activity in terms of Constitutional limits. Where does the authority for this odd creation come from? Certainly, no one has ever asked me. Students, teachers, and coaches are dealing with the government and then have all the associated rights when one deals with the government. It just becomes too confusing. What happened to the coach’s right to due process.

Third, and probably most important, it’s not fair to expect teachers and coaches to work in this new version of the “company store”. We don’t have the marketplace to supply the discipline to ensure that everyone is maximizing their service to their fellow human beings. The government, its schools, and all its undertakings have no marketplace to tell it when it is doing something good, something bad, or in this case something very confusing.

//Signed//
alibertarianin08824


LIBERTY: Pot becomes top cash crop in US

Thursday, December 21, 2006

http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,,1975161,00.html

All-time high for homegrown as pot becomes top cash crop in US
Dan Glaister in Los Angeles
Tuesday December 19, 2006
The Guardian

*** begin quote ***

Marijuana is now the biggest cash crop grown in the US, exceeding traditional harvests such as wheat, corn and soy beans, says a new report.

The study shows that 10,000 tonnes of marijuana worth $35.8bn (£18.4bn) is grown each year; the street value would be even higher. This dwarfs the $23bn-worth of corn grown, $17.6bn-worth of soybeans and $12.2bn-worth of hay. Marijuana is the biggest cash crop in 12 states, with the value of pot grown outstripping peanuts in Georgia and tobacco in North and South Carolina. In California, the biggest producer, it is worth $13.8bn.

*** end quote ***

Only in America could we figure out how to make a weed the most important crop. What a joke! Yup, that “war” on drugs is really working.

Perhaps, if we really want the nation to be drug free, then we should direct Governments at all levels to try to require us to be drug addicts. In a decade, we’d be drug free. All thanks to, what I will call, “The Gooferment can’t do anything right” Law. Rule of thumb. Safe bet.

Can you answer the best question I ever heard from the boys over at Free Talk Live —- name a government program that works?


TECHNOLOGY: Bloggers Must Disclose Sponsored Posts

Thursday, December 21, 2006

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/T/
TECHBIT_BLOG_DISCLOSURES?SITE=7219&SECTION=HOME
&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2006-12-20-19-54-08

http://tinyurl.com/yf6qd7

Dec 20, 7:54 PM EST
Bloggers Must Disclose Sponsored Posts
By ANICK JESDANUN
AP Internet Writer
Technology Video

***Begin Quote***

NEW YORK (AP) — A company that helps advertisers connect with bloggers willing to write about their products for payment will now require disclosures amid criticism and a regulatory threat.

***End Quote***

Oh thanks goodness, mommy government saved us from the big bad bloggers selling their souls and an unsuspecting public down the river.

Save me, save me, mommy government, from the big bad internet.

Yeah, like anyone should ever trust the net as the source of truth.

For the record, I haven’t found any one dumb enough to pay me for these rantings. And, when I do, you’ll be the first to know.

Could it be that the FTC saw the criticism moderating the blogosphere’s behavior and they ran up to the front of the parade to lead it? Nah, that would assume that they could do anything during the holiday season.

Sheesh!


TECHNOLOGY: Borgata Casino in AC NJ has computer problems

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

I guess I should try to get me resume in here. The “computers in the pits” have been down all day. And, everyone has frayed tempers. They can do the table accounting, order chips for the tables, rate players, give comps, or whatever else they do. :-) Guess they skipped reliability in their specs. Entertaining! I think they run windoze.


RANT: Clean needles are a poor solution for the “drug war”!

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Never let is be said that mommy government does care about you. Guv Corzine now has regally allowed for needle exchange. Sheesh! How about getting out of the drug war business completely. Let the marketplace give “addicts” and patients access to what ever they need when they need it. The marketplace will make it very inexpensive. Perhaps they could even hold down a job while supporting their habit, regardless if it is nicotine, alcohol, or other drugs. Get the government out of our medicine chest!


TECHNOLOGY: The fellows over at Free Talk Live have a problem …

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

… the fellow that made up their monthly torrent of their shows went MIA. They’ve asked me to help.

One problem: I don’t know squat about torrents.

By muddling around I made one torrent for demo purposes.

If you use torrents, please click on the link and let me know if you can get my torrent and play it.

Then, I’ll be a torrent guru having made one!!

http://www.inpursuitof.com/FTL2006-12-18.mp3.torrent

Try this a see if you can get their show.


RANT: PA opens more “racinos”

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Doesn’t anyone think that Government is a joke when it comes to gambling. Don’t get me wrong, I gamble. I just think that anything is ok as long as they get taxes, can hold up developers for campaign contributions, and the unions get work. It’s all part of the intellectual dishonesty around the “vice” crimes. Gambling, drinking, drugs, and prostitution are all “terrible” unless the government can make a buck out of it. Anyone who thinks that the gubamint’s “laws” actually prevent or stop anything is sadly deluded. Not only that, but they don’t really want it to go away. It keeps them in power.


TECHNOLOGY: SKYPEIN not working

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Being an old bell shaped head, I am always fascinated with when the web can touch the PSTN (public service telephone network). Imagine being able to turn a ~4k laptop or desktop into a $9 phone. Great. Ever since Judge Green threw the snowball that started an avalanche! (He decided that the Bell “monopoly” would have to open up. We did have the best phone service in the world, universal service, a dedicated workforce, and Bell Labs. (That was a national treasure!) This was all for the sake of supposedly cheaper phone rates for business. Interesting that I don’t think we have seen the benefits of competition. It’s really not a free market. Now that would be great, if we had gone to a truly free market. Instead, we have a sort of regulated, sort of free, definitely regulated market.

So I’ve been playing with SKYPE. You can skype me at “reinkefj” (I know the name is a real surprise.) You can call me on 732 – 917 – 4816.

SKYPEIN isn’t working. For calls from a phone, it doesn’t “ring” on the laptop, but it will take a message. For calls from a pc, it does work correctly.

Yahoo Instant Messenger With Voice has a similar offering. Again, I’m “reinkefj”, or you can call from 609-489-5893.

Call me if you want to chat or just want to turn my notebook into a nine dollar phone.

Interesting! What the real future of the public telephone network will really be?


TECHNOLOGY: Topix says “trust us”; they miss the point

Monday, December 18, 2006

From: Admin, Topix [mailto:topixadmin@ex.topix.net]
Sent: Monday, December 18, 2006 1:49 PM
Subject: RE: Feedback: BUG Sign up none

Hi there,

Thanks for letting us know. We are constantly working to improve our site, and I have forwarded your issue to our engineers. In the meantime, feel free to sign up using another email address. We will never share your email address, and it is not displayed publicly.

Admin @ Topix

—–Original Message—–
Sent: Sun 12/17/2006 8:20 AM
To: feedback2@ex.topix.net
Subject: Feedback: BUG Sign up none

Can’t use a gmail plus for an email. It’s a way of preventing spam. https://reinkefj.wordpress.com/2006/12/16/productivity-use-two-gmail-accounts-to-protect-an-isp-email-account/

Sorry can use your site until you support gmail plus signs.

==============

Just trust us. We’d never spam you. Or, make a mistake.

Yeahhhhhh


FUN: 2do when I retire

Monday, December 18, 2006

http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/art/2006/12/the_50_artworks_you_rate_highe.html


RANT: Are government workers “special”

Monday, December 18, 2006

… or at least are they allowed to flaunt the law?

Yesterday, in NYC, I traveled my usual route, and on this one block with a firehouse, the block was wall to wall cars. Cars on the sidewalk. Cards double parked for the length of a long block. It was tight just to get through. I had to wait while some one was dropped off.

It was “obviously” the fire house’s holiday party.

If you or I did that, cars would get towed.

So are government workers above the law?

Silly serf, obviously yes!


LIBERTY: Where government is concerned, never forget the Law of Unintended Consequences

Sunday, December 17, 2006

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0%2C%2C2089-2508262%2C00.html

http://tinyurl.com/y97scb

The Sunday Times December 17, 2006
Tsunami survivors given the lash
Michael Sheridan and Dewi Loveard, Banda Aceh
Disaster donations help Islamic vigilante force impose punishments on women

***Begin Quote***

International aid workers and Indonesian women’s organisations are now expressing dismay that the flow of foreign cash for reconstruction has allowed the government to spend scarce money on a new bureaucracy and religious police to enforce puritan laws, such as the compulsory wearing of headscarves.

***End Quote***

So here we have donations for the victims of a natural disaster perverted into oppressing the people.


LIBERTY: The UN … an idea who time never was and is fatally flawed

Sunday, December 17, 2006

http://www.lewrockwell.com/reese/reese328.html

http://tinyurl.com/v3eyj

 

Put No Faith in the United Nations
by Charley Reese

***Begin Quote***

My first choice is and always has been to abrogate the treaty and withdraw from the U.N. completely. If it were merely a worthless organization, that wouldn’t be so bad, but it is a very expensive organization, which has great capacity to cause trouble.

***End Quote***

An excellent opinion, The UN is ineffective, inefficient, expensive, permits leaders to misbehave, and screws up NYC. Nuke ’em.

You have to wonder about any organization that allows murderers to be in charge of “human rights”.

Withdraw now. Stop paying. Boot ’em out.

It’s a “club” we shouldn’t be in!