Archive for February, 2007

28
Feb

Fear brings people closer to conservatism

I recently read an interesting article in the February 2007 issue of Psychology Today. It was about political stances, and how most people’s politics have little to do with reason and more to do with personality traits and education level, among other things. According to the article, psychologists have discovered some interesting underlying personality differences between liberals and conservatives. A few I found to be somewhat surprising:

Multiple studies find that liberals are more optimistic. Conservatives are more likely to be religious. Liberals are more likely to like classical music and jazz, conservatives, country music. Liberals are more likely to enjoy abstract art. Conservative men are more likely than liberal men to prefer conventional forms of entertainment like TV and talk radio. Liberal men like romantic comedies more than conservative men. Liberal women are more likely than conservative women to enjoy books, poetry, writing in a diary, acting, and playing musical instruments.

As kids, liberals had developed close relationships with peers and were rated by their teachers as self-reliant, energetic, impulsive, and resilient. People who were conservative at age 23 had been described by their teachers as easily victimized, easily offended, indecisive, fearful, rigid, inhibited, and vulnerable at age 3. The reason for the difference, the Blocks hypothesized, was that insecure kids most needed the reassurance of tradition and authority, and they found it in conservative politics.

Getting to the main point of the article, it seems that those who have the greatest fear of death, a need for an authority figure, and who have a one-dimensional view of the world are more likely to be conservative. On a side note, this would help explain why the vast majority of those in the military tend to vote Republican.

If anyone understands this, it’s President Bush. After the 9/11 terrorist attacks, Bush’s approval ratings shot up to around 90%. Instead of using this golden opportunity to push for a truly conservative agenda of smaller government, he vastly expanded the powers of government with the PATRIOT Act and the creation of the Department of Homeland Security. Instead of reevaluating US foreign policy and changing it in a way that would ease resentment of the United States in hotspots around the world, he created a culture of fear, convincing Americans that their neighbors might be terrorists. Never mind that terrorism doesn’t register much of a blip when compared to the top killers of Americans.

Today’s conservatism is fueled by fear. Those who are more easily manipulated by fear feel at ease when someone in a position of authority (Bush) reassures them and tells them that he will keep them safe. Unfortunately, this combination of fear and need to be kept safe gives people a false sense of security. It is my hope that rational people will understand that the government can do very little to stop terrorism. Until then, we need to stop being ruled by our fear.

28
Feb

Bill would would ban use of phrase ‘illegal alien’

TALLAHASSEE — A state legislator whose district is home to thousands of Caribbean immigrants wants to ban the term “illegal alien” from the state’s official documents.

“I personally find the word ‘alien’ offensive when applied to individuals, especially to children,” said Sen. Frederica Wilson, D-Miami. “An alien to me is someone from out of space.”

Well, you’re an idiot.

Read the rest of the story here.

27
Feb

To whom does the US Constitution apply?

There is a great debate in the United States over whether or not terrorists have the same rights as American citizens, or even if terrorists have any rights under the Constitution at all. President Bush has maintained that captured terrorists are enemy combatants, and do not have the rights an privileges guaranteed by the Constitution. Bush is so adamant that terrorists do not have rights under US law that they are imprisoned at Guantanamo Bay, where Cuba technically has sovereignty even though the United States has effective legal control.

Another popular claim is that captured terrorists are actually prisoners of war. Prisoners of war do not typically get to challenge their detention and so captured terrorists must be held until hostilities have ceased.

Some even go as far as claiming that not even illegal immigrants have rights under the Constitution, because the Constitution only applies to American citizens.

There are several flaws in these claims. I’ll address the first one in this post and cover the others later. First, let’s evaluate the notion that non-Americans do not have constitutional rights. If one reads through the Constitution it becomes apparent that all references to “citizens” in the Constitution have nothing to do with the rights of the people. Most references are rules as to how one can participate in the political/election process. In fact, the Bill of Rights makes no distinctions between citizens and non-citizens.

Consider this: How can we be sure of our government’s claims that a suspected foreign terrorist is indeed a foreign terrorist until that person has had a fair and impartial trial to determine his status? What is to prevent an American citizen from being arrested, detained, and accused of being a foreign terrorist? That person would have no way to confront his accusers and prove his innocence.

This leads me to my conclusion. In truth, the Constitution does not apply to non-Americans. It doesn’t even apply to American citizens. The Constitution is a contract between the federal government and the states, and thus applies to the federal government. The Constitution itself is a list of rules and powers of the federal government. It is specifically enumerated and if it isn’t listed, the government isn’t allowed to do it. The Bill of Rights is a list of things the federal government may not do. Nowhere does it make an exception for non-citizens, terrorism, etc.

26
Feb

What’s your real tax rate? How about 40%

Think you pay a lot in taxes? What if you learned that you probably pay a lot more than you think? According to an article on MSN Money, the state takes about a 40% cut from the average American’s income. The American revolutionaries rebelled over taxes a fraction of that amount.

When we hear most politicians talk about taxes, they usually only refer to the federal income tax. However, most people don’t think to include other taxes such as property taxes, sales taxes, or all the “little” taxes we all pay that add up to a very large portion of our income over time. [digg=http://www.digg.com/politics/What_s_your_real_tax_rate_How_about_40]

I don’t know how others feel, but I hope more than a few are little peeved that the government can claim almost half of our income that it did nothing to earn.

For something a bit more visual, here is a table from the article:

All-in marginal tax rates for couples
Age
$20,000
$30,000
$50,000
$75,000
$100,000
$150,000
$200,000
$300,000
$500,000
30 42.5% 42.3% 24.4% 36.9% 37.0% 45.9% 36.8% 43.9% 44.0%
45 41.7% 41.8% 35.8% 36.1% 36.1% 45.1% 35.9% 40.9% 43.2%
60 32.0% 36.3% 36.5% 45.5% 45.5% 47.7% 43.2% 45.8% 45.0%
                   

So how can we get our politicians more connected with the real world? Maybe it should be required that they do their own taxes every year.

Without a calculator or computer software.

Perhaps that might give them a vested interest in the tax code they write.

25
Feb

Americans more likely than Muslims to support attacks on civilians

According to a recent poll done by the University of Maryland, Americans are more likely to support attacks against civilians than citizens of every other Muslim country except Nigeria. This poll challenges the popular belief that Islam is a religion of war and the United States is a nation of peace.

Percentage of population agreeing that “bombing and other attacks intentionally aimed at civilians” are “never justified:”

Pakistan: 86%
Bangladesh: 81%
Indonesia: 74%
United States: 46%

WASHINGTON - Those who think that Muslim countries and pro-terrorist attitudes go hand-in-hand might be shocked by new polling research: Americans are more approving of terrorist attacks against civilians than any major Muslim country except for Nigeria.

The survey, conducted in December 2006 by the University of Maryland’s prestigious Program on International Public Attitudes, shows that only 46 percent of Americans think that “bombing and other attacks intentionally aimed at civilians” are “never justified,” while 24 percent believe these attacks are “often or sometimes justified.”

Contrast those numbers with 2006 polling results from the world’s most-populous Muslim countries – Indonesia, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Nigeria. Terror Free Tomorrow, the organization I lead, found that 74 percent of respondents in Indonesia agreed that terrorist attacks are “never justified”; in Pakistan, that figure was 86 percent; in Bangladesh, 81 percent.

Click here to read more.

25
Feb

Why do they hate us?

For a while after the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001 George Bush made the claim that the terrorists attacked us because they hate our freedoms. Here’s an excerpt from a speech George Bush gave in 2002:

You just need to know it’s still a dangerous period in Afghanistan. There’s still a lot of killers roaming around, and they hate America. They hate us because we’re free. Then cannot stand the thought that we have freedom of religion in America; that we respect each other based upon our personal religious beliefs. They cannot stand the thought that there’s honest political discourse. There’s free press — confident they hate that. They hate us. And so, wherever they try to hide, we’re going to get ‘em. There’s no cave dark enough or deep enough from the United States of America.

However, this meme doesn’t seems to be as played up as much as it used to be. Even Osama bin Laden himself has discounted it:

If Bush says we hate freedom, let him tell us why we didn’t attack Sweden, for example.

The current conventional “wisdom” among supporters of the president seems to be that the terrorists hate us and want to kill us because they are Muslims and we are not. But how much truth does this assertion really have?[digg=http://www.digg.com/political_opinion/Why_do_the_terrorists_hate_and_want_to_kill_us]

It is true that much of the Muslim world finds many aspects of Western and American culture highly offensive. But it’s hard to find much evidence to support the claim that we are being attacked because they find us offensive. Most people typically are not going to be motivated to kill people on the other side of the planet because they watch trashy TV.

We can gather evidence for what motivates terrorists from looking at history. The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan offers us some clues. In 1979 the Soviet Union, a communist and atheistic state, invaded the Muslim country of Afghanistan. In response to this, Osama bin Laden and other non-Afghan Muslims came to Afghanistan to fight the Soviet Union, not because the Soviets were non-Muslim atheists, but because they were waging a brutal invasion. Once the last of the invading troops left in 1989, war with the Soviet Union was not pursued.

The US government has a hard time learning from history. In this case, the US government is caught in a vicious cycle. Their solution to terrorism is to do more of the very thing that motivates terrorists in the first place.

The terrorists have made it very clear as to why they attack us. It is not because of our freedoms or because we are not Muslim. The two grievances that form a common theme among terrorist groups are our government’s bullying and meddling in the Middle East and its lopsided support for Israel.

Unfortunately, it is not easy to have true debate with those who support the war in Iraq and the war on terror unwaveringly. To them, the very idea that the United States might be partly to blame for terrorism is unacceptable and cannot or should not be considered, and the United States is only seen as a force of good in the world.

We will have to see how long our government can play with fire before it realizes how much the American people are getting burned.

24
Feb

How I broke my leg — Part I

Since I’ve talked about what my life is like with a broken leg, I suppose it is only appropriate that I tell the story of how my leg became broken in the first place.

It was my wife’s fault. Well, sort of anyway.

My wife and my friend’s girlfriend got it in their heads that it would be a great idea to go to a roller rink and go roller skating. I was against the idea from the beginning, stating that roller skating is, “for kids.” Indeed, I hadn’t actually skated since I was 10 years old, when my elementary school classmates would invite everyone to the local roller rink for a birthday party.

But, eventually I give in because what the wife wants, the wife gets unless I don’t care much about being happy. We start the day off by going to my brother’s house to play a game called Guitar Hero. My brother is quite addicted to this game, and he loves it more than many things in life including his girlfriend and getting to work on time. I believe he even has a special spot reserved in his bed for his guitar shaped controller (I try not to use that one when I play). After playing this game for about half an hour, I can see how one can become addicted to it. For those of you who haven’t played it, it’s like Dance Dance Revolution, except that it’s with a guitar instead of dancing and it doesn’t suck.

After this, we meet up with our friends and have dinner at a burrito place and chat about various topics, including Guitar Hero. Since my brother wasn’t going skating with us and we were his ride, we all head back to his house to drop him off after dinner. On the way back I have this brilliant idea: Instead of going roller skating, we should play Guitar Hero for a while! Yes, Guitar Hero is a fun game but if someone had wanted to go eat paint chips instead of roller skating I probably would have taken him up on it. Unfortunately, my friend’s girlfriend was dead set on going roller skating that there was no avoiding the inevitable.

We arrive at the rink and walk in. The admission price of $9.50 was surprisingly expensive. Even more expensive than a movie. I had actually been to this particular rink before, many many years ago. Despite a recent remodel, the place hadn’t changed a whole lot. There were a few things that were different, such as the music. Instead of oldies and the Hokey Pokey, rap songs about sexy thighs and asses were played.

I got my skates and proceeded to get on the rink. There were actually a lot of people there and quite a few of them were going very fast. I, on the other hand, was more focused on not falling down. However as I approached the end of my first “lap” around the rink, I lost my balance and fell backwards on top of my right leg. I definitely felt and heard the bone break. A feeling of “I can’t believe that actually happened” rushed into my head. I was in extreme pain as I crawled off the rink. My wife and friends came over and my wife asked if I needed an ambulance and I told her yes.

After a few minutes, the paramedics came and put me on a stretcher. Everyone was clapping as they wheeled me out. I’m not really sure if they were clapping as a show of support or because they were glad the paramedics were finally getting me out of there so they could start skating again.

Next: My experience in the hospital ER

23
Feb

Alabama’s dildo police

Now I’m no coneisseur of dildos or vibrators, but I’m happy to report that the government of Alabama is using its taxpayers’ dollars well. Instead of focusing on petty issues, such as murder and rape, the public servants of Alabama have vigorously defended its decision to ban the commerical sale sex toys in the state…and won their case in front of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals:

MONTGOMERY — A federal appeals court issued a Valentine’s Day ruling upholding an Alabama law banning the sale of sex toys. But the devices won’t disappear from store shelves, including at one Decatur store, immediately.

The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Alabama’s sex toy ban is constitutional because “the state’s interest in preserving and promoting public morality provides a rational basis for the challenged statue.”

Hmm. I wonder how the court reasons that the state, an intangible and inanimate entity, can have interests? The truth is that the state does not have “interests”. Only individuals have interests. In reality, claiming that something is in the “state interest” or “national interest” is simply a government employee imposing his or her interests on you.

The lead plaintiff, Sherri Williams, said she was disappointed the 11th Circuit dated its ruling “on the very day this nation celebrates romance.”

Of course, this ruling could not have fallen on a more appropriate date, February 14th — reminding us that we should all look to the state to be the final judge of what kind of sex we can have behind closed doors.

I saved the best (scariest) part for last:

In previous appeals to the 11th Circuit, Williams and her attorneys had argued that the law was an unconstitutional intrusion into bedrooms, but the 11th Circuit held there was no fundamental right to use sexual devices.

That is a pretty bold assertion. If one completely ignores the Ninth Amendment as the 11th Circuit has, such an opinion by the court has far reaching ramifications. If it is the court’s opinion that there is no fundamental right to use sexual devices, then what devices do the people have a right to use? Using this pattern of logic, there is no fundamental right to use anything. The state is in complete control of your life and the legality of anything is at its whim.

Welcome to America. Land of the free.

22
Feb

I am a big government apologist

Yes. I’m a big government apologist. I want big government. I want more and more and more government. I think the government should get bigger and take more money and enslave more and more and more people. I want the government to raise your kids in a pod with robots for parents. I want the government to tell you what to do for the good of society. I want the government to tell you what to eat and when to crap. I want the government to tell you what to believe and when to pray. I want the government to tell you how to spend your money. I want the government to decide when your are unproductive enough to be replaced. I want the government to decide how many children you must concieve, test them, and then determine which ones will be kept and which ones discarded. I want the government to declare white people illegal. I want government RFID chips in everyone for tracking purposes. I want government cameras watching every move anyone makes and recording it on optical storage with real-time interpretation and automatic profiled arrest. I want government to mandate one gay experience a year for all adults over the age of 10. I want government to ban monogamy as it stagnates the gene pool from which they can select the next generation. I want government to require pregnancy and ban abortion. I want government to set racial quotas on birth rates.

Somebody call the sarcasm police, because I think I’m over quota.

21
Feb

You owe nothing to the public

“[The Individual] owes nothing to the public so long as he does not trespass upon their rights.”
Hale vs. Hinkel, 201 US 43, 74-75

The implications of this single US Supreme Court ruling are broad and sweeping. If our courts and governments (state and federal) honored this single ruling as they should, there would be considerably less oppressive government intrusions upon our everyday lives as citizens.

20
Feb

The Passengers’ Bill of Rights vs. the real Bill of Rights

I’m sure most of you have heard about the JetBlue passengers who were stranded on the runway for 10 hours on Valentine’s Day. If not, you can read about it here.

Every time something like this happens, one can inevitably hear calls for a Passengers’ Bill of Rights from the outraged. Unfortunately, those of us who actually value liberty are disappointed at the lack of outrage concerning the blatant disregard for the original Bill of Rights at the airport. You know, the one that’s in the Constitution? [digg=http://www.digg.com/political_opinion/The_Passengers_Bill_of_Rights_vs_the_real_Bill_of_Rights]

Much of your airport experience is regulated by the Transportation Security Administration, or TSA. The TSA is a federal agency created in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks. Before this, airport security was handled by private companies. The TSA’s main jobs are to make sure airports are secure and to prevent airline hijacking. Whether or not the TSA is actually effective at doing their job is the subject of another post.

While there is outrage at the incredibly rare occasion when passengers are stuck on a runway for hours on end, it seems that most people have no qualms about surrendering their constitutional rights just to travel from point A to point B.

A trip to the airport usually voids your first amendment rights. God forbid someone makes a joke about a bomb. That person may well find himself detained with a hefty fine. Even writing an insult on one’s toiletry bag can get one detained.

You can forget about your second amendment rights as well. Large signs at the airport warn travelers that the government doesn’t look too kindly on those who would exercise their constitutional right to bear arms.

Your fourth amendment rights are thrown out the window as well. Everyone at the airport is searched like a criminal and no warrants are obtained.

Fifth amendment rights are routinely violated. It protects people from being “deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” However, personal property is routinely confiscated at the airport without due process.

Eighth amendment protection against excessive fines is ignored, as passengers can be fined up to $10,000 for violating TSA rules. Also, don’t bother carrying over $10,000 in cash to the airport. Thanks to our draconian drug laws, the cash will be confiscated under the assumptions that anyone carrying that much cash must be up to no good.

Of course, we are all told that this is all being done for the public good. Unfortunately, the government is the last entity that I trust to make decisions affecting the “public good.”

20
Feb

Painkillers

Right now I’m on some hardcore painkillers. Vicodin to be exact. Apparently this is some pretty hard stuff. In fact I believe that Vicodin, along with most other narcotic painkillers, are closely related to heroin, which is why it is so easy to get addicted to them.

I got my first prescription for Vicodin after going to the emergency room right after I broke my leg. I got a second batch after a visit with the orthopedic surgeon. He prescribed me a lower dosage which caused me to go through withdrawal. I typically only take the pills right before I go to bed. My leg doesn’t really hurt all that much, but it can get very uncomfortable at night. Taking painkillers helps me forget about that discomfort. However, when the doctor gave me a new prescription, the new pills were only about 70% as potent as the old pills. Apparently, my body wasn’t going to stand for that, so I started getting withdrawal symptoms a few hours before I usually go to bed. Unfortunately at the time, I didn’t know they were withdrawal symptoms. I thought that I had come down with a really bad fever. I ached all over, I had the chills and couldn’t get the heat high enough, and I was very irritable. I decided to go to bed, and of course, take a painkiller.

About two hours later I woke up, drenched in sweat. My wife had left the heat on that night because I was so cold before I went to bed, but now I was hot! I also felt completely better. All my symptoms were gone. It was at that point when I realized what had happened. I originally didn’t associate the way I was feeling with the painkillers because it had been nearly 24 hours since I had last taken them. I had read that withdraw usually happens after 8 hours, but then again, I’m no expert.

Another weird side effect of painkillers is the dreams. Occasionally I will have terrible dreams that wreck my sleep for that night. Now, I’m not really sure what makes these dreams bad, but I hated the. One dream was about a reality show about people who had broken their legs. Their legs had healed and the show was featuring what they were doing now. I remember one guy had started a pizza parlor, as if that has anything to do with breaking one’s leg. But nobody said dreams made a heck of a lot of sense. Another dream was about my dad. He was teaching my brother and me how to snort cocaine.

So bizarre.

19
Feb

Recovery

I don’t know if you’ve ever had general anesthesia, but it is truly weird. Right before the doctor gave me the mask of pure oxygen (yea right) I made a conscious effort to remember myself falling asleep. Well, it doesn’t work that way. The next thing I remember after the doctor put the mask on was waking up in the recovery room. I don’t even remember getting drowsy. Weird.

Waking up is also an interesting experience. Apparently I had been awake for a while before I started remembering anything. From my wife’s descriptions, I was acting pretty much like a brain dead retard. She would talk to me but I wouldn’t even look at her. My first memories after waking up were of seeing my wife showing me my X-rays. I remember seeing them but not being really interested in talking back to her or anyone else. I was in a state of euphoria.

After a while, I was pushed out to the car in a wheelchair and my wife drove me home. It was then that I first noticed that my leg below the knee was completely numb. Actually, it wasn’t just numb, it was paralyzed. I tried wiggling my toes but they didn’t budge. It was a very bizarre feeling, but at least my leg didn’t hurt. I also had a bunch of vicodin that I had been on since I broke my leg. I took a pill before I went to bed that night, just in case the numbness wore off before morning.

16
Feb

Surgery

Well, this past Monday I had surgery on my broken leg. For those of you who have never been to the hospital, it’s like going to the DMV. Be prepared to do a lot of waiting. I was accompanied by my wife because she had to drive me home after everything is all said and done with. Can’t drive while you’re all doped up. Or if your right leg is broken.

I check in and we sit in the waiting room and chat while I wait until I’m called. After a few minutes we start hearing these weird noises coming from behind the counter. I look over and see that the lady at the front desk is playing Space Invaders on her computer. The really odd thing was that she didn’t bother turning off the sound and it was really loud. Pretty damn funny.

After a while, I get called back. I have to strip down to my underwear and put on those stupid hospital gowns that tie in the back. Of course, most normal people can’t make a knot behind their back so the nurse has to help me with that, and of course check out my sweet ass. The nurse then proceeds to do all the usual doctor stuff like take my temperature and blood pressure. She then spends the next five minutes trying to decide where to stab my arm so she can pump some fluids in me, since by this point I haven’t had anything to eat for about 16 hours.

Next, the anesthesiologist comes in and gives me the option of having my leg numbed before surgery. That way when I wake up, i won’t feel any pain in my leg for a day or so. I agree to this and I get sedated while she gets started. She uses ultrasound to find the nerve in my leg she wants to numb. Then she sticks this huge needle in my leg while I writhe in pain.

“Oh, I must have gone through a tendon,” she says.

Great.

After this I get wheeled into the operating room where it’s off to dreamland.




 

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