• ClaytonB's Avatar
    Yesterday, 08:12 PM
    Danny Devito's Penguin was one of the best live-action Batman villains of all time. Only Heath Ledger's Joker is better, IMO...
    67376 replies | 1111772 view(s)
  • oyarde's Avatar
    Yesterday, 08:04 PM
    LOL , thanks to AF , Pump It Up , Elvis Costello. Then some Talking heads.
    6249 replies | 515922 view(s)
  • oyarde's Avatar
    Yesterday, 06:35 PM
    oyarde replied to a thread For Sale: Feb 01 I expanded space in Marketplace
    - Lots of new inventory went out Mon morning , About Uncirculated 1878 - 1904 silver Morgan dollars , some Mexican silver at spot etc. Ten percent off sale ends 3/31 at end of day
    236 replies | 92339 view(s)
  • oyarde's Avatar
    Yesterday, 06:27 PM
    No she doesnt need to know , all she must remember is that I have many and she does not. Seems she is a fool.
    11 replies | 209 view(s)
  • oyarde's Avatar
    Yesterday, 05:48 PM
    Almost 3 1/2 ? Hell they should be glad to get it , it is 3 1/2 more than I intend to need to pay .
    9 replies | 163 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    Yesterday, 03:53 PM
    That paid-propagandist life be like...
    119 replies | 3240 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    Yesterday, 03:49 PM
    Pelosi must have been giving him stock picks ... :tears: :tears: :tears:
    67376 replies | 1111772 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    119 replies | 3240 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    Yesterday, 03:28 PM
    Yeah, math is kind of my thing, so I get that. Hence why I qualified that this isn't what the Founders were actually trying to accomplish. But it's an acceptable first-approximation.
    119 replies | 3240 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    Yesterday, 02:38 PM
    The symbolism of school-shootings I really like Palki's style and most of her coverage is right-on. However, on this topic, she goes the way of most non-Americans and falls for all the usual gun-control canards. I am highlighting this segment, in particular, because she discusses the topic in a way that American gun-control advocates never would -- she mentions America's "soul" and she asks what the issue of school shootings and other armed violence in America says about it. Good question, Palki! Most Christian conservatives tend to examine this issue from a strictly textual basis (does the Bible permit us to be armed?) and there's nothing wrong with that. However, it's not a very good way to persuade those who disagree with you, since you're just telling them, "God doesn't say I have to not be armed." To someone like Palki, that will feel like a very "Get off my lawn!" type of response. It's not wrong, but it's not very persuasive, either. So, let's step back and analyze this from a symbolic standpoint. This is a topic that I would love to discuss with Jonathan Pageau because, as a Canadian, I'm pretty sure he doesn't understand the American viewpoint on firearms (based on some of his remarks about this topic). Notice how Palki frames the issue: when will Americans wake up and realize that it's the right thing to do to give up their guns to stop these shootings? As conservatives, we tend to snicker at these kinds of questions because they are missing the point. Nevertheless, if you were raised in a typical left-of-center suburban liberal American household, it sounds like a perfectly reasonable question. And that's one of the reasons that the 2A has eroded so far as it has (which is itself dangerous!)
    0 replies | 48 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    Yesterday, 02:29 PM
    Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard. - H. L. Mencken
    119 replies | 3240 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    Yesterday, 01:35 PM
    "If the locks on your house were so good, how come we were able to break in?" The locks weren't there to make it impossible to break in. The locks were there to rouse the homeowner in case of a home-invasion. Vengeance is coming.
    119 replies | 3240 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    Yesterday, 12:16 PM
    As I understand, the revenue collected on an apportioned tax would be pro-rata to each state according to its population... so Wyomingans would be paying a much smaller total tax bill than New Yorkers. In theory, that would all "cancel out" so that the net-percentage would theoretically be the same. But I don't think that's what the Framers were primarily concerned with. I think they wanted the burden to fall to each state in proportion to its representation in Congress in order to ensure that any direct Federal tax would be unpopular and would be most resisted by the big states. This is the opposite of what we have now. The biggest states are the biggest proponents of higher Federal taxes, because they are more "plugged in" to the pork-barrel system than smaller states. That's exactly what the Framers knew would happen.
    119 replies | 3240 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    Yesterday, 11:58 AM
    As a matter of self-improvement, I've done a bit of memeing practice on this forum, probably at the expense of minor brain-damage to forum participants. Memeing, marketing, stumping, hyping, etc. is an art in itself. Those who develop it will excel at it. I've primarily developed other skills. In the last couple years I've done some backfill on my wit. But wit is not everything. It will not carry the day. You need both -- presentation to hook people, and then substance to persuade them to stay. - States are where the popular vote occurs and is counted (representation, "democracy") - The Framers put the States (and their people) in charge of all regulation and taxation except those few powers enumerated to the Federal government in the Constitution, see the 9th and 10th Amendments. - Direct taxation by the Federal government means any tax that bypasses the State governments (hence, DIRECT) and was explicitly prohibited by the Framers because it is taxation without representation, unless it is apportioned, which means that each State's citizens pay proportionally to their representation in Congress.
    119 replies | 3240 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    Yesterday, 11:12 AM
    Don't. Go do what you're good at for the cause of liberty, instead.
    119 replies | 3240 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    Yesterday, 10:15 AM
    I mean, if you want to make big claims, you should at least provide some backup for that. Words are cheap. Rothbard was a scholar whose field overlaps with history in many ways, since historical events are an important part of understanding economics. He never pretended to be something he wasn't, he just did very thorough scholarship in his chosen subjects.
    119 replies | 3240 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    Yesterday, 10:12 AM
    No, that's not the issue. Most libertarians aren't deep-divers like me, either. A robust army does not consist of only light-infantry, or only cavalry. It has a broad mix of all the essential types of soldiers. If you want to know how the libertarian movement "should be" structured, go look at how the Marxists have structured their movement. They have been steam-rolling liberty for over a century. Given that they're literally fighting gravity at every step, they're certainly doing something right organizationally! The Marxists may be a lot of things, but they are well organized -- they are moving heaven and earth to impose their psychotic, upside-down-world tyranny. It's a lot longer than 3 seconds, but if you really want to understand how the Marxists have taken over, watch the following lecture. Reducing attention-spans and cutting The Message down into quotable 3-second clips is one aspect of how they've done this, but before they were able to do all of that, they had to build an army that could do it. We don't need a massive, secret army like they do, because we're not fighting gravity. We don't need to move heaven and earth, we only need to provide enough force to tip over their insanity and let it crumble under its own weight. A lie repeated often enough, will be believed. But it's never really true, it's still just a lie. The Emperor With No Clothes was reduced to shame by a lowly child, with a single question. That's all we need. But you won't even get there if you try to build everything on 3-second TikTok clips. It will never hold up to the flames.
    119 replies | 3240 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    Yesterday, 09:52 AM
    Yes, and the opposition was successful because there was no taxation without representation. Once you have taxation without representation, the central bank can grease the palms of the legislative, and it becomes a self-reinforcing cycle. You completely misunderstand the Great Depression. If you want to actually understand what happened in the Great Depression, and the Fed's role in both causing and worsening it, read America's Great Depression by Murray Rothbard.
    119 replies | 3240 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    Yesterday, 09:49 AM
    Yes, cyber-warfare exists.
    119 replies | 3240 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    Yesterday, 09:48 AM
    I mean, the more the merrier. You do you. Mises Institute is focused on "force-multipliers" which is where you train folks who can go out and train other folks. It can seem to not be having much of an effect for some time but, over time, it builds up into a "chain-reaction", and you get things like LPMC. As for the 3-seconds stuff, I'm not that guy. I think that a lot of Dave Smith's quotes are targeted to that aspect of messaging. And he's not the only person in the movement focusing on this. No one technique contains the whole key.
    119 replies | 3240 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    Yesterday, 09:20 AM
    The people who can only muster their attention for 3 seconds at a time are natural-born followers. They don't think, really. They just need someone to be pointed at, to follow. So, the real issue is producing good leaders with right thinking, true beliefs and moral courage. That's what Mises U and similar programs are about.
    119 replies | 3240 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    Yesterday, 09:18 AM
    Why did the first and second banks of America fail, but the Fed did not? False. The Fed directly caused the Depression. This is standard textbook history, so nothing revisionist about it. Then you oppose the Constitution.
    119 replies | 3240 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
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  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    03-27-2023, 09:33 PM
    Sure, most of it is Slick-Willy-style business-as-usual. But the 16th Amendment is a big deal because it is the only reason that the Fed is able to exist at all. End the anti-American and unconstitutional practice of DIRECT UNAPPORTIONED tax, (aka taxation-without-representation), and you implode the entire bond market without having to overturn the Federal Reserve Act. From whom is the Fed going to collect the "interest" on all those bonds? The US government? Them and what army? And if the US government has to collect taxes constitutionally -- meaning, by representative apportionment -- no way in hell are they going to be able to maintain the kind of colossal budget they are running right now. Everything will have to be cut and the first thing to go would be the damn interest payments. Let the banksters figure out what to do with all those worthless bonds.
    119 replies | 3240 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    03-27-2023, 08:52 PM
    Yes, the useless multiplication of words is a trademark of pseudo-intellectual ideologues (both left and right). Nevertheless, these are just front-rankers, ideological bullet-stoppers, useful idiots. The academic Marxists wouldn't be such a threat if they really were so stupid. They're not stupid. And their arguments, left unchallenged, are extremely dangerous. Look at the 100's of millions of innocents slaughtered in the name of "They Did It Wrong Last Time, It Will Work This Time." Answering, debunking and silencing the semantic content of the ideological Marxists is job #1 of those who choose to join the ranks of the "opinion-forming class", as the Austrians call it. And when the truth is on your side, numbers don't matter. 2+2=4 no matter how many people say otherwise. Gravity exists, no matter how many people say otherwise. Printing money causes or contributes to inflation no matter how many people say otherwise. These arguments don't make themselves. Some of us have to take on the task of deep-diving into the madness of Marxism and wiring up their bunkum ideology with demolition charges and imploding it from within. While my primary focus is not on Marxism itself (I primarily focus on the spiritual aspect behind Marxism), this is the kind of thing that I do. The whole framework needs to be torn down, top-to-bottom, so we need young folks out there learning the ropes, learning the logical fallacies, the economic fallacies, the civics fallacies, the constitutional fallacies, the historical fallacies, and ready to enter that "high-school debate" and flatten any and all who step up. There is no easy way to do it, but what's cool about the Mises and aligned movements is that we win no matter what. Want to be on the winning side? Join us, because truth wins, 2+2=4 wins. It is a force more powerful than any army, than any nuclear bomb -- indeed, the Truth is omnipotent.
    119 replies | 3240 view(s)
  • oyarde's Avatar
    03-27-2023, 08:27 PM
    Rand and his staff should be wearing vests
    11 replies | 279 view(s)
  • oyarde's Avatar
    03-27-2023, 08:24 PM
    Probably already illegal in dc , is in some cities
    11 replies | 279 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    03-27-2023, 08:00 PM
    The death of the forum has been predicted a thousand times, and it's false every time. Sure, the click-rate and bandwidth of forums like this isn't even a drop in the ocean of the twitterverse. But so what. I'm not interested in talking to people who can only think in 160-character chunks. I get it, brevity is the soul of wit, etc. but that's not what Twitter's character-limit was really about. It was about attenuating speech, because the most persuasive arguments in a short-format populist forum will always be left-wing sloganeering. "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants" is a pithy quip, but it will never be popular. (2017) BI: The 10 most-liked tweets of all time are dominated by Obama. That is why Twitter was created (among other things). So yes, we need a space where people who want to think thoughts longer than 160-characters have a space where they can learn how that's actually done. Practice makes perfect. There are no shortcuts. You can't read your way into learning how to think... the only way to learn to think is to, you know, actually think.
    119 replies | 3240 view(s)
  • ClaytonB's Avatar
    03-27-2023, 07:46 PM
    I'm less concerned about getting bad people to leave a forum, and more interested in getting good people to join it (and learn from it). The Internet is too big, and too septic, to be filtered. All you can do is set up supply of fresh, clean water and try to direct people's attention to it. Especially the up-and-coming LPMC/MisesU crowd who are new to liberty. They have the fire. They are the future. Ron Paul understands this, which is why he is the most successful libertarian movement leader ever.
    119 replies | 3240 view(s)
  • oyarde's Avatar
    8 replies | 278 view(s)
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