Friday, February 25, 2011

Letter from 2007 to Senators

November 15th, 2007

To: The Institute for Justice, The Nebraska ACLU, US Senator Hagel and US Senator Ben Nelson

Glenn Beck, on CNN Headline News November 12th, says "While our foreign enemies are the obvious ones, the physical threat may be developing domestically" and says Ron Paul's 'Revolution' and his record setting $4.3 million 'money bomb' from November 5th, Guy Fawkes Day --referring to the movie, "V is for Vendetta", when the people took back control of their government -- is tied in "with a historical terrorist attack". "if fringe elements take that disenfranchisement and turn it into violence, we endanger the freedoms we`re supposedly all fighting for."

David Horowitz said, "There`s a strain of isolationism and anarchy in the American tradition which Ron Paul is tapping into. I think it`s very significant that he chose Guy Fawkes as an image."
"There are plenty of, unfortunately, libertarian Web sites which are indistinguishable from the anti-American left these days. LewRockwell.com and others like that. Totally in bed with the Islamofascists and have turned against this country."

Lew Rockwell's site, LewRockwell.com, was thus identified by name and slandered.

Beck finishes this segment with, "The Ron Paul revolution, I think it`s meant to be a catchy slogan, but I fear some of his fringe supporters are taking the word "revolution" too literally."

Ron Paul's 'Revolution' is a non-violent attempt to change foreign policy, fix the monetary system and return control of our government to the people, the majority of whom are opposed to our war in Iraq and very skeptical of our interventionist foreign policy.

Rockwell and Paul are public figures, possibly immune from slander, but their supporters are not.

When Lew Rockwell's site's non-profit status was challenged early in the 2008 campaign as clearly supporting Ron Paul's candidacy, Rockwell gave up his non-profit status and requested private donations although no longer eligible as tax deductions. Hitting the alternative minimum anyway in 2007, I sent him $200 and on November 5th, I sent my second $100 to Ron Paul's campaign. The results of Paul's November 5th fund raising forced the main stream media to cover the Ron Paul campaign -- necessary for success.

But did I put myself, my liberty and my personal assets at risk? If, as Beck and Horowitz implied, LewRockwell.com and November 5th donors support an implied threat of domestic terrorism, am I not then guilty of supporting a suspected terrorist organization? Can my computer files be searched without warrant? Is the same true for all the tens of thousands of small Ron Paul 'money bomb' donors on November 5th? Will all their names end up on the no-fly list?

Is there an action that can be taken against CNN Headline News, naming Beck and Horowitz, for allowing slander on a national television broadcast and putting private citizens, such as myself, civil rights at risk -- based only on my political associations?

Name, address, etc

Please contact me and let me know my options for preserving my good name as a patriot. My Swiss ancestry makes me think that Switzerland's non-interventionist policies work much better than ours.


paper copy to Senator Ben Nelson

Here is my background.

My opposition to our covert foreign policy goes back to 1975. An Afghan woman, married to an assistant attorney general of Afghanistan and related to the king (still in power), lived with our family for a year while attending UNO. She was a delightful woman often making Kabul chicken, teaching us to eat with our fingers as we sat on the floor, and making elephant ear pastries for my little girls. The cultural exchange of information was rewarding for all involved.

My husband's contract at Offutt often took him to the home office in McLean, Virginia. While there, agents of our government took him to visit with the Afghan ambassador and the agents discussed the US sending trucks with large electronic equipment on top into northern Afghanistan to provide state of the art medical attention by broadcasting operations. My husband, now deceased unfortunately, is not here to clarify what happened that day. I do recall we laughed about the trucks and their equipment as more likely to be used in some covert activities on the southern border of the USSR. Little did we realize roads built in that area would allow access for tanks to eventually roll into Kabul.

Things have gotten much worse for the Afghan people since 1975 with the invasion by the USSR and the infestation of radicalism that followed, brought by not only the ISI in Pakistan but the Wahhabis from Saudi.

Eventually, I became a libertarian.

Harry Browne once said, paraphrasing, if a close friend smokes, you tell him 'quit smoking or you'll get cancer'. Browne was convinced terrorism would surely come to the USA based on 'poking that stick into the hornet's nest'- as he called the Middle East. Based on what I was hearing and seeing, I agreed. And many of us were very vocal in our concerns. Our policies were making us unsafe - not only here at home from terrorism but when we traveled overseas.

And when your friend comes to you with the news 'I have lung cancer', you do not gloat and say 'I told you so'. In fact, you are devastated by the news and tell them 'we can beat this cancer. We will do everything and anything we can to help'. Watching the towers fall on 9/11, I was devastated, inconsolably so, as were many Americans. I assumed a strike force would be sent immediately to the Afghan and Pakistani camps to capture and kill all involved in that deadly event.

The invasion of Afghanistan and the invasion of Iraq coupled with the billions in aid being poured into Pakistan's dictatorship are not making us safer. Threatening Iran is not making us safer. Passage of legislation like the Patriot Act and the continuing trend of nationalization of local law enforcement by funding measures and Homeland Security (a third defense department after the Pentagon and the covert CIA) doesn't bode well for our personal liberty. Citizens were supposed to police the federal government. The Government wasn't supposed to police us.

When Ron Paul stood up to run for President, I knew I had to do everything I could to get him elected. My grandkids are facing the falling dollar, saddled with the billions and trillions in debt and an aging boomer generation who will bankrupt Social Security and Medicare as we know them today. They are being subjected to 'fear' every day even as schools have adopted 'lock down', a term I learned when I taught classes at the Correctional Center.

My support of Ron Paul is to prevent a violent revolution, not create one. Lew Rockwell and all the libertarians I have ever known do not believe in the initiation of force against anyone -friend or foe. They know that only government agents and criminals initiate the use of force and thus they endeavor to limit the control of government over the individual by legal means.


Friday, February 11, 2011

Central planning

How well-intentioned central planning advances to fascism as decisions made not "on what do a majority of the people agree" but "what the largest single group is whose members agree sufficiently to make unified direction of all affairs possible." Our largest group now want progress, a way forward. That means a health care plan passes, not based on majority's wishes, but on what progressives can "pass." In the end, no one seems happy with result:
"The totalitarian leader must collect around him a group which is prepared voluntarily to submit to that discipline they are to impose by force upon the rest of the people. That socialism can be put into practice only by methods of which most socialists disapprove is, of course, a lesson learned by many social reformers in the past. The old socialist parties were inhibited by their democratic ideals; they did not possess the ruthlessness required for the performance of their chosen task. It is characteristic that both in Germany and in Italy the success of fascism was preceded by the refusal of the socialist parties to take over the responsibilities of government. They were unwilling wholeheartedly to employ the methods to which they had pointed the way. They still hoped for the miracle of a majority’s agreeing on a particular plan for the organization of the whole of society. Others had already learned the lesson that in a planned society the question can no longer be on what do a majority of the people agree but what the largest single group is whose members agree sufficiently to make unified direction of all affairs possible."
From Readers Digest "Road to Serfdom" pg 43 In the US, most agree on needing a Way Forward.. to where I"m not sure. They see a return to individual autonomy, as backward.
"There are three main reasons why such a numerous group, with fairly similar views, is not likely to be formed by the best but rather by the worst elements of any society.
  1. First, the higher the education and intelligence of individuals become, the more their tastes and views are differentiated. If we wish to find a high degree of uniformity in outlook, we have to descend to the regions of lower moral and intellectual standards where the more primitive instincts prevail. This does not mean that the majority of people have low moral standards; it merely means that the largest group of people whose values are very similar are the people with low standards.
  2. Second, since this group is not large enough to give sufficient weight to the leader’s endeavours, he will have to increase their numbers by converting more to the same simple creed. He must gain the support of the docile and gullible, who have no strong convictions of their own but are ready to accept a ready-made system of values if it is only drummed into their ears sufficiently loudly and frequently. It will be those whose vague and imperfectly formed ideas are easily swayed and whose passions and emotions are readily aroused who will thus swell the ranks of the totalitarian party.
  3. Third, to weld together a closely coherent body of supporters, the leader must appeal to a common human weakness. It seems to be easier for people to agree on a negative programme – on the hatred of an enemy, on the envy of the better off – than on any positive task.
The contrast between the ‘we’ and the ‘they’ is consequently always employed by those who seek the allegiance of huge masses.
The enemy may be internal, like the ‘Jew’ in Germany or the ‘kulak’ in Russia, or he may be external. In any case, this technique has the great advantage of leaving the leader greater freedom of action than would almost any positive programme."
Are you seeing any similarities to the USA of today? Are we seeing a growing "hatred of an enemy, on the envy of the better off?" Yep .. right on schedule just as Hayek showed us about 60 years ago.

Once our leaders understood Democracy.. but we forgot and suffer from ignorance now.

"We are a Republican Government. Real liberty is never found in despotism or in the extremes of Democracy... It has been observed that a pure democracy if it were practicable would be the most perfect government. Experience has proved that no position is more false than this. The ancient democracies in which the people themselves deliberated never possessed one good feature of government. Their very character was tyranny; their figure deformity."
~ Alexander Hamilton, Secretary of the Treasury to George Washington, author of the Federalist Papers
"Democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts, and murders itself. There never was a democracy yet that did not commit suicide."
~ John Adams, 2nd President of the United States
"A democracy is nothing more than mob rule, where fifty-one percent of the people may take away the rights of the other forty-nine." --  Correction: This cannot be found by Monticello scholars and may not be true.
~ Thomas Jefferson, 3rd President of the United States
"Democracies have ever been spectacles of turbulence and contention; have ever been found incompatible with personal security or the rights of property; and have in general been as short in their lives as they have been violent in their death.
~ James Madison, 4th President of the United States, Father of the Constitution
"The experience of all former ages had shown that of all human governments, democracy was the most unstable, fluctuating and short-lived." -
~ John Quincy Adams, 6th President of the United States
"Between a balanced republic and a democracy, the difference is like that between order and chaos."
~ John Marshall, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, 1801-1835