Herbert Spencer, “The Great Political Superstition,” The Man versus The State (1884).
If we adopt pessimism as a creed, and with it accept the implication that life in general being an evil should be put an end to, then there is no ethical warrant for these actions by which life is maintained: the whole question drops. But if we adopt either the optimist view or the meliorist view — if we say that life on the whole yields more pleasure than pain; or that it is on the way to become such that it will yield more pleasure than pain; then these actions by which life is maintained are justified, and there results a warrant for the freedom to perform them. Those who hold that life is valuable, hold, by implication, that men ought not to be prevented from carrying on life-sustaining activities. In other words, if it is said to be ‘right’ that they should carry them on, then, by permutation, we get the assertion that they ‘have a right’ to carry them on. Clearly the conception of ‘natural rights’ originates in recognition of the truth that if life is justifiable, there must be a justification for the performance of acts essential to its preservation; and, therefore, a justification for those liberties and claims which make such acts possible.
Will Rogers
On November 4, 1879, American humorist Will Rogers was born. Aside from his cowboy act, and his work as an actor in Hollywood, he gained much fame for being a topical comedian “just reporting what’s in the papers.”
Among his most famous quips?
“Be thankful we’re not getting all the
government we’re paying for.”
Citizen-Only Voting
Paul Jacob, in addition to writing columns five days a week on this website, is the chairman of Americans for Citizen Voting. He recommends these resources to help increase understanding of an important issue on the ballot in eight states across the union.
ACV President Avi McCullah’s “Path To Citizenship”:
ACV-NC Director Kevrick McKain testifying before NC Senate Re-Districting and Elections Committee:
MO Treasurer Vivek Malek sets the record STRAIGHT on Noncitizen Voting:
Vote YES on Amendment 7 to Preserve Missouri Election Integrity!
GA Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger on Meet the Press:
Paul Jacob’s columns on non-citizen voting:
Spilt Ink
October 21, 2024
Democrats and Noncitizen Voting
October 7, 2024
Jugglers & Clowns
July 9, 2024
The Non-Citizen Dodge
May 28, 2024
More Is Less
March 26, 2024
Alien National Capital
March 7, 2023
Reforms from Ground Zero
January 10, 2022
Ballots, Barriers and Buncombe
September 13, 2021
Should Non-Citizens Vote?
July 10, 2018
Dr. Drew Pinsky
There is literally no one in the public sphere that you or I can trust.
Drew Pinsky in conversation with Winston Marshall, “Dr Drew Analyses Kamala’s Cognitive Abilities” (November 1, 2024).
Army Disbands
On November 3, 1783, the American Continental Army — its mission fulfilled — was disbanded.
What Floats
“The Puerto Rico trash problem has been growing for decades,” explained John Tarrantino on Wednesday, at The Environmental Blog. “With a population of around 3.2 million, the island generates about 3.7 million tons of waste yearly. Despite being small, the island’s landfills are full and there’s no proper recycling infrastructure. This trash crisis affects everything from health to the economy so solutions are crucial for Puerto Rico’s future.”
This, some have suggested, accounts for Tony Hinchcliffe’s infamous joke written about by Paul yesterday.
Does it make the “floating island of garbage” comment funny?
Puerto Ricans don’t seem to be laughing. But if Mr. Hinchcliffe gets invited to the island territory of the United States for a gig, we’ll reconsider.
NOTE: Puerto Rican resident and infamous investment advisor Peter Schiff has advice for voting next week: