Saturday, November 21, 2009

Owings Mills, MD: On November 21, 2009 the Central Committee of the Libertarian Party of Maryland selected Susan Gaztañaga as their candidate for Governor and Doug McNeil as their candidate for Lieutenant Governor.

The MDLP will be releasing more information as well as the Gaztañaga Campaign's platform and plan for Maryland in the coming weeks. With the extraordinary burden placed on Maryland Taxpayers, businesses and the over regulation of everything from fishing to the gaming industry, the Libertarian Party believes that reducing both taxes and regulations will strengthen the stability of Maryland's economy. It will bring more freedom to all citizens and make Maryland a more attractive place to live, work, and raise a family. These are the core principles of the Libertarian Party and what drives Susan Gaztañaga and Doug McNeil to serve.

For more information on this issue, or to arrange an interview with the Maryland Libertarian Party, please call Communications Director Muir Boda at (410) 603-3347, or email at mwboda@mac.com.

The Libertarian Party is America's third-largest political party, founded in 1971 as an alternative to the two main political parties. You can find more information on the Maryland Libertarian Party at www.md.lp.org, their blog at www.mdlibertarian.com, and the Libertarian Party by visiting LP.org. The Libertarian Party proudly stands for smaller government, lower taxes and more freedom.


Ron Paul - New Orleans Investment Conference, Pt. 3

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Missing the Point

After receiving emails and messages concerning others opinions on my Letter to the Editor, I have decided to respond.

First, I believe the point of the entire editorial was missed. It is not about any one person, the issue is larger than that. Whether Chief Webster is terminated or not, will not affect the crime rate. Chief Webster is not the issue. This obsession with Chief Webster is personal and vindictive.

Second, those that propose to get rid of him have never offered any detailed solutions to reduce crime. Sub-Stations have been proposed and we have talked about the crime numbers and that is about it.

Third, I believe now is the time we need to have the discussion on how do we reduce crime and improve the effectiveness of our Law Enforcement.

Those that choose to make the discussion personal, resort to name calling, and degrading an individuals chosen profession are simply blinded by their own arrogance. They have the audacity to question a concerned taxpaying citizen, voter, and someone who is willing to express their opinion because they care. These actions show their true nature and that they have no alternative plan, proposal, or fresh ideas. This is their M.O. against anyone who may disagree on a particular policy. Unless they can engage in meaningful debate and exchange ideas, I plan on simply ignoring them from this point forward.

What I do propose is this:
  • We should phase in merging all law enforcement agencies in the county. Creating a Public Safety Commissioner (Elected Position). Under the PSC should be the Police Chief, Fire Chief, Fire Marshall, and Emergency Management.
  • Develop strong, anti-crime educational courses in our schools, taught by Law Enforcement.
  • Encourage our legislators to pass mandatory sentencing and fines for all levels of convictions.

These are ideas that may not be the final solution. The problem is, there is nobody offering any solutions except hanging all their hopes on a person or whether we fire someone. Our problems are bigger than any individual, that is why it will require all of us to be engaged in the solutions.

Ron Paul - New Orleans Investment Conference, Pt. 1

The 'Stimulus' for Unemployment

by Alan Reynolds
This article appeared in the New York Post on November 17, 2009.

Why did the unemployment rate rise so rapidly — from 7.2 per cent in January to 10.2 percent in October? It was clearly the administration's "stimulus" bill — which in February provided $40 billion to greatly extend jobless benefits at no cost to the states.

As Larry Summers, the president's top assistant for economic policy, noted in July, "the unemployment rate over the recession has risen about 1 to 1.5 percentage points more than would normally be attributable to the contraction in GDP." And the rate has moved nearly a percentage point higher since then, even though GDP increased. Countries with much deeper declines in GDP, such as Germany and Sweden, have unemployment rates far below ours.

Summers knows why the US rate is so high. He explained it well in a 1995 paper co-authored with James Poterba of MIT: "Unemployment insurance lengthens unemployment spells."

That is: When the government pays people 50 to 60 percent of their previous wage to stay home for a year or more, many of them do just that.

And the stimulus bribed states to extend benefits — which have now been stretched to an unprecedented 79 weeks in 28 states and to 46 to 72 weeks in the rest. Before mid-2008, by contrast, only a few states paid jobless benefits for even a month beyond the standard 26 weeks.

When you subsidize something, you get more of it. Extending unemployment benefits from 26 to 79 weeks was guaranteed to leave many more people unemployed for many more months.

And longer unemployment translates to higher unemployment rates — because the relatively small numbers of newly unemployed are added to stubbornly large numbers of those who lost their jobs more than six months ago.

Until benefits are about to run out, many of the long-term unemployed are in no rush to make serious efforts to find another job — or to accept job offers that may involve a long commute, relocation or disappointing salary and benefits.

(Incidentally, the "mercy" of longer benefits does no long-term favors: The literature is quite clear that a prolonged period on unemployment tends to depress income for years after you finally go back to work.)

The median length of unemployment hovered around 10 weeks for six months before February's "stimulus" plan. Since half the unemployed found jobs within 10 weeks, more than half of those counted among the unemployed in one month would no longer be included three months later. In other words, more frequent turnover among the unemployed held down monthly unemployment.

But after February, with jobless benefits stretched out to 46 to 79 weeks, the median duration of unemployment nearly doubled, reaching 18.7 weeks by October.

READ MORE @ REASON

Reason.tv: UPS vs. FEDEX—Ultimate Whiteboard Remix

Great Letter From Dr. Adrian Moore of the Reason Foundation

I received this yesterday from Dr. Adrian Mooore, Vice President of the Reason Foundation.

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I live in a small town with a large state prison on the outskirts. Fortunately relations between the prison and the city are pretty good. In fact, the city, facing another tough budget year, has been very innovative in working with the prison to use work crews on public works projects. A great way to turn what some might think is a liability into an asset.

From Congress to the smallest town in America, the pressure is on to do more with less. To help stir that pot, here are some recent items from my colleagues at Reason:

Setting the Record Straight on Chicago Parking Meter Privatization
While glitches in the early implementation have prompted significant scrutiny of the transaction from local officials and media, the turbulence of the early rollout now seems to have subsided as operational improvements have taken hold in recent months.

Selling" State Buildings in Arizona, California
Arizona has made national headlines in recent months for a $735 million dollar proposal to sell state buildings to generate revenue in the face of ongoing, massive budget deficits. Given their high-profile nature, the inclusion of the state House and Senate buildings, the Governor's executive tower and state prisons in the package has generated a great deal of publicity, generating headlines like "Desperate state may sell Capitol buildings, others" in the Arizona Republicand even a Daily Show segment poking fun at the idea.

San Quentin, I'd Sell Every Inch of You: Reason Foundation's Anthony Randazzo on Why California Should Sell Off Useless Assets (video)

Getting Virginia Off the Sauce
Virginia is one of 18 states where the government is the monopoly rumrunner. Supermarkets, gourmet shops, and corner stores are all forbidden to sell liquor. But Bob McDonnell, the newly-elected Republican governor, has promised to end the monopoly on liquor sales in the Old Dominion.

Privatize the Post...Oh, Just Forget It
As unlikely as it may seem to today's wee young Ron Paul supporters, "Privatize the Post Office!" was once a seriously stirring rallying cry.

Some Officers of Their Own
The citizens of a housing estate in Darlington, U.K., try a private solution to crime:

And to get a sense of how many places are looking at some kind of outsourcing, competition, or privatization, check out the links to news stories in these updates:

Privatization News Roundup, 10/2/2009
Privatization News Roundup, 10/16/2009
Privatization News Roundup, Oct. 23, 2009
Privatization News Roundup, Nov. 5, 2009
Privatization News Roundup, Nov. 13, 2009



Adrian
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dr. Adrian Moore
Vice President
Reason Foundation
(661)477-3107

Libertarian Party of Maryland Program


First Steps Towards Freeing the Citizens of the Free State

The purpose of the Libertarian Party of Maryland is to use the political process to promote freedom as the primary value in the organization of a healthy society. To that end, it seeks to elect Libertarians to public office, influence other elected and appointed officials, and move public opinion toward supporting increased liberty in our daily affairs. Our liberties were not curtailed overnight and we do not expect them to be restored overnight. This program represents our first steps toward restoring our freedoms.

Education
Encourage variety in education through local control, including:
  • Allowing for increased parental choice within the government public school system (e.g. tax credits, vouchers, school district selection, etc.);
  • Supporting small autonomous schools within the larger school buildings;
  • Allowing K-12 neighborhood schools (reducing busing costs);
  • Encouraging privately funded K-12 scholarships for non-government educational activities; Discouraging government interference and control with home schooling;
  • Encourage counties to elect school boards.
Open and Responsible Government
  • Create or maintain small, single member legislative districts at the state and local levels. This will encourage politicians to be accountable to their constituents for their actions.
  • Take steps to create a nonpartisan redistricting process. Politicians should not be able to choose who votes for them.
  • Work to decentralize the governmental bodies in Maryland. Politicians should respect the right of local communities to govern themselves and not micro-manage every aspect of peoples’ lives. Political decisions should be made at the lowest feasible level in order to encourage civic participation.

Job and Wealth Creation without Corporate Welfare
Reduce government spending and lower the tax burden by:
  • Ending public funding for stadiums, hotels, concert halls, etc., and stopping unfunded mandates;
  • Promoting economic growth by restructuring the tax system in order to eliminate subsidies or special tax breaks to businesses;
  • Reforming licensing laws that unfairly restrict competition, thus allowing the creation of more jobs and business opportunities.

Secure Property Rights
  • Forbid government entities from abusing the power of eminent domain in order to transfer private property to privileged individuals.
  • Phase out government entities that compete against the private sector, such as the Maryland Economic Development Corporation (MEDCO).
Land Use, Transportation, and the Environment
Encourage private redevelopment of vacant and underused urban land and remove developmental pressure on farms and wilderness lands by:
  • Removing subsidies to developers, such as publicly funded infrastructure for new developments;
  • Encouraging efficient land use by reducing the tax on buildings and property improvements, leaving only assessments on land itself;
  • Revising zoning laws to allow the development of self-sufficient communities. Transportation systems in the compact communities resulting from the above policies would increase pedestrian, rail, and mass transportation relative to automobile traffic. Prevent pollution and increase environmental awareness by making polluters pay for their irresponsibility by facing strict civil liability. Promote free market environmentalism to solve problems.

Crime and Public Safety
  • Free up our law enforcement resources by concentrating efforts on crimes against persons and property, rather than non-violent offenders.
  • Stop any use of “asset forfeiture” until the property owner has been properly convicted of a crime in the judicial system. Seizure of property before a conviction is an un-American policy of “guilty until proven innocent.”
  • Promote medical treatment, rather than prison sentences, for those who abuse alcohol or drugs.
  • Stopping the national War on Drugs will reduce profit of the drug trade, resulting in a decrease in crime.
  • Permit the carrying of firearms with training and a background check (shall-issue). This will allow law-abiding citizens the constitutional right to arm themselves to protect their homes and liberties. Waiting periods, bans, and registration may actually increase crime.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Lou Dobbs Resigns from CNN

11/18 Fiat Dollar Reserve System Dead New World reserve currency

Letter To the Editor

For some time now FBI Crime Statistics have been waved around in our faces. They tell us Salisbury is the second most dangerous city in America. All we have heard is “Crime is out of Control!” “You do not want to go out after dark.” Yet through all of this, the only solution that seems to be out there is to replace the current Chief of Police – Allan Webster. Some how magically that will solve all our problems.

The truth is that crime is not just Salisbury’s problem it is Wicomico County’s problem. As the economical hub of Delmarva, Salisbury becomes a city of over 100,000 during the day with all the people who come here to work, shop, and do business. So many of the people who commit crimes are from the county, lower Delaware, and beyond. That would be an interesting statistic – how many of the crimes committed in the city are from people outside of the city?

The police react to crime they do not stop crime. Individuals make choices to commit crimes and the police arrest them when they discover who has committed the crime. At that point they are turned over to the court system and eventually released back into society where many fall back into the same cycle.

Without a comprehensive regional plan to fight crime – that should begin with education, rehabilitation, and streamlining law enforcement resources – the situation is not going to improve if we continue with a vacuum in our leadership.

Reason.tv: Mike Flynn on Big Government (The Website!) & The Videos That Cut Down ACORN

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

I'll Never Smoke Weed With Willie Again

Kiss Your Freedoms Goodbye If Health Care Passes

Why we cannot afford to sit out this fight

Last week the House of Representatives voted on a 2,000 page bill to give the federal government the power to micromanage the health care of every single American. The bill will raise your taxes, steal your freedom, invade your privacy, and ration your health care. Even the Republicans have introduced their version of Obamacare Lite. It, too, if passed, will compel employers to provide coverage, bribe the states to change their court rules, and tell insurance companies whom to insure.

We do not have two political parties in this country, America. We have one party; called the Big Government Party. The Republican wing likes deficits, war, and assaults on civil liberties. The Democratic wing likes wealth transfer, taxes, and assaults on commercial liberties. Both parties like power; and neither is interested in your freedoms.

Think about it. Government is the negation of freedom. Freedom is your power and ability to follow your own free will and your own conscience. The government wants you to follow the will of some faceless bureaucrat.

When I recently asked Congressman James Clyburn, the third ranking Democrat in the House, to tell me "Where in the Constitution the federal government is authorized to regulate everyone's healthcare," he replied that most of what Congress does is not authorized by the Constitution, but they do it anyway. There you have it. Congress recognizes no limits on its power. It doesn't care about the Constitution, it doesn't care about your inalienable rights, it doesn't care about the liberties protected by the Bill of Rights, it doesn't even read the laws it writes.

America, this is not an academic issue. If this health care bill becomes law, life as you have known it, freedom as you have exercised it, privacy as you have enjoyed it, will cease to be.

When Congress takes away our freedoms, they will be gone forever. What will you do to prevent this from happening?

We Can't Sit Back and Allow the Loss of Our Freedoms

We elect the government. It works for us. As we watch the Democrats' plans for health care take shape, we can only ask how did our government get so removed, so unbridled, so arrogant that it can tell us how to live our personal lives?

On Saturday November 7, at 11 o’clock in the evening, the House of Representatives voted by a five vote margin to have the federal government manage the health care of every American at a cost of $1 trillion dollars over the next ten years.

For the first time in American history, if this bill becomes law, the Feds will force you to buy insurance you might not want, or may not need, or cannot afford. If you don’t purchase what the government tells you to buy, if you don’t do so when they tell you to do it, and if you don’t buy just what they say is right for you, the government may fine you, prosecute you, and even put you in jail. Freedom of choice and control over your own body will be lost. The privacy of your communications and medical decision making with your physician will be gone. More of your hard earned dollars will be at the disposal of federal bureaucrats.

It was not supposed to be this way. We elect the government. It works for us. How did it get so removed, so unbridled, so arrogant that it can tell us how to live our personal lives? Evil rarely comes upon us all at once, and liberty is rarely lost in one stroke. It happens gradually, over the years and decades and even centuries. A little stretch here, a cave in there, powers are slowly taken from the states and the people and before you know it, we have one big monster government that recognizes no restraint on its ability to tell us how to live. It claims the power to regulate any activity, tax any behavior, and demand conformity to any standard it chooses.

The Founders did not give us a government like the one we have today. The government they gave us was strictly limited in its scope, guaranteed individual liberty, preserved the free market, and on matters that pertain to our private behavior was supposed to leave us alone.

In the Constitution, the Founders built in checks and balances. If the Congress got out of hand, the states would restrain it. If the states stole liberty or property, the Congress would cure it. If the president tried to become a king, the courts would prevent it.

In the next few weeks, I will be giving a public class on Constitutional Law here on the Fox News Channel, on the Fox Business Network, on Foxnews.com, and on Fox Nation. In anticipation of that, many of you have asked: What can we do now about the loss of freedom? For starters, we can vote the bums out of their cushy federal offices! We can persuade our state governments to defy the Feds in areas like health care—where the Constitution gives the Feds zero authority. We can petition our state legislatures to threaten to amend the Constitution to abolish the income tax, return the selection of U.S. senators to state legislatures, and nullify all the laws the Congress has written that are not based in the Constitution.

One thing we can’t do is just sit back and take it.

Judge Andrew Napolitano is Fox News' senior judicial analyst. This article originally appeared in two parts on FoxNews.com.

Monday, November 16, 2009

Maryland Libertarian Party Central Committee Meeting

Date: November 21, 2009
Time: 2:00PM
Location: 3213 Patmor Road Owings Mill, MD 21117

Agenda: Nominations for Governor/ Lieutenant Governor and other public offices. Approval of last two Treasurer's reports.


RSVP: n3ic@ICengineering.com (410)363-6626