Categories
by Paul Jacob video

Watch: Free Speech Everywhere

The world is getting weirder, and those who love liberty seem less weird every day — but some are very wrong about democracy.

Categories
Thought

Voltaire

If there were only one religion in England there would be danger of despotism, if there were two they would cut each other’s throats, but there are thirty, and they live in peace and happiness.

Voltaire, Letters on England, letter 6, “On the Presbyterians,” Leonard Tancock, trans. (Harmondsworth, England: Penguin Books, 1980): p. 41, published first in English in 1733.
Categories
Today

Nat Turner

On August 21, 1831, Nat Turner led slaves and freed black Americans in a rebellion that was quickly suppressed.

Categories
audio

Listen: Freedom of Speech Everywhere?

The right to speak freely is under attack everywhere — and needs to be defended here as well as elsewhere:

Categories
Thought

Frédéric Bastiat

Le plus pressé, ce n’est pas que l’État enseigne, mais qu’il laisse enseigner. Tous les monopoles sont détestables, mais le pire de tous, c’est le monopole de l’enseignement.

The most urgent necessity is, not that the State should teach, but that it should allow education. All monopolies are detestable, but the worst of all is the monopoly of education.

Frédéric Bastiat, in debate with Pierre-Joseph Proudhon (1849–1850).
Categories
Thought

Yves Guyot

We must not confound liberty with anarchy. Liberty is the reciprocal respect for personal rights, according to certain fixed rules known by the name of law. Anarchy is the privilege of some and the spoliation of others, according to the caprices and arbitrary will of the cunning and the violent, and the feebleness and lack of energy of the timorous.

Yves Guyot, The Tyranny of Socialism, 1894.
Categories
Today

Estonian Independence

On August 20, 1991, Estonia issued a decision to re-establish independence on the basis of historical continuity of the Baltic country’s pre-World War II statehood, sloughing off Soviet rule since 1940.

On August 20, 1935, Ron Paul was born. Paul is now famous for his heroic congressional record, his several presidential campaigns, and for books such as End the Fed and Liberty Defined.

Categories
international affairs national politics & policies

Survival Disallowed?

By their assault on farming in the Netherlands, those who would sacrifice humanity on the altar of Mother Nature have given a big clue of how far they will go . . . to make our lives harder. 

Pretty darn far.

Will Dutch farmers be forced out of business? Will others face skyrocketing food prices, hunger, even starvation? 

Yet the elites say: So what? “It’s a transition.”

Livestock produce ammonia. Ammonia must be stopped. Whaddyagonnado?

We’re under assault in the U.S., too. Even if the attacks don’t always top the headlines and energy producers have yet to blockade roads en masse. 

Specifically, the Legal Insurrection blog calls our attention to three new governmental obstacles to energy production:

  • The federal government is pausing oil and gas leases on 2.2 million acres of Colorado land to permit more study of environmental impact.
  • A federal judge is re-imposing a ban on the sale of coal on federal lands to permit more study of environmental impact.
  • The federal government is stopping a pipeline to transport gas from Idaho to Wyoming to permit more study of environmental impact.

If this goes on, sooner or later people without AC or heat will be rioting against utilities and gas stations . . . as Biden and the rest pretend that high prices and low supplies are caused by evil entrepreneurial greed.

Every election day we will have another chance, sort of, to stop the insanity. Meanwhile, we can at least stop pretending that this is not happening.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.


PDF for ptinting

Illustration assist: DALL-E (an artificial intelligence that turns text prompts into completely original art)

See all recent commentary
(simplified and organized)
See recent popular posts

Categories
Thought

Booker T. Washington

No man who continues to add something to the material, intellectual, and moral well-being of the place in which he lives is long left without proper reward.

Booker T. Washington, Up from Slavery Chapter XVI: Europe.
Categories
Today

Patriotism & Protest & Ousting

On August 19, 1919, Afghanistan gained full independence from Great Britain. The British attempts to maintain an imperial presence in this region elicited an earlier, infamous essay in protest by English sociologist and anti-imperialist Herbert Spencer (pictured), “Patriotism” (Facts and Comments, 1902).

On this day in 1991, Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev was placed under house arrest, a crucial event leading to the dissolution of the Soviet Union.

In 1999, a mass rally of Serbians demanded the resignation of Slobodon Milosevic.