Question from the Audience II

Question from the Audience II

I received an email Thursday from reader Joe P.:

I read your post about refusing to pay taxes in order to starve the beast. In it, Heinlein’s The Moon is a Harsh Mistress is mentioned, as is the strategy of making people more miserable in order to get them to join the revolution. I pondered that a bit and had something I wanted to run past you. How likely is it that this is the strategy of the current administration? Make all of us – the producers – so miserable that we finally revolt? It would be a fight we couldn’t win, for sure, and with the media complicit in much of what was going on, it would give them all the cover they needed to eliminate the last vestiges of true freedom – gun rights, for sure, probably the 4th amendment (what little meaning it retains, that is), etc. The way I see it, they have us right where they want us. If we tolerate the quickly tightening screws, they win. If we go out in a second amendment blaze of glory, they win faster and probably more decisively.

And the ballot box? Who’s running? More socialists? No society in history has successfully gotten people to give up loot from the public treasury for the good of the nation. I think Donald Sensing was right. We are the last generation to experience meaningful freedom.

Anyway, I was just interested in your thoughts on the matter.

I am, as I have noted previously, a pessimist by temperament. I am not, however, a conspiracy theorist. No, I don’t think the current administration has a strategy to fire up the populace and bring us to armed rebellion, I really don’t. I don’t think they fear us at all. By the same token, I agree that an armed uprising would merely hasten the current disassembly of the Constitution. And I am in full agreement, as I have also stated previously, that merely throwing out the Democrats in the next two elections is not equal to “taking back our country” or our Constitution, because we have nothing worthy to replace them with.

It has taken over a hundred years for us to get to where we are. We have gotten here through the actions of thousands of people, each chipping away (and most with the best of intentions) at the foundations of the American culture: self-reliance, independence, the Protestant work-ethic, individual (as opposed to collective) compassion, education (especially in history and civics, later mathematics and language), etc. The actions of those thousands have spread geometrically until now the majority of the population lacks the skills, the knowledge and the philosophy necessary to support a culture of liberty.

I don’t know how to get it back. I’m afraid that whoever wrote the historical sequence attributed to Alexander Fraser Tytler had it right, that civilizations go through a predictable cycle due to human nature:

From bondage to spiritual faith;
From spiritual faith to great courage;
From courage to liberty;
From liberty to abundance;
From abundance to complacency;
From complacency to apathy;
From apathy to dependence;
From dependence back again into bondage.
I’d put the majority of the population at late-stage apathy, early-stage dependence.

I was going to save this for tomorrow’s Quote of the Day, but here is as good a place to put it as any (and hell, it’ll still be tomorrow’s QotD):

The Left believes it will achieve final victory through socialized medicine, which will forever shackle the middle class as dependents of the State, and destroy the independence that makes them dangerous. — Dr. Zero, Hot AirTargeting the Tea Party

And those are my thoughts on the matter.

Quote of the Day – Twofer Edition

These both come from the concluding piece of NRO’s Uncommon Knowledge interview of Dr. Thomas Sowell on his latest book Intellectuals and Society:

Sowell: We’re becoming a nation of people who are propagandized from elementary school right on through to the graduate school in a certain vision of the world. And only the ones who, for one reason or another, either experience or insight or whatever, leads them to say “Wait a minute!” Only those are the ones we have to depend on.

Peter Robinson: If you had a sentence or two to say to the Cabinet assembled around President Obama, and this cabinet holds glittering degrees from one impressive institution after another, if you could beseech them to conduct themselves in one particular way between now and the time they leave office, what would you say?

Thomas Sowell: Actually, I would say only one word: Goodbye. Because I know there’s no point talking to them.

I Was Wrong

The comments by Louis and eeky finally pushed me over the edge. I just got back from watching Dances with Smurfs, er, Blue Pocahontas, um AVATAR.

Holy Sh!t!!

James Cameron is a friggin’ genius.

At directing. At visualizing and getting his vision down on film or tape or disc, or whatever. At writing, nazzofastguido. But my sweet bleeding jeebus, that film is a visual freaking masterpiece. (As were Titanic and even Aliens.) My hat’s off to him. And yes, I saw it in 3D, and I have to say that this is the FIRST film in which that gimmick wasn’t a gimmick – it really added to the film.

Ignore the political message – you need to see this thing, and pay the extra for 3D.

Edited to add: In the sequel, directed by Paul Verhoeven, the “Star People” (dressed in leather trench coats and knee-boots, to the dulcet strains of Wagner) return to Pandora, drop tactical nukes from orbit as the ultimate in daisy-cutters, spray the 22nd Century’s equivalent of Agent Orange on the rest of the planet, and strip mine the place for every picogram of “Unobtanium” ore they can get. In a fit of pique, Mother Pandora telepathically convinces the primary gas-giant to compress itself and ignite, thus wiping out all life on Pandora, including the hated “Star People.”

There. I feel better now.

At Least They ADMIT IT

At Least They ADMIT IT

Via SayUncle and Sebastian, the Joyce Foundation admits its agenda:


If you can’t read that, it says that the Joyce Foundation gave a grant of $179,971 to the Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health “For support of research on policies that can more effectively restrict firearm ownership to law-abiding persons.”

I had to grab a screen-shot of that one myself.

Video Bleg

Video Bleg

I’m looking for a good, preferably free, flash video editor. I’ve tried a couple so far that haven’t been too impressive, and the final result of the second one I tried wouldn’t upload properly to Photobucket – half of the video is 60fps, and half is 30fps. The 30fps stuff played perfectly, but the 60fps stuff played at double speed. Alvin and the chipmunks audio without video.

I’m willing to buy something, but (being unemployed) I don’t want to spend much.

So, any recommendations?