Archives for the Month of June, 2006

Man charged after videotaping police

Since when is it illegal to videotape activity that takes place on your own property? Hmm?

Michael Gannon, 49, of 26 Morgan St., was arrested Tuesday night, after he brought a video to the police station to try to file a complaint against Detective Andrew Karlis, according to Gannon’s wife, Janet Gannon, and police reports filed in Nashua District Court.

Police instead arrested Gannon, charging him with two felony counts of violating state eavesdropping and wiretap law by using an electronic device to record Karlis without the detective’s consent.

This is going to turn into a massive black eye for the Nashua police. New Hampshire is supposed to be one of freest places left to live in the United States. It is the home of the Free State Project. I’m sure this story will have members in an uproar.

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The Daily Radar

Defending the Flag

Ben Stein says burning the flag is not free speech and should be illegal. He makes some good points when he says there are many exceptions to free speech.

If we can tell people that it’s obscene to show pictures of children having sex (and it is), why can’t we say it’s obscene to burn the flag that is the symbol of this shining city on a hill, a flag for which many brave men and women have died? If it hurts women’s feelings to hear sex jokes at the office and if that’s illegal, doesn’t it also hurt patriots’ feelings to see the flag burned?

Well Ben, I think you’re wrong. Hurting someone’s feelings should not be against the law. That is too open to intrepretation. Physically hurting someone is very different than “offending” them. Burning a flag is not causing anyone physical injury.

People Power

Now we have armies of amateurs, happy to work for free. Call it the Age of Peer Production. From Amazon.com to MySpace to craigslist, the most successful Web companies are building business models based on user-generated content.

Hopefully, I’ll make some real money from my “user generated content” one day. Working for free is overrated.

New e-voting study shows it’s really easy to steal an election

Maybe this is the avenue I should be pursuing to affect political change?

On Tuesday, the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU’s law school released the most comprehensive study to date on the state of electronic voting. The extensive report is a painful read for anyone concerned about the future of democracy, because it shows just how brain-dead easy it is to rig an election with three popular electronic voting systems: direct recording electronic (DRE), DRE with voter verified paper trail, and precinct count optical scan.

Jihad — A Family Affair

Wives of four of the central figures arrested last month were among the most active on the website, sharing, among other things, their passion for holy war, disgust at virtually every aspect of non-Muslim society and a hatred of Canada.

My oh my. Immigrants who plot against their new host nations are bad. Very bad. I wonder how many of Canada’s non-Muslim immigrants are pushing for holy wars their new home?

Jury Acquits Iraq War Veteran Of Shooting Into Crowd

A jury deliberated just two hours Thursday before finding an Iraq war veteran acted in self-defense when he fired a shotgun into a group of club-goers outside his Lawrence home, injuring two people.

Moral of the story - don’t throw f*&*ing bottles through people’s windows. They might shoot at you.

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Stolen VA laptop turned in

AFIS is reporting that the stolen laptop containing the personal records of millions of U.S. veterans has been returned. Apparently, someone was feeling the heat, or had a conscience when it came to screwing American veterans over.

Reports indicate that the FBI has made a preliminary determination that data contained on the computer and hard drive has not been accessed.

I’d like to say all’s well that ends well, but I just can’t bring myself to do that in this instance. The immediate threat may be over, but I want to see long-term security policy and implementation improvements.

Washington Post: Veteran’s data loss should not be a surprise
Veterans Sue VA over Data Loss
More on the Veteran’s Affairs data loss scandal
VA to offer free credit monitoring 

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American ‘poverty’

Americans who are defined by our government as living in poverty enjoy material wealth that, if they had been born in many other nations, would put them solidly in the middle class.

  • Forty-six percent of all poor households actually own their own homes. The average home owned by persons classified as poor by the Census Bureau is a three-bedroom house with one-and-a-half baths, a garage, and a porch or patio.
  • Seventy-six percent of poor households have air conditioning. By contrast, 30 years ago, only 36 percent of the entire U.S. population enjoyed air conditioning.
  • Only 6 percent of poor households are overcrowded. More than two-thirds have more than two rooms per person.
  • The average poor American has more living space than the average individual living in Paris, London, Vienna, Athens, and other cities throughout Europe. (These comparisons are to the average citizens in foreign countries, not to those classified as poor.)
  • Nearly three-quarters of poor households own a car; 30 percent own two or more cars.
  • Ninety-seven percent of poor households have a color television; over half own two or more color televisions.
  • Seventy-eight percent have a VCR or DVD player; 62 percent have cable or satellite TV reception.
  • Seventy-three percent own microwave ovens, more than half have a stereo, and a third have an automatic dishwasher.

Source: Understanding Poverty in America

What sort of moral obligation, if any, do American taxpayers have to financially support people who have shelter, food, and access to medical care and many of whom have a number of the luxury items in the list above?

Most of those individuals defined as poor are neither physically or mentally handicapped. What do I, as a productive citizen, owe them? What am I getting back in return for my tax dollar “investment.”

In my opinion, the real poverty crisis in America is not nutritional or financial. America’s real problem with poverty centers on the minds of Americans. What are we teaching our children in America’s public school system? Do we teach them appropriate moral values? I don’t think so. Do we teach them sound personal financial management principles? I haven’t seen it. Do we teach them basic economics? Not really, from what I can tell. Do we teach them to be responsible, civically minded citizens? I am dubious.

What we do seem to be teaching our children is that they live in a culture where individual responsibility is dead and the culture of entitlement is their birthright. We’re inculcuating the idea of the state as nanny, caregiver and overlord. We’re pursuing mantras of materialism, hedonism and the herd mentality.

People used to say “God helps those who help themselves.” Today, we think in terms of government cheese. Americans who work hard, start a business or achieve anything tangible are punished by government agencies who interfere, regulate, tax and attempt to micromanage their activities.

Got a problem? The taxpayers will fix it for you, with a little help from your nearest powermongering corrupt politician and a few dollars taken from the most productive members of society. It’s no wonder that American achievers increasingly hide their money offshore or develop elaborate schemes to hide their true wealth.

America has more than enough food to feed itself, as evidenced by the obesity epidemic. Yet our nation is neatly mentally bankrupt. Americans are increasingly lazy, ignorant and apathetic. 34% of us are overweight. We’ve been at war for three years now, and two-thirds of young American adults still do not know where Iraq is on the map. As a nation, we are financially irresponsible in the extreme.

The poverty I worry most about is mental poverty. Without a rich mind, a human being will not prosper, unless propped up by others. We are failing to demand from our citizens that they use their minds. Instead, we are telling them that the government (read productive taxpayers) will take care of them from birth to death. That’s a recipe for disaster.

Go read John Stossel’s Stupid in America. Start worrying. Dont’ forget to thank a government bureaucrat near you for fostering the culture of dependence we live in. Thank your neighbor who continually re-elects the politicians who promise the biggest income redistribution schemes. Thank the Republicans for paying lip service to ideas about smaller government while they grow it larger. Thank the Democrats for insisting that government is the solution to every problem no matter how big or small it may be.

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Combat journalist pose

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My unit asked me to pose with all the gear a combat journalist carries while on a mission. So here I am wearing full battle rattle with M16A2 rifle, M9 pistol, a still camera, a video camera, a tripod and assorted odds and ends.

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