From the American Left, the Obama administration, and the Washington bureaucracy, one hears frequent lip service to freedom, but sees little substance about freedom in practice. Too often, a discussion of freedom begins and ends with the Constitution, whence the discussion should only begin. The Constitution establishes the essential foundation for free behavior, but it remains up to us to decide how to use that freedom. [Read more…]
Archives for 2013
Community and Development Services
“The essential principle of totalitarianism is to make laws that are impossible to obey. The resulting tyranny is even more impressive if it can be enforced by a privileged caste or party which is highly zealous in the detection of error. Most of humanity, throughout its history, has dwelt under a form of this stupefying dictatorship, and a large portion of it still does.”
Hitchens
Why don’t Elbert County Republicans show up to fight encroaching totalitarianism from the expansion of impossible to obey zoning law?
All the Democrats show up.
B_Imperial
Merry Christmas
Somehow the magic of Christmas can cut through all the noise in the world. I know the noise will be back in a day or a week, and all the forces that tear at the world will be back doing their worst. But at least for a few hours, how nice to set all that aside.
Aaron Brachfeld
Aaron Brachfeld is no Andrew Breitbart.
Most writers write to find and flesh out their ideas of truth. But for his political adversaries, Brachfeld writes to destroy their meaning, and cut off the potential that an inconvenient truth, for him, could be revealed. [Read more…]
reality and consensus
One can get balled up in Christopher Hitchens’ atheism, for he’s an equal opportunity offender of all the faithful. [Read more…]
Rick Brown on discretion
discretion – A public official’s power or right to act in certain circumstances according to personal judgment and conscience. [Black’s Law Dictionary]
Mr. Brown – the Democrat Party official placed on to the Elbert County Planning Commission by BOCC member Larry Ross, a recent Democrat himself – does not trust the Republican majority on the BOCC to administer the law in the best interest of Elbert County.
Mr. Brown pushes regulations that, in the name of discretion, remove all discretion from the process.
First off, this is an impossible task. Second, if Mr. Brown has his way Elbert County will be saddled with an impossibly tortuous body of regulatory law for oil and gas development that will put a stop to all oil and gas development.
Coincidentally, this has been Mr. Brown’s, and Larry Ross’s, objective all along.
Mr. Brown is on the Planning Commission to push the left’s agenda by any means possible. If he can’t control the wording of the regulatory law, his fallback strategy is to delay the implementation of it. Either one serves the purpose of preventing oil and gas development. Brown is a determinist who intends to dictate the zoning law out of the mistaken belief that law can control human behavior. While law can certainly influence human behavior, law will never control people to the extent the left believes.
It’s a mistake to put legal zealots in Planning Commission seats. All they need is a foot in the door to insinuate anything they desire into the process. That’s what lawyers do – they build cases out of thin air.
Take a step back from the particular points Mr. Brown and company ceaselessly argue. Look at the one-way trend toward their objective of obstructing oil and gas development. For almost 3 years now in Elbert County, their contributions to this nascent oil and gas industry have been about: control, delay, refusal, preemption, denial, suspension, constriction, prevention, etc., all performed in the name of good regulations.
Bullshit.
Are we not supposed to notice that nothing that they suggest actually facilitates this industry?
B_Imperial
Sturm und Drang
HELP WANTED [Read more…]
A conflict of models
Planners attempt to imitate reality through regulatory law. You could call it modelling reality.
Private sector businesses make all sorts of models for controlling their businesses. These models accept data, they associate data elements through defined relationships, they produce performance metrics for their businesses, and they attempt to predict, at least for the near term, future business requirements for the firms.
Public sector modelling in regulatory law aspires to reach the standards of modelling success seen in the private sector. But regulators aren’t private sector operators. They don’t run the businesses that their regulatory models attempt to control. They don’t have a survival motivation to make a correct model. [Read more…]
Obamaganda
Liberal Newspeak
(Every time I read this, it gets more powerful. B_Imperial)
By: Daniel Greenfield
Posted: 10 Dec 2013 08:49 PM PST
Orwell’s mistake in 1984 was assuming that a totalitarian socialist state would maintain the rigid linguistic conventions of bureaucratic totalitarianism. [Read more…]
Merry Christmas!
so many assumptions
Mr. Corrado certainly hates the Tea Party. [Read more…]
a “hands on” party leader
our collective what?
If someone is going to represent me, I want an opportunity to vote for that person. [Read more…]
IBD 11-29-2013
like it is
Among other things. . . . [Read more…]
a strange moral sense
views from inside and outside
With much hoopla, [Read more…]






