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Biden Administration Is ‘Irreparably Harmed’ by Free Speech Injunction

Posted by M. C. on July 8, 2023

According to the White House, it needs to squash the First Amendment rights of its opposition.

It is as though, before the internet, the government had demanded that Bell Telephone Co. disconnect Ralph Nader’s phone line, pressured the New York Times to block publication of the Pentagon Papers, or leveraged Warner Bros. to pull All the President’s Men from theaters.

https://spectator.org/biden-administration-is-irreparably-harmed-by-free-speech-injunction/

by LLOYD BILLINGSLEY

“The Government faces irreparable harm with each day the injunction remains in effect,” contends a July 6 motion from the Biden administration in response to federal Judge Terry Doughty’s preliminary injunction in Missouri v. Biden. Government lawyers argued that it may “prevent the Government from engaging in a vast range of lawful and responsible conduct,” and therefore, a stay of the injunction “is in the public interest.”

It isn’t. In reality, the people have suffered harm from government conduct against their basic rights and freedoms. 

Issued on July 4, Doughty’s preliminary injunction stated that “‘Protected free speech’ means speech that is protected by the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution in accordance with jurisprudence of the United States Supreme Court, Courts of Appeal and District Courts.” (RELATED: Flahertyism: Orwellian Censorship by Biden Proxy Rob Flaherty)

Doughty named Department of Health and Human Services boss Xavier Becerra, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), the FBI, DOJ, the State Department, and many others, including the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA). 

These agencies, including specific employees, “are hereby enjoined and restrained” from “meeting with social-media companies for the purpose of urging, encouraging, pressuring, or inducing in any manner the removal, deletion, suppression, or reduction of content containing protected free speech posted on social-media platforms.”

The agencies and employees, acting in their official capacity, are also enjoined from “specifically flagging content or posts on social media platforms and/or forwarding such to social-media companies urging, encouraging, pressuring, or inducing in any manner for removal, deletion, suppression, or reduction of content containing protected free speech.” 

It is as though, before the internet, the government had demanded that Bell Telephone Co. disconnect Ralph Nader’s phone line, pressured the New York Times to block publication of the Pentagon Papers, or leveraged Warner Bros. to pull All the President’s Men from theaters. In recent years, the government has been ramping up this brand of censorship. 

The plaintiffs include epidemiologists Dr. Jay Bhattacharya and Dr. Martin Kulldorff, authors of the Great Barrington Declaration (GBD), which opposed draconian COVID lockdowns. Instead of debating these medical scientists, Dr. Anthony Fauci of NIAID and National Institutes of Health boss Francis Collins teamed up for “a quick and devastating published takedown” of the declaration. Shortly after its publication in October 2020, the declaration was “censored on social media by Google, Facebook, Twitter, and others.” 

According to Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt, “When Fauci speaks, big tech censors and that’s what this lawsuit’s all about.” However, public health matters were not the government’s only target. (READ MORE: Five Quick Things: The Biden Bribes Scandal Gets Deeper and Wider)

In 2018, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg testified to the Senate that Facebook had collaborated with Robert Mueller’s investigation of Donald Trump, but the CEO provided no details. Zuckerberg did reveal that Facebook had removed a page from the site at the government’s demand. Zuckerberg did not indicate the content of the page, which government agency or official had demanded its removal, and when the removal had taken place.

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State Of Emergency Declared In Netherlands As Rulers Attempt To Stop Farmers From Protesting

Posted by M. C. on July 8, 2023

https://www.shtfplan.com/headline-news/state-of-emergency-declared-in-netherlands-as-rulers-attempt-to-stop-farmers-from-protesting

The Hague, the seat of the ruling class in the Netherlands, has declared a state of emergency to prevent farmers from driving their tractors into the city to protest the government’s mandatory fertilizer reduction targets. Farmers say that their rights and freedom are being trampled on by a totalitarian system of rule we all know as “democracy.”

A State of Martial Law: America Is a Military Dictatorship Disguised as a Democracy

Democracy worldwide is, even if run perfectly, nothing more than mob rule and nothing less than slavery. All freedom is an illusion as long as governments exist, people will be deluded into being their slaves.

Dystopia Disguised as Democracy: All the Ways in Which Freedom Is an Illusion

The Path To Freedom & Abolishing Slavery

The organizers of Thursday’s protest are the Farmers Defence Force. They said the state of emergency was a way to squash their democratic rights and freedom of assembly.  Of course, their government, like all governments, sees them only as slaves meant to obey, so they don’t care about rights or freedom. The rulers think they own their slaves. It would be like believing your cow has a right to vote to keep it from being eaten. The notion of government gets more absurd by the day and yet, slaves still hold the system that’s oppressing them up.

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John Bolton Accidentally Explains Why US Policy On Russia And China Is Wrong

Posted by M. C. on July 8, 2023

https://caitlinjohnstone.substack.com/p/john-bolton-accidentally-explains?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email

CAITLIN JOHNSTONE

Professional psychopath John Bolton has an article out with The Hill titled “America can’t permit Chinese military expansion in Cuba” which inadvertently spells out exactly what’s wrong with the way the US empire keeps amassing heavily armed proxy forces on the borders of its large Asiatic enemies.

Citing a Wall Street Journal report from last month in which anonymous US officials claim that Havana has entered negotiations with Beijing for a possible future joint military training facility in Cuba, Bolton argues that the US must use any amount of aggression necessary to prevent this facility’s construction, up to and including regime change interventionism.

“The potential of significant Chinese facilities in Cuba is a red-flag threat to America,” Bolton writes, arguing that such activities “could well camouflage offensive weapons, delivery systems or other threatening capabilities.”

“For example, hypersonic cruise missiles, already harder to detect, track, and destroy than ballistic missiles, are natural candidates for installation in Cuba, a prospect we cannot tolerate, along with many other risks, like a Chinese submarine base,” he adds.

All of which are arguments that could be made pretty much note-for-note by Russia and China about the ways the US has been threatening their security interests with war machinery in their immediate surroundings.

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Rothbard: The Free-Market and Antigovernment Roots of the American Revolution

Posted by M. C. on July 8, 2023

The State, in short, was to be kept extremely small, with a very low, nearly negligible budget. The classical liberals never developed a theory of taxation, but every increase in a tax and every new kind of tax was fought bitterly — in America twice becoming the spark that led or almost led to the Revolution (the stamp tax, the tea tax).

By Murray N. Rothbard

Mises.org

Historians have long debated the precise causes of the American Revolution: Were they constitutional, economic, political, or ideological? We now realize that, being libertarians, the revolutionaries saw no conflict between moral and political rights on the one hand and economic freedom on the other. On the contrary, they perceived civil and moral liberty, political independence, and the freedom to trade and produce as all part of one unblemished system, what Adam Smith was to call, in the same year that the Declaration of Independence was written, the “obvious and simple system of natural liberty.”

The libertarian creed emerged from the “classical liberal” movements of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in the Western world, specifically, from the English Revolution of the seventeenth century. This radical libertarian movement, even though only partially successful in its birthplace, Great Britain, was still able to usher in the Industrial Revolution there by freeing industry and production from the strangling restrictions of State control and urban government-supported guilds. For the classical liberal movement was, throughout the Western world, a mighty libertarian “revolution” against what we might call the Old Order — the ancien régime which had dominated its subjects for centuries. This regime had, in the early modern period beginning in the sixteenth century, imposed an absolute central State and a king ruling by divine right on top of an older, restrictive web of feudal land monopolies and urban guild controls and restrictions. The result was a Europe stagnating under a crippling web of controls, taxes, and monopoly privileges to produce and sell conferred by central (and local) governments upon their favorite producers. This alliance of the new bureaucratic, war-making central State with privileged merchants — an alliance to be called “mercantilism” by later historians — and with a class of ruling feudal landlords constituted the Old Order against which the new movement of classical liberals and radicals arose and rebelled in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.

The object of the classical liberals was to bring about individual liberty in all of its interrelated aspects. In the economy, taxes were to be drastically reduced, controls and regulations eliminated, and human energy, enterprise, and markets set free to create and produce in exchanges that would benefit everyone and the mass of consumers. Entrepreneurs were to be free at last to compete, to develop, to create. The shackles of control were to be lifted from land, labor, and capital alike. Personal freedom and civil liberty were to be guaranteed against the depredations and tyranny of the king or his minions. Religion, the source of bloody wars for centuries when sects were battling for control of the State, was to be set free from State imposition or interference, so that all religions — or nonreligions — could coexist in peace. Peace, too, was the foreign policy credo of the new classical liberals; the age-old regime of imperial and State aggrandizement for power and pelf was to be replaced by a foreign policy of peace and free trade with all nations. And since war was seen as engendered by standing armies and navies, by military power always seeking expansion, these military establishments were to be replaced by voluntary local militia, by citizen-civilians who would only wish to fight in defense of their own particular homes and neighborhoods.

Thus, the well-known theme of “separation of Church and State” was but one of many interrelated motifs that could be summed up as “separation of the economy from the State,” “separation of speech and press from the State,” “separation of land from the State,” “separation of war and military affairs from the State,” indeed, the separation of the State from virtually everything.

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School Choice Is Empowering Students and Teachers — And Devastating Unions

Posted by M. C. on July 8, 2023

Promisingly, 15–20 percent of union workers in education resigned their memberships last year.

Most states provide at least some support for parents who choose to send their child to a private school, such as tax credits, education savings accounts, or vouchers. Historically, this has not been a partisan issue. Among the states that spend the highest percentage of their education funding on choice programs, Florida and Indiana are strongly Republican, Vermont and Maine are strongly Democratic, and Arizona and Wisconsin are split.

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In many states, however, choice programs are limited in the types of students they can serve and in how much public money parents can spend on the school of their choice. As a result, only a minuscule amount of government education funding is expended on any program outside of the traditional neighborhood public school. (READ MORE: The Biden Administration’s Title IX Revisions Provoke Backlash From Left and Right)

But that’s changing.

The American Spectator school choice

The American Spectator

West Virginia, Arizona, Iowa, Utah, and Arkansas have all recently passed universal school choice bills that offer programs to all students. According to school choice advocate Corey A. DeAngelis, similar bills are moving, or likely to move, in Oklahoma, Florida, Idaho, Indiana, Nebraska, Ohio, South Carolina, and Texas. (A majority of lawmakers in Wyoming have also signed on to full school choice, but it is currently being blocked by the Republican House speaker.)

School choice is popular. Even in Democratic-controlled states, lawmakers have not — yet, at least — rolled back private school programs. In Michigan, where private-school choice programs are unconstitutional, about a quarter of students still want choice, attending public schools other than the one assigned to them based on their home address — either a charter school or one in a nearby district. The state’s new Democratic legislature, the first in forty years, has not signaled an interest in restricting these choices.

School choice is also effective: EdChoice, an education-reform nonprofit, found that the vast majority of studies on educational vouchers and tax credits show that choice results in significant learning gains for students, as well as such benefits as increased parental satisfaction and less bullying of students.

There are two main obstacles to expanding school choice: one is the traditional public school establishment, and the other is teachers unions. But the latter’s power and influence are gradually being gutted across the nation.

Why? Because of union choice.

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My Forty-Year War on Reefer Madness | Mises Wire

Posted by M. C. on July 7, 2023

As I wrote in my 1994 book Lost Rights, “The war on drugs is essentially a civil war to uphold the principle that politicians should have absolute power over what citizens put into their own bodies.” But there is scant hope that politicians will forfeit any punitive power regardless of how many lives they continue to blight.

https://mises.org/wire/my-forty-year-war-reefer-madness

James Bovard

Forty years ago last week, the Los Angeles Herald Examiner published my first attack on the federal drug war. The previous year, the Reagan administration had unleashed its “Just Say No” program, vilifying anyone who smoked a joint, sniffed the wrong powder, or used nonapproved hallucinogens. I was mortified to see Ronald Reagan—who was elected on a promise to get “government off your backs”—double-cross his supporters with what morphed into the most intrusive scheme in American history.

Like kids everywhere in the 1970s, I laughed at the 1936 movie Reefer Madness in my high school health class. I’d occasionally smoked marijuana but hadn’t felt compelled to burn down any orphanages afterward. When Reagan went on the antidrug warpath, I was “laying for him,” as Mark Twain would say.

The Herald Examiner was a conservative-leaning paper, so I slanted my argument accordingly: “Many heavy marijuana users voted Republican in 1982, so there is no proof that it causes irreparable brain damage.” I pointed out that legalizing and taxing marijuana could raise enough money to pay for the MX missile program that Reagan championed. (Pentagon boondoggles were much cheaper back then.) Ending marijuana prohibition would put hundreds of lawyers out of work, I cheerily noted. Reagan’s drug crackdown was playing to a culture war theme which I mocked in the final sentence of my piece: “Personally, I’m all in favor of locking up hippies, but we need to find a better reason.” The editor wisely deleted that last sentence before printing the article.

My attempts at humor were not universally appreciated. When I took the page from the Herald Examiner to a photocopy shop in uptown Washington, the cranky old manager was outraged by the article’s headline: “Making Pot a Crime Is, Well, Un-American.” He railed about how drugs were destroying the nation and wagged his finger so hard he almost threw his shoulder out of joint. The real problem, he said, was troublemakers like me. I just grinned at him and found another copy shop.

Two years later, writing in the San Diego Union-Tribune, I declared, “The only things drug laws achieve is to make drugs more dangerous, crime more prevalent, and government more obnoxious.” I scoffed, “If the FBI didn’t have a thousand agents chasing dope dealers, would the Soviets be having so much success stealing U.S. military secrets?” I also whacked the Feds’ narcotic nitwittery in the Detroit News and other papers.

My pieces had as much impact on the drug war as bouncing a ping pong ball off the hull of a battleship. After the drug war became politically profitable, the number of drug offenders in prisons rose tenfold. More people were locked up for drug offenses than for violent crimes, and possessing trace amounts of cocaine was often punished with longer sentences than rape, murder, or child molesting.

In 1992, I headed to Guatemala to give a few speeches on perfidious US protectionist policies. Outside of Guatemala City, I met farmers and small businessmen who explained to me how the US drug war was ravaging their country. A Guatemalan banker told me that the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) was involved in shooting down or forcing crash landings of small planes suspected of carrying drugs. A prominent Guatemalan politician told me, “If you criticize the Drug Enforcement Administration, you might lose your visa” and be banned from visiting the US.

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Just What Is the Military’s Image and Reputation?

Posted by M. C. on July 7, 2023

By Laurence M. Vance

…Just what is the military’s image and reputation? Since Rubin never tells us, I guess I will have to:

  • Pretending to defend our freedoms
  • Fighting wars that are not constitutionally declared
  • Obeying immoral orders
  • Serving as the president’s personal attack force
  • Engaging in offense while calling it defense
  • Going where they have no business going
  • Fighting unjust and unnecessary wars
  • Carrying out a reckless, belligerent, and meddling foreign policy
  • Making widows and orphans
  • Policing the world
  • Blindly following orders
  • Invading and occupying other countries
  • Bombing, maiming, and killing for the state
  • Doing the government’s dirty work
  • Destroying property and infrastructure
  • Supporting a network of brothels around the world
  • Helping to create terrorists, insurgents, and militants

This is the image and reputation of the military that we never hear about. Soldiers are not heroes, role models, defenders of freedom, or public servants. They do not protect and defend the Constitution. They are at best pawns in the hands of Uncle Sam, drops of oil in the gears of the war machine, dupes, and cannon fodder.

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Report: US Will Provide Ukraine Cluster Bombs as Part of New Weapons Package

Posted by M. C. on July 7, 2023

The news comes after HRW issued a report that said Ukraine killed civilians with cluster bombs used in Izium

antiwar.com

by Dave DeCamp

The Associated Press reported Thursday that the Biden administration has decided to arm Ukraine with cluster bombs and will announce the munitions as part of a new $800 million arms package. The news comes after Human Rights Watch (HRW) issued a report that said Ukraine has killed its own citizens using the munitions.

US officials told AP that they expect the arms package to be announced Friday. The White House used to be opposed to arming Ukraine with cluster munitions, as they are indiscriminate weapons that cause harm to civilians, but the concerns have waned.

Cluster bombs scatter small submunitions over large areas, making them especially hazardous to civilians who can find unexploded munitions years after they were dropped. Because of their indiscriminate nature, cluster munitions have been banned by more than 100 nations. The US, Ukraine, and Russia are not parties to the treaty, known as the Convention on Cluster Munitions. 

The HRW report said that Ukrainian cluster munition rocket attacks in the eastern city of Izium in 2022 killed at least eight civilians and wounded 15 more. HRW also said Russia’s use of cluster bombs in the war has killed many civilians.

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The World Of DATA Is An Illusion

Posted by M. C. on July 7, 2023

According to who?   Are there really 8 billion humans?   Who tells us this?   The same people who tell us algorithmic and data lies all day long.   The same people who declare at the end of every statistic that the number is an ‘estimate’.   Remember when the Data experts declared they would no longer count CoVid cases?   They never did count them – Covid data was assimilated by; Wikipedia, NYT, Johns Hopkins, Facebook, Google and various analytics…, including Bill Gates IHME.

The World Of Data IS An Illusion.

HELENA

The Nationalist Voice

The Job Market is showing signs of cratering.   Real People – not a Matrix Algorithm – but real people are being laid off in hordes.   The Tech market leading the bandwagon is claiming their layoff reaction is due to ‘inflation’.   The claim is that during the online Pandemic panic tech firms over-hired.   Now they are cleaning slate of superfluous employees, particularly highly qualified ones…   Illogical?   Absolutely.   Yet that is the narrative.

Of the $525 or $700 or $800 billion doled out in PPP Loans, the vast majority of the funds went to the Largest Corporations representing just 5% of businesses.   In other words, the PPP Loans which were created to go to small businesses – didn’t.   Tech companies were some of the biggest beneficiaries.   Revenue took a hit between 2021 vs 2022, yet when compared to 2019 – the spikes were higher by 60%, 80%, and double.

A Subsidy.   A Scam.   What happened to $800 BILLION?

For Example: META’s income between 2019 and 2022 rose 66%.  

Media 2022 – META shares take a 20% DIVE!   Media Jan. 2023 – META shares soar 20%.   As though it was ‘engineered’.   Between 2021 and 2022, Google/Alphabet added 34,000 jobs – an increase of 22%.   Same period – profits tanked.   For both companies, pretax income in 2021 was stellar.   Alphabet’s income in 2021 more than doubled over 2019.   It’s revenue to date has risen over $100 billion.

These are not causes for layoffs.

Where are the layoffs coming from?  

Many of the tech layoffs are from obscure companies located predominantly in New York and California ~ according to tech-crunch.  212,294 in 2023 so far, and 164,709 in 2022.   Shopify declared their layoffs were “due to a need to be more efficient now that the stable economic boom times were over…”   Dropbox claimed that their layoffs are due to slowing growth and ‘investments that are no longer sustainable’.  META claims it is restructuring.   Yahoo also says it is restructuring.

A closer look reveals these companies have been buying back shares since 2019 while incurring debt.

Who benefits from the share buybacks?   The same trio:   BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street.   Fink, Buckley and O’Hanley are the respective CEO’s of these three giants.   They Control and Dictate the market, the price of shares, the buys and sells, the media press releases, the news, etc…

The economy is virtually an illusion.   White House press briefings continually spike false information to dispel notions that America is in a decline.   A monopoly game with fake money.   Because in reality, the West ran out of money long ago and has been peddling the shell game for a decade or more.

Example:   Germany just announced the purchase of 60 Chinook helicopters from Boeing for a price tag of $7.8 billion.   Germany is in the midst of a recession.   To pay for the deficit spending, Germany has announced they will borrow an additional $18+ billion in 2024.   High unemployment, high inflation, packing on more debt, Germany is simply another Matrix of reality.

Does the US even have ‘gold reserves’ or is that another false piece of data?   How Deep Is The MATRIX?

As I noted above there are 3+ accounts on how much PPP loans were distributed.   Different media = different facts.   Facts are created opinions.   Money is allocated – and suddenly it cannot be accounted for.   Ukraine aid?   The infamous Pentagon Paper Caper wherein they had lost $3 trillion before 9-11.   Remember the $1.2 TRILLION infrastructure bill?   It was labeled The Bipartisan Infrastructure and Jobs Act.   Yet bridges are collapsing, trains derailing and jobs are lost.

Where’s The Beef?

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Meta Launches Data-Harvesting Twitter Clone, Immediately Starts Censoring

Posted by M. C. on July 7, 2023

As journalist Michael Shellenberger notes,

Within a few hours of launching, Threads was already secretly censoring users and not offering them the right to appeal.

That crazy guy Zuck, at it again!

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/metas-twitter-clone-reaches-10-million-users-hours-aoc-says-app-bricked-her

Tyler Durden's Photo

BY TYLER DURDEN

Meta claims that over 10 million people had signed up for its Twitter competitor, Threads, in what CEO Mark Zuckerberg framed as a “friendly” alternative to the little blue bird.

“Let’s do this. Welcome to Threads,” wrote Zuckerberg in his first post on the app, which is a “text-based conversation app” where users can publish posts up to 500 characters long, and allows people to post links, photos and videos.

Threads is directly linked to Meta-owned Instagram, which has over 2 billion users. The Twitter competitor is being rolled out in over 100 countries for iOS and Android.

“The goal is to keep it friendly as it expands. I think it’s possible and will ultimately be the key to its success,” wrote Zuckerberg in a Wednesday post, casting the service as a more wholesome substitute to Twitter. “That’s one reason why Twitter never succeeded as much as I think it should have, and we want to do it differently.”

Meanwhile, data privacy and censorship concerns have emerged, with former Twitter owner Jack Dorsey highlighting the vast amount of data collected by Threads.

As journalist Michael Shellenberger notes,

Within a few hours of launching, Threads was already secretly censoring users and not offering them the right to appeal.

Meta is already too powerful. One company controls what much of the public is allowed to see. And if Threads succeeds, it will have 80% of the global market outside of Russia and China, according to one industry insider. As such, it’s reasonable to expect that Meta will censor precisely the same way the large news media corporations, including the New York Times, and corporate advertisers want it to. More censorship is what the mainstream news media, big corporations, and their celebrity pitch people have been demanding.

…additionally, Unlike Twitter, Threads collects data about “Health & Fitness,” “Financial Info,” “Sensitive Info,” and “Other Data.”

What’s ‘other data’?

Shellenberger further noted that within hours of launching, Threads was already secretly censoring users and not offering them the right to appeal.

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