Ah, Internet, you are a boundless cornucopia. Hear your IP address read out in orgasmic moans. (HT: YitC)
Top Level Domainatrix
August 23rd, 2007 · 1 Comment
Tags: Random Cool Link
It’s Like a Crime Watch. If They See Any Freedom, They’ll Report It Immediately.
August 23rd, 2007 · 12 Comments
Via roomie Dave, a group called Freedom Watch has produced a series of ads urging the importance of staying in Iraq. Their nominal argument (for some appropriately loose sense of that term) is something along the lines of: 9/11! Iraq! 9/11! Iraq! We’re going to keep mentioning these things in close proximity! Even at this […]
Tags: War
More Fun With Libertarian Animal Rights
August 23rd, 2007 · 2 Comments
James Joyner writes: While there are many theories and many stripes of libertarianism … it seems to me that at the core of all of them is the Harm Principle…. It would seem, therefore, that any libertarian case for preventing cruelty to animals — or, more correctly, as Sanchez notes, the particular classes of animals […]
Tags: Moral Philosophy
In Search of Higher Pleasures
August 22nd, 2007 · 4 Comments
Kerry links to Will Wilkinson’s unflattering review of the most recent anti-consumerist jeremiad from Ben “Jihad vs. McWorld” Barber: Barber claims that not only is modern capitalism no longer satisfying real needs, but is in some sense making us worse off. The modern consumer, Barber writes, “is less the happy sensualist than the compulsive masturbator, […]
Tags: Libertarian Theory
Department of Unfortunate Analogies
August 22nd, 2007 · 1 Comment
From Marketplace today: Daniel Mitchell: A capitalist system without losses or bankruptcy is like religion without hell. Yes, I mean, who ever heard of such a thing?
Tags: Religion
Are Animals People Too?
August 22nd, 2007 · 1 Comment
There’s an awful lot of cruelty toward animals in the news lately, and Jim Henley wants to know whether there’s a “libertarian case for animal cruelty laws.” But I actually don’t think the question can really be answered as framed. Libertarianism is a family of doctrines defined by a set of views about the rights […]
Tags: Moral Philosophy
Headline Dissonance
August 22nd, 2007 · 2 Comments
I think it’s because I’m reading a novel in which art figures pretty heavily, but my first thought upon reading the headline ““Olmert bans mobiles in meetings” was: “What has he got against Calder?”
Tags: Journalism & the Media
High Command Has Everything Under Control
August 21st, 2007 · 1 Comment
Perhaps you’ve noticed the near-unanimous condemnation of the Protect America Act by people not currently, formerly, or in their fevered daydreams employed by a Republican administration? Fear not! As Andy McCarthy explains, the urgency and consensus with which people are objecting just shows how little weight the objections should be given, as it’s proof that […]
Tags: Privacy and Surveillance
A Farce That Gives Us Moaning
August 21st, 2007 · Comments Off on A Farce That Gives Us Moaning
Since an earlier post of mine seems to have prompted this dead-on and entertaining polemic from Gene Healy, I should probably clarify that I’m in full agreement with his take on the sort of ludicrous warrior pose that seems to animate so much war boosterism. My point wasn’t that we should welcome the opportunity to […]
Tags: War
The Best Bands Never
August 21st, 2007 · 1 Comment
Earvolution has released their list of the greatest fictional rock bands, and I’m delighted to see the nefarious American Medical Association from the cult-classic Illuminatus! Trilogy make the cut. On largely contrarian grounds, I’m sort of tickled to see the obvious choice for the top slot, Spinal Tap, bumped to second by Dr. Teeth and […]
Tags: Art & Culture