MCViewPoint

Opinion from a Libertarian ViewPoint

Free Speech on Campus on the Israel-Palestinian War

Posted by M. C. on December 9, 2023

by Jacob G. Hornberger

We are now talking about real censorship and real infringements on the fundamental, God-given rights of freedom of speech and private property. How a university runs its affairs is no more the business of Congress (or the rest of the federal government) than how a church runs its affairs. 

What gives Congress the authority to censor, insult, abuse, humiliate, question, and pressure college presidents on any campus policy? The answer is that such authority comes from the schools’ decision to go on the government dole through the receipt of taxpayer-funded grants and subsidies from either the state or federal governments. Thus, the dole gives Congress the authority to control, manage, and supervise these institutions of higher learning. 

The issue of free speech on U.S. college campuses has reappeared big time with the Israel-Palestinian war. 

Ross Stevens, a big donor to the University of Pennsylvania, is asking for the return of his $100 million donation unless the university fires its president Liz Magill. Stevens got angry when Magill answered a question before a congressional committee in which she did not unequivocally state that calling for the genocide of Jews would necessarily violate the school’s code of conduct on bullying and harassment. Jonathan Greenblatt, the CEO of the Anti-Defamation League, described Magill’s testimony as “catastrophic and clarifying.”

Meanwhile, large donors to other major universities are terminating their support because of the failure of school administrators to condemn, punish, or suppress any speech on campus that does not unequivocally side with the Israeli government. Donors claim that permitting anyone on campus to openly sympathize or side with Palestinians or issue any critique of the Israeli government automatically means that the school is “anti-Semitic.”

Not surprisingly, mainstream commentators are framing the issue in the context of “free speech.” Actually, except as noted below, the controversy has nothing to do with the right of freedom of speech. 

As the owners of their establishments, colleges and universities have the right to set whatever policies they want on their campuses. If they want to prohibit students and teachers, for example, from questioning the Holocaust, they have the right to do that. By the same token, if they decide to have a course taught that questions the Holocaust, they have that right as well. 

If students don’t like the school’s policy, they don’t have to attend that school. They can go elsewhere. By the same token, if donors don’t like a particular policy of the school, they can take their money elsewhere. 

This is the way that things are handled in a free society. It’s not always an easy issue for school administrators. On the one hand, they might see university life as one of being exposed to all sorts of ideas, concepts, positions, policies, and philosophies, including some that people might find offensive, in order to have students figure things out for themselves. On the other hand, school administrators might not want the students to be exposed to concepts that are considered to violate moral or ethical principles of the school. While the issues might present school administrators with difficult choices, the idea is that it’s best to have them sorted out and resolved within the voluntary actions of the participants. 

But a question naturally arises, one that no one in the mainstream press asks: Why is this controversy any business of Congress?

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COP Out

Posted by M. C. on December 9, 2023

Taki

But let’s not fool ourselves when we read about summits. They are just an excuse for lots of phonies to playact and attract attention. The Brits have totally sold out to the towels, and the Americans are getting there. We should hold a summit on selling out, not on emission impossible.

The main problem is hypocrisy. No one will admit that the rich like to stay rich, whereas the poor need cheap energy, which means fossil fuel. The rich are the petrostates, Russia and the U.S. The poor are the rest of the world. So why go through all the summit meetings and pantomime? To make you, dear Takimag reader, feel that something is being done. It is as simple as that. Here are a few facts, however unpleasant as it might be to list them.

Dubai, UAE

Dubai, UAE

Source: Bigstock

I suppose it was the Almighty’s sense of humor to cover Western Europe with snow while those who flew into Dubai on private jets warned of planetary disasters due to fossil fuels. The United Nations climate conference is and always will be a contradiction, especially when held in a place whose wealth is uniquely derived from fossil fuel. COP28 is a joke, a lot of fat cats reading acronym-ridden speeches and with as much intention of cutting down oil production as cutting down private jet use or expensive hookers flown in for the occasion.

What I’d like to know is whom are these fat cats trying to fool? The summit is nowhere near consensus, that’s for sure. Exporting countries and major oil producers are on one side; countries without oil are on the other. Both sides are saying how important it is to cut down, and that is where King Charles comes to mind. He opened the conference by reminding everyone that we’re going to boil in hell unless we cut down. I was reminded of the time he flew to central Europe as heir to the throne and with him went a Rolls or a Bentley that did nine miles to the gallon because Charles likes his comforts. Hypocrisy reigns supreme with the Brit King and in Dubai as well.

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The Pentagon’s Rush To Deploy AI-Enabled Weapons Is Going To Kill Us All

Posted by M. C. on December 9, 2023

While experts warn about the risk of human extinction, the Department of Defense plows full speed ahead…

Tyler Durden's Photo

by Tyler Durden

Friday, Dec 08, 2023 – 09:00 PM

Authored by Michael T. Klare via The Nation,

Jenkins was at the UN that day to unveil a “Political Declaration on Responsible Military Use of Artificial Intelligence and Autonomy,” a US-inspired call for voluntary restraints on the development and deployment of AI-enabled autonomous weapons. The declaration avows, among other things, that “States should ensure that the safety, security, and effectiveness of military AI capabilities are subject to appropriate and rigorous testing,” and that “States should implement appropriate safeguards to mitigate risks of failures in military AI capabilities, such as the ability to… deactivat[e] deployed systems, when such systems demonstrate unintended behavior.”

None of this, however, constitutes a legally binding obligation of states that sign the declaration; rather, it simply entails a promise to abide by a set of best practices, with no requirement to demonstrate compliance with those measures or risk of punishment if found to be in non-compliance.

Getting that warm and fuzzy feeling yet?

https://www.zerohedge.com/military/pentagons-rush-deploy-ai-enabled-weapons-going-kill-us-all

The recent boardroom drama over the leadership of OpenAI—the San Francisco–based tech startup behind the immensely popular ChatGPT computer program—has been described as a corporate power struggle, an ego-driven personality clash, and a strategic dispute over the release of more capable ChatGPT variants. It was all that and more, but at heart represented an unusually bitter fight between those company officials who favor unrestricted research on advanced forms of artificial intelligence (AI) and those who, fearing the potentially catastrophic outcomes of such endeavors, sought to slow the pace of AI development.

At approximately the same time as this epochal battle was getting under way, a similar struggle was unfolding at the United Nations in New York and government offices in Washington, D.C., over the development of autonomous weapons systems—drone ships, planes, and tanks operated by AI rather than humans. In this contest, a broad coalition of diplomats and human rights activists have sought to impose a legally binding ban on such devices—called “killer robots” by opponents—while officials at the Departments of State and Defense have argued for their rapid development.

At issue in both sets of disputes are competing views over the trustworthiness of advanced forms of AI, especially the “large language models” used in “generative AI” systems like ChatGPT. (Programs like these are called “generative” because they can create human-quality text or images based on a statistical analysis of data culled from the Internet). Those who favor the development and application of advanced AI—whether in the private sector or the military—claim that such systems can be developed safely; those who caution against such action, say it cannot, at least not without substantial safeguards.

Without going into the specifics of the OpenAI drama—which ended, for the time being, on November 21 with the appointment of new board members and the return of AI whiz Sam Altman as chief executive after being fired five days earlier—it is evident that the crisis was triggered by concerns among members of the original board of directors that Altman and his staff were veering too far in the direction of rapid AI development, despite pledges to exercise greater caution.

As Altman and many of his colleagues see things, humans technicians are on the verge of creating “general AI” or “superintelligence”—AI programs so powerful they can duplicate all aspects of human cognition and program themselves, making human programming unnecessary. Such systems, it is claimed, will be able to cure most human diseases and perform other beneficial miracles—but also, detractors warn, will eliminate most human jobs and may, eventually, choose to eliminate humans altogether.

“In terms of both potential upsides and downsides, superintelligence will be more powerful than other technologies humanity has had to contend with in the past,” Altman and his top lieutenants wrote in May. “We can have a dramatically more prosperous future; but we have to manage risk to get there.”

For Altman, as for many others in the AI field, that risk has an “existential” dimension, entailing the possible collapse of human civilization—and, at the extreme, human extinction. “I think if this technology goes wrong, it can go quite wrong,” he told a Senate hearing on May 16. Altman also signed an open letter released by the Center for AI Safety on May 30 warning of the possible “risk of extinction from AI.” Mitigating that risk, the letter avowed, “should be a global priority alongside other societal-scale risks, such as pandemics and nuclear war.”

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So What Do ‘Libertarians’ and the ‘Right-Wing’ Think of Milei Now?

Posted by M. C. on December 9, 2023

By Gary D. Barnett

Milei also chose Santiago Bausili as the new central bank head. (I thought there was to be no central bank?) Bausili also worked for JP Morgan and Deutsche Bank in debt, capital markets, and of course, derivatives, in markets covering Argentina, Chile, and Peru. This looks like old home week for Argentina, as the same guys responsible for the past destruction of the economy will be back in the saddle along with Milei,

One can dream, can’t one?

“You can sway a thousand men by appealing to their prejudices quicker than you can convince one man by logic.”

Robert A. Heinlein, Revolt in 2100/Methuselah’s Children

I warned just after the recent Argentina election, that Javier Milei was not as advertised, and in fact, that he was no different than other politicians. Many condemned my criticism of their new political ‘hero,’ as latching on to any chance for ‘change’ by ignorant and duped voters, is always the imbecilic response by those voluntarily seeking a master to rule them. As I write this just two weeks later, and before he has even taken office, much has already changed, exposing corruption, and political reality that is eternally present. But given the circumstances surrounding all the hype of this self-described new ‘libertarian’ and ‘anarcho-capitalist,’ it seems prudent to expose all the contradiction that surrounds Milei, his Cabinet appointments, his immediate back-tracking, and his connections and supporting cast worldwide, even before he is inaugurated. I think this very important because of so much interest and support coming from the U.S., especially the ‘libertarian’ crowd, and much of the alternative media, whose feigned passion for the people, while at the same time promoting the advancement of freedom through the ballot box, creates a false dichotomy of epoch proportion.

I am not writing this specifically as a hit piece against Javier Milei, but against all ruling class types who claim to be the saviors of the people, by seeking and accepting State power to wield over them. I am only pointing out the gross double-speak, contradiction, and hypocrisy that is so common with all in the political class, government, and any who desire to rule over others, as they can never be trusted. So to be fooled into their trap of propaganda, only requires giving trust without scrutiny, and expecting (hoping for) a desired outcome before it is proven, based only on extreme rhetoric, false promises, political pledges, and bombastic and pompous displays of theatre. All these things are useless, and an assault on the intellect of any able to think for themselves, but given that the ability to think critically is now a very minority position, one can see why those choosing to rule have such an easy time fooling the crowd. Milei’s campaign was little more than a circus-like psychological takeover of the empty minds of those looking for a savior in a crowd of fraudulent criminals.

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The ‘Diversity Is Strength’ Mantra Is Collapsing Across Europe

Posted by M. C. on December 8, 2023

Robert Bridge

European Union struggles to absorb millions of new arrivals without any forethought as to how the experiment was supposed to work in the first place.

It should come as no surprise that hard-right political parties have become part of the European political landscape amid soaring crime rates and tumbling living standards, as national borders remain wide open.

Last week, European capitals received yet another brutal reminder that, try as they might, it is impossible to forever tamp down the rise of anti-immigration sentiments. This latest wake-up call came as Geert Wilders, head of Party for Freedom (PVV), won in the Dutch general elections, grabbing 37 seats out of 150 (76 seats are need for a majority).

The victory comes months after the collapse of former Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte’s government amid infighting over migration policy.

“Migration is a large and important subject, both politically and socially,” Rutte told reporters in the Hague at the time. “Now that we cannot come to an agreement on this subject, we have jointly decided that the political support disappeared.”

Wilders, familiar by his trademark white bouffant, is perhaps even more recognizable by his fierce anti-immigrant rhetoric, which is particularly aimed at Muslims. A political acolyte of Frederik ‘Frits’ Bolkestein, a retired politician and who served as leader of the People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD), Wilders’ platform calls for a ban on further mosque construction in the Netherlands, tough laws against street crime, and severe restrictions on immigration.

Exactly how much of his manifesto Wilders will have to scrap to enter a new coalition government remains to be seen, but already the new pro-reform NSC party of Pieteer Omtzigt (20 seats), the BBB agrarian party (seven seats), and the center-right VVD party (24 seats) have all signaled the possibility of sharing power with the PVV. On top of this, Wilders stands a better than average chance of becoming the first far-right prime minister of the Netherlands.

If Wilders wins, it will represent yet another setback for the EU as it is already dealing with an increasingly influential anti-immigration bloc made up of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, and newly elected Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico. Meanwhile, Europe’s two political powerhouses, France and Germany, are also witnessing the inexorable rise of anti-immigrant parties, namely Marine Le Pen’s National Rally, and Alternative for Germany, respectively.

As if to underscore Wilders’ victory, the Irish capital Dublin exploded in an orgy of mass rioting on November 23 after it was reported that an immigrant had stabbed three young children, critically injuring a five-year-old girl. The male, who was charged with knife possession in May but never convicted, also stabbed and seriously injured a care assistant as she tried to shield the youth. The assailant was later identified as a 49-year-old naturalized Irish citizen, of Algerian origin, who had lived in Ireland for 20 years.

In the melee, 400 gardaí (Irish police) were dispatched, including the largest deployment of gardaí armed with riot gear in the nation’s history.

All of this was easily predictable considering that tiny Ireland is bursting at the seams with new arrivals;

141,600 migrants arrived in the year to April 2023, pushing Irish immigration to a 16-year high. In fact, Muhammad became the most popular boy’s baby name in the Irish city of Galway last year, according to the Central Statistics Office (CSO).

It is the first time the Islamic name has become the most popular baby name in an Irish city, and continues a trend witnessed in the UK and other European nations in recent years.

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In Defense of Capitalism – The American Spectator | USA News and Politics

Posted by M. C. on December 8, 2023

It is the most compassionate form of economy known to man.

by Kate Morra

I would posit that the Gilded Age is to be celebrated, as it is a fascinating illustration of what individuals did with the liberties secured by the Constitution. It was an expression of the American people, politically and economically free. Because individuals were able to pursue that which impassioned them and in which their aptitude lay, transformational inventions became a part of daily life.

https://spectator.org/in-defense-of-capitalism/?lh_aid=6979495&lh_cid=8xeqi4x83h&di=f8a1a5bf09fc056476025abe26e2ca49

Considering the current sympathy for Marxism disguised as “democratic socialism,” it has become necessary to revisit some basic facts, one of which is that capitalism is the most compassionate form of economy known to man and, as such, must be fiercely defended.

To begin with, it must be noted that the socialist experiment was tried upon our shores at the very start of the Pilgrim colony, to the peril of such. At least half their number was decimated in the first winter. Why? Their God-given right to the fruits of their labor was ignored, and, inevitably, very little was produced. William Bradford recognized the errors of this governance and plotted out land for each man wherein each would be the owner of what he earned. The colony immediately began to prosper. (READ MORE: The Pilgrims Were the First Socialists)

Adam Smith, in his voluminous 1776 tome The Wealth of Nations, hit the proverbial nail on the head when he speaks of the baker, who, through no altruistic motivation, nonetheless serves the people around him. The self-interested baker is providing bread to others who had not the time to make it, and he is contributing to the economy with jobs, opportunities, lease payments to a landlord, taxes, etc.

Another very important point to embrace is that wealth is not evil. Can it be, and has it been used thusly? Of course. But it has also created the most benevolent nation on earth when calamities befall others in the world.

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The State Takes The Place Of God… “They Want to be Our Shepherds. But That Requires Us to be Sheep.”

Posted by M. C. on December 8, 2023

Milan Adams

When the project of universal democracy ended in the blood-soaked streets of Iraq, this pattern began to be reversed. Utopianism suffered a heavy blow, but politics and war have not ceased to be vehicles for myth. Instead, primitive versions of religion are replacing the secular faith that has been lost. Apocalyptic religion shapes the policies of American president George W. Bush and his antagonist Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Iran. Wherever it is happening, the revival of religion is mixed up with political conflicts,

Modern politics is a chapter in the history of religion. The greatest of the revolutionary upheavals that have shaped so much of the history of the past two centuries were episodes in the history of faith – moments in the long dissolution of Christianity and the rise of modern political religion. The world in which we find ourselves at the start of the new millennium is littered with the debris of utopian projects, which though they were framed in secular terms that denied the truth of religion were in fact vehicles for religious myths.

Communism and Nazism claimed to be based on science – in the case of communism the cod-science of historical materialism, in Nazism the farrago of ‘scientific racism’. These claims were fraudulent but the use of pseudo-science did not stop with the collapse of totalitarianism that culminated with the dissolution of the USSR in December 1991. It continued in neo-conservative theories that claimed the world is converging on a single type of government and economic system – universal democracy, or a global free market. Despite the fact that it was presented in the trappings of social science, this belief that humanity was on the brink of a new era was only the most recent version of apocalyptic beliefs that go back to the most ancient times.

Jesus and his followers believed they lived in an End-Time when the evils of the world were about to pass away. Sickness and death, famine and hunger, war and oppression would all cease to exist after a world-shaking battle in which the forces of evil would be utterly destroyed. Such was the faith that inspired the first Christians, and though the End-Time was re-interpreted by later Christian thinkers as a metaphor for a spiritual change, visions of Apocalypse have haunted western life ever since those early beginnings.

During the Middle Ages, Europe was shaken by mass movements inspired by the belief that history was about to end and a new world be born. These medieval Christians believed that only God could bring about the new world, but faith in the End-Time did not wither away when Christianity began to decline. On the contrary, as Christianity waned the hope of an imminent End-Time became stronger and more militant. Modern revolutionaries such as the French Jacobins and the Russian Bolsheviks detested traditional religion, but their conviction that the crimes and follies of the past could be left behind in an all-encompassing transformation of human life was a secular reincarnation of early Christian beliefs. These modern revolutionaries were radical exponents of Enlightenment thinking, which aimed to replace religion with a scientific view of the world. Yet the radical Enlightenment belief that there can be a sudden break in history, after which the flaws of human society will be for ever abolished, is a by-product of Christianity.

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Letter to the Amnesty-Demanders

Posted by M. C. on December 8, 2023

Why We Will Never Forget—Nor Let You

Margaret Anna Alice

https://margaretannaalice.substack.com/p/letter-to-the-amnesty-demanders


“The struggle of man against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting.”
—Milan Kundera, The Book of Laughter & Forgetting: A Novel (Kindle, paperback, hardcover, audiobook)

You want to know why so many people erupt when you say you “didn’t know,” you “were doing [your] best,” and “mistakes were made” so we should forget about it and move on?

Independent: Boris Johnson, Mistakes Were Made
el gato malo: "mistakes were made" by Scott Galloway

Because WE knew, and when we told you, you called us selfish immoral science-denying far-right-wing–extremist anti-vaxxer conspiracy theorists.

But we were the ones following the science, and you were the ones following the television. We’re batting a thousand, and your “experts” are zero for zero.

We were like the bystanders in The Birds frantically trying to warn the man standing in the puddle of gas not to throw down his match, only to be persistently ignored until he self-immolates.

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Husband E. Kimmel

Posted by M. C. on December 7, 2023

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Husband_E._Kimmel

On 18 February 1941, Kimmel wrote to the Chief of Naval Operations (CNO), Admiral Harold Rainsford Stark:

I feel that a surprise attack (submarine, air, or combined) on Pearl Harbor is a possibility, and we are taking immediate practical steps to minimize the damage inflicted and to ensure that the attacking force will pay.[12]

The court convened on July 24, 1944, and held daily sessions in Washington, D.C., San Francisco, and Pearl Harbor. After interviewing numerous witnesses, it completed its work on October 19, 1944. Its report to the Navy Department largely exonerated Kimmel. The court found that Kimmel’s decisions had been correct given the limited information available to him, but criticized then-Chief of Naval Operations Harold R. Stark for failing to warn Kimmel that war was imminent. The court concluded that “based upon the facts established, the Court is of the opinion that no offenses have been committed nor serious blame incurred on the part of any person or persons in the naval service.”[19] Because the court’s findings implicitly revealed that American cryptographers had broken the Japanese codes, a critical wartime secret, the court’s report was not made public until after the end of the war.

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Henry Kissinger: The Life of a Nobel Prize Winner in Figures

Posted by M. C. on December 7, 2023

Strategic Infographics

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