Weaponized Taxation

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“The power to tax involves the power to destroy.” John Marshall, McCulloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S. 316 (1819).

Last week Apple felt that power from abroad. The EU decreed Apple owes $15 Billion in back taxes. The imposition is seen as retaliation for Apple’s sales success in Europe. Economic success warrants retaliation in the twisted mind of government.

Here in America, Congress is desperately seeking similar retaliation. It has been suggested that American tax power may be weaponized to strike hard at European companies. While they’re at it, they may want to strike at you as well.

The past decade has seen a massive increase (1,000% or so) in Americans attempting to flee the ruins of the old Republic in efforts to preserve what they have created (and to preserve their own freedom). Fleeing the Land of the Free for freedom. Odd.

Mark Nestmann explains:

But just to make sure expatriates know “who’s the boss,” in 2012, Senators Schumer and Bob Casey (D-PA) introduced legislation to retroactively punish them. The “Expatriation Prevention by Abolishing Tax-Related Incentives for Offshore Tenancy Act,” or Ex-PATRIOT Act, would punish wealthy expatriates by forbidding them from ever reentering the US. The proposal would apply to anyone with a net worth of $2 million or more at the time of expatriation. It would also be retroactive for the 10-year period prior to enactment of the statute.

The Ex-PATRIOT Act didn’t pass in 2012, or in 2013 when Schumer reintroduced it as an amendment to another act. But I wouldn’t be at all surprised if it reappears in 2017. It’s hard to see how someone like Donald Trump, who bashes everything non-US, could oppose this bill. And Hillary Clinton has long slammed corporations that move their base of operations from the US to save on corporate taxes. It’s not a huge jump to conclude that if elected, she’d sign the Schumer-Casey proposal into law.

A retroactive law is known legally as ex post facto (after the fact). Such laws were viewed for centuries, rightly, as unfair. They are forbidden not once but twice in the Constitution: Art 1, § 9 and § 10. Such a deliberate targeting of the successful is known as a Bill of Attainder – also prohibited by the Constitution, again in Article I, Section 9.

 

The U.S. abandoned the ancient abstention of retroactive prosecution in 1945 and has not looked back. The Constitution is abandoned. “Constitutionalists” may say what they like but saying doesn’t stop the doing. And it’s all done anyway.

Anyone who deals with the IRS knows Washington wages an everyday war for power. It is more about showing the commoners “who’s the boss” than the money.

Remember Jim Bakker the 1980’s televangelist? His affairs left him with a $500,000 tax bill. Thirty years later the debt has grown (with interest and penalties) to around $6,000,000. Bakker will never pay that off. The government doesn’t expect him to. They are most happy lording over him for life; the money is a side issue. His freedom, otherwise redeemed by the passage of time, is destroyed by taxation. Marshall was on to something.

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Everyone makes mistakes. Many pay for them. Some have to pay and pay and pay … forever. God forgives. The IRS does not.

The future looks to hold much of the same. Schumer is still trying to ram his pet (illegal) law through Congress. The IRS terrorizes millions. Do not look for help from either presidential candidate.

Trump has already announced an intention to use selective confiscation for his benefit. He wants to seize drug cartel funds and use them to construct his wall. Remember that such programs grow over time, usually to encompass more targets than originally stated. Remember too any wall that can keep Mexicans out can also keep Americans in.

God help you if Clinton is elected. She views all of you as servants and the government as a giant tool for her personal gain. IRS persecution of anyone deemed even slightly anti-Clinton is a given. Worse, she may use tax records (And she didn’t know they were classified! Honest.) to compile a hit list. You know, for more of those “suicides”.

Tomorrow is Labor Day – the day for celebrating productivity in the workforce. Ponder for just a moment, between the burgers, beer and football, that you have a silent partner at work. Whatever you do, your partner takes 20%, 40% (honestly much more – maybe 60-70% in totality) of every dollar you earn and produce while contributing absolutely nothing. Your silent partner uses taxes as a weapon to keep you in line or, at the least, to rob you.

Jim Bakker. Tammy Faye? The makeup??

Presidents and Alternatives

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The esteemed Thomas DiLorenzo takes a look at a new book by Clyde Wilson on the benefits of ditching Washington national political craziness.

In his new book Nullification: Reclaiming Consent of the Governed, Clyde Wilson pinpoints the folly and futility of “presidential politics” – of hoping against hope that some Great Savior will somehow restore American liberty. Only those who are almost completely ignorant of American history could be fooled by such a farce. Unfortunately, that seems to include most Americans.

Early Americans were never so naïve as to believe that national politicians could preserve their freedom; that was their job. They are the ones who, acting through their state-level political societies, created and gave authority to the Constitution. The government was to act as their agent and was delegated by them only a few specific powers. Moreover, the government itself could never be the judge of its own powers, for that would lead to “nothing less than a government of unlimited power, a tyranny,” writes Wilson. Of course, that is what Americans have now lived under for generations with the “black-robed deities” of the “supreme” court announcing for all of us what freedoms we shall have.

Yes, he left out Interposition, but that is here forgivable.

The time for effective (for Liberty) presidential politics has long since come and gone. As the masses are unlikely to support or even understand these concepts, I recommend personal secession. It’s almost effortless and does not require waiting on a hero, the people, or any statesmen.

In related news, Chuck Baldwin lists his top ten worst presidents of all time. They are:

  1. Imperial Abe;
  2. Wilson the Destroyer;
  3. F. “Dammit” R.;
  4. Lyndon “Bane of Freedom” Johnson;
  5. Jorge “PATRIOT ACT” Boooosh;
  6. “Hopey Changey”;
  7. Slick Willy;
  8. Bush the Vomitor;
  9. Brick Head Grant; and
  10. Tricky Dick Nixon.

You probably have a similar list. These numbers could be shuffled – especially below number 3. And another ten could easily be added – each with his own cool nickname. You’ll surely notice Baldwin’s choices are heavily weighted towards the modern era. This underscores the futility in waiting and hoping for a savior.

TrumpBClinton

Nothing rigged. Nothing to see. Vote along now.

The GQBM is right around the corner. One proposed candidate is talking the talk while the other can barely walk. I don’t like the odds. Thus, I don’t play the game.

Speaking of games, the great football trial starts in earnest today. Odds ain’t looking to good there either.

Onward!

Hoya La Amistad

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A.J. Fernandez and Hoya de Monterrey – who’d a thunk it?

The folks at General Cigar, I suppose.

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We have a winner here. For the early morning after a tropical storm it’s a darn good full-bodied smoke. A revolt from the ordinary.

Good morning!

Clowning Around: Within and Without D.C.

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News comes from Greenville, South Carolina of nefarious clown sightings. One or more jesters are lurking about the area. Stalking people, chasing people, creeping, trying to lure children into the woods – good wholesome fun.

Deputies in Greenville County said the clowns were initially seen in wooded areas, where they reportedly tried to encourage children to join them, but the situation escalated to reports that clowns were also knocking on the doors of homes.

Investigators said no conclusive photo or video evidence has surfaced and no suspects have been named in any of the incidents.

Nothing a bullet wouldn’t cure there.

In related news from Washington the clowning is a little more dire. The FBI has released its investigation documents from Hillary’s email escapades.

Clinton campaign spokesman Brian Fallon has said that turning over the documents was “an extraordinarily rare step that was sought solely by Republicans for the purposes of further second-guessing the career professionals at the FBI.” But he has said that if the documents were going to be shared outside the Justice Department, “they should be released widely so that the public can see them for themselves, rather than allow Republicans to mischaracterize them through selective, partisan leaks.”

It’s always someone else’s fault. Just because someone commits a crime and gets away with it, there’s always that jerk that wants to point out that you committed a crime.

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FBI Director Jimmy “no intent” Comey.

There is a benefit here. Criminal defense attorneys are looking forward to gleaning for the FBI the details of the “Hillary Defense”. Meet every element of a crime? Just say that one element really isn’t. Case dismissed.

Personally I’m more comfortable with the S.C. lurkers. You?

 

Playing Both Sides Against Nothing

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Eric Margolis explains the increasingly idiotic American war in Syria.

What a mess! In the crazy Syrian war, US-backed and armed groups are fighting other US-backed rebel groups. How can this be?

It is so because the Obama White House had stirred up the war in Syria but then lost control of the process. When the US has a strong president, he can usually keep the military and intelligence agencies on a tight leash.

As a result, the two arms of offensive US strategic power, the Pentagon, and CIA, went separate ways in Syria. Growing competition between the US military and militarized CIA broke into the open in Syria.

Fed up with the astounding incompetence of the White House, the US military launched and supported its own rebel groups in Syria, while CIA did the same.

Fighting soon after erupted in Syria and Iraq between the US-backed groups. US Special Forces joined the fighting in Syria, Iraq and most lately, Libya.

While nothing good can possibly come out of this shifting mire of stupidity, many things could go very wrong. Some already have. Some probable outcomes to consider:

  • At best huge amounts of dollars are wasted and a few Americans are killed;
  • Huge numbers of Syrians and others are killed, maimed, and displaced;
  • Displaced refugees flood into the West;
  • The refugees are mad as hell with us (and with pretty good reason);
  • More terrorism (here not there);
  • The possibility of ISIS or some other radical group actually acquiring a nation;
  • The spread of the above to surrounding areas;
  • Full blown U.S. war with casualties, expenses, and no win possible (see Iraq and Afghanistan, etc.);
  • War with Russia (worse than no-win);
  • A government corrupt enough to move on and do it again somewhere else and a population ignorant enough to let them.

We were warned against such foolishness. In addition to the warnings we have actively seen these things play out live. Some of these examples are recent. Very little of all this activity is hidden.

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CNN.

That the people keep falling for and supporting this insanity defies belief. Yet still it happens. How does this happen? And why?

Hermine: Stay Safe Out There

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Florida’s first hurricane in 11 years is due to make landfall on the Panhandle in an hour or two. Things to remember:

  • The storm conditions recede in Tampa. My people there seemed to have dodged this one. All is reported well.
  • My favorite beaches are being hammered right now. SGI, Appalch. and the rest of the Forgotten Coast are ground zero. Hopefully, if you’re there you’ve already taken precaution (meaning you’re not there now).
  • Hermine will degrade slightly as she moves inland. Tallahassee, Jacksonville, Valdosta, Savannah, Charleston, Augusta, and Columbia could all see gusts up to 60 MPH between midnight and tomorrow afternoon. Coastal S.C. and N.C. will likely see significant storm activity into Saturday.
  • In addition to wind, these locations may receive 5 – 10″ of rain.
  • Tornadoes are likely.
  • Flooding may happen.
  • Power may go out.
  • In a few days New York and Boston may contend with a strengthened system.
  • These are all good reasons why a little prepping is important.
  • If you are in one of these areas (many of you are), play it safe.

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The Weather Channel.

The 700 Club

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This post has nothing to do with Pat Robertson except for success. Robertson’s show is a huge, long-term hit. The blog still pales in comparison but I’m getting there. We, rather, are getting there. This is post number 700! Thank you all.

WordPress.

I’d like to give a special welcome to my new subscribers and visitors. Hello! Thanks for joining the party. From time to time I take a post like this one to note where the show is going.

I also track trends. Right now just about everything is trending upwards. In addition to 700 articles I have maintained at least a post per day for 12 weeks in a row now – 18 weeks with a few brief interruptions. Longtime followers know I had an early habit of taking time off – looong periods. No more. I’m on a roll.

I look at where traffic comes from. For a short time in the not-to-distant past I paid for a little (very little) advertising. It was worth it but is no longer remotely necessary. I get traffic from Facebook and LinkedIn. Many of my new friends from Freedom Prepper are stopping by. And, I am finally noticing increased numbers straight from web searches. Four years of plugging away and a little SEO operation have gone a long way.

Last month saw a massive uptick in hits. August 2016 was, by far, my busiest month ever. Even now – even early this morning – I was able to extrapolate that September will be even busier. Over last year and previous falls it may be an order of magnitude.

Until recently I had in my mind a cutoff number for what I considered a good day. It now seems sadly antiquated, an embarrassment even. Lately, I’ve been hitting it by early morning. I may have to adjust my expectations, substituting what used to be an average week for what makes a “good” day.

I even “helped” a new blog into existence. Check it out sometime.

I still get asked if I plan to “monetize” the blog. Outright, no I do not. I’m still mid-level in the WordPress plan world. Soon I will go full pro which will allow me commercial control. Honestly, I hate gimmicky ads all over a page. And the people who run the ad programs tend to shy away from my brand of … ideology.

If I do allow any advertisement here it will be targeted and directly linked to the source. That will probably mean firearms and cigars. We’ll see. Of course, I will continue to sell books. More of those and many related items are coming hard and fast. Ready those credit cards please.

And please keep coming back. I have some changes in mind. I think they will help the overall flow here.

Thank you so much and please stand by for number 701!

-Perrin

PS: Other numbers. I still have about 50 drafts cooking. Hmmmm.

PPS: More numbers. My thrilling success here has carried over to the physical world. It helped pull me out of an exercise rut. Thanks for that too! I will never bench press 500 pounds. Not without steroids or bionic modification.Not going to happen. I did however hit 365 lbs – today – twice (2 consecutive reps) – unassisted. That’s 207.4% of what I weigh. Not bad for an old crazy man.

Colin Kaepernick, the Culture, and the Football Crisis of Faith

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The Bionic Mosquito has an article today about the differences between love of country (true Patriotism or honest Nationalism) and militarized, jingoistic love of the country’s government (Statism). He compares the Icelandic pride in their national football (soccer) team to the American worship of government, disguised as football (real football). Naturally, the news being as it is of late, he mentions Kaepernick’s capering.

LA Times.

The story got me thinking. Now it has me typing. Actually, I’ve been thinking these thoughts for a long time. Now, it may be I’m nearing an action point.

I’ve been thinking about football (American “real” football) outside of the political context. Then it occurred to me that is impossible for those reasons spelled out by the Mosquito.

Football isn’t just football anymore. In fact, it’s hardly football anymore, period. Rather, it has become an extension of the state. Attending a game – any game at any level and anywhere – is like attending a “church” service in honor of the federal government. Football has also become the new culture which is, itself, another extension of the unholy state religion.

Kaepernick took a stand (or rather did not) against the new false faith. For this his former fans are burning his jersey. I really know little of Kaepernick but I support his protest. If I understand correctly, he is half black and is upset about the treatment of black people in America. Black people are mistreated here. It’s mainly by other black people thought that usually goes unsaid if not unnoticed. The government mistreats everyone unless they are commercial bankers, insurance lobbyists, or warmongers. It isn’t right and it warrants a protest.

I have no interest in pledging allegiance nor anything else to any piece of fabric. Nor do I care for allegiance to any government, especially one that no longer exists. Still, I get goosebumps when I hear the Star Spangled Banner played or sung – a reminder of my former home. It was all about freedom or it was supposed to be. Thus, I see the value of the protest.

All the same, some people see Colin’s resistance to part of the evil as an even greater evil. They say he has somehow disrespected soldiers and police officers. Those groups happen to be, all of them, agents of the government which mistreats everyone. This is all truly an odd parable for the modern age.

That modernity has seeped slowly into football and consumed it, perverted it. The examples are so numerous as to be ubiquitous. Think for a second and you’ll realize what I mean. When does pink season start again? While comprising virtual temples to the aggrandizment of the state football has become anathematic to the former unique American culture. It is anti-American (in the sense of the former people, not in reference to Washington).

Half of American households own nearly 300 million firearms. When was the last time you saw a Remington ad aired during a football game? .00000001% of Americans are trans…whatever (or even really know what that means [if anything]). Yet the NFL and the NCAA condition bowl and championship games on the regional accessibility of peculiar restroom facilities. Their own facilities are financed by taxpayers so as to increase profits.

A friend of mine owns a cigar shop. For years he had a special relationship with a local television station which allowed him to cheaply run his commercials during the Super Bowl. Someone at the NFL found out. Now he is forbidden to advertise at any price. Overweight felons in pink are all-Amerikan, harmless tobacco is not.

The game itself is slowing to a pitiful crawl. This is due to the advent of rules no-one understands, copious reviews of everything, politically correct and nauseating commercials, and the shenanigans of the afore-mentioned felons. One must suffer an hour of mind-numbing nonsense in hopes of seeing but one good run or pass-play. Is it worth it?

That question has led me to my football crisis of faith. I follow three football teams: UGA (the men of my family, myself included, are alumni); Mississippi State (raised in Starkville and on campus largely) and; The Patriots (deep connections to New England). Overall these teams rank as follows: MSU – respectable; UGA – impressive; NE – incredible. Still, their games and organization have all succumbed to the blight.

Recently I wrote that Dak Prescott had renewed my faith in the NFL, if but for one more season. He’s a great player and a likable man. Yet he nor any other single player will be able to reverse what has happened. So I judge.

Players do make a difference. I follow the Lions sometimes out of respect for Matthew Stafford. That’s an example of a good player with a lousy team. I similarly follow the Panthers because of Cam Newton. I was never a fan until I watched the 2010 Iron Bowl and Newton’s electric and contagious play on and off field. By the way, I watched it from a bar in Lawrence, MA – the NE connection again. Player differences only go so far.

This season is a trial for football. I think I have already made up my mind but I may allow a final chance. Barring some major development or spectacle I think we shall part ways. This may be only a page in my divorce from popular culture.

It will not be, if it comes to pass, absolute. I still watch the occasional baseball game even after disavowing that sport in the summer of 1994. Then, I had Braves tickets made useless by the whining of men paid to play a game, who though their impressive compensation insubstantial. That was enough for me. I still cheered the Bravos on in 1995. An AJC front page hung in a frame in my former garage workshop. I even went back to games – so long as I could manage luxury box seating (thank you, Trammell Crow). Football may become like that to me.

And what else? What happens next? Unlike many of the portly jersey burners, I, myself, engage in regular athletic activity. That is generally enough. Once a decade or so I enjoy pulling a fish from the water or a bird from the sky. There is always golf, a sport I respect immensely though I am flatly no good at it personally.

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Boston Bruins / Wiki.

I begin to consider a replacement team sport fan-ship. I lean precariously towards hockey. This is a sport I know almost nothing about. We don’t have much ice below the sixth level (the block at the bottom notwithstanding). I do understand that hockey moves at a rapid pace and is yet to fall wholly to the new anti-culture.

The Bruins are a natural choice and my front-runners. One of the two cities I split my time between has a NHL team. My chosen retirement state and true spiritual “home” has a newer team. I have choices, professionally. The college scene is somewhat bleak. There are something like 70 D1 college teams and none at schools I am really familiar with. The only southern team is in Huntsville, AL of all places. I will not follow anything from Alabama. Sorry.

This fall I will work on these quandaries. Once or if my mind is made up there will be no stopping me. And I ask none to follow. I do understand many have gone ahead. In conclusion I ask those who love freedom, those who remember America, to reconsider things and institutions which do not. Kaepernick’s “scandal” will come and go. Football may also be gone.

I Must Admit I Was Impressed

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I watched and listened to Donald Trump’s address from Mexico. He spoke honestly about immigration and NAFTA. These remarks would have more useful 22 years ago but at least he said them. He also talked about mutually beneficial issues – from a straightforward American perspective.

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NBC News.

Hillary was incensed by the speech and visit:

“You don’t build a coalition by insulting our friends or acting like a loose cannon. You do it by putting in the slow, hard work of building relationships,” the Democratic presidential nominee and former secretary of state said during remarks at the American Legion’s national convention in Cincinnati, referring to her Republican opponent.

Nobody was (or should have been insulted) except for Hillary and the globalists. Trump was far from a loose cannon. She should cheer up. Trump mentioned her in his remarks. Or, I think he did. Something about bodies stacking up because of the cartel. He also praised Hussein “Fast and Furious” Obama for smuggling weapons across the border. It was almost bipartisan.

A little too little and a little too late it seems to me. I still hold that RP 08 was the last chance to cure the cancer. Still, if Trump is sincere and can even partially act on some of this, he may buy us a little time. Time will tell.

In Government We Trust: The Shadow Lengthens

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Just yesterday morning I followed up on the bumbling attempts by Washington to explain electoral system security breaches. I pondered whether the FBI actually found said breaches as part of an investigation or if they had created them as part of some false flag scheme for control. Today, we may have part of an answer.

I woke up (late) to this headline at Drudge:

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Hussein Obama elaborates on his golf handicap at NASA; Jeh Johnson looks on.

Drudge likes a little shock value. It should read: DHS to take charge of election security. That’s what they’re planning to do.

Even before the FBI identified new cyber attacks on two separate state election boards, the Department of Homeland Security began considering declaring the election a “critical infrastructure,” giving it the same control over security it has over Wall Street and and the electric power grid.

The latest admissions of attacks could speed up that effort possibly including the upcoming presidential election, according to officials.

“We should carefully consider whether our election system, our election process, is critical infrastructure like the financial sector, like the power grid,” Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson said.

Johnson also said that the big issue at hand is that there isn’t a central election system since the states run elections. “There’s no one federal election system. There are some 9,000 jurisdictions involved in the election process,” Johnson said.

Or, there were 9,000. Decentralization of power is a long-standing paper theme in America. I say “paper” because though we cut ties to centralized authority (King George III) in 1776, we reinstituted them in 1787 with the federal Constitution. Still, with something like elections, it’s probably preferable to have 9,000 separate authorities rather than just one. That makes corruption 9,000 times harder. Or, it did.

A related topic was raised in a U.S. News article today:

There’s nothing in the Constitution which requires a popular election for the electors serving in the Electoral College,” says John Nagle, a law professor at the University of Notre Dame, meaning the body that officially elects presidents could convene without the general public voting.

“It’s up to each state legislature to decide how they want to choose the state’s electors,” Nagle says. “It may be a situation in which the fact that we have an Electoral College, rather than direct voting for presidential candidates, may prove to be helpful.”

Both major parties do have rules for presidential ticket replacements, however, and Congress has the power to change the election date under Article II of the Constitution, which allows federal lawmakers to set dates for the selection of presidential electors and when those electors will vote.

But Congress would be up against a de facto December deadline, as the Constitution’s 20th Amendment requires that congressional terms expire Jan. 3 and presidential terms on Jan. 20. Though it’s conceivable to split legislative and presidential elections, they generally happen at the same time. And if the entire general election were to be moved after Jan. 3, Congress effectively would have voted themselves out of office.

While I would be happy as a clam if Congress voted itself out of office I suspect many others would not. “There’s nothing in the Constitution which requires a popular election…” – that doesn’t jive with all that “democracy” and “you’re vote counts” business so popular today. But, it’s true.

Your vote, your participation in the election is not needed. It is only an illusion. At best it provides the real state electoral system with suggestions. If someone wanted to tamper with your suggestion box, it would be better for them (worse for you) to do so from a singular point (as opposed to 9,000 little points all over the place). Thus, my suspicion of DHS’s power grab.

Oddly, DHS isn’t necessary either nor is it found in the Constitution. With the brief and partial interruption in the scheme from 1861-1865, the federal system operated without DHS from 1787 until 2002 (2003 really). It was a gift of the wooden, horse-like, Greek variety from our dear friend Jorge the Dimmer. (Miss him yet?) It was instituted after another false flag event. (Thanks for that recent admission, Rudy!)

I’m really close to 700 posts on this site and at least about 600 of them deal with the evil nature of government. You simply cannot underestimate the state’s capacity to do harm. Yesterday I mockingly rattled off but a few of the known recent depredations from D.C. Here’s a new one:

Those hard-working, just like us, only trying to better their lives while hiding “in the shadows” illegal aliens have stolen 1,000,000 of our social security numbers. What’s more, the IRS has known about this for about FIVE YEARS and has done nothing! They haven’t even notified the victims. A can of worms this is.

Social Security isn’t in the Constitution either, apart from just being another tax. The IRS is happy to collect taxes from any source it can. If illegals pay in, great. They care nothing about you and your identity theft claims.

As for the illegals, some say there is no such thing as an “illegal person”. This is where I part ways with the open borders libertarians. Is there now no such thing as an illegal identity thief?

We are not the world, nor are we children.

Even if the IRS cared (they don’t), they would have a very hard time sorting all this out. Likely they have no idea how to solve this problem. Their position is partly defensible mathematically: in just a few short score of years both the illegals and the identity victims, every last one, will be dead – thus, no problem in the long run to worry about.

Back to DHS, they have a short but growing history of doing a whole lot of nothing. Nothing except for taking control – of anything they can. That helps boost their budget numbers. A few of you may recall how DHS took control of the West Virginia situation in the novel Republic and the ensuing hilarity.

By the way, and on a concluding note, pursuant to the deficiencies discovered in Republic those you in WV might want to go ahead and stock up on AAA and SAMs.