Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Who is John Galt? Or Why Atlas Shrugged Pt. 1 Should be a Lesson to The Venus Project.

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The Venus Project has been begging for donations to start this movie about life in an RBE. So far, they managed to milk 33,000 USD for this project. Peter Joesph posted a huge letter detailing why this is a bad idea, but I will go a little further.Let's look at Atlas Shrugged and compare it to TVP Movie.

Atlas Shrugged is a novel that is based on the political philosophy 'Objectivism' and free-market economics. In the book they explore how the philosophy works in the US system before it's collapse and how it works in a society where there is no government outside of a few courts. This is very similar to what Fresco wants for his movie; what life would be like according to his philosophy in his world.

Now just for the record, I tried reading this book an failed. The long soliloquies about objectivism got to be too much to bear and never finished it. Because I saw this movie, I'm attempting again just to get the story that was cut off in the movie. So my bias exists, but is minimal at best.

Atlas Shrugged is revered amongst conservatives and libertarians. Recently the book has been enjoying a renaissance as it hit the Amazon best seller list recently. So you do have a very large fan base to pander. Far larger than TVP or TZM, I'm sure we can agree.

Hollywood has been struggling to get this into a movie made for years. The big studios wanted nothing to do with it. Look at this clip from the movie and see if we can understand why:



Now remember in Hollywood everything is unionized. Actors, screenwriters, directors, producers, video and sound guys all have their own union. Tell me what would happen if Warner Brothers made this move? Would the unions not protest that an anti-union movie is being made? You bet your sweet ass!

Now not to say big studios do make these movies our of these overly political books. Take V for Vendetta for example. In the graphic novel, Alan Moore explains in great detail the philosophy of anarchism. Warner Bros. stripped all of it's pro-anarchist leanings, and left with a nice popcorn film without a tinge of pro-anarchism ideals whatsoever. Then there's the clearly liberal/progressive movie Avatar. This is what is known as a cause movie. Cause movies can work, but only if they are done right like Avatar. However, what impact did that movie really have on you?  Think about it.

What Atlas Shrugged took was a business man to invest 10 million dollars to fund this movie though an independent studio to make it. The result? A mediocre film that put too much emphasis on the politics than the story. This is reflected from the book well, but in a movie that's preachy, you're only going to attract like minds and alienate people who already object to the philosophy. You're preaching to the choir.

I did find the movie entertaining, but only because I agree, for the most part, with the ideas of her philosophy. I think we need to admit this whether you you liked the movie or not; it was a disaster. In fact, most movies are. This only got on 300 screens nationwide, pulled in a little more than 2 million the first weekend, which isn't too bad, but considering the 10 million invested we can safely assume the chances for part 2 or 3 coming out anytime soon is unlikely.

I submit, TVP Movie will be worse. They will not pull in more than 100,000 dollars. Big studios will turn it down because of it's message some will think is communist and will be forced to produce it independently. The result will be corner cutting in CGI (as we saw in Atlas Shrugged) and a story that plays second fiddle to the philosophy. The people who will come to see it, are those who are already interested in the philosophy already. The people like me who will see it, my be annoyed by it's blatant political message that gets in the way of the story.

This is a bad idea. I suggest you abandon it. The libertarians tried your method for you in advance, learn from our mistakes before repeating them. 

Monday, April 18, 2011

"Fear the Boom and Bust" a Hayek vs. Keynes Rap Anthem

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We’ve been going back and forth for a century
[Keynes] I want to steer markets,
[Hayek] I want them set free
There’s a boom and bust cycle and good reason to fear it
[Hayek] Blame low interest rates.
[Keynes] No… it’s the animal spirits


[Keynes Sings:]

John Maynard Keynes, wrote the book on modern macro
The man you need when the economy’s off track, [whoa]
Depression, recession now your question’s in session
Have a seat and I’ll school you in one simple lesson

BOOM, 1929 the big crash
We didn’t bounce back—economy’s in the trash
Persistent unemployment, the result of sticky wages
Waiting for recovery? Seriously? That’s outrageous!

I had a real plan any fool can understand
The advice, real simple—boost aggregate demand!
C, I, G, all together gets to Y
Make sure the total’s growing, watch the economy fly

We’ve been going back and forth for a century
[Keynes] I want to steer markets,
[Hayek] I want them set free
There’s a boom and bust cycle and good reason to fear it
[Hayek] Blame low interest rates.
[Keynes] No… it’s the animal spirits

You see it’s all about spending, hear the register cha-ching
Circular flow, the dough is everything
So if that flow is getting low, doesn’t matter the reason
We need more government spending, now it’s stimulus season

So forget about saving, get it straight out of your head
Like I said, in the long run—we’re all dead
Savings is destruction, that’s the paradox of thrift
Don’t keep money in your pocket, or that growth will never lift…

because…

Business is driven by the animal spirits
The bull and the bear, and there’s reason to fear its
Effects on capital investment, income and growth
That’s why the state should fill the gap with stimulus both…

The monetary and the fiscal, they’re equally correct
Public works, digging ditches, war has the same effect
Even a broken window helps the glass man have some wealth
The multiplier driving higher the economy’s health

And if the Central Bank’s interest rate policy tanks
A liquidity trap, that new money’s stuck in the banks!
Deficits could be the cure, you been looking for
Let the spending soar, now that you know the score

My General Theory’s made quite an impression
[a revolution] I transformed the econ profession
You know me, modesty, still I’m taking a bow
Say it loud, say it proud, we’re all Keynesians now

We’ve been goin’ back n forth for a century
[Keynes] I want to steer markets,
[Hayek] I want them set free
There’s a boom and bust cycle and good reason to fear it
[Keynes] I made my case, Freddie H
Listen up , Can you hear it?

Hayek sings:

I’ll begin in broad strokes, just like my friend Keynes
His theory conceals the mechanics of change,
That simple equation, too much aggregation
Ignores human action and motivation

And yet it continues as a justification
For bailouts and payoffs by pols with machinations
You provide them with cover to sell us a free lunch
Then all that we’re left with is debt, and a bunch

If you’re living high on that cheap credit hog
Don’t look for cure from the hair of the dog
Real savings come first if you want to invest
The market coordinates time with interest

Your focus on spending is pushing on thread
In the long run, my friend, it’s your theory that’s dead
So sorry there, buddy, if that sounds like invective
Prepared to get schooled in my Austrian perspective

We’ve been going back and forth for a century
[Keynes] I want to steer markets,
[Hayek] I want them set free
There’s a boom and bust cycle and good reason to fear it
[Hayek] Blame low interest rates.
[Keynes] No… it’s the animal spirits

The place you should study isn’t the bust
It’s the boom that should make you feel leery, that’s the thrust
Of my theory, the capital structure is key.
Malinvestments wreck the economy

The boom gets started with an expansion of credit
The Fed sets rates low, are you starting to get it?
That new money is confused for real loanable funds
But it’s just inflation that’s driving the ones

Who invest in new projects like housing construction
The boom plants the seeds for its future destruction
The savings aren’t real, consumption’s up too
And the grasping for resources reveals there’s too few

So the boom turns to bust as the interest rates rise
With the costs of production, price signals were lies
The boom was a binge that’s a matter of fact
Now its devalued capital that makes up the slack.

Whether it’s the late twenties or two thousand and five
Booming bad investments, seems like they’d thrive
You must save to invest, don’t use the printing press
Or a bust will surely follow, an economy depressed

Your so-called “stimulus” will make things even worse
It’s just more of the same, more incentives perversed
And that credit crunch ain’t a liquidity trap
Just a broke banking system, I’m done, that’s a wrap.

We’ve been goin’ back n forth for a century
[Keynes] I want to steer markets,
[Hayek] I want them set free
There’s a boom and bust cycle and good reason to fear it
[Hayek] Blame low interest rates.
[Keynes] No it’s the animal spirits

Monday, April 11, 2011

V-Radio, Economic Calculation, and Rage; Videos

2 comments:
For those who are interested, I am providing you with some more information about the topics I discuss.

Overview of the system I advocate:



Breif explanation of why Austrians are labeled 'cranks':



More in-depth talk on Economic Calculation



Austirans on Money, Banking and the Federal Reserve



Jacob Spinney responds to TVPchallenge:

V-Radio, Economic Calculation, and Rage.

8 comments:
"Revenge is a dish best served cold" - Marie Joseph Eugène Sue

On April 7, 2011 I posted a blog about V-Radio and their blog post at attempting to address the economic calculation problem. I posted it before I had my morning coffee and i had to retract a lot of it and edit it heavily. However, my frustration is evident but I feel was justified. Neil had not looked at any of the material we gave him and relied on Wikipedia. Wikipedia cannot be an objective source of information in regards to politics, economics, religion, or any other topic where there is debate, it's just a starting point. I took that, amongst other things, as an attempt to deliberately distort our position.

Another thing that angered me further was after I posted this blog addressing this you ignored it. It could very well be true you were not aware of it's existence as I didn't send it to you directly. However, you were aware that I was one of the many people you could of asked to come on and talk about it, and you didn't bother to invite me or the multitude of other people who you could have asked and other people who offered to be on the show with you.

Also in this show you claimed we were 'disciples' of Mises who 'dogmatically' believe everything he says and intentionally ignore your arguments because we are 'religiously' opposed to them. This is a high level of dishonest debate techniques that is abhorrently hypocritical. In your debate with Stefan Molyneux (and you boast so eagerly) that The Zeitgeist Movement he says it doesn't matter if you guys are a cult if what you advocate is true. You attempt to tackle an argument that is irrelevant to the conversation that The Zeitgeist Movement is a dogmatic religion, then turn around and use that exact style of argument with others.

So concluding this part, the Zeitgeist movement is not a religion. Does not advocate a religion. Does not encourage religious practices. Has no rituals. Or ceremonies. We obviously don't have any “sacred ideology” and do not have any “sacred symbols” because we don't believe in the concept of anything being “sacred” because we don't believe in religion. And that basically disqualifies it from all of the negative connotations that are generally brought up when using the world “cult” in the derogatory.
...
A lot of people in TZM do admire Jacque Fresco for his work. Nobody is building any shrines to him. Nobody believes he is God. Or mystical. I know people who admire Muhammad Ali for his boxing prowess. That doesn't mean they worship him. So, religion again is out of the way here.
*THE PARADIGM SHIFT*
"The problem is that I answered him, but like, as typical with Austrian Economics enthusiasts, that are very set in their ways, so to speak, and very dogmatic."
...
"It's very funny how people come out of the woodwork, even from just reading my blog and how angry they get when you talk in contridictionary to the way their free-market 'Gods' speak." 

I never said The Zeitgeist Movement or The Venus Project is a destructive cult or a religion, and have said it isn't numerous times. While I have expressed concerns about how The Zeitgeist Movement is structured and the recruitment methods, I have made it clear that this is not why I oppose the Venus Project. Even if contend that if they are a cult, it doesn't negate their political ideology that might very well be true. Neil was quick to attack me for even hinting that it could be a cult for this very same reason. Fine, then don't say I'm in a cult as your argument against my position.

You need to offer a formal apology to not only me, but the people you said these things too. Even if Austrian economics are a fringe dogmatic religion, this is the very same stupid "ad-hom bomb" you are quick to correct others on.

Now let's put this all aside for now and re-write the article as I think it should be for the sake of the real ECP debate.

Now Neil says he was a libertarian. He claims that during the 2004 election, he was turned on to the ideals of liberty from Dr. Ron Paul's debate and later running for office on the Libertarian ticket. I too came from another political ideology myself, and I'll delve into it if Neal ever brings me on the show and asks the usual thinking out of the box question. So we both can agree that no system is perfect. One we see an optimal solution to the problems facing us, we are both willing to give up those ideas we hold on strongly onto for what we feel is a better solution. So either one of us could be wrong, or worse yet, BOTH OF US ARE WRONG.



Neil expresses that he and other who support The Venus Project are falsely labeled as socialists and communists when we propose that the RBE falls into the economic calculation problem of socialist economies. While it is true I think that this system is a new flavor of anarcho-syndicalism (which is 'voluntary' socialism) this is irrelevant. They are just labels.

To give you an understanding of the debate at the time Mises wrote the article, there were 2 camps. The crazy Utopian Socialists (name given by Marx after he realized these guys were getting clobbered by the classical economists for saying things like roasted chickens would fly into your mouth and the seas would turn to lemonade) and 'Scientific Socialism' which would be latter called Communism. The issue Mises had was not because communism and socialism was 'evil' and was afraid of 'sharing.' It was the ideas proposed by them that you also share; central planning of an economy and no money. The reason we bring this up is not because you said 'share' and we heard 'SOCIALISM! PINKO COMMIES!' No, we heard 'managing all the worlds resources and distributing them for free,' the very problem with communist and socialist systems. If The Venus Project also were around during that debate, he would of dropped the word 'socialist' from the paper for another word that collectively shares the same problem.

Neil goes on to try to explain the economic calculation problem, but completely misrepresents it. Mises said there are 3 things you need for a functional economy:
  1. You need private property in all means of production. Not just in consumer goods, but capital goods as well. The machines that make the goods, the resource collection for those goods...etc. The things that you and I will never buy as end consumers. Which is necessary for #2
  2. You need to have exchange. If the capital goods or consumer end goods are owned by a one party (i.e. The Common Heritage of The Earth) you can't have exchange. Without exchange, you can't determine the marginal utility of goods and services. In order to know what to make given the limited resources and the infinite possible combinations to use them, you need to take into account what the ever-changing and unpredictable individual whims have. The only way to extrapolate the data derived from those exchanges is #3.
  3. Sound money. By sound, we mean a currency based in value that cannot be printed out of thin air. Most likely, the favorable would be a gold . As it's durable, high value to weight ratio, easy to determine quality. (You don't have to be an expert to see if it's low quality or fakes like diamonds are.) What this does is turn those exchanges based on the heterogeneous subjective desires or wants, into an objective homogeneous number to calculate and make future profit forecasts with. If it's not profitable to fashion a particular resource into something, it means people do not value it's utility enough to spend time, energy, labor, and recourses to trade with it in the form of money. Companies would have to figure out how to produce it with less production costs. (i.e. maybe we don't need to buy a machine to remove apple stems if it will make apples too expensive and not worth the effort if most of the consumers don't care about the stem..)

It has nothing to do with companies trying to "dominate" a market. Companies want competition if they are willing to admit it or not. If Google continued without Bing, Google would have a hard time figuring out what people want if they are the only ones providing the service. They need to look to competition to build a better mousetrap, and via versa.

Neil gives an analogy:

Bob produces widgets. Bob calculates a price based on the cost of the resources that were used in making his widgets, including how much he had to pay his employees at the widget factory. He of course wants to make a profit so he charges a price that is above and beyond the costs involved in production. If he gets too greedy then people instead may buy a rival product that has a lower price.

This is bad analogy. Here's a more accurate one:

Bob produces widgets. Based on this system, Bob can predict that his widget would cost 100 dollars if he adds features 'x', 'y', and 'z'. If he leaves out feature 'y' and places a new feature he developed that's called 'a' that's more efficient than 'y' but it would cost 10 more dollars in production. He could use prices to forecast how much people would pay to see if producing it with a over 'y' is a good idea, and the market will either embrace 'a' and pay a higher cost, or just settle for 'y'. This does NOT mean that if 'a' is better, that anyone still producing 'y' will become obsolete and bankrupt. The market will reflect that 'a' is more preferable, but not everyone should get 'a' if 'y' will suffice at a lower cost. Since there is only enough resources to allow a few people to have this widget at a given time, the price system gives people the necessary information to calculate it's utility. If you need 'a' because you need it for work or whatever, you will value it's utility more than someone who just wants 'a' for fun when 'y' would suffice. In order to figure this out, he needs to look to prices to forecast profits and losses whether or not he could produce it for a nominal extra charge. Something a system without prices to determine production costs, could not figure out until lots of resources are misallocated to the point of some form of collapse.

This is also why scientific efficiency differs from economic efficiency. It may be scientifically efficient to make a widget with x, y, z, a, b, and g but it couldn't tell you who will utilize it to their peak economic efficiency. Only economics will determine if people need all those features, and who should get it.

Neil goes on to quote Wikipedia. Let me stop you there. With all the videos, books and articles we gave you that explains this, you go with Wikipedia? Are you trying to be dishonest or are you naive to think Wikipedia is an unbiased objective source of information? Look no further than The Venus Project's entry for reliability of Wikipedia. That whole article is ripped right off The Venus Project's website verbatim. No criticism section, not so much of a hint that people may object to this.

Now Neil, using Wikipedia, finds that money is mentioned and assumes that we contend the American Dollar is sound money. This is incorrect. I can use this same fallacious reasoning to say this loaf of Wonder Bread is white, ergo ALL bread is white. Neil also points to various heavily regulated regulated and protected industries as examples of free-exchange. This is also incorrect. He also assumes that the indoctrination into a consumer culture is a monetary issue. This is also incorrect. He may not explicitly say we advocates it, but he does point to it as if we would contend it should be true in this scenario.

  1. Zeitgeist 1, 2, and 3 goes into detail about why the American Dollar is anything but sound money. It is a Ponzi scheme to amass wealth and cause wealth disparities. The problem, is it conflates this problem with all forms of money. Neil, you were a libertarian. To told me expressly in no uncertain terms that you know this. You went and presented it anyways. This, in my mind at least,  is either a retraction on your previous claim, a blatant strawman, or a case of amnesia. 
  2. The oil industry is anything but a free-enterprise, it's mercantilism. Government props up organizations like OPEC who sets the price for all companies to adhere to. Regulations are in place to ensure no new competition to the market. Can you find this in an area of even our current system that is at least half as regulated as oil? Oil is arguably the least free-market sector of our whole economy that isn't expressly a government body, other countries have even nationalized their oil production. 
  3. Advertising. We both know who educates the children in this country. We both know they impose the idea that once we get out of school, the best thing to do is get the wife, kids, huge house, huge car that you cannot afford and 'build credit' (or as we say in the real world, build debt.) So the government is teaching this and not teaching critical thinking skills. We'll get into marketing later. 

Mises suggests that no rational prices can be reached without a price system. But are rational prices actually reached within a price system? No. The reason? The entire price engine is driven by the profit motive. And profit by no means depends on rationality.
I would agree this is true in a Keynesian system that depends on constant over-consumption, but this has never been the case in a free-market.

Neil then delves into advertising. It is true that marketing has turned into this simple "We have a great product, here's why it's the best" to using manipulative psychological tricks to get you to buy things. These tricks cannot work with people who are aware of those deceptive possesses. For example, Neil is a guy who has been educated about advertising. He has also educated his children about it, and helps them find ways of avoiding or ignoring it. We don't need an RBE to counter this, we just need to have more control over what is taught to our kids. Control we will never have in a state owned public school system. Neil, unknowingly, is defeating these corporations and their millions of dollars and brain scans where it hurts; in the wallet. If there were more people like Neil who took it into his own hands to educate his kids about this stuff, we wouldn't have a consumer whore generation.

He goes on to explain that there are handbags being sold for 3 grand, shoes being sold for 1 grand, or a shoulder bag for 8 grand. This, he says, is evidence that the price system fails at rationally pricing goods. This is false. The fact that I can go to Payless Shoes and get a pair of Airwalks for 15 bucks shows that it is possible to buy these goods that are about equal in utility, but if you want you can buy the flasher shoe for more. I on the other hand stick to DC. I can get a pair for about 30 bucks, they look nice, work great, and aren't going to get me made fun of. I could do something better if I wanted, I could buy the Airwalks and tell people who laugh at me to fuck off. I like the DCs better though, they are comfier and last longer. I honestly doubt you have ever spend more than 200 bucks on one item of clothing. Funny how you, I and many others in both your camp and my camp, for the most part, don't fall into this trap. Maybe because people aren't all as stupid as you make them out to be.

Is there a reason to buy this overpriced bullshit? Yes. If you are in the entertainment/fashion business, this could be seen as a capital investment as it reflects taste and style, a good that they are selling. We may not agree, but we're not entertainment agents who are qualified at making those decisions for others, who am I to say Angelina Joelie's career could be rescued by holding a $2,000 Prada handbag on Oscar night? I have no clue how a lot of this industry works. I do know a former executive for a big name movie studio, I could ask if you'd like. 

He goes into planned obsolescence, predatory pricing, and collusion. Again, this is only possible in a market which puts barriers to entry and enforces corporate collusion.

Planned obsolescence can be easily counteracted by allowing entrepreneurs to compete with more reliable products. If they fail, you could always create a fundraiser and offer a cash prize the the company that produces this item first. If these won't work, then you could figure out a way to encourage them to do so. The free-market is like ZomboCom, anything is possible and the only limitation is YOU.*

Predatory pricing is bullshit, even today. We see examples of companies like Wal-Mart. coming in and driving away competition. What we don't see is after the competition is gone, they jack up prices. This is a bare assertion that isn't backed up with any evidence. In the real world, what's to stop these companies to buy up the goods from Wal-Mart and then sell them at a higher price? This has happened before with Herbert Dow. Dow found a way to make bromine cheaper than his competitors. The German chemical cartel couldn't compete with Dow when he came to Europe. What did this cartel do? They went to America and sold bromine for half the price in an attempt to undercut him. Dow was brilliant, he had his people go and buy up all this under-priced bromine and resold it. The cartels got angry and slashed their price in half yet again hoping to under bid him. Dow continued to buy up this even cheaper bromine and resell it even cheaper. The cartel gave up after it got so laden down with debt and Dow became very rich from this endeavor. Economists today know this to be a fallacy, even outside of Chicago and Austrian schools because there's simply no evidence for this.

Ah yes, the old vestige of the statist think; Oil companies are a prime example of the free-market in action. With all the regulations that are placed on the oil companies that are written by oil company lobbyists to protect their cartel (OPEC,) how is this free-market? Funny how you only see this in health care, oil, pharmaceuticals, and diamonds which are heavily regulated and have government enforcement cartelization or monopolies and not in more free-market sectors.

Neil claims that the price system allows for 'worker exploitation.' Exploitation is a subjective term, especially in RBE terms as punching a time clock is not only exploitative, it's a dictatorship. You must remember, you are the final arbiter. If you don't want to support what you feel is exploitation, don't buy it. If you can't afford alternatives, it might be due the the fact half of your income was stolen by the government. I personally try to avoid sweatshop goods, and you say you do as well. I doubt Zeitgeisters who take TVP seriously as you buy sweatshop goods regularly. This is the free-market principles in action. People are understanding this is bad, and competition has emerged to satisfy a sweatshop-free demand for clothes. If we weren't taxed to hell, having our money inflated, and had to have 2 working people in a household just for ends meat, we could afford to pay twice as much for a hat. If you don't want to support companies outsourcing, then don't fucking shop at Wal-Mart! It's not the companies that are forcing people out of work and out of business and outsourcing, it's the consumers who demand lower prices and support their business practices by buying those goods. There are thousands of companies that successfully compete with Wal-Mart, some of whom offer those goods in sweatshop-free factories. Don't blame Wal-Mart for fulfilling the wishes of their customers, blame the customers.

Neil then says that in Z3 and in his own experience that there are random children starving and dying in the streets while we are selling a thousand dollar handbag next to them. While I would agree this system is leaving hundreds of thousands, if not millions people with substandard living conditions, I cannot agree to this extent. The American poverty class have way higher standards of living than any other poverty stricken people in most other nations. While Detroit and it failed planned economy might be an example of people living under even those modest means, this is still appealing to emotions. Do I feel bad there are people suffering? Yes. Do I think there's a way to fix this? Yes. Do I think it's the RBE? Hell no.

When attacking any centrally planned system, the Austrian economists point to examples such as the various instances of mass starvation supposedly created by centrally planned economies. They point to death camps and gulags as the inevitable solutions of failed centrally planned economies.
...
Mises and his disciples stated that centrally planned economies fail due to the fact that the resources would be distributed according to the “whims” of bureaucrats.
Bullshit, we know you won't have gulags and concentration camps, thats not what we're saying. We're pointing out people dying as a result of famines and miss allocation of other resources that caused people to flee the cities and build anarcho-primitivist communes. NOT BECAUSE OF BRUTAL PSYCHOTIC DICTATORS! Mises never said it was because of the 'whims,' he said you could only have 'whims' as there is not a system to calculate production costs and marginal utility.

Neil goes on to point out wealth disparities in America as if that's free-market in action. This is also incorrect. The wealth disparities in America did not arise until after the foundation of The Federal Reserve and the hundreds of thousands of barriers to entries created by government. I would ask him to point out anywhere in history or currently where there was sound money, limited government intervention and egregious wealth disparities in it's populous. There have been numerous examples of countries having the first 2, but not all 3.

It's ironic that the same incident of the rules suddenly changing in the book “Animal Farm” that was supposed to be a story about communism applies just as well to people living in a capitalist system.
That's because we're a sociofascistic country who are enacting laws and programs like those in Animal Farm. Is it any wonder why we are starting become like them when we start emulating them?

Neil goes on to point out why Mises and Hayek are wrong because they argued this in the 1920's (ignoring that they continued arguing this up until their deaths in the 70's and 90's and further ignoring other contributions to the ECP and Salerno and Woods which continue today.) The age of the idea that the earth is round is irrelevant even when we take into account how wrong the originators were. The earth is not a perfect sphere or pear shaped and we know this now due to new techologies that could determine this.  Neil tried to paint the picture that Mises came up with the idea, Hayek finished it, and it's been set in stone ever since. This is patently dishonest if he holds to the claim he has looked into this and I'll show you why.

ECP is not completely Mises' idea. It started with Charles Menger and his thesis on money and marginal utility. Menger knew that prices reflected marginal utility, but couldn't explain exactly how. Mises came along and showed how this worked. Hayek pointed out some discrepancies and divided the school on this issue. Rothbard and Salerno also had their contributions as well. As the ECP debate rages on today, Austrian and other schools have come closer on this issue over time. Some Marxist economists still propose a world wide communist system where they still allow Hong Kong to be a free market just so they can use their prices in planning. It is a real debate, the other sides are taking it seriously. The only people not taking it seriously are the RBE folks, which is understandable. The Zeitgeist films which is responsible for most of the interest in RBE are laden down with all the possible economic fallacies that it weeds out people who know a thing or two about economics from even participating.

Neil goes on to say that Hayek is wrong that people would have no incentive to provide information to use in the economy. While it is true that people will want to voluntarily provide information if it will better suit their desires, people will ultimately not. Why? Think about all the economic decisions you make in a given day. Do you want a banana, or some ice cream? Do you want a Pepsi, or a Dr. Pepper? Tuna or black forest ham? iPhone or Android? Could you imagine if every time you have a decision thats not a reflection of what you wanted in the past you had to fill out a survey? Or worse yet, had to learn about all the possible resources available and decide based with a survey afterwards? Even if you limit it just to the resources needed for just that particular need, it will end up being too much of a daunting task for any one person to do every time they decide they want a chicken burger over a beef burger.

An error I see Neil making, that other Zeitgeisters are guilty as well, of is compartmentalize goods into a overarching group. There are no beans, celery, t-bone steaks, or burgers; there is just food. There are no skirts, tank tops, pants or shoes; there are just clothes. This is another foundational falsehood in TVP. If you have 'food' and 'clothes' and distribute them, people will become sick of 'food' and unhappy with the 'cloths' provided. This is a veiled one-size-fits-all approach system that they are unwilling to admit to. I don't want 'food' today. Today I want oatmeal and scrabbled eggs for breakfast, for lunch I think a coto-salami and cheese sandwich will suffice, and for dinner I think I will make some mole chicken and Mexican rice. Tomorrow, I will probably eat none of those things. Even if you drastically reduced my number of options of food and still could satisfy my food desires, you couldn't predict what I will want to eat tomorrow. Nor could I! Also I really don't care what people say about my attire, but there is no way you're getting me to wear a skirt, dress, moo-moo, or shaw. I'll take the button up work shirt and work pants. Something a lot of people won't want to wear either. If we all end up dressing the same, then I most definitely want to part of it.

As far as Project Cybersyn example, I can show this is inaccurate. Chile at the time was ran by a communist dictator who bought into the whole technocracy. Beer designed the "schematics" of the "computer" which was really just an an over-elaborate analogy for how the brain works and how people working together can operate like a computer simulating a brain. Nowhere in his schematics was there ever a plan to calculate information with a computer. The telex computers used were just a way to transfer information to the central location, but no information is sent back. Why? Because the control room was just a mock up. A team of unknown bureaucrats took all this information received and and made graphs and flowcharts onto slides which were projected onto the screens. The sad thing is, that even this was fake just to show the concept to the Chilean rulers how it would work. The strike example is an error. The telex machines never calculated the answer to the problem, the telex systems only relayed the information to the rulers for which they manually devised an alternative. Good luck getting someone, everyone is dead now who worked close on it's development. They were killed in the military coup or passed away from old age. Beer did comment later before his death that the Project Cybersyn that running the country from a computer "..was rubbish. I did no such thing."

For more information about Project Cybersyn, check out this video:
http://player.vimeo.com/video/8000921

Neil goes back into the tangent that we should ignore Austrians because they are not infallible and mainstream economists (who Neil agrees are ruining the country) consider them cranks. So what? Are we to presume that Mr. Fresco is correct because he declared it to be true and thus is infallible? Of course not. No one is saying Mises or Fresco is infallible, so why bring it up as an argument against it if infallibility is your criteria from being a correct economist? No one says that socialist planning is impossible because Mises said so, Mises just first introduced a thesis that shown itself to be true. If modern proponents of this idea still hold it to be true, you can't promise them we'll figure it out later and climb aboard! What you need to do to show us that the model you propose, that has shown itself historically to be a disaster, can show itself to work under this NEW system. Show us an algorithm or show us a test city that works.

You ignored it over and over when Stefan brought this up to you, but I think you need to listen this time. You are offering a business plan to the world that says "Get on board and we'll make sure everyone gets wealth!" How exactly? "Don't worry about it, we'll figure it out when the time comes." This stockholder wants more explanation before he gambles on a system that has historically shown itself to be a total failure.

I'm a stockholder of planet earth, you proposed a business strategy for most of us to agree to. I need the details of this proposal before I can vote on it in good faith. So show us, the skeptical stockholders, how exactly you can fulfill the unspoken needs of 6 billion people with a team of scientists and computers. If you can't I will vote 'Nay.' If you can show me how this system can work in detail or provide a test city as an example of it's efficiency, count me in. Do you honestly believe I want to work hard to get the necessities and luxuries of life? No one does, it's just the most efficient way we are aware of. Show me exactly how to get to this better world you speak of.

*unless of course you plan on coersing or ripping people off, people will not stand for that very long. 

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Why VTV's Project Cybersyn example is bullshit

5 comments:

Let me know when this remotely resembles RBE? 

Addressing V-Radio's Attempt at Solving the ECP. (FIX'D)

1 comment:
UPDATE 2:02PM PST: I had to almost re-write this whole blog. I promise not to blog before coffee again. 

The original blog is posted here. I suggest reading it first as I will not post it in it's entirety.

The economic calculation problem is at the core of debate between free market advocates and socialists. And because a Resource Based Economy suggests distribution of resources to people absent a price tag we find ourselves not only being labeled socialists, but the same arguments being leveled at us that are leveled at socialists.

While it is true I think that this system is a new flavor of anarcho-syndicalist (which is 'voluntary' socialism) this is irrelevant. To give you an understanding of the debate at the time Mises wrote the article, there were 2 camps. The crazy Utopian Socialists (name given by Marx after he realized these guys were getting clobbered by the classical economists) and 'Scientific Socialism' which would be latter called Communism.  The issue Mises had was not because communism and socialism was 'evil' and was afraid of 'sharing.' It was the ideas proposed by them that you also share; central planning of an economy and no money. The reason we bring this up is not because you said 'share' and we heard 'SOCIALISM! PINKO COMMIES!' No, we heard 'managing all the worlds resources and distributing them for free,' the very problem with communist and socialist systems.

The idea behind the price mechanism is that in in the market resources will be given a value by the market. This value would be calculated based on the cost of production which includes resources expended and labor. And then finally consumer demand. The theory is that if a producer of a given product charges too much for that item then no one will buy it. Hence forcing the producer to lower the cost. Competitive forces also play a part here as rival producers of a given product will vie for dominance in the market by offering competitive prices.

So breaking this down into an analogy:
Bob produces widgets. Bob calculates a price based on the cost of the resources that were used in making his widgets, including how much he had to pay his employees at the widget factory. He of course wants to make a profit so he charges a price that is above and beyond the costs involved in production. If he gets too greedy then people instead may buy a rival product that has a lower price.
No, that's not it. The price system does do that, but that's not all it does. Price also allows entrepreneurs to make decisions based on the collective subjective demands in an objective price system and the time, energy, resources, it would take to produce it. It would be impossible to know whether or not a fashioning a particular good is the best way to utilize them versus using it add or subtract features or even making something else entirely.

Bob produces widgets. Based on this system, Bob can predict that his widget would cost 100 dollars if he adds features x, y, and z. If he leaves out feature y and places a new feature he developed that's called 'a' that's more efficient than 'y' but it would cost 10 more dollars in production.  He could use prices to forecast how much people would pay to see if producing it with a over 'y' is a good idea, and the market will either embrace 'a' and pay a higher cost, or just settle for y. This does NOT mean that if 'a' is better, that anyone still producing 'y' will become bankrupt.  The market will reflect that 'a' is more preferable, but not everyone should get 'a' if 'y' will suffice at a lower cost. Since there is only enough resources to allow a few people to have this widget at a given time, the price system gives people the necessary information to calculate it's utility. If you need 'a' because you need it for work or whatever, you will value it's utility more than someone who just wants 'a' for fun when 'y' would suffice.

This is why scientific efficiency differs from economic efficiency. It may be scientifically efficient to make a widget with x, y, z, a, b, and g but it couldn't tell you who will utilize it to their peak economic efficiency. Only economics will determine if people need all those features, and who should get it.

From Wikipedia:
Neil, let me stop you there. With all the videos, books and articles we gave you that explains this, you go with Wikipedia? Are you trying to be dishonest or are you just that stupid to think Wikipedia is an un-biased objective source of information? Look no further than The Venus Project's entry for reliability of Wikipedia. That whole article is ripped right off The Venus Project's website verbatim. No criticism section, not so much of a hint that people may object to this.

But what about the inefficiencies in the price system? Just how good of a job does it actually do when it comes to efficiently distributing resources? Lets take a look.
Stop right there again, Mises never said this system can work with government owned fiat money system. He agrees with you this system does not work, and states so. Mises says that you need 'sound money' which is something that cannot be printed out of thin air. So you're arguing his point home, thanks.

First of all, lets talk about advertising. Advertising has evolved over the years into what amounts to outright brainwashing. They specialize in ensuring that consumers have irrational desires for products that they do not even need. Or are even harmful to them! The work of Edward Bernays in assisting the cigarette companies in their quest to give women the irrational desire to smoke is an example I have frequently brought up on V-RADIO. Documentaries such as “Psywar” and “Consuming kids” really dig deep into the very dark reality of advertising and it's ability to target our minds in a way that causes us to feel “needs” for objects that have no rational purpose.
Well why are people so susceptible to this but you and I are not? You said so yourself you're desires are suppressed now that you are aware of marketing's influence. How did you do this? You educated yourself about it. So if this parasitic consumer culture can be changed though education, then let's look at who is currently education our kids? Seems to be that the vast majority of education in America is by government schools. Wait.... Government owns the schools, owns the money system, and allows corporations to side step rules everyone else has to follow. Hummmm... there's a conspiracy theory to play with.

In all seriousness, however, public schools have disincentives to teach any real values. You teach them anything that gives them any kind of rational reasoning, history, science...etc. there will be an angry mob with pitchforks asking for heads to roll. If people got to keep all of the money they earned and could use the money they pay though taxes for expensive public schools, and had a wide range of education to choose from there would be intensives to offer all kinds of values. Also if people can change not to be consumer whores, why the fuck bother having an R.B.E. to begin with?

One such industry is the fashion industry. A never ending cycle of convincing people that unless they wear certain clothing, (and more specifically are willing to pay a higher price for it) they are worth less as a human being. The $3,000 hand bags mentioned in “Zeitgeist: Moving Forward” are just one of many absurd fashions that resources are devoted to. A company named Louis Vuitton will also be happy to sell you a shoulder bag for $8,000. A pair of sneakers for $1,000. Or a belt for $3,000! The price mechanism has attached to it elements of social stratification. This brings us back to the reason that Air Jordan shoes that were purchased at Foot Locker were somehow more valuable then those purchased at K-Mart. Solely because the person could afford to pay the price. It was therefore more fashionable.
I just wear skate shoes, Dickie's work pants, and button up shirts. I have a couple suits for business, a fedora for fun, and that's about it. Funny how both you and I can avoid this particular pitfall with our monkey brains, and no one else can. Please, Neil.

The price system is subject to corruption in other ways. Planned obsolescence and perceived obsolescence of goods is also built into this system to ensure that people are forever in stores moving inventory. Products are made to break down or to not be easily fixable intentionally for the sake of profit. The price to fix a given product is set in such a way to artificially make it more expensive to simply repair an item then it is to buy an entirely new item. The price system creates the motivation to do all of this contradictory to the ecological and environmental impact of such wanton production. Because it is a system for an economy with profit as the motivator producers of given products are encouraged to find as many ways to cut corners as much possible when it comes to ecological safety of their products. Products are made without recycling in mind because a product that is easy to take apart to be recycled is in many cases easy to repair. This would allow the consumer to simply repair their products rather then buying new ones.
Planned obsolescence was explained to you 500 times why it's false, but you continue to repeat this line like a creationists keeps repeating the tired debunked line about evolution defying the laws of physics.


(starts at 4:07)

Again, even if this was true in the system today, it's not possible in a system without government creating barriers to entry that would prevent another company that could make something last indefinitely.


The price system because it is based solely on the whims of consumers also permits the production of goods completely irrespective of the long term effects of using up given resources. The consumer at the counter of a store does not consider, nor are they encouraged to consider the long term implications of their purchases. What will buying all these plastic products do to the environment? What if this useless junk I am purchasing has resources in it that will be required for mankind's survival? What impact will the fact that I purchase a new I-Pod every year have on my grand children? Or their children? None of this is taken into account in the price system.
You know what else the price system doesn't do? Tell you how to get dressed in the morning. Yea, fuck money.

No, wait. People don't need a price system that also includes environmental impact. People demand already to seek eco-friendly options by buying them when they come out. Entrepreneurs see this and start building more eco-friendly products for this emerging damand. We see this today, and Zeitgeisters play a role in all this new eco-friendly technology we see today by voting with their dollar. I have yet to see a Zetgiester rolling around in a Hummer. So, yea. Stupid. If someone could come up with a price system that also gave all kinds of information about how to use it and how it was made, awesome. No one is saying it does or should. That's up to us as consumers.


Because you want to be able to offer your goods at the lowest possible prices the price system also encourages worker exploitation. Wal-Mart's goods made in sweat shop factories can be offered at a far lower price then products produced locally. And the profit motivated price system will only serve to perpetuate this. Outsourcing to more and more desperate economies where people are willing to accept a lifestyle no better then conventional slavery.

Well if we weren't taxed to hell, having our money inflated, and had to have 2 working people in a household just for ends meat, we could afford to pay twice as much for a hat. If you don't want to support companies outsourcing, then don't fucking shop at Wal-Mart! It's not the companies that are forcing people out of work and out of business and outsourcing, it's the consumers who demand lower prices and support their business practices by buying those goods. There are thousands of companies that successfully compete with Wal-Mart, some of whom offer those goods in sweatshop-free factories. Don't blame Wal-Mart for fulfilling the wishes of their customers, blame the customers.

Another example of corruption of the price model is when businesses collude to sell a vital product at an ever increasing price. Take the oil industry. The oil companies formed a cartel to cooperate on what the price of gasoline should be. They agreed to compete by no more then a few cents at the pump. The benefit of this is that profits in all of the oil companies collectively went up to record heights. It was to the benefit of everyone in the cartel to see this happen. And because gasoline is not an optional commodity they were able to get away with it. It was not as if the consumers could simply choose not to drive to work.
Stefan already showed you why this is bullshit, but I will go further.

FUN FACTS ABOUT THE OIL INDUSTRY:
  1. The government enacts regulations that seem they are for 'protecting' people from bad corporate practices, but are in fact designed my big oil lobbyists to prevent new companies from entering the market place!
  2. Oil companies collude with government help to set oil prices though a private agency known as OPEC. OPEC sets the prices of oil arbitrarily. If one company dips below the price, they will be violating many national and international laws.  
  3. Oil companies (and other companies) hire lobbyists to suppress competition in alternate energies by allowing for area monopolies to power companies and barring competition from the market place.
The oil industry is anything but a free-enterprise, it's mercantilism. Can you find this in an area of even our current system that is at least half as regulated as oil. Oil is arguably the least free-market sector of our whole economy that isn't expressly a government body.

A further proof of the price mechanism's failure is that outside of the stores that sell these products there are often homeless people lying on the street. People who could feed themselves for MONTHS if they had even a quarter of the money spent on a single item purchased at the prices above. When it comes to a system of allocating resources the billions of people starving on this planet are a testament to the absolute failure of the market system to give any option to these people. There is no mechanism in the market or the price system that will distribute resources to these people despite the fact that technologically we could provide for them.
I'm sure this is true in that failed facio-socialist paradise in Michigan, but not so much elsewhere in our failing system. Again, Detroit is hardly a free market anything.

When attacking any centrally planned system, the Austrian economists point to examples such as the various instances of mass starvation supposedly created by centrally planned economies. They point to death camps and gulags as the inevitable solutions of failed centrally planned economies.
Bullshit. We know you won't have gulags and concentration camps, thats not what we're saying. We're pointing out people dying as a result of famines and miss allocation of other resources that caused people to flee the cities and build anarcho-primitivist communes. NOT BECAUSE OF BRUTAL PSYCHOTIC DICATORS!

Mises and his disciples stated that centrally planned economies fail due to the fact that the resources would be distributed according to the “whims” of bureaucrats.
So whims of scientists and their computers? Science can't tell you who deserves cars over scooters.

Disciples? Are we really going back to this bullshit argument of yours that we are religious and dogmatically accept everything he said? Normally I would over look this, but being that you have in the past said this, I think you are using the religious definition of disciples.

Mises laid out an argument that has shown to be correct that pro-central planning people have yet to show is incorrect. By me asking for you to address this as your solution fits the requirements for failure, does not mean I fixed a portion of my closet as a shrine I religiously pray too. If you want to talk about sucking off idols' dicks, let's talk about how you eat up every fucking thing that comes out of Fresco's and Merola's pie hole and defend everything they say even if it means distorting your opposition's position to do it. So much in fact, that you gamble your children's lives off this thing taking off so you can milk enough donations to feed them.

I'm going stop here and I know I'm going to sound like a total Zeitard for saying this but it's true. This is all straw mans and a false dichotomy: We advocate the current system which fails, the only choice now is R.B.E.

 So the rest of this misleading article I say the following;

That's still not addressing the argument Mises proposed, it's a strawman. Mises never said it could work with fiat money or government intervention in the market place, you're just affirming his thesis. Even still, this doesn't mean your system is the only possible solution.

If you want to have a real debate with me, you now need to take my challenge and abide to a new set of rules just for you:

  1. You can only talk about the current system if that sector is fairly unhampered (No oil, pharmaceuticals, coal, agrocorps,...etc. If they have a powerful lobby is a good indicator you're not dealing with anything 'free') 
  2. We can't use the words: Dogma, dogmatic, dogmatically, disciples, apostles, religious, religiously, cult, ..etc. It doesn't matter if RBE or Free-Market Economics are dogmatic or a cult, if in their assessments are right they are right. 
  3. "The price system has no place for people who cannot find ways to be useful to people who have more." is the threshold of stupidity. Moronic statements like this only tell me I am wasting my time arguing with fools. 


Someone just asked..

No comments:
..what I think about the comment Prokofy Neva said. I don't. I started reading it, but it went right back into her paranoid delusions that I used alts to greif her, that I killed her chickens blah blah blah.

I really don't care what a 54 year old fat typical self-important New Yorker who, on top of that, suffers from narcissistic personality disorder and thinks things that happen in a video game as "terrorism." Prok, play your stupid video games, I don't give a shit about you and never really have. I'm going to use a list system built into all blogs which you have yet to figure out and still use 'o's like a middle school thesis on why prom will be awesome this year.

  • I never crashed your sims or "greifed" you at your meetings (unless you say my presence alone is greifing which is to then re-write a words deffinition like a cult leader. ) I have never organized, planned, executed via me or by proxy:  sim crashing, chicken killings*, text/sound spamming, prim litter, or client crashes to you or anyone renting land from you ever in my life. She continues to make this baseless claim with evidence a that even conspiracy theorist nutjob would shrug off as being inconclusive. Ohh I was a security expert that heard the PN was going to crash your sim so I show up to attempt to stop it.... or was I really planning with a group who tried to find humiliating things about me the whole time BUAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA. Retard.  
  • I never made a mock Twitter account of anyone, in fact in California this might be a violation of state law. Also making Twitter Bots is beyond me. Never tried, never even looked into how to go about it. 
  • I am not Jim Korpov. I can't prove a negative. Her asking for proof of a negative just shows how retarded or dishonest she is. She needs to prove the positive claim. If she denies this then she can try to give me proof that Bigfoot and Unicorns do not exist. Also Jim Korpov lives in Kansas still, I moved to California. Anyone who know us knows we're different. We have talked to each other over voice numerous times in front of countless people. Also think I'm him, I could give a rat's ass about your delusions. 
  • Calling someone a cunt on your own restricted sim is not a Community Standards issue. Period. As much as she wants to pretend it is. 
  • I never said she was the 50 year old lady in question was you. LL verified over the phone with me that this couldn't of been why.
  • I already explained why Charity was banned, if she wants to continue under the delusion of it was banned for greifing her, she's free to do so. I just ask why she hasn't been taking those pills the doctors across the street at the mental health clinic asked her to. 
*Which by her own Keynesian economic opinions should be a good thing. Breaking stuff = prosperity. 

This is the last time I interact with this cunt. I'm not in SL, nor do I care about your drama anymore. If your sims crash and chickens die, then good. You feed and bait trolls and greifers and then they greif and troll you, I WONDER WHY? Don't paint a big red target on your ass and complain someone shot an arrow at it. Then don't say the person who saw you get arrowed was in on the conspiracy.  

This time there is a conspiracy, right here right now. If there are people who are interested in trolling a chemically imbalanced 50 year old fat cunt lunatic, all the information you need to do it is right here. If you do, tell her you did it because I said so. If you wanna know how to crash sims, I can't help you. After I stopped working security, I stopped caring how sim crashing was possible to figure out how to stop it. I'm sure you can Google or ask someone. 




Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Why I was banned.

1 comment:
Case: XXXXXXXXXXAvatar:Type: Reactivate an old AccountStatus: Waiting for Customer Acceptance Hello, Charity Nexen I am sorry to hear that you are having issues with logging into your account today. I would be more than happy to assist you. After reviewing your account, it appears that your account has been placed on hold for administrative review because we are concerned about your close links to at least one other Second Life account that has had trouble with our Terms of Service. We are deeply sorry for any inconvenience to accounts that have not violated the Terms of Service. Below you will find a link to an article that explains how to appeal this decision. Please make sure you carefully read over the wiki page in its entirety. http://wiki.secondlife.com/wiki/Linden_Lab_Official:My_account_has_been_unfairly_or_incorrectly_suspended_or_permanently_closed_by_Linden_Lab_--_how_can_I_appeal_this_decision As part of the appeal process, we will need you to provide to us a list of all alternate accounts (including accounts that are not currently active, and perhaps any accounts used by members of your household) as well a valid scanned copy of your ID. The following ID types are accepted: 1. Driver License2. State/National ID3. Passport4. Birth Certificate Please make sure that the file is no larger than 5MB in size and attach the file to this support case. To attach a file to your case:1. Click the Comment button.2. Click the Attach a file link.3. Browse for the file on your computer and click Open.4. To attach another file, click the Attach another file link.5. Click the Submit button.6. The files you specified will be uploaded and attached to the case. Once we have received this information, we will review your case and account and respond back to you as soon as possible. Please be aware that your account may not be eligible for release, based on the investigation of account activity and your links to other high-risk accounts. Either way, we will let you know. Regards,DeanT ScoutLinden Lab Support

To reply to this case, either Reply to this email, or visit :
It had nothing to do with disclosure. It had to do with a connection to an unknown person. Not Codizzo Hax, though. You see, he wasn't banned nor was Jim Kaprov. I am Jim Kaprov in her paranoid delusion because there can only be 1 Jim in Witchita, KS. Even though I have been living in Hollywood, CA for the last 5 months. Calling someone a cunt in a mature sim by a member of the owner group is not a Community Standard violation. Prokofy had committed 5 counts of disclosure in-world at her damn meetings that I personally saw and AR'd. I lowball'd her age (she's 65, not 50) and made no real reference to her identity which she boasts in-world for which there's numerous documentation of.

The real reason I was banned; Only Linden Lab knows and they just want to see my papers for some creepy Orwellian reason. Which is the true reason I will not go back. Second Life is a surveillance police state who takes Prokofy seriously. This cannot end well. So good luck arranging the deck chairs on the titanic there Rodvik.

Prokofy is a lunatic who makes bullshit libelous statements about me and others, and there's nothing I can do. Because of her history of making outrageous insane comments regularly, I could not prove in court that she is deliberately lying about me and honestly believer's her paranoid delusions. So all I can do is laugh and show everyone she's past due for her lithium and shrug it off.

U mad, Prokofy? Go blog about it.

I remember...

No comments:
I remember when Obama promised us he wouldn't rush into a war like Bush did. I remember when Obama said the first thing he'd do as president was close Gitmo. I remember when Obama he would reduce/eliminate deficit spending and balance the budget. I remember Obama promising to stop the DEA raids of medical marijuana dispensaries. I remember Obama saying he was change I could believe in.

Lesson learned: Democrats and Republicans promise the world and NEVER deliver. Stop voting for them. Bush was an incoherent serpent while Obama is a serpent with a soothing golden tongue that lulls the masses to sleep. The Republican who wins the nomination will be no better and no worse than Obama.

If you must play into the violent charade of freedom called 'voting,' whatever you do, don't vote for Obama, Palin, McCain, Bachmann, Barbour, Bolton, Cain, Daniels, Gengritch, Giuliani, Huckabee, Huntsmen, Jindal, Moore, Pataki, Pawlenty, Reily, Roemer, Romney, or Scarboroh. They all have identical track records; Promise something, and do the opposite when elected.