I will be reading one part a week or about 50-80 pages. Should be slow enough to stick with it. Reading starts Friday. I’ll post my thoughts on the part and address any comments.

Tim asked, why not Human Action?

Human Action is a great book(tome) but it is too dry a read and will disinterest many of the people that visit the site. I picked volume four because it is over an exciting and misunderstood period, the revolutionary war. I also happen to be reading Gates of Fire, so I suppose I’m in a war mood. Although, if this goes well, I’m not opposed to reading sections of Human Action.

I figured some of you might be interested in a bookclub/studygroup sort of thing. I’m going to be reading the fourth volume of the four volume work, Conceived in Liberty by Rothbard.

With nearly ever politician and man on the street proclaiming their undying love for the founding fathers,the spirit of America and revolution, this might be the perfect opportunity to read a complete history of colonial America.

If you want to order the book you can do it from Amazon or Mises Store. I can’t attest to the content of the book, but the construction of the book is pretty nice.

Alternatively, all four volumes are available online. Volume 1 Volume 2 Volume 3 Volume 4

It will probably be a week before I begin reading. However, I’ll make a schedule in the next day or two.

Comment or email me any suggestions you have.

A coronation is never a pleasant sight for an honest man.

The Republicans just might not repeat the mistakes of 2000, 2004 and 2008 by nominating a non-leftist.

Have you ever wanted to inspire your child to the mediocre heights of a federal airport screener?

This has got to be some sort of tell-tale; don’t expect airports to become anymore pleasant anytime soon. The toy is a manifestation of an American security fetish; it is indicative of an appalling faith in government. Other than foiling plots at clean teeth and hydration, airport security fails utterly to detect hidden weapons. Now, I would never dream of accusing a government employee of efficiency, but when your failure rate is as high as 95% one has to seriously question these sorts of security schemes.

Obama hitting the road to sell his economic plan

He’s now taking his pitch directly to the public—and trying to sell the sweeping package to lawmakers’ constituents.

I won’t bother going through usual lecture on prices, opportunity and the inevitable failure of these grandiose government plans. What is more important is that Obama will derive his political power from the unwashed constituency; just as FDR did. Like FDR, Obama takes office during an economic depression. Both ride a wave of popular support. Who knows we might even get fireside chats out of this debacle, won’t that be a treat for the children!

FDR was continually elected, despite being in the midst and the cause of America’s Great Depression. How will Obama fair? My guess is that he is already attempting to build up the plebeian support for this very reason. Expect one economic catastrophe after another.

The eye recognizes the sharp angles and patterns of carved stone amongst a field of flowers; the stone is not of the field. The casual observer recognizes the slums neighboring the prosperous commercial block; the slums are not of the city. Often people wonder why a city looks as it does, why cities can look so differently, why anomalies – like the slums – seem so out of place. To answer these fine questions, I believe one must understand how a city is formed, the rest follows simply.

Spontaneous order is perhaps the simplest and most misunderstood concept in economics. Spontaneous order is a coincidence of wants; acting upon this is called trade. I want a store’s ginger ale, the store wants my two dollars; I prefer to have the ginger ale instead of two dollars, and the store prefers to have two dollars rather than the ginger ale. We then physically trade the goods and an ordering has occurred. This simple example holds for all voluntary transactions; even those of land and buildings. This may seem a bit like a lecture to an economic tenderfoot but keep in mind, this escapes even those who hold a Nobel Prize in economics. The importance of this lesson cannot be underestimated.

Cities are nothing more than a large collection of the above sorts of trade. The reasons people seek cities are as sundry as the people. It is only important to know that they desire to cohabit or work within the city. This desire or want lends itself to a coincidence of wants and therefore to trade. The aging city dweller may want to leave the city for more open spaces; the young entrepreneur believes the population of the city will boom and there will be an urgent need for housing. The two parties trade and the city now has a slightly different ordering. In this respect cities are no different than a community of distant farm houses or the largest metropolis.

Cities and rural towns seem to be treated differently as if there are two sets of economic laws governing them. However, no logical line can be drawn, both are simply people engaging in trade. It is because of this that case studies into specific cities are worthless. One need not know how Budapest fairs under government intervention to make a conclusion on how New York or St. Louis will do under the same sort of intervention. Failing to realize this will lead an otherwise capable human being into tremendous displays of buffoonery. Consider the following from Paul Krugman, this year’s Nobel prize winner in economics:

At least New York’s transit system allows those who can’t afford to live in the glamorous parts of the city to commute to jobs. Imagine being poor in a sprawling heartland city with no rapid transit and a poor quality bus system. Central New Jersey is part of the Zoned Zone, but less expensive than the city; still, manual workers can’t afford to live anywhere closer than Trenton, and I can’t imagine how they get to their jobs.

The emotion that Krugman expressed is typical of many economists, even amongst those without such a strong sense of social justice. If government had not intervened in New York, what would have happened?

Since cities emerge from a coincidence of wants and a vast matrix of trade, one can reason that any interference in this process will by necessity distort otherwise voluntary transactions. Trade is voluntary; both parties benefit from the action. Think of a pond disturbed by a boulder falling into it, crest and troughs now exist instead of a tranquil surface. Government intervention within a city is no different. By forcing one man to engage in an action he otherwise would not have, one party benefits at the expense of the other party; a true zero sum scheme. Consider the case of Times Square. Once Times Square was mall of pornography, now it is as kid friendly and colorful as the oddly placed Disney store that represents this transformation. On the surface, it appears better in it’s newer state. However, what is forgotten is the cost to the people who were forced out, the shop owners and customers. If Disney or anyone else wanted to transform Times Square, why didn’t they purchase it from the pornography shops? The answer to this question is precisely the reason why the transformation of Times Square is so onerous. People wanted porn in Times Square more than they wanted a Disney shop. By government’s forceful action a group of people benefited, but only at the expense of another, more economically vested group of people. New York city is poorer because of it.

This applies to all types of government intervention, not just zoning laws. Subsidies function in much the same way by forcing people to make choices at the margin out of the market. It is perhaps this reason that so many urban cities are experiencing a mass exodus for the sprawling suburban wilds which are less regulated. It is also for this reason that those who believe one can plan a perfectly ordered city are the same that would denounce these “sprawlers” as demon kin and attempt to force them back into the city.

Urban revitalization or new-urbanism is one of these ways. Proponents of these seek to order an urban environment by what they feel it should look like. These utopian ne’er-do-wells dazzle the masses with charts, graphs and numbers supposedly showing the optimum amount of population density, coffee shops, stoops, automobiles, distances from work and pretty much any other facet of a person’s visible life. It shouldn’t come as a surprise this movement is a grand failure; for all the same reasons explained above.

Cities are natural and organic things arising from an ordering that is never planned, but ordered nevertheless. Government intervention, in whatever flavor, only disturbs this process. If you look upon your city and find something that just doesn’t seem to fit, chances are it doesn’t and some city planner, rent-seeker, or new urbanist zealot is behind it.

Don’t throw away leftovers, warn ‘food police’

One hardened criminal speaking to another:

“What are you in for?”

“Not eating all my vegetables.”

“Don’t you know there are people STARVING in China!”

In a logical sense there is no ‘waste’. A person may choose to not eat all their vegetables and discard the rest into the trashcan. He does so because he feels discarding the vegetables is a better use than: shipping them to China, eating them, throwing them in a compost, turning them into biofuel and using the biofuel to power your converted Obama campaign wagon. The word ‘waste’ is therefore a judgment of misuse by an outside party.

Like smoking and so many other ‘hot topics’, this issue is extremely simple. One party is attempting to impose it’s will onto another’s property because they don’t like what they are doing with it.

Lehigh Valley group eyes a local alternative to money

A group interested in forming a local currency will meet at 4 p.m. Sunday at The Caring Place, 931 W. Hamilton St., Allentown, to discuss how to make, market and distribute it. The meeting is open to the public.

They seem to be modeling this after the Ithaca Hour, a local New York currency that is more egalitarian masturbation than legitimate money. It’s not to say I don’t support a free-market in money, it’s that I have doubts if this particular product will be any good.

The article claims that making your own money is not illegal. In their case, it might be legal because their care and share currency is a joke. However, serious attempts at competing with the government’s monopoly on money will be met with federal raids and confiscation of your gold and silver.

I updated the “why” section to include the explanation of the phrase “brace the remnant”.

Also, I’m trying to figure out if categories are useful or not. Let me know if you would like me to start using categories or to scrap them.

I was updating the software and playing around with a few things on the site but it should be back to normal now.

Enjoy the video below in recompense.

Another major American industry is asking for assistance as the global financial crisis continues: Hustler publisher Larry Flynt and Girls Gone Wild CEO Joe Francis said Wednesday they will request that Congress allocate $5 billion for a bailout of the adult entertainment industry.

But the industry leaders said the issue is a nation in need. “People are too depressed to be sexually active,” Flynt said in the statement. “This is very unhealthy as a nation. Americans can do without cars and such but they cannot do without sex.”

The ridiculousness of bail-outs is attested to when Nancy Pelosi is being charged with the sexual rejuvenation of America.

…pretty ridiculous

The Home Office has quietly adopted a new plan to allow police across Britain routinely to hack into people’s personal computers without a warrant.

The hacking is known as “remote searching”. It allows police or MI5 officers who may be hundreds of miles away to examine covertly the hard drive of someone’s PC at his home, office or hotel room.Material gathered in this way includes the content of all e-mails, web-browsing habits and instant messaging.

It will be interesting to see how this pans out. I suspect that electronic property such as email and chat logs will be the historical debate of our time. However, I do not think it will be resolved favorably.

When a flight attendant asked him to close his laptop after boarding, Shafermeyer says he jokingly asked her, “Are you the one who checks for shoe bombs?” Within minutes, federal agents removed him from the plane. He spent much of his time in the St. Louis County jail in solitary confinement. Shafermeyer says he’s charged with making a false bomb report.

One has to wonder what the chances of a Muslim, devout enough to kill himself, boarding a plane drunk then making a shoe bomb joke to the infidel flight attendant while the plane is grounded?

If it isn’t already, don’t be surprised when filming a cop becomes a crime.

I think people believe I’m joking when I suggest that cops should be the only people disallowed from owning firearms. The pretense that cops protect anyone is quickly fading. Cops are not legally obliged to protect anyone. They certainly don’t serve me or anyone else I know. So I can’t help but wonder what exactly they do.

Cops arrive after a crime (sometimes real but more often edictal) and file reports. Sometimes they catch the criminal, sometimes they don’t, sometimes they arrest a series of innocent people and sometimes the DA convicts those innocent people. Whatever the outcome, it seems the entire system is supremely inefficient. A police officer is a nice way of saying an uneducated paper pusher.

As crimes continue to become less a matter of one person harming another’s property, police power continues to increase. Just consider that in many states a man cannot injure, much less kill, a home intruder without the DA promptly filing charges. Not only can a cop shoot a restrained man in the back of the head he can constrain the man in the first place with absolutely no repercussion. The balance of power is clearly in the favor of the cop. Cops are given a privileged legal position, why should a society also give them the practical means to enforce their will over the people they are supposedly protecting?

As St. Augustine observed, a pirate is no less a pirate because he styles himself an emperor. Disarming cops and arming everyone else strikes me as the most sensible solution to what ails the legal system. Consider it a sort of jury nullification.

He makes several good points but what I found most interesting was the insider slant of the going-on’s in congress.

Parents who smoke often open a window or turn on a fan to clear the air for their children, but experts now have identified a related threat to children’s health that isn’t as easy to get rid of: third-hand smoke.

Sorry sir, this is a non-second-hand smoking restaurant.

I’m not sure where the this ludicrousness will end but outright prohibition of smoking doesn’t seem impossible. Not by the states of course, their settlements with the cigarette companies are much too lucrative. However, I don’t see why the federal government wouldn’t do it should popular opinion become strong enough. Already smokers are demonized by smokers and non-smokers to the point where one can’t publicly smoke without being accosted by a righteous person who just must let the smoker know that they disapprove. As I sit and watch this spectacle on a daily basis I can’t help but think those are the same people that led America’s previous prohibition movement. These indigents of class are not only a tacky nuisance but a serious danger to a person’s health.