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| HEIL FDR!!!To those of you interested in the parrellels between the rize of
socialism in nazi germany and the rise of socialism in the United
States, copy and paste the following link. Interestingly, Hitler himself said he
was in full "accord
with the President {of the Unites States} in
the view that the virtue of duty, readiness for sacrifice, and
discipline should dominate the entire people. These moral demands which
the President places before every individual citizen of the United
States are also the quintessence of the German state philosophy, which
finds its expression in the slogan "The Public Weal Transcends the
Interest of the Individual"'. Perhaps Hitler was only wrong because he
lost the war. Or perhaps he was wrong because mankind is meant to be
comprised of strong, rational, independent human beings who interact
voluntarily.
http://www.mises.org/story/2312
Vote Libertarian.
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| Isn't this amazing?
Not
one of these taxes existed 100 years ago and our nation was the most
prosperous in the world, had absolutely no national debt, had the
largest middle class in the world and Mom stayed home to raise the kids.
TAXES Accounts Receivable Tax Building Permit Tax Capital Gains Tax CDL license Tax Cigarette Tax Corporate Income Tax Court Fines (indirect taxes) Dog License Tax Federal Income Tax Federal Unemployment Tax (FUTA) Fishing License Tax Food License Tax Fuel permit tax Gasoline Tax Hunting License Tax Inheritance Tax Interest expense (tax on the $) Inventory tax IRS Interest Charges (tax on top of tax) IRS Penalties (tax on top of tax) Liquor Tax Local Income Tax Luxury Taxes Marriage License Tax Medicare Tax Property Tax Real Estate Tax Septic Permit Tax Service Charge Taxes Social Security Tax Road Usage Taxes (Truckers) Sales Taxes Recreational Vehicle Tax Road Toll Booth Taxes School Tax State Income Tax State Unemployment Tax (SUTA) Telephone federal excise tax Telephone federal universal service fee tax Telephone federal, state and local surcharge taxes Telephone minimum usage surcharge tax Telephone recurring and non-recurring charges tax Telephone state and local tax Telephone usage charge tax Toll Bridge Taxes Toll Tunnel Taxes Traffic Fines (indirect taxation) Trailer registration tax Utility Taxes Vehicle License Registration Tax Vehicle Sales Tax Watercraft registration Tax Well Permit Tax Workers Compensation Tax
What the f__k?!
Brought to you by thinklibertarian.com
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| THE LITTLE RED HENOnce
upon a time, on a farm in Texas, there was a little red hen who
scratched about the barnyard until she uncovered quite a few grains of
wheat.
She called all of her neighbors together and said, "If we
plant this wheat, we shall have bread to eat. Who will help me plant
it?" "Not I," said the cow. "Not I," said the duck. "Not I," said the pig. "Not I," said the goose. "Then I will do it by myself," said the little red hen. And so she did. The wheat grew very tall and ripened into golden grain.
"Who will help me reap my wheat?" asked the little red hen. "Not I," said the duck. "Out of my classification," said the pig. "I'd lose my seniority," said the cow. "I'd lose my unemployment compensation," said the goose. "Then I will do it by myself," said the little red hen, and so she did.
At last it came time to bake the bread. "Who will help me bake the bread?" asked the little red hen. "That would be overtime for me," said the cow. "I'd lose my welfare benefits," said the duck. "I'm a drop out and never learned how," said the pig. "If I'm to be the only helper, that's discrimination," said the goose. "Then I will do it by myself," said the little red hen.
She
baked five loaves and held them up for all of her neighbors to see.
They wanted some and, in fact, demanded a share. But the little red hen
said, "No, I shall eat all five loaves." "Excess profits!" cried the cow. "Capitalist leech!" screamed the duck. "I demand equal rights!" yelled the goose. The pig just grunted in disdain.
And they all painted "Unfair!" picket signs and marched around and around the little red hen, shouting obscenities.
Then a government agent came, he said to the little red hen, "You must not be so greedy." "But I earned the bread," said the little red hen. "Exactly,"
said the agent. "That is what makes our free enterprise system so
wonderful. Anyone in the barnyard can earn as much as he wants. But
under our modern government regulations, the productive workers must
divide the fruits of their labor with those who are lazy and idle."
And
they all lived happily ever after, including the little red hen, who
smiled and clucked, "I am grateful, for now I truly understand." But
her neighbors became quite disappointed in her. She never again baked
bread because she joined the "party" and got her bread free.
And
all the Democrats smiled. 'Fairness' had been established. Individual
initiative had died but nobody noticed; perhaps no one cared, as long
as there was free bread.
Bill Clinton is getting $12 million for his memoirs.
His wife Hillary got $8 million for hers.
That's
$20 million for memories from two people who for eight years repeatedly
testified, under oath, that they couldn't remember anything.
God Bless America!
Brought to you by thinklibertarian.com
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We know, by infinite Examples and Experience, that Men
possessed of Power, rather than part with it, will do any thing, even the worst
and the blackest, to keep it; and scarce ever any Man upon Earth went out of it
as long as he could carry every thing his own Way in it. . . . This seems
certain, That the Good of the World, or of their People, was not one of their Motives
either for continuing in Power, or for quitting it.
It is the Nature of Power to be ever encroaching, and
converting every extraordinary Power, granted at particular Times, and upon
particular Occasions, into an ordinary Power, to be used at all Times, and when
there is no Occasion, nor does it ever part willingly with any Advantage….
Alas! Power encroaches daily upon Liberty, with a Success too evident; and the
Balance between them is almost lost. Tyranny has engrossed almost the whole
Earth, and striking at Mankind Root and Branch, makes the World a
Slaughterhouse; and will certainly go on to destroy, till it is either
destroyed itself, or, which is most likely, has left nothing else to destroy.
-Cato's Letters, John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon, 1720
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| LEFT-LIBERAL
INTELLECTUALS are often a wondrous group to behold. In the last three
or four decades, not a very long time in human history, they have, like
whirling dervishes, let loose a series of angry complaints against
free-market capitalism. The curious thing is that each of these
complaints has been contradictory to one or more of their predecessors.
But contradictory complaints by liberal intellectuals do not seem to
faze them or serve to abate their petulance—even though it is often the
very same intellectuals who are reversing themselves so rapidly. And
these reversals seem to make no dent whatever in their
self-righteousness or in the self-confidence of their position.
Let us consider the record of recent decades:
1.
In the late 1930s and early 1940s, the liberal intellectuals came to
the conclusion that capitalism was suffering from inevitable "secular
stagnation," a stagnation imposed by the slowing down of population
growth, the end of the old Western frontier, and by the supposed fact
that no further inventions were possible. All this spelled eternal
stagnation, permanent mass unemployment, and therefore the need for
socialism, or thoroughgoing State planning, to replace free-market
capitalism. This on the threshold of the greatest boom in American
history!
2. During the 1950s, despite the great boom in postwar America, the
liberal
intellectuals kept raising their sights; the cult of "economic growth"
now entered the scene. To be sure, capitalism was growing, but it was
not growing fast enough. Therefore free-market capitalism must be
abandoned, and socialism or government intervention must step in and
force-feed the economy, must build investments and compel greater
saving in order to maximize the rate of growth, even if we don't want to grow that fast. Conservative economists such as Colin Clark attacked this liberal program as "growthmanship."
3. Suddenly, John Kenneth Galbraith entered the liberal scene with his best-selling The Affluent Society
in 1958. And just as suddenly, the liberal intellectuals reversed their
indictments. The trouble with capitalism, it now appeared, was that it
had grown too much; we were no longer stagnant, but too well off,
and man had lost his spirituality amidst supermarkets and automobile
tail fins. What was necessary, then, was for government to step in,
either in massive intervention or as socialism, and tax the consumers
heavily in order to reduce their bloated affluence.
4.
The cult of excess affluence had its day, to be superseded by a
contradictory worry about poverty, stimulated by Michael Harrington's The Other America
in 1962. Suddenly, the problem with America was not excessive
affluence, but increasing and grinding poverty—and, once again, the
solution was for the government to step in, plan mightily, and tax the
wealthy in order to lift up the poor. And so we had the War on Poverty
for several years.
5.
Stagnation; deficient growth; overaffluence; overpoverty; the
intellectual fashions changed like ladies' hemlines. Then, in 1964,
the happily short-lived Ad Hoc Committee on the Triple Revolution
issued its then-famous manifesto, which brought us and the liberal
intellectuals full circle. For two or three frenetic years we were
regaled with the idea that America's problem was not stagnation but the
exact reverse: in a few short years all of America's production
facilities would be automated and cybernated, incomes and production
would be enormous and superabundant, but everyone would be
automated out of a job. Once again, free-market capitalism would lead
to permanent mass unemployment, which could only be
remedied—you guessed it!—by massive State intervention or by outright
socialism. For several years, in the mid-1960s, we thus suffered from
what was justly named the "Automation Hysteria."1
6.
By the late 1960s it was clear to everyone that the automation
hysterics had been dead wrong, that automation was proceeding at no
faster a pace than old-fashioned "mechanization" and indeed that the
1969 recession was causing a falling off in the rate of increase of
productivity. One hears no more about automation dangers nowadays; we
are now in the seventh phase of liberal economic flip-flops.
7.
Affluence is again excessive, and, in the name of conservation,
ecology, and the increasing scarcity of resources, free-market
capitalism is growing much too fast. State planning, or socialism,
must, of course, step in to abolish all growth and bring about a
zero-growth society and economy—in order to avoid negative growth, or
retrogression, sometime in the future! We are now back to a
super-Galbraithian position, to which has been added scientific jargon
about effluents, ecology, and "spaceship earth," as well as a bitter
assault on technology itself as being an evil polluter. Capitalism has
brought about technology, growth—including population growth, industry,
and pollution—and government is supposed to step in and eradicate these
evils.
It
is not at all unusual, in fact, to find the same people now holding a
contradictory blend of positions 5 and 7 and maintaining at one and the same time
that (a) we are living in a "post-scarcity" age where we no longer need
private property, capitalism, or material incentives to production; and
(b) that capitalist greed is depleting our resources and bringing about
imminent worldwide scarcity. The liberal answer to both, or indeed to
all, of these problems turns out, of course, to be the same: socialism
or state planning to replace free-market capitalism. The great
economist Joseph Schumpeter put the whole shoddy performance of
liberal intellectuals into a nutshell a generation ago: "Capitalism
stands its trial before judges who have the sentence of death in their
pockets. They are going to pass it, whatever the defense they may hear;
the only success victorious defense can possibly produce is a change in
the indictment."2 And so, the charges, the indictments, may change and contradict previous charges—but the answer is always and wearily the same.
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