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First Amendment rights general freedom Second Amendment rights

Wanted: Armed Satirists

I have a suggestion. Bear arms.

Commenting on the terrorist attack on Charlie Hebdo, a Reason.com reader points to a profile of Henry Jarvis Raymond (1820-1869) at the website of Green-Wood cemetery.

At the moment, the most urgently relevant detail of Green-Wood’s profile is not Raymond’s co-founding of The New York Times, his politics or his friendship with Abraham Lincoln, but how he defended his paper against threat of assault.

“During the ‘high tide’ of the Confederacy . . . Raymond fought to rally public opinion in favor of the Union. When draft rioting mobs approached the offices of The New York Times in July 1863, Henry Raymond held them off with three Gatling guns he had obtained from the army.”

Charlie Hebdo has been attacked by Islamo-terrorists before. In 2011, its Paris office was badly damaged by a firebomb unleashed in reply to a “Charia Hebdo” issue of the satirical magazine.

At least since that attack, then, the risk to Charlie Hebdo staff for ridiculing Islam, Islamism and/or Muhammad* has not been merely theoretical. I applaud the fact that they have fearlessly persisted in their satiric mission despite what happened — and are fearlessly persisting now despite a much steeper cost.

But if you’re in that situation, please don’t just brave the odds. Even the odds. Ensure that personnel are well-trained in the use of firearms, and that these weapons are easily accessible at all times.

And if you’re a government, make bearing arms easy.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.


* It may be worthwhile pointing out — as many have — that the satirists were not narrowly ridiculing one culture, that of Muslims; they have been and are across-the-board satirists, mocking politicians, clerics and partisans of most (if not all) stripes. Further, though widely considered a left-wing magazine, its editorial policy has never fallen into the lefty rut of blaming only the West and bending backward to defend foreign criminals and tyrants.

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Today

Ford sets land-speed record

On Jan. 12, 1904, Henry Ford set a land-speed record of 91.37 mph on the frozen surface of Lake St. Clair in Michigan, driving a four-wheel vehicle, dubbed the “999,” with a wooden chassis but no body or hood. Ford’s record was broken within a month, but the publicity from Ford’s achievement was valuable to the auto pioneer, who had incorporated the Ford Motor Company the previous year.

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Thought

Albert Camus

It is the job of thinking people not to be on the side of the executioners.

Categories
Today

Jan 11, Austrian nobility get religious freedom

On January 11, 1571, the freedom of religion was granted to Austrian nobility.

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links

Townhall: An Egyptian Crackdown in South Dakota

What does a South Dakota physician have in common with an Egyptian political activist? Persecution by their respective governments.

Yes, it can happen here, folks.

Click on over to Townhall, and come back here for a little extra medicine.

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Common Sense

Read the Most Popular Book in American History!

Read Tom Paine's COMMON SENSE at ... Common Sense!


We are beginning our library, starting out with the obvious entry, Tom Paine’s “Common Sense.” Right now we have this book available for you in HTML, on this website. Soon we will produce PDF and ePub editions as well. Happy reading!

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Today

Jan 10, Common Sense

On January 10, 1776, Thomas Paine published Common Sense.

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Thought

Albert Camus

People hasten to judge in order not to be judged themselves.

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video

Video: Anniversary of Tom Paine’s Common Sense

Thomas Paine

COMMON SENSE

— published anonymously on Jan. 10, 1776


Open Yale Courses: A lecture by Dr. Joanne Freeman, Professor of History at Yale University. [45 min]

Discovery Channel: A segment about Thomas Paine [3 min]

Liberty’s Kids – “Common Sense” [22 min]

Episode 12: “James, Sarah and Henri meet Thomas Paine and learn of his belief that the common man can rule himself.”

(This is animated and great for kids. Paul liked it, too. )

The late Christopher Hitchens lectures on Tom Paine [60 min]

YouTube: Common Sense by Thomas Paine Sparked the American Revolution

By Constitution Man [10 min]

The Most Valuable Englishman Ever – Part 1 [60 min]

By Kenneth Griffith


And finally, why not read Common Sense for yourself? Indeed, you can read it on this site! Click here.

Categories
Today

Jan 9 Connecticut

On January 9, 1788, Connecticut became the fifth state to be admitted to the United States under the new Constitution. Connecticut was one of the first nine states of the original union, under the Articles of Confederation, to accept the Constitution, and thus officially ratify it. All 13 original states had ratified that new compact, officially, by May 29, 1790. The first state to be added to the original 13 was Vermont, in 1791.