Saturday, January 22, 2011

When they came for me...

"In Germany, they first came for the communists, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a communist. Then, they came for the Jews, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew … Then they came for the Catholics. I didn't speak up then because I was a Protestant. Then they came for me, and there was no one left to speak up."


Reverend Martin Niemoller, German Lutheran pastor arrested by the Gestapo in 1937.






How Would I Vote? - The Old Firehouse

Despite the controversy surrounding this issue I would have voted for the sale.




I believe Palmer Gillis’ intentions are honroable and that he did not attempt to deceive anyone. There are strict requirements in this deal and everyone must understand that an educational component is required. Failure to adhere to the requirements will result in the building being forfeited back to the city.

The other aspect of this issue is that renovation costs could be between $500,000 to $1,000,000. There are very few who have the resources available to pull that off and Palmer is one of those few. He has a proven track record here in Salisbury and I hope we can all give him a chance to accomplish something that we all will benefit from.

Friday, January 21, 2011

How Would I Vote?




Many voters want to know where their candidates stand on the issues and how they would vote and approach the legislative process.

As the election season moves along I will be adding my positions on many issues and agenda items that come before the council, as well as items that the council has voted on in the past. Hopefully this will give voters the chance to understand my thought process and approach to government.

If anyone wants to know where I stand on a specific issue or agenda item, please e-mail me at: boda4council@gmail.com

www.boda4salisbury.com

In-Depth Political Analysis




"Doctors say Dick Cheney may need a heart transplant, but Cheney isn’t worried. He’s already picked out a hunting buddy."


David Letterman

On Gun Control and Violence

by Ron Paul





The terrible violence in Arizona last weekend prompted much national discussion on many issues. All Americans are united in their sympathies for the victims and their families. All wonder what could motivate such a horrible act. However, some have attempted to use this tragedy to discredit philosophical adversaries or score political points. This sort of opportunism is simply despicable.

We are fortunate to live in a society where violence is universally denounced. Not one public official or commentator has attempted to justify this reprehensible act, yet the newspapers, internet, and airwaves are full of people trying to claim it was somehow motivated by someone else’s political rhetoric. Most disturbing are the calls to use government power to censor certain forms of speech, and even outlaw certain types of criticism of public officials. This was the completely apolitical act of a violent and disturbed man. How sad that the attempted murder of the Congresswoman who had just read the First Amendment on the House floor would be used in efforts to chill free speech! Perhaps some would feel safer if the Alien and Sedition Acts were reinstated.


Also troubling are the renewed calls for stricter gun control laws, and for government to “do something” to somehow prevent similar incidents in the future. This always seems to be the knee jerk reaction to any crime committed with a gun. Nonsensical proposals to outlaw guns around federal officials and install bulletproof barriers in the congressional gallery only reinforce the growing perception that politicians view their own lives as far more important than the lives of ordinary citizens. Politicians and a complicit media have conditioned many citizens to view government as our protector, leading to more demands for government action whenever tragedies occur. But this impulse is at odds with the best American traditions of self-reliance and individualism, and it also leads to bad laws and the loss of liberty.


Remember – liberty only has meaning if we still believe in it when terrible things happen and more government security is demanded. Government cannot make us safe by mandating security any more than it can make us prosperous by decreeing an end to poverty.

We need to reaffirm the core American value of individual responsibility. Consider the young man who had the courage to tackle the shooter and prevent further carnage because he himself had a concealed weapon. Without that gun, he could have been yet another sitting duck. When peaceful citizens are armed, they at least have a chance against armed criminals.

Advocates of gun control would urge us to leave our safety to law enforcement, but eyewitness reports indicate it took police as much as 20 minutes to arrive on the scene that day! Since police cannot be everywhere all of the time, a large part of our personal safety depends on our ability to defend ourselves.

Our constitutional right to bear arms does not create a society without risks of violent crime, and neither would the strictest gun control laws. Guns and violence are a fact of life. The question is whether it is preferable to be defenseless while waiting for the police, or to have the option to arm yourself. We certainly know criminals prefer the former.

The Truth About The Constitution

The Constitution is not an instrument for the government to restrain the people, it is an instrument for the people to restrain the government – lest it come to dominate our lives and interests.


Patrick Henry






Jeffersonian Policy

"The policy of the American government is to leave their citizens free, neither restraining nor aiding them in their pursuits."


Thomas Jefferson





In-Depth Political Analysis




"The President of China is in Washington. It's a bit like when you're into your bookie for more than you can afford, and he stops by the house to say hello."

–Jimmy Kimmel

Thursday, January 20, 2011

The Truth About The Constitution

No one can read our Constitution without concluding that the people who wrote it wanted their government severely limited; the words "no" and "not" employed in restraint of government power occur 24 times in the first seven articles of the Constitution and 22 more times in the Bill of Rights.


Edmund A. Opitz






Jeffersonian Policy

"I am not a friend to a very energetic government. It is always oppressive."


Thomas Jefferson





Barack Obama vs Ludwig Von Mises

President Obama has an Op-Ed in today's WSJ calling for a review of all government regulations. In his commentary surrounding this review, the views of the president and those of the great economist Ludwig von Mises could not be in greater contrast.

President Obama begins his Op-Ed by writing:
For two centuries, America's free market has not only been the source of dazzling ideas and path-breaking products, it has also been the greatest force for prosperity the world has ever known. That vibrant entrepreneurialism is the key to our continued global leadership and the success of our people.

But throughout our history, one of the reasons the free market has worked is that we have sought the proper balance. We have preserved freedom of commerce while applying those rules and regulations necessary to protect the public against threats to our health and safety and to safeguard people and businesses from abuse.

From child labor laws to the Clean Air Act to our most recent strictures against hidden fees and penalties by credit card companies, we have, from time to time, embraced common sense rules of the road that strengthen our country without unduly interfering with the pursuit of progress and the growth of our economy.


This "balance" that the President speaks of can be viewed as a "middle-of-the-road" policy. It is not unbridled free markets, but free markets with restraints. This is what Professor Mises said about such a middle-of-the-road policy:
There is simply no other choice than this: either to abstain from interference in the free play of the market, or to delegate the entire management of production and distribution to the government. Either capitalism or socialism: there exists no middle way.


Mises' view may appear at first harsh, but upon reflection it can be understood that he is making a very important point. Mises is saying that any intervention in the economy leads to other interventions, until the full economy is engulfed in a sea of regulation, which we can not call anything but socialism. Indeed, President Obama, in a way, is acknowledging Mises view, when he calls for a review of regulations.

Read the rest...




Colbert on Discourse




"Many are asking if our political discourse has gotten too heated. And those people should go to hell!"

Stephen Colbert

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

How real is crime in Salisbury?


Muir Boda
 At 1:36 am I woke up to what I thought was someone knocking on my front door. As I lay in my bed thinking that it was a little too loud to be a knock on my front door, two more loud bangs rang through my neighborhood and I knew it was gun shots. It sounded like it was in my front yard.

Immediately I made my wife get on the floor while struggling to find my phone, I then realized it was in another room. We remained on the floor for another twenty minutes between our bed and an interior wall away from windows.

I then got up and peaked out my bedroom window and could tell that lights were flashing. I then moved out into the living room, checked our alarm and then went back to our bedroom. I spent the rest of night listening to what seemed like every rain drop landing on our roof. Like everyone in our neighborhood, we tried to go back to sleep.

The psychological affects of crime on a neighborhood, regardless of crime statistics, never go away because people never forget. They never forget that one street over a resident in my neighborhood was grazed by bullet that went flying through her house. They never forget that a girl is killed because a gang thought she was getting out of someone else's car. They never forget that a food delivery person is robbed at gunpoint across from the Doverdale Playground in broad daylight.

Crime is here, crime is real and we need to address it with real solutions, now. Until we realize that we are losing a war, long term, because we fail to address the root causes of crime, we will continue losing that war. It is more than just a city issue because criminals know no boundaries. Everyone must be on board from every level of government regardless of political party, we need to work together and develop solutions now.

Muir Boda

Ballot Access and MdLP State Convention

The Maryland LP turned in 13,787 ballot access petition signatures on Monday, January 17.

In addition, the Board of Elections has postponed the turn-in date until March 7, therefore we can continue to deliver more signatures.

Please continue to collect petition signatures, and mail them to Bob Johnston, P.O. Box 7742, Essex, MD 21221.

The annual Maryland Libertarian Party convention will be held on Saturday, March 12, at Squires Italian Restaurant in Dundalk, from 1 - 9 pm.

Speakers include:

Bill Redpath, 2-term LNC Chair, 5-time candidate, current LNC board member;

Ken Krawchuk, former Pennsylvania LP candidate for Governor, long-time libertarian activist;

Len Lazarick, editor and publisher of MarylandReporter.com;

James Bovard, libertarian writer, author of "The Bush Betrayal", "Attention Deficit Democracy", "Lost Rights", "Terrorism and Tyranny", and "Freedom in Chains".


Details will be posted on the state party website soon.

Notice of the convention and the program committee will be mailed to all MDLP Central Committee members.

Bob Johnston
(443) 310-5373
chair@md.lp.org



In-Depth Political Analysis




"Arnold Schwarzenegger said being Governor of California cost him at least 200 million dollars in lost movie roles. Moviegoers everywhere said, 'Totally worth it.'"

Conan O'Brien

In-Depth Political Analysis




"The Republican National Committee elected Reince Priebus as their new chairman. “Reince Priebus” is also the name of a car driven by Jay Leno." David Letterman

Monday, January 17, 2011

A Message from Dr. Richard Davis




The election is past and the new Congress is in office, so it is time for me to send two messages.

First, to the 10,875 people who thought outside the Democrat-Republican “box” and voted for me, thank you all!

Second, to all the Tea-Partiers who ASSURED me that THIS time the Republicans have learned their lesson and will get it right, I really hope you’re right but WATCH CLOSELY. I’ve been waiting and watching since 1971, and occasional flashes of hope followed by major disappointment have been the pattern.

In fact, though I didn’t learn of it until about 20 years later, the Libertarian Party was formed in 1971 over the distress from the “conservative” Republican Richard Nixon’s imposition of wage and price controls and his taking this country off the gold standard. Since then there have been some tax cuts, but really none in spending, borrowing, or the growth of government size and intrusiveness.

So far the signs seem mixed with the new group in Congress. There seems to be more concern with getting back within the Constitution, but it remains to be seen whether anyone is ready to look at the kinds of cuts it will require to deal with our deficits, let alone our existing debt, and with government overreach. How this goes over the next two years will determine how much you hear from me like this.

Sincerely,
Richard J. Davis, D.D.S.

The Constitution Protects Us

by Doug Bandow


The incoming Republican House majority intends to require that all legislation cite specific constitutional authority. Tea party activists are calling themselves constitutional conservatives. A federal judge ruled Obamacare to be unconstitutional.

Many in Washington are worried. The idea that the Constitution is relevant to the operation of the federal government is a frightening concept to those constantly seeking to expand Leviathan.

The document creates a national government with only limited and enumerated powers.

The post-Civil War amendments expanded national power to protect individual liberty in the states, not Washington's authority to infringe the liberty of the same individuals.

However, judicial "interpretation" changed over the years. Although the Founders provided a method to amend the nation's governing document, activists preferred to take a judicial short-cut. They turned the Supreme Court into a sort of continuing constitutional convention, with new amendments routinely enacted with just five votes.

Yet if the people's intentions are not controlling, then what is the purpose of the Constitution?

The document should simply authorize the executive and legislative branches to do whatever they feel like, subject to judicial review, based on whatever the judges feel like. Why bother with the pretense that constitutional interpretation is occurring?

Not every constitutional question has a clear answer, of course, but that doesn't mean honest interpretation allows any answer.

The nation's founding document envisioned a national government of enumerated powers.

Lincoln Caplan of the Legal Times recently sneered at the "nostalgia for an inadequate version of the nation's past." Yet the problem of government abusing power and violating liberty is eternal.

Has time passed the Founders' handiwork by?

Read the rest at CATO.








Sunday, January 16, 2011

Pilot suing TSA gave libertarian-sounding speech at EPIC conference

Michael Roberts, the airline pilot who helped raise public awareness of the full-body scanner program, gave a very libertarian-sounding speech at a recent conference. The text of Mr. Robert's speech follows.

On January 6, I participated in a panel at a conference hosted by the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) in Washington, DC entitled, The Stripping of Freedom: A Careful Scan of TSA Security Procedures. The broad coalition of speakers included Representative Rush Holt, Ralph Nader, New York City Councilman David Greenfield, and representatives of the Libertarian Party, the Council on American Islamic Relations, Flyer’s Rights, and the CATO Institute. The well-organized conference was streamed live and filmed by CSPAN and several others. The following is a transcript of my speech before the attendees:

It’s important to think clearly about exactly what it is that we are resisting, and what effective resistance entails. Throughout history, citizens of every kind of government, facing all kinds of crises have cried out to the state: “Deliver us from evil.” The state invariably answers that it must be given more control in order to meet the people’s demands for its protection and provision. Governments are made powerful only by the consent of the governed. The people take comfort in creating for themselves a higher power to stand between them and the uncertainty of things beyond their control. The state is established and ascribed with the power to meet the needs and desires of its creators. But, being inherently impotent, it is most essentially interested in the transference of power away from the many into the hands of a few. Whatever ancillary agendas or obligations it has, the primary business of the state must be to secure the strength needed to bring its intentions to pass. Promises are exchanged for a disproportionate share of the power that has been equally endowed by the laws of nature and nature’s God to the people themselves.

Now – as it has happened throughout history – a subtle but comprehensive shift is underway in the relationship between the people and the government in the United States and, indeed, throughout much of the waning free world. Roles are being reversed with regard to who is accountable to whom. In our context here today, consider: law-abiding travelers are being ordered about by government security agents, told to remove our shoes, our belts, and even prosthetic body parts. We are instructed to stand in docile compliance and pose for the imaging of our naked bodies or, and sometimes in addition to, the physical invasion of our personal space and literal bodily and sexual assault. Recorded announcements are made in airport terminals, with desensitizing repetition, warning us that we may be arrested if we dare to openly question or ridicule this madness. It may be difficult for the infrequent traveler to believe that these things are truly happening. Yet right now in America travelers are bartering their personal sovereignty in exchange for the ability to move about within their own borders by air, to perform their work, or even to attend a conference and express their indignation against the state’s egregious assault on our basic rights and dignity.

In any exchange we must choose carefully between the value of one alternative and that of another. On October 15, I was confronted with a choice between access to my workplace and my essential dignity as well as the right to be secure in my person against unreasonable search and seizure. Countless others are being made to choose every day between their livelihood and their freedom. The choice to fly for a living, or otherwise, and to simultaneously enjoy the assurances expressly guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment (and by the rule of law in general) that we will not be accosted by government agents has been taken from us without any meaningful semblance of due process. If passenger airlines were permitted to offer their services in a free marketplace – with our without the humiliating mistreatment of their customers – perhaps an accurate assessment could be made of how much so called “Transportation Security” the market is truly inclined to bear. Unfortunately, however, the determination has evidently been made that we the people are not fit to choose for ourselves in this regard. And when the executive decree was handed down to use federal Recovery Act funds to stimulate the economy by abusing the traveling public, the people most affected – those of us who work within the industry – began to question whether the value of our jobs outweighed that of our personal rights and liberty.

But that was not the only exchange we had to consider. First Officer Howard Pinkham of US Airways placed the value of his passengers’ safety above that of his own livelihood when he declared himself unfit to fly as a result of his traumatic security screening experience. His flight was canceled and the airline’s passengers were unable to reach their destinations as planned. I’ve personally spoken with many crew members who acknowledge the psychologically upsetting and performance degrading effects of the TSA’s unlawful and invasive actions, but who have nevertheless chosen to fly under the duress of fear that to do otherwise may adversely affect their employment status. Other traveling professionals – too many to count – have given similar reasons for continuing to subject themselves to these abuses. To reiterate, people are compelled to comply with the violation of their personhood, and even the degradation of passenger safety, because they are afraid of what will happen if they refuse. And coercion by fear, called by any other name, is nevertheless the very epitome of terrorism. Whereas politicians make promises in exchange for power, the leveraging of fear to control the actions and decisions of others in society is the work of tyrants.

We’re not talking about security at all here. This entire situation is a national embarrassment and disgrace. But, above all, it is our security itself that is most threatened by the attack of our Constitution’s domestic enemies – many of whom are somewhere in this city with us today. Their criminal actions clearly violate the legitimate bounds of the state’s constitutionally delineated jurisdiction. If our bodies belong to the state, we belong to the state. I urge everyone to carefully consider the value with which you regard your natural rights and liberty, and whether it is ever justified to peddle them in the market at any price. What will you profit even if you gain the whole world and forfeit your own soul?

Bio:
Michael Roberts is a pilot for ExpressJet Airlines, Inc. On October 15, 2010, he was denied entry to the terminal area of Memphis International Airport when he withheld consent to be virtually strip searched by means of Advanced Imaging Technology (AIT) or, in lieu of AIT, to be physically frisked by government security agents without probable cause. He and another pilot are now suing the Department of Homeland Security and the Transportation Security Administration. Michael and his wife, Patti, are home-schooling parents of six children ranging from ages one to eight.