Tags



Git ’em, Nathan! Gas for the people.
18 Sunday Sep 2016
Posted in Legal/Political Columns, News and Notes
Tags



Git ’em, Nathan! Gas for the people.
18 Sunday Sep 2016
Posted in Legal/Political Columns, Uncategorized
≈ Comments Off on One Good Thing About a Gas Shortage
Tags
freedom, Georgia, government, interposition, law, nullification, regulation, States
It’s not everyday one sees a State Governor nullify a federal regulation.

GA Gov. Nathan Deal, 9/13/2016.
Yes, it’s just one reg. about hours for truckers under the Motor Carrier Safety Administration. And, yes, it is allowed by a concomitant reg. But, can’t an anarchist dream?
What if the states gave us a little more protection via nullification and interposition? What if? Some essentially do this with MJ and a few may try with firearms. My suggestion would be the income tax and the National Guard next.
BTW, there is still gas out there and, outside of the larger cities, the gouging isn’t that bad.
18 Sunday Sep 2016
Posted in Legal/Political Columns, News and Notes
≈ Comments Off on Fighting For Them Over There, So They Can Fight Us Over Here
Tags
America, bombing, government, ISIS, Islam, Syria, terrorism, The People, War
The United States is free-falling as fast as WTC No. 7. Remember the “gotta fight ’em over there so we don’t have to fight ’em over here” refrain from ten years (or so) ago? Right or wrong thinking, that’s ancient history now.
“Our” government is bombing our enemies abroad in support of our other enemies so that associated enemies can bomb us here. Washington has made little sense since the Cleveland administration.
Yesterday, in Syria, U.S.forces bombed the embattled national army … in support of ISIS. In Obama-speak, the JV team is fighting a D2 college squad; to help Obama sent in some pro ringers. The bombing allowed ISIS to at least temporarily advance. U.S. commanders, such as they are (if any), say the run was an accident. Russia is mad as hell, seeing this for what it is – a violation of the recent cease-fire agreement. Americans watch reality Teevee and football.
Last week U.S. special forces suffered embarrassment in Syria. They are in country to advise and support “rebel” fighters, who at any given time support or are ISIS. The hardened American troops, the greatest on Earth ever, retreated hastily after being called names by the angry locals. Americans got tattoos.
The fighters scream anti-American chants as a column of pick-up trucks carrying US commandos drives away from them.
“Christians and Americans have no place among us,” shouts one man in the video. “They want to wage a crusader war to occupy Syria.”
Another man calls out: “The collaborators of America are dogs and pigs. They wage a crusader war against Syria and Islam. ”
This assessment is 100% correct: Americans (and now Christians) simply have no legitimate business in Syria. That nation is small, far-away, inconsequential, and of now interest to Americans.

U.S. Commandos discuss support for ISIS in Syria. Telegraph, UK.
The inverse opposite can also be said, correctly: that Syrians and Muslims have no business in America or the West. That would include places like New Jersey, New York, and Minnesota. Yesterday, while the government killed and maimed where we don’t belong, the Muslims returned the favor, here.
In New Jersey a Marine Corps fun-run was canceled after a bomb exploded in a trash can. No-one was injured in the attack. Americans searched for Pokemon.
Then, in New York City, dozens were injured when a bomb exploded in a dumpster near a high-rise residential building in Chelsea. A second device was disarmed. Americans gorged on empty carbohydrates.

Bomb blast, NYC. Daily Mail.
It’s not clear if these bombing were related or coordinated. Happening the same day in the same region is mere coincidence. Could have easily been the work of a Confederate Battle Flag or a rogue AR-15.
There was a definite Muslim angle in Minnesota. Last night a Somali import stabbed eight people at a mall while extolling the virtues of Allah. He was shot dead. Americans gleefully spent money they didn’t have.

The All-American mall, Saturday night. Daily Mail (notice how the European press actually covers America? Odd, huh?
Minnesotans may have noticed slight changes in their state lately. If the Somalis aren’t trying to rape young girls, they’re hacking away in the food court. Diversity and all that strength.
Given all of these attacks, I’m a little suspicious about the Colonial Pipeline leak. Disruption in one or two major gas supply lines would cause have more damage than one or two bombs in garbage cans.
This news all comes fifteen years and a week post 9/11. People often lament that America isn’t the same country it was 50 years ago. It isn’t. And it’s not even the same place it was in 2001. If people want to survive, it may be time to give up television, the obesity, the triviality, the willful ignorance, and the support of a government that actively operates against them.It’s time to wake up. Past time.
17 Saturday Sep 2016
Posted in Legal/Political Columns, News and Notes
≈ Comments Off on Saturday Super Summary (Simple, Sorry)
Tags
civil unrest, Donald Trump, election, football, Freedom Prepper, Perrin Lovett, perrinlovett.me, politics
Uh, I survived my 20-hour Friday. I think. Today will be pretty busy too. As such, there may not be any “substantive” posting here. This one you’re reading is … semi-substantive. Good enough, eh?
You’re probably going to watch college football today. Perrin’s pick of the week is Alabama (1) at Ole Miss (19). In Oxford. Has to be a good game. There are others that should be good games. I’m particularly interested in what may happen in Boone. *BTW, I think the football verdict is in; opinion may be forthcoming. Non-committal prediction department.
If you’re looking for hardcore rambling, may I suggest two strategies. First, the archives. Over to the left in the sidebar is a list of months – from this one back to June, 2012. Click on any one and see what I was gibbering about at any given time. If you have a particular subject in mind, then type that into the search box located in the upper right corner. I’m closing in on 800 or so articles and I cover just about everything under the sun or moon.

Our favorite satellite, Sept. 16, 2016.
In related news I culled through the drafts department. I eliminated a few and set some up for a little work. Great stuff there.
For now I’ll stick with the American election, such as it is. Karen Kwiatkowski wrote a piece about the rising neocon tide of vultures circling the coming Trump Presidency. This is why I’ve been saying (assuming Trump will be the next president) that it will be a disappointment to many. He can’t operate in a vacuum.
If anyone should be strong enough to dismiss the siren calls of the war and money-mongers, it’s Trump. I don’t like the signs honestly. My politico-computer gives him an exact 2% chance of running an independent American administration. (And that’s almost 10 times higher than anyone else’s chances). We’ll see.
And what we may see may not be so pleasant. There is hope though not through politics. I’ll leave you with this nifty Guide to Surviving Civil Unrest. It’s a short from Freedom Prepper written by some crazy man.
Happy Saturday, friends!
15 Thursday Sep 2016
Posted in Legal/Political Columns, News and Notes
≈ Comments Off on Who’s HE Calling “Crazy”
Alan Greenspan, the former “Maestro” of the Federal Reserve, recently explained the dire straights of the American economy as he sees it from senility:
Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan voiced concern that the U.S. economic and political system could be undermined by what he called “crazies.”
“It is the worst economic and political environment that I’ve ever been remotely related to,” Greenspan, 90, told a conference in Washington Tuesday evening sponsored by Stanford University and the University of Chicago.
On the economic front, the U.S. is headed toward stagflation — a combination of weak demand and elevated inflation, according to Greenspan. “Politically, I haven’t a clue how this comes out.”
“We’re not in a stable equilibrium,” he said. “I hope we can all find a way out because this is too great a country to be undermined, by how should I say it, crazies.”
Crazies. I’m not sure if this is a weak attempt to blame honest people who, upon finally waking up, are angry to find their nation in ruin, or if it is a weak admission about his own actions and those of his allies and successors.
Greenspan largely kicked off the modern era of the Fed’s Mandrake Mechanism. During his time he was dubbed “The Maestro” by Bob Woodward because his easy money strategies seemed, at the time, to temporarily lift the country and ease economic woes. There was more of a country to lift then and the woes weren’t as bad as they are now. Today they are much worse, as Greenspan admits, because of his actions and those of the Fed after his tenure.
The party is over because the magic has ceased to have effect. “Politically, I haven’t a clue how this comes out,” mumbled the Maestro. Of course, he doesn’t. The politics were never his expertise. His job was to run the money, creating it out of a thin computer. The politics were a side phenomenon.

Somebody forgot the cigarettes and blindfolds. Glassdoor.
The politicians were and are concerned with their own power. To them all the fake money is another side phenomenon. They haven’t a clue how it comes out economically. The fact is, neither side really cares.
That leaves the rest of us caught in the middle, trapped between two dying and angry, violent dragons, trashing about wildly. And the old leech will call anyone who expresses dismay or who tries to suggest solutions “crazy”. Well, it is all enough to make anyone crazy.
I do have a clue as to how it all comes out and it isn’t pretty. The outcome is becoming obvious to any but the most ardent and stay-at-home football fans and Pokemon fanatics. Call me crazy.
14 Wednesday Sep 2016
Posted in Legal/Political Columns, News and Notes
≈ Comments Off on Without Government, Who Would Kill The Horses?
Tags
America, BLM, Constitution, death, government, horses, law, regulation
No-one, no thing, and no animal on Earth is safe from the federal government. Now, in addition to stealing and debasing our money, starting wars, and polluting rivers, the government will begin slaughtering wild horses. Maybe forty-five thousand of them.
The U.S. government is coming under fire from animal rights activists amid concerns that almost 45,000 wild horses could be euthanized in an attempt to control their numbers.
Last week the Bureau of Land Management’s National Wild Horse and Burro Advisory Board recommended that the Bureau euthanize or sell “without limitation” excess “unadoptable” horses and burros in the BLM’s off-range corrals and pastures.
An “unadoptable” horse or burro is typically at least 5 years old, making them less attractive for purchase or adoption. The bureau has more than 44,000 horses and more than 1,000 burros in off-range pastures and corrals.
The recommendation prompted an angry response from The Humane Society of the United States. “The decision of the BLM advisory board to recommend the destruction of the 45,000 wild horses currently in holding facilities is a complete abdication of responsibility for their care,” said Humane Society Senior Vice President of Programs & Innovations Holly Hazard, in a statement.
Under the terms of the 1971 Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act, the BLM manages, protects and controls wild horses and burros. The law authorizes the agency to move wild horses and burros off ranges to sustain the health of public lands. In addition to the off-range animals, the bureau estimates that more than 67,000 wild horses and burros are roaming on BLM-managed rangelands in 10 Western states.
Who knew we had a Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act? The burros part actually makes sense as it was enacted by a bunch of jackasses. One would think, based on the title, that the horses would be in the wild. You know, free roaming and such, and not in holding corrals. I have no time to read the Act nor any of the BLM’s regs on the matter. (Can you imagine how much ink has been wasted on this?)
I have read the Constitution a time or two. Many of my readers, here, are fond of the Old Parchment. Some fancy it still applies to the criminals in D.C. It does not. It has utterly failed as demonstrated by this very story (among 100,000 others). The BLM isn’t in it even once. Nor are horses. Nor burros. The afore-mentioned jackasses are included but in different context.
These horses aren’t just out West. There’s a sweet little colony of them living off the AT in Virginia. There are others elsewhere. I’ve met some of them. I liked them. I wonder how many will be headed to the glue factory because an agency that shouldn’t even exist can’t do the job mandated by one of its own signature legislative programs.

Government victims. Mount Rogers, VA.
I am a hunter, an outdoorsman, and an animal liker (“lover” is a bit strong, don’t you think). Thus I have a vague notion about herd management, ecology, and sustainability. I also understand government.
Government has no business managing lands let alone living things. The former they excel at ruining, the latter they enjoy killing. Correction: it simply has no business existing. Ours was brought to life by this Constitution thing. Said Constitution was supposed to limit the state. It failed and is now roundly disregarded by that Frankenstein’s Monster on the shores of the Potomac. As such, we have agencies and laws for everything.
Of course, once an agency exists and has a law to follow, they’re suppose to follow it. They don’t. They don’t let the horses roam free and they don’t manage the land. They sit back, pass regulations, burn money and wait until they have an overpopulation. Does anyone know anyone else who wants to (or even has the ability to) adopt 45,000 horses? I’m sure the bullet orders have already been placed.
Things would work out much better if we let the animals manage the land and put the politicians and bureaucrats in corrals.
14 Wednesday Sep 2016
Posted in Legal/Political Columns, News and Notes
≈ Comments Off on Record Taxes, Record Debts
Tags
America, banksters, crime, debt, Donald Trump, Federal Reserve, government, Obama, Ron Paul, taxes
More credit given where and when due: Hussein Obama is the greatest tax collector in the history of America, probably the world. Through last month Obama has raised $20,197,437,000,000 during his two terms in office.
That sum is, theoretically, more than enough to pay of the government’s (on-books) debt. That would leave nothing with which to operate the government. Horror!
Of course the debt was half of what it is now when Obama first took office. Had the government operated at Constitutional levels, there would have been plenty and to spare to completely pay off the debt before now.
This also means that Obama raises enough money each year via real taxation to run the federal leviathan at 2000 levels without any debt at all. Didn’t they get by in 2000? Why can’t they make do with that kind of spending now. Ron Paul officially raised that question back when there was still time to elect him president. That idea did not sit well with the criminals at the Federal Reserve.
Now Donald Trump is actually making similar noise:
To wit, Yellen is still sitting on interest rates at the zero bound after 93 months for one simple reason. Even in the context of an economic recovery that is now allegedly so complete that we are actually on the cusp of full employment, according to Vice-Chairman Stanley Fischer, she is deathly fearful of a hissy fit on Wall Street, as was foreshadowed by last Friday’s sharp sell-off.
Opined the Donald:
“She’s obviously political and she is doing what [President Barack] Obama wants her to do,” Trump said in an interview on CNBC. Trump predicted that the market is going to “go way down” as soon as interest rates go up.
“I believe it is a false market because money is essentially free,” Trump said.
He got that right but needs to take it a step further. At the same time that the Fed continues placating Wall Street gamblers with an unending stint of free carry trade funding that has self-evidently not generated real breadwinners jobs or higher real incomes in Flyover America, savers and retirees continue to be pounded.
In fact, our unelected monetary politburo is causing upwards of $300 billion per year to be transferred from savers to the banks and the financial system owing to its senseless pursuit of 2.00% inflation via pegging the money market interest rate on the zero-bound.
All Donald has to do to get my endorsement is to call for the abolition of the Fed. Well, that and promise to drive the banksters into the sea. He won’t, of course. The game will go on a little while longer.

Somewhere on Google.
There are no plans to pay off the debt. It is in fact un-payoff-able by design. One day all that red ink will have to be repudiated or written off. We might as well look at that reality now. I say cancel the debt – cancel all debts. And make debt illegal. Make issuing usurious debt a capital felony. There oughta be a law!
Otherwise, by 2024, Trump will hold the tax collection record while presiding over a $40-50 Trillion (on-books) debt. These are dubious records – like the highest score on the golf course.
That’s what I’m Yellin’ bout.
13 Tuesday Sep 2016
Posted in Legal/Political Columns
≈ Comments Off on My 2001 Comments on Guns, Airliners, and 9/11
Tags
911, America, Federalist Society, firearms, freedom, government, Perrin Lovett, Second Amendment, terrorism, The People, Washington
Sunday was the fifteenth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. Two months after those attacks I went to D.C. for the annual Federalist Society National Lawyer’s Convention. It was my first real exposure to real power. They also featured a frequently open bar.
It was either Thursday, November 15th or Friday the 16th. Let’s say it was the 16th. A few hours before Ted Olson gave the inaugural speech in honor of his wife Barbara (deceased on 9/11/2001 on American Airlines flight 77), the Fed-Soc hosted several luncheon mini-seminars. Everything was at the Mayflower.

The Mayflower, Washington.
I cannot recall which group I stumbled into nor what I had for lunch. We’ll just say Administrative Law & Regulation: Aviation Security with Tara Branum of Fulbright & Jaworski. And chicken – always a safe choice.
Of course, given that year’s main event the subjects of terrorism and hijackings dominated the discussion. Two days earlier I had flown into Reagan National under very tight security. Washington proper looked like an armed camp – fences, soldiers, Humvees – the whole nine yards.
Much of the talk centered on increased security. That and there was a debate over profiling Muslims at airports. I remember thinking, wondering how 19 savages with only box-cutters could have pulled off what they did. (At the time I had not considered outside and inside assistance). Also, most of the commentary then and there seemed irksome to me. I grew incredulous.
Finally, I raised my hand and was given the floor. Thus began my habit of making profound if off-beat comments at Society functions. Note: the “red wine incident” later that night does not count … what I recall of it…
I began by rhetorically asking the crowd exactly how such a tragedy could have happened in America of all places. I noted that we were (were especially now – past tense) a strong people. We had the Second Amendment. We had guns and lots of them. We carried them. Except, since the 1970s we were prohibited from carrying them on commercial airliners. That was where I found fault. I still do in spite of everything else odd about 9/11.
Americans, I said, had become conditioned to do nothing in such circumstances. “Just let the hijacker take the plane where he wants. Give him some money. We’ll be fine. The police will handle it.” Bull. One Monday morning turned all that malarkey on its head.
I said, sarcastically but firmly, that the headlines that day should have read: “Nineteen Hijackers Shot Dead.” That’s what should have happened and little more. The following cartoon could have been my visual exhibit:

Scott Bleser, 2001.
An armed America could send its people onto any plane without worry of attack because they could defend themselves. Thus, gun control helped facilitate 9/11. And gun freedom will go a long way towards making sure it never happens again.
Most of the people at lunch that day nodded along (some with alarm at the prospect). Then there was nothing. Many in attendance made their livings off of regulations and laws. Laws are good for that and little more – certainly not good for freedom and security. My comments essentially died right there.
Fifteen years later and we still have the same gun control on planes. And we have a much less freedom-friendly society in general. Once clear of intrusive yet useless airport security and in the absence of an Air Marshal (frequently missing) passengers are still sitting ducks. My money says they will act the part too.
Passivity in the face of danger rarely works out well. Gun control never does. Remember that the next time they tell you disarmament is for your own good. Blame it on me if you have to.
12 Monday Sep 2016
Posted in Legal/Political Columns, News and Notes
≈ Comments Off on They Forgot to Blame the Guns: Homicide Rates Up in Major Cities
The New York Times missed a golden opportunity to blame inanimate objects for crimes. They’re either slipping or they have come around to the truth.
This weekend the Times released a story about the rising murder rates in 25 of America’s largest cities (for 2015).

NY Times.
The story was based largely on the findings of the Department of Justice [SIC] and, to a lesser degree, a complimentary study by the Major Cities [Police] Chiefs Association. Both of those studies failed to fault firearms and firearms owners. Maybe the moon is full or something.
This city trend defies the generation-long decline in homicide and violent crime in general over the past few decades. During that time firearms ownership has essentially doubled. Perhaps someone finally explained the divergence to the Times’ staff.
Why the increase in these cities. The worst offenders – St. Louis, Milwaukee, Cleveland, Baltimore, et al have certain things in common. For one, they’re large cities. It doesn’t take a DOJ study to show that cities are more dangerous than smaller towns. The Chiefs found this was also true even in Canada (where gun control is stronger and demographics different).
The DOJ is good at compiling statistics and running analysis. Following Due Process, no. Prosecuting classified information breaches, no. Numbers, yes. They summarized from the numbers:
The study of crime trends is as old as criminology itself. A large body of contemporary
research literature is devoted to explaining the causes and correlates of changing crime rates (Blumstein and Wallman 2006; Rosenfeld 2011a). The current task, however, is not to explain a long- or even short-run trend in crime rates, but rather a trend reversal in the nation’s large cities. Some of the explanatory factors that have been emphasized in the crime trends literature are poor candidates for explaining the homicide rise of 2015. Shifts in age composition or the consequences of exposure to lead, for example, unfold gradually over time and cannot explain why homicide rates would suddenly increase after falling for over two decades. The same is true of economic conditions, except for the relatively abrupt changes in income and employment that occur during a recession. The last recession in the United States, however, ended at least five years before the current upturn in homicide (see http://www.nber.org/cycles/main.html). Some evidence suggests that a drop in consumer confidence contributed to the increase in violent crime in 2005 and 2006 (Rosenfeld and Oliver 2008). Consumer confidence, however, rose from 2014 to 2015.11 Crime increases also tend to correspond with rising inflation rates (Rosenfeld and Levin 2016), but U.S. inflation rates fell from 2011 through the end of 2015.12
It is reasonable to assume that whatever factors lay behind the 2015 homicide rise should themselves have exhibited comparably abrupt changes at the same time or shortly before. Among the explanatory factors featured in research on crime trends, the three that are examined here appear better able than others, at least in principle, to explain the recent homicide increase. We begin by considering whether the comparatively sudden uptick in homicide in large cities might have been spurred by a recent expansion in urban drug markets. The discussion then turns to the possible role of recent changes in imprisonment rates and, finally, to the Ferguson effect, in both its de-policing and “legitimacy” versions. Throughout the discussion, several empirical indicators are described that can be used to evaluate the contribution of these factors to the homicide increase, once the requisite data become available.
The causes of the trend were three-fold. First, in those cities, drug gang violence was up as dealers fought over customers. (Way to go, War on Drugs!). Second, a recent decrease in incarcerations caused an increase in recidivism – often in the drug business. (One notes that Sam Adams and Busch don’t seem to have these problems). Third, there was the “Ferguson Effect”. (This demonstrates that black lives matter – except to black criminals).
Overall: big cities are rotten and crime is still down in general. It’s almost not news. The big thing for me is that nobody blamed assault rifles. I suppose this was a real factual expose. I’m sure Kuntzman will be op/ed-ing along shortly to cry about the dreaded AR-15.*
*I just checked. Gershy, at last posting, was merely upset that Donald Trump is running for president. I had to look. Can’t be long.
On a more serious note: if Hillary is elected, I’m sure the Times will forget that they forgot about guns. Hillary, if she doesn’t keel over before November, will try like hell to ban guns. She’ll seize on this modest increase as “evidence”. If it’s Trump, then the fascists in Congress will keep pushing gun control.
Either way, someone will push the issue. I really can’t get over that they let it slip here. Just odd…
11 Sunday Sep 2016
Posted in Legal/Political Columns, News and Notes
≈ Comments Off on Fifteen Years Later Americans Feel Less Safe
Tags
A Pew Survey found that 71% of Americans felt less safe from terrorist attacks than they did 15 years ago. There’s good reason for that. As a philosophical and political matter Americans traded freedom for safety and got neither. As a practical matter there are more terrorists in the country now than there were then.
The poll consensus centered on mass attacks, like 9/11. However, the threat today is likely from small-scale acts like Orlando. ISIS seems to have a lock on the lone-wolf action but al Qaeda wants in. On this anniversary of 9/11, not wanting to be forgotten, the original CIA-created monster reared its internet head.
“As long as your crimes continue, the events of 9/11 will be repeated thousands of times, by the will of Allah. And we will follow you – if you don’t cease your aggression [against us] – until the Day of Judgment…, ” [al-CIA-da leader Ayman Al Zawahiri] says.
Referring to the events of 9/11 as the “blessed raids,” Zawahiri boasts at both the economic and human toll the attacks had on the U.S. which are still felt by Americans today.
According to that poll above he may be right. The U.S. government shows no signs of slowing the aggression. Nor do they seem willing to stem the tide of terror-prone immigrants coming to America. It’s the same or worse in Europe.
The day after Germany admitted concern over 500, or 520, or 880 known terrorists in country, the French one upped their neighbors – they boast of 15,000 known jihadis. If they know, why don’ they act? This is the same government that recently asked the French people to take the new invaders into their homes. Rather than house them, why not deport them all?
The British government has deported at least one “refugee” of late. Passengers on a commercial jet flight from the UK to Italy were treated to a barrage of threats from the handcuffed African man.

Daily Mail, UK.
Charming. Why no-one thought to bash his head in is beyond me. You don’t have to passively accept such behavior at 30,000 feet. At least he was deported. And that reminds me of a story about 9/11 which I shall share sooner or later.
I wonder what percentage of the people would support deporting the politicians?
You must be logged in to post a comment.