Libertarianism and Traditionalism

The intersection of libertarianism and traditionalism (First Nations traditionalism in particular) has long been a subject that I have tried to wrap my head around. This commentary by Ryan McMaken at LewRockwell.com lays out a basic element of that intersection — local sovereignty — quite effectively. I am not entirely sure of my response to his words yet, but they have helped to clarify my own thoughts on this subject (and that is always welcome).

“While free markets unquestionably provide a freer, wealthier society, the issue of local sovereignty is a strength in libertarianism that is often neglected. Libertarianism does not demand ideological loyalty in order to function. It functions when people simply try to carry on their lives in peace. In a libertarian society, traditionalists like Russell Means could live life in their own way, and we’d live it in ours.”

Hat tip to LewRockwell.Com

JPK Muses on Mandatory Voting

Southam News recently reported that Jean-Pierre Kingsley, the Chief Electoral Officer of Canada, is “warming” to the idea of mandatory voting (although fortunately still considers it repugnant). I really hope this doesn’t catch the fancy of Parliament, because choosing not to vote (for whatever reason) should, in my opinion, be just as valid as voting. University of Toronto professor Clifford Orwin’s commentary in the National Post covers the issue quite well, and more eloquently than I could. I would only add (in response to a common complaint, not to that piece) that less government authority due to low voter turnout should be seen as an advantage rather than a problem. And, in any case, the theory might not even be true; low turnount in the recent election will certainly not hobble the present government’s ability to push its agenda through.

Hat tip to National Post Headline Scan

Saddam Hussein: Iraqi President and PS2 Fan?

This item, I think, says something important about sanctions and about technology, but I’m not sure what that is (and on the other hand the story probably isn’t even true). Anyway, the Iraqi Government has apparently discovered a loophole in the UN sanctions against it. According to WorldNetDaily.com the US Federal Government thinks that several thousand of the hard to find Sony PlayStation 2 game machines have been shipped to Iraq. The loophole is that computer machinery in general, but not video game machines in particular, are tightly restricted by the sanctions. And, the punchline is that the significant computing power inside the latest breed of game machines could support a relatively inexpensive “supercomputer” (according to WND.com sources anyway).

The details seem a little bit thin (WND.com cites a “secret Defense Intelligence Agency report” and indicates that there is a joint FBI/US Customs Service investigation), but it could be true I suppose; eventually someone finds the holes in any given set of sanctions. Particularly, when that someone is under the Great American Thumb, so to speak. On the other hand, maybe President Hussein is tired of trying to sell oil and has decided that PS2 speculating offers a better profit margin? A possibility hinted at (tongue in cheeck, I think) by the UpsideToday article where I saw this originally.

Hat tip to Salon.com

Scrooge and the Stars

Preservatory.com is offering selections from the CBC Radio archives in Real Audio with a different theme each month. As I would expect the theme for December is Christmas, and one of the comedy selections is a really great The sketch features Rich Little’s impersonations of a number of stars playing the roles of Scrooge and the others, including (among others) Jack Benny as Scrooge, George Burns as the Narrator, Ed Sullivan as the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come, and I think there’s even a brief cameo by Orson Welles.

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