How to become an anarchist
I am an anarchist. I know a few of my readers figured this out from the emails they sent me after recognizing names like Walter Block and Thomas Woods in the text of my columns.
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I am an anarchist. I know a few of my readers figured this out from the emails they sent me after recognizing names like Walter Block and Thomas Woods in the text of my columns.
The Constitution is the supreme law of the United States of America. It is the framework of the government dreamed up by our Founding Fathers. It is the foundation of our beautiful republic. Yet it is worthless.
Michael Moore is a very sick and confused person. His documentaries consist of blatant lies, deliberate misrepresentations and skewed viewpoints of relatively easy-to-analyze situations.
When I was an itty-bitty freshman here at ASU, I lived in Hassayampa. My best friend was my roommate, and our suitemates — how should I put this — were fans of Bob Marley.
I woke up one year ago to a Washington Post headline: “Ron Paul wins CPAC straw poll.” About two weeks ago, I woke up to the same exact headline in the same exact column. It shouldn’t have been a surprise considering the growing libertarian movement, but I was happier than ever.
Happy birthday last week, Abraham Lincoln! It seems like only 150 years ago that your decisions led to the bloodiest war in American history, the complete shredding of our beloved Constitution and the utter destruction of what was meant to be the most beautiful republic to have ever existed.
Last week, Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., introduced House Resolution 3, legislation that would have banned federally funded abortions with the exemption of pregnancies caused by “forcible rape.”
A few weeks ago, President Barack Obama signed an executive order assigning Jeffrey Immelt as the Chairman of the President’s Council on Jobs and Competitiveness. Immelt has been the CEO of General Electric since 2001, and will now succeed Paul Volcker as one of Obama’s top economic advisers.
Ever since passing the House of Representatives, the “Repealing the Job-Killing Health Care Law Act” has sparked much discussion. It’s not going to pass in the Senate, unfortunately, but the bill is at least a nice political gesture by the GOP.
Politicians, in general, tend to make me angry based on their existence alone, but Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., has spent the past two months throwing around so much bad legislation. Never in such a short time has a politician annoyed me on so many occasions.
I never thought it would be possible for someone to lose a debate before it started, but Paul Krugman proved me wrong. Krugman, a recipient of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics and blogger for the New York Times, has declined to participate in an important economic debate.
As you look around the table at the Thanksgiving feast set in front of you, remember to give thanks to the opportunity you might have never had if it weren’t for the free market.
Congress was recently notified by the United States administration that it would be participating in one of the largest arms sales in history to Saudi Arabia. The $60 billion deal includes advanced military aircraft, new helicopters and other weapons such as missiles and bombs.
1:13pm. Last Friday. Tempe, Arizona. “Happy Election Day next week, your vote doesn’t matter, thanks for choosing!” I almost hear my double-stamped absentee ballot yell at me as I drop it into the mailbox. I frown and head across the street to eat lunch at SmashBurger with my friend.
The gubernatorial race is perhaps the most important in the state. The ‘little president’ race, as I like to call it, is only giving us one genuine choice this year, and that man’s name is Barry Hess. Let’s discuss Barry’s political positions as well as those of his opponents to see what we’re up against.
I’ve noticed that foreign countries continue to follow in the footsteps of the United States government’s reckless economic policies. To start, Japan’s central bank recently cut its key interest rate to be between zero and 0.1 percent. I don’t even feel the need to expand on that because everybody can hear that bubble forming in the distance. We can look at Ireland’s present state in order to see what Japan will look like in a year.
President Barack Obama delivered a Rose Garden statement on Monday regarding his administration’s new plans to approve a $50 billion project that will upgrade our “woefully inefficient and […] outdated” infrastructure. As usual, I have a few beefs with Obama’s economic mindset and facts.
Who do you blame for the sick human experimentations in Block 10? Dr. Josef Mengele or Germans?
A lot of talk lately has gone on about the same-sex marriage debate.
We cannot trust anyone.
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