Tuesday, 29 December 2009

The Death Penalty, The War on Drugs, Rule of Law and National Sovereignty

Today we hear that China has executed Akmal Shaikh for drug smuggling.

Firstly Mr Shaikh was executed. He was not presenting an imminent threat to life or limb but was taken from a cell or secure room in a facility well capable of containing him and killed in cold blood. Like an individual, the State can, in certain circumstances, take life. But this is usually limited to situations of immediate ongoing threat to existence, as in a defensive war against an external aggressor. This is no such case. Had there been no death penalty, any discussions about mental health could go on and, hopefully, be resolved. Now it cannot.

Secondly, Mr Shaikh was smuggling drugs. The whole war on drugs is irrational and counter-productive. It enriches drug lords, impoverishes and criminalises users who, frankly, probably have enough on their plate as it is, and drives up crime to fund habits and maintain "turf". It should not have been a crime outside that of, possibly, tax evasion of duty or VAT.

Thirdly, China is a sovereign nation. It has poor and sometimes non-existent Rule of Law, but that fact remains. It is the role of the Chinese people to effect change in that dimension and not for "Western governments" to demand anything*. Having said that, it is NOT the right of the Chinese authorities to, in turn, demand that no criticism be made of their actions. Such protests sound shrill.

If people outside of China want to make a stand then make it as individuals using the means available within the Rule of Law. Some call for a boycott of Chinese goods, but then again is it the responsibility of private companies in China? Even if China had multi-party democracy, how would one know that a particular manufacturer and their hapless employees (and suppliers, come to that) were supportive of the regime and policy and so be responsible? Collective punishment is disgraceful. Period. One must be very clear about who is being targeted and the unintended consequences of such actions.

So, we have a man convicted of a non-crime, convicted without due process and sentenced to an illegitimate punishment, but by a Sovereign Nation.

What would a Libertarian government do? We would put our case against the death penalty and the futility of the "war on drugs". We would put our case for the Rule of Law. This was not some extra-judicial outrage, however. I would ask all those who want the State to "do something" to consider how you would react if a foreign power or group tried to dictate or use force to control how our courts dealt with a case in the UK. Not acceptable. For us. For China.


* As for Brown and our embarrassing, quisling, limp and routinely toadying F&CO response...one wonders if certain elements intentionally act to weaken our position and undermine influence, so eager to play in a bigger pond.

Saturday, 26 December 2009

Cha Cha Cha CHANGES!!!




New Labour or Blue Labour?

Cha cha cha ...same shit.

Thursday, 24 December 2009

Season's Greetings

"Please accept with no obligation, implied or implicit, my best wishes for an environmentally conscious, socially responsible, low stress, non-addictive, gender neutral celebration of the winter solstice holiday, practiced with the most enjoyable traditions of religious persuasion or secular practices of your choice with respect for the religious/secular persuasions and/or traditions of others, or their choice not to practice religious or secular traditions at all.

I also wish you a fiscally successful, personally fulfilling and medically uncomplicated recognition of the onset of the generally accepted Gregorian calendar year 2010, but not without due respect for the calendars of choice of other cultures whose contributions to society have helped make our country great and without regard to the race, creed, colour, age, physical ability, religious faith or sexual preference of the wishes.

By accepting this greeting, you are accepting these terms: This greeting is subject to clarification or withdrawal. It is freely transferable with no alteration to the original greeting. It implies no promise by the wisher to actually implement any of the wishes for her/himself or others and is void where prohibited by law, and is revocable at the sole discretion of the wisher. This wish is warranted to perform as expected within the usual application of good tidings for a period of one year or until the issuance of a subsequent holiday greeting, whichever comes first, and warranty is limited to replacement of this wish or issuance of a new wish at the sole discretion of the wisher.

No trees were harmed in the sending of this message."

H/T: Daniel Katz

http://www.pi-news.net/
http://www.pi-news.org/

Monday, 21 December 2009

Quote of the Day

Eaten up with envy, you become a Socialist, blind hatred makes you a Nazi - while self-confidence and love of one's neighbour makes the capitalist.

André F. Lichtschlag

eigentümlich frei

http://www.ef-magazin.de/

Friday, 18 December 2009

Markets are Awsum

American Libertarian Magazine, reason.tv reminds us all that however bad the recession may be, even if expensive taxes and burdensome regulations prevent the full power of human creativity being unleashed, even semi-free-market capitalism is definitely worth it:
(Original Video)

Merry Christmas, Libertarians

Saturday, 12 December 2009

Best Libertarian....





Well I thought I would get more of discussion post going rather than an informative one.

What is the best Libertarian movie....?

What are the best Libertarian songs...?


obviously I mean "themed", doesn't have to be Libertarian directed or sung, lol.


For Movie I would probably say "The People vs Larry Flynt",

For Song I am pretty tempted to go for "The Government Totally Sucks" by Tenacious D
Just because I came across it whilst sorting my ITunes today. But there are LOADS of great ones, so lets get the discussion going!


I guess because the holidays are coming up I thought I would try a "fun" post, rather than depress us all with the scary madness going on in the world today.


So feel free to give me your list, or top 5 or top Libertarian fiction book, or top Libertarian food, top Libertarian mode of transport...

everything and anything is permitted really :)

Friday, 11 December 2009

Budget Savings

A quickie for my first post:

As we all accept that need to make savings why don’t we ever hear a discussion about cuts in our EU budget in the MSM? Why is it always nurses and teachers and police and defence?

H/T Snafu

What is education?

This from Bearwatch...
In response, I argue that we have public schools because (based on the data):

a) they are cheaper than private schools;

b) they out-perform private schools, on average;

c) it is better to educate than imprison;

d) education is the only modern means for social mobility.

I really hate the way people assume that education has to be associated with an institution.

I learnt very little at school. After 13 years of 'education' I still didn't know what a comma was used for.

At Uni I learnt a little more. But it wasn't until I left all the institutions that I really began to pick things up.

And what this taught me was that the basis of education is as follows. Concentrate on things that interest you. Read lots of books. Use the Internet. And talk to lots of people who are smarter than you. All of which are much cheaper than schooling.

We really need to scrap the idea in this country that schooling is the only/best form of education. It should just be seen as an option. And not forced on anyone. As it is today.

Because for many people it simply doesn't work.

Thursday, 10 December 2009

The Last Act

Dear Sir,

I have no doubt that the Europhiles amongst the party apparatchiks would find it inconvenient before the forthcoming General Election if the subject matter of UK abandoning sterling and replacing it with the Euro were to come up once again. It would of course be embarrassing particularly to this Labour Government if this debate were to be reignited by the Eurosceptics.

Yet for all Gordon Brown’s posturing on the subject of currency conversion we are reminded that Article 2 para.4 of the Treaty of Lisbon ratified by the UK without the consent of its people in referendum provides quite clearly that all subscribing members will adopt the Euro now and makes no provision for dissent.

There at a stroke at the beginning of a document which on any reading has ended a thousand years of independence is the final nail in our coffin. We have lost our flag, our right to legislate for ourselves, to maintain the integrity of our own borders, to raise taxes and every other democratic right enjoyed by free countries and for which we have spilt our blood in two world wars. We now have a president not a prime minister.

Our embassies worldwide are at a stroke redundant. The spectre of a European Warrant rules our streets. We are ruled now by nameless, unelected Eurocrats who will increasingly and a rate far more frightening than that of the prolific law making of this present Government spew forth legislation and regulations and so rule from a foreign shore every aspect of our daily lives.

The reward of party failures will not be elevation to the House of Lords but rather a plum job with all perks in the European Commission. The Palace of Westminster and the Houses of Parliament will one day become a splendid tourist hotel no doubt reserving a suite or two for our European masters. We will think, speak and behave to the beat of a foreign drum and dream of glories past. In the words of Pastor Neimoller…is there any one out there who will speak up for us now?

David Kirwan

Prospective Independent MP for Wirral West

Wednesday, 9 December 2009

Climate Change -- are you a moron?

George Mombiot has some amusing posts on ClimateGate over at his blog.

They reveal -- shock horror -- that large oil corporations have promoted anti-climate change propaganda.

And George gives a great reason as to why skeptics have accepted this propaganda...
When I use the term denial industry, I’m referring to those who are paid to say that manmade global warming isn’t happening. The great majority of people who believe this have not been paid: they have been duped. Reading Climate Cover-Up, you keep stumbling across familiar phrases and concepts, which you can see every day on the comment threads. The book shows that these memes were planted by PR companies and hired experts.

Yep, it's because all skeptics are morons. It's the catch-all, lefty, argument winner -- write off 50% of the population as morons.

Because of course none of us could grasp that oil corporations may interpret climate change differently...

I have a few points to make to George Mombiot and his ilk.

1. Yes I am a skeptic. But I fully accept that climate change is a fact. If it weren't the climate would be in a unique and very odd situation.

2. There is no consensus. No-one agrees on what will happen; what the impact will be; or what we should do. Even among those who fully accept AGW. This therefore makes policy development very risky.

3. It should be of concern to everyone that many of the proposed solutions involve a great increase in the size and scope of the state.

4. Wind turbines are a stupid idea. Let's drop them as a proposed solution.

5. Most skeptics have their doubts because they do not accept ideas just because they have been expressed by someone 'important'. Even if that person works for a corporation.

END...

Tuesday, 8 December 2009

Quote of the day

UKIP's LEADER IS A GHOST OF TORIES' PAST


Today in the House of Lords he asked the government whether they would hold a referendum.

The answer, from Glenys Kinnock, was "no". She added that his offer to liquidate his own party was a "rather original approach to leadership".

Simon Hoggart

Monday, 7 December 2009

And the Government's big economic plan is...

What with all the who-ha about Copenhagen you may have missed the Government announcing their big econmic plan...
Gordon Brown is to begin setting out Labour's plans for slashing public spending by £12bn over four years, ahead of Wednesday's pre-Budget report.

The PM will unveil the "efficiency savings" as he tries to show how Labour could halve the UK's budget deficit.

And...
British banking chiefs have reacted angrily to news the Treasury is drawing up plans for a one-year windfall tax on bonuses paid to some UK-based bankers.

A scheme could be unveiled in Alistair Darling's pre-Budget report this week.

BBC business editor Robert Peston said taxing bankers rather than banks would not weaken the banks and could raise several hundred million pounds.

Awesome, absolutely awesome, isn't it...

Our Government's big plan to prevent fiscal meltdown is to steal some petty cash from the bankers. And to cut the spending deficit by less than a tenth over four years.

Is it just me or can anyone else hear the low rumble of a massive waterfall in the distance?

It's either that or I'm developing stress-related tinnitus...

Can A Libertarian Be A Conservative ?

Dan Hannan poses this question whilst giving a potted history of the amalgamation of disparate political philosohies in the current Conservative Party.

He also gives mention to Chris Mounsey Leader of The Libertarian Party, who apart from the issue of legalising drugs he has very little difference. As the Libertarian Party constantly has the refrain you will only ever get 80% of what you want if you join the LPUK, my compromise issue is Republicanism.

As to Dan's question 'Can a Libertarian be a Conservative' in our opinion no, and Cameron in his last but one Conservative speech, stated that the Conservative Party is not a Libertarian Party, thus swinging his party in the direction of the Authoritarian Social Democrats, the same mush that the Liberal Democrats is in.

Dan is clearly in the wrong party. I listened to him on R4 a few weeks ago just after we all 'signed up' to Lisbon. He admitted that politically the last twenty years has been a failure for him. The EU has just steam rollered through democratically accountable Government, ignoring Referenda, and the same is going to happen in Copenhagen.

A minority political class is going to enact costly authoritarian measures without a shred of legitimacy or scientific proof that Global Warming is caused by man (Global warming is happening but it is part of a very natural cycle)

I admire Dan a lot, and his humilation of Brown in the Halls of the EU, which became one of the biggest youtube political hits of recent times, put Libertarianism right at the top of the agenda for a while. I know this to be a truth because the BBC ignored it for two whole days, until it was forced to show it, or be exposed as the mouthpiece of Government it has become.

By sharing a bed with the Authoritarians of the Conservative Party, he will be continually sidelined and sacrificed like David Davies, to keep the tribal Tories onside and happy. Thus reducing the Conservative Party to a Hydra. Where the voice of Libertarianism is lost on the wind of Tax & Spend Toryism.

Just as we now have a Conservative Party MK II in UKIP in terms of Authoritarian policies, I also believe that Nigel Farage is in the wrong party.

The realignment is slowly happening, this next election is not the important one, that will be a Tory 'Landslide' with 38% of the vote, it will be the one after that.

Libertarians cannot be Conservatives, because it is deeply at odds with the whole Philosophy of Freedom from the Power of the State.

Friday, 4 December 2009

The man with the Midas touch...

Mencius Moldbug presents a convincing argument for the inevitability of gold remonetization as an international reserve currency.
This is a self-reinforcing feedback loop. The more gold the [central bank]s buy, the more incentive they have to buy gold. Because if the game ends with gold winning, the game will be scored by how much gold you got for your dollars. This will be a consequence of how soon the CB exchanged its dollars for gold. Devil take the hindmost! A classic panic scenario. A melt-up for gold; a melt-down for the dollar.

Caveat lector: Mr Moldbug, whilst very clever, is also batshit insane by standard definitions of the word (although I'm with Levant about the fine line). Enjoy his musings slowly, and in small doses. The views in his blog are his own, and do not reflect the views of the UK Libertarian Party.

Wednesday, 2 December 2009

Green Trade Barriers...

There is an interesting post over at Liberal Vision warning us of the rise of Green trade barriers...
With all eyes on the UN summit at Copenhagen this month, keen observers are wondering whether collaborations are possible to mitigate climate change. Yet some proposals would do more harm than good, with “green” protectionism the most dangerous of all.

These are proposals to permit trade restrictions on the grounds that they will help to prevent climate change–a sadly misleading theory, which has predictably gained support already from uncompetitive industries and other vested interests have jumped on the bandwagon.

They've got a petition running to try and encourage our overlords not to use Climate Change and Copenhagen as an excuse to introduce more damaging trade barriers.

It may not do too much good but get over there and sign up anyway. Because at least then you can tell the kids you didn't support any of this B.......

Tuesday, 1 December 2009

Rose and Crown this Thursday

Just to remind people if you are available for a drink after work on Thursday we will be at the Rose and Crown in Southwark from 6:30.

For more details read here.