The Prometheus League
Breaking News and Updates
- Abolition Of Work
- Ai
- Alt-right
- Alternative Medicine
- Antifa
- Artificial General Intelligence
- Artificial Intelligence
- Artificial Super Intelligence
- Ascension
- Astronomy
- Atheism
- Atheist
- Atlas Shrugged
- Automation
- Ayn Rand
- Bahamas
- Bankruptcy
- Basic Income Guarantee
- Big Tech
- Bitcoin
- Black Lives Matter
- Blackjack
- Boca Chica Texas
- Brexit
- Caribbean
- Casino
- Casino Affiliate
- Cbd Oil
- Censorship
- Cf
- Chess Engines
- Childfree
- Cloning
- Cloud Computing
- Conscious Evolution
- Corona Virus
- Cosmic Heaven
- Covid-19
- Cryonics
- Cryptocurrency
- Cyberpunk
- Darwinism
- Democrat
- Designer Babies
- DNA
- Donald Trump
- Eczema
- Elon Musk
- Entheogens
- Ethical Egoism
- Eugenic Concepts
- Eugenics
- Euthanasia
- Evolution
- Extropian
- Extropianism
- Extropy
- Fake News
- Federalism
- Federalist
- Fifth Amendment
- Fifth Amendment
- Financial Independence
- First Amendment
- Fiscal Freedom
- Food Supplements
- Fourth Amendment
- Fourth Amendment
- Free Speech
- Freedom
- Freedom of Speech
- Futurism
- Futurist
- Gambling
- Gene Medicine
- Genetic Engineering
- Genome
- Germ Warfare
- Golden Rule
- Government Oppression
- Hedonism
- High Seas
- History
- Hubble Telescope
- Human Genetic Engineering
- Human Genetics
- Human Immortality
- Human Longevity
- Illuminati
- Immortality
- Immortality Medicine
- Intentional Communities
- Jacinda Ardern
- Jitsi
- Jordan Peterson
- Las Vegas
- Liberal
- Libertarian
- Libertarianism
- Liberty
- Life Extension
- Macau
- Marie Byrd Land
- Mars
- Mars Colonization
- Mars Colony
- Memetics
- Micronations
- Mind Uploading
- Minerva Reefs
- Modern Satanism
- Moon Colonization
- Nanotech
- National Vanguard
- NATO
- Neo-eugenics
- Neurohacking
- Neurotechnology
- New Utopia
- New Zealand
- Nihilism
- Nootropics
- NSA
- Oceania
- Offshore
- Olympics
- Online Casino
- Online Gambling
- Pantheism
- Personal Empowerment
- Poker
- Political Correctness
- Politically Incorrect
- Polygamy
- Populism
- Post Human
- Post Humanism
- Posthuman
- Posthumanism
- Private Islands
- Progress
- Proud Boys
- Psoriasis
- Psychedelics
- Putin
- Quantum Computing
- Quantum Physics
- Rationalism
- Republican
- Resource Based Economy
- Robotics
- Rockall
- Ron Paul
- Roulette
- Russia
- Sealand
- Seasteading
- Second Amendment
- Second Amendment
- Seychelles
- Singularitarianism
- Singularity
- Socio-economic Collapse
- Space Exploration
- Space Station
- Space Travel
- Spacex
- Sports Betting
- Sportsbook
- Superintelligence
- Survivalism
- Talmud
- Technology
- Teilhard De Charden
- Terraforming Mars
- The Singularity
- Tms
- Tor Browser
- Trance
- Transhuman
- Transhuman News
- Transhumanism
- Transhumanist
- Transtopian
- Transtopianism
- Ukraine
- Uncategorized
- Vaping
- Victimless Crimes
- Virtual Reality
- Wage Slavery
- War On Drugs
- Waveland
- Ww3
- Yahoo
- Zeitgeist Movement
-
Prometheism
-
Forbidden Fruit
-
The Evolutionary Perspective
Daily Archives: August 11, 2021
Park City candidates briefly address polarizing Black Lives Matter mural on Main Street – The Park Record
Posted: August 11, 2021 at 12:36 pm
The field in the Park City Council primary election on Tuesday briefly addressed the Black Lives Matter mural that was put on Main Street in 2020, an indication there continues to be simmering emotions about the polarizing work and the process that led to the creation of the mural and others with social justice themes at the same time.
Seven of the eight City Council candidates attended a forum hosted by the issues-oriented activist group Future Park City at the Mustang restaurant on lower Main Street. One of the leaders of Future Park City, Angela Moschetta, inquired about the process undertaken by City Hall prior to the creation of the murals on Independence Day last year. There was intense criticism afterward about what was seen as a lack of publicity prior to the appearance of the murals as well as questions about whether the mural was designed to align the community with the Black Lives Matter movement.
Moschetta has previously criticized the process. She asked the candidates on Tuesday whether they supported the City Hall process. Six of the seven candidates who attended said they did not. The one who did support the process was Tim Henney, who is the only incumbent member of the City Council seeking reelection this year.
Henney later in the event provided additional comments, saying the mural was a beacon and a welcoming message. He said he supports diversity and said he has seen more Black people and other minorities on Main Street than in the past. He acknowledged he has not spoken to Black leaders in Utah, though.
The other candidates at the event did not explain in any depth their reasoning for withholding support for the process.
The murals, particularly the Black Lives Matter work, caused a splintering as supporters and those who question the movement mobilized. The Black Lives Matter mural was vandalized shortly after it was created, spurring a community conversation about race.
Some people both supporters and opponents of the Black Lives Matter movement itself raised concerns at the time about the process prior to the creation of the murals. There were especially worries that the plans had not been widely publicized before the murals appeared while there were also questions about the use of taxpayer monies.
The controversy continued into this spring and the summer. Moschetta in May confronted Park City leaders about not involving Black people in the planning of the murals. Mayor Andy Beerman cut off Moschetta during the May meeting in a rare move to end someones public input. He claimed her comments amounted to personal attacks.
Social justice issues generally have not been crucial to City Hall elections, which for decades have tended to focus on topics related to growth, such as development, traffic and the economy. Latinos are the only minority group living inside the Park City limits in any significant number. Candidates over the years, including those currently competing in the City Council election, have appeared to support the broad ideals of social justice.
The forum on Tuesday was a rare opportunity for the public to see most of the candidates in person and together. City Council candidate Thomas Purcell was not in attendance.
The event was held as the balloting continues in the vote-by-mail primary election. Voters will advance four of the eight candidates to Election Day in November. The primary is Tuesday. The voters on Tuesday will also drop one mayoral candidate from a field of three. The candidates for the mayors office are incumbent Mayor Andy Beerman, City Councilor Nann Worel and investment banker David Dobkin.
Some of the candidate highlights from the forum included:
John Greenfield saying he supports the concept of public-private partnerships in housing projects designed for the workforce rather than City Hall pursuing projects on its own. He added that City Halls housing efforts should focus on essential workers and families.
Daniel Lewis indicating he has experience with direct lines of communications and that he would ask the tough questions and use compassion as a member of the City Council.
Jeremy Rubell describing himself as someone who has the ability to relate across the socioeconomic spectrum and to work as a bridge builder.
Michael Franchek claiming that he and his son were terrorized by the Park City Police Department, a reference to a claim he has made that an officer violated his constitutional rights. He said he wants better training for the police.
Tana Toly wanting to learn why some Parkites do not frequent Main Street and raising the question of the way to ensure people at Park City Mountain Resort and Deer Valley Resort get to Main Street.
Henney conceding City Hall several years ago pressed an idea to hire a firm to provide free rides covering short distances before the proposed program was ready. He said the process should not have occurred as it did.
Jamison Brandi saying he would continue to work in the service industry if he wins a seat on the City Council, adding that the community needs to balance full-time Parkites and visitors as it addresses the concept of sustainable tourism.
Read more:
Posted in Black Lives Matter
Comments Off on Park City candidates briefly address polarizing Black Lives Matter mural on Main Street – The Park Record
Levin: BLM and Antifa are the ‘militia wing’ of the Democrat Party – Fox News
Posted: at 12:36 pm
Black Lives Matter and Antifa "thugs" now serve in the "militia wing" of the Democratic Party, "Life, Liberty & Levin" host Mark Levin said on his show Sunday.
Levin began his opening monologue with a focus on "soft tyranny," warning viewers that it is "getting increasingly more aggressive" in the United States.
"You see the demands when it comes to vaccines. You see bureaucrats shutting down businesses purposely. You see Democrats and Republicans in Congress getting together on an infrastructure bill. Twenty-seven hundred pages, one point two trillion dollars. You have people on television, so-called Republicans, promoting it who have no idea what's in it and all the social manipulation and social engineering that they attach to these spending bills. That's not a representative republic. That's not a constitutional republic. That's not a federal republic. You know what that is? It's what Thomas Jefferson called it. That's tyranny by legislature," he said.
Levin later turned his fury to President Biden, remarking that it's "too bad he doesn't understand he's an autocrat."
"We have tyranny by the executive branch. They don't want to know what we think. They don't ask for our input," Levin said.
" We have a House of Representatives where the Speaker of the House rules like she's some kind of a fascist," he continued. " She has proxy voting so members don't have to show up. They don't even have to show up."
Levin, visibly outraged, tore into the media for empowering the "force" within the Democratic Party.
"These autocratic regimes, in these Marxist and fascist regimes. What do they have? They have their thugs. And all through last summer, their thugs were burning cities, attacking cops, assaulting people, killing people, and the media supported it," he said. "The media celebrated it. Their candidate for president could barely utter words that it was a bad idea. Their vice-presidential candidate, Kamala Harris, she was helping support a movement to get these people off."
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
"Now, this is not a constitutional republic when this sort of thing is happening. What's happening is we're empowering the Democrat Party. We're empowering this one force. And this is what they do in autocratic regimes," he warned.
"They have one party systems. Look at California, look at New York, look at Illinois, look at some of these other states.that's going to be America if they get their way."
Follow this link:
Levin: BLM and Antifa are the 'militia wing' of the Democrat Party - Fox News
Posted in Black Lives Matter
Comments Off on Levin: BLM and Antifa are the ‘militia wing’ of the Democrat Party – Fox News
Reckoning With Race in Hollywood: How the Events of 2020 Created Conversations on Set and Off – Variety
Posted: at 12:36 pm
In March, Warner Bros. Television severed ties with Greg Spottiswood following an investigation looking into allegations of racial insensitivity in the writers room of All Rise, where Spottiswood served as creator and co-showrunner. This was a far cry from late 2019, when five of the shows original seven writers left the show after bringing forward similar allegations, including concerns about the depictions of characters of color, but the studio reported not finding cause to remove Spottiswood.
A lot has changed in that short year and a half, however. In this specific case, more concerns about the boss behavior resulted in a second investigation. But in the wider world, there were calls for a racial reckoning in the wake of the murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and others. The Black Lives Matter movement saw a surge in protests and the need for more diversity, greater inclusion and true equality was discussed in workspaces and headlines around not just the entertainment industry, but the country. For some Black actors, the discourse of summer 2020 included teachable calls to action for such efforts and what it truly means to be an ally in and around Hollywood. For many, it also drove home just how badly that change is widely needed.
The unfortunate truth is that as a Black person as a Black artist this last year is indicative of what we know that the world to be, says actor Jurnee Smollett (Lovecraft Country, Lou). Its hard for me to separate this last year from any other year. I am aware that other folks have felt an enormous awakening over the past year but, for me, the unfortunate truth is it feels like more of the same. Black folks have to wake up and live with this reality every single day.
That reality includes the fact that only 8% of the highest-ranking jobs in television are held by people of color, according to the 2020 UCLA Hollywood Diversity Report. Furthermore, according to a study on Black representation conducted by McKinsey & Co. earlier this year, the handful of Black creatives who are in prominent above-the-line positions (creator, producer, writer or director) find themselves primarily responsible for providing opportunities for other Black talent, including promoting them. (Black people who are production staff are largely shut out of critical roles unless a senior staffer is Black, that study found.) Lack of agency and advocacy serve as direct reflection of how racial insensitivity has been allowed to flourish for so long.
Producer and actor Nnamdi Asomugha spent a year and a half taking the script for Sylvies Love, a 1960s-set love story between two Black characters, to different companies and being told those executives didnt know who the audience was for the film. He eventually decided to just make it himself. It premiered at Sundance in January 2020 and Amazon Studios scooped up the distribution rights. The events of the past year have made Asomugha even more conscious of the projects and teams with which he aligns himself.
We really just wanted to make a beautiful story that people could fall in love with and that told our story as Black people from a different lens than people were used to seeing, especially in the civil-rights era, he says. I feel like a lot of the time were so used to a certain type of film and the people that usually make the decisions are used to seeing a certain type of film and a lot of times you want your life or your experience to be reflected on the page and on the screen, and I feel like a lot of people we went to, or maybe all of them, just didnt see their world in the script. I think it was fear of the unknown.
Samira Wiley filmed Season 4 of The Handmaids Tale in 2020. The Hulu dystopian drama features a predominantly white cast and comes from a white creator and showrunner. Although she recalls having so many conversations on set about what was happening in the world, those conversations, she notes, were between herself, O-T Fagbenle and Amanda Brugel, all of whom are Black actors.
We see each other every day on set, and all we can do is sit here and talk about what was happening at the moment, Wiley says. Being stuck in the pandemic, but also the racial reckoning, everything thats happening with George Floyd, with the aftermath from that. It was just a lot. I dont think its the work of Black people in America to try and fix this problem.
She shares that she received a slew of well-intentioned Im sorry messages in the wake of last years events. Theres a line [between] you trying to investigate and better yourself, but then theres also coming to a Black person and trying to ask them every single thing. And thats all well and good [but] thats not going to fix anything. And actually, it really has nothing to do with me. Thats you getting your guilt off of your shoulders. Thats not the work.
What does constitute the work, according to Smollett, is knowing the details of history so that we can move forward in a more nuanced way.
I think about the power of images historically. Emmett Tills mother having the courage to say, I want this image of my son to be out there. I want the world to see what they did to him, she says. The world could not say they did not know what was happening any longer. They couldnt look away any longer.
Keeping these stories in the news matters, but she believes putting them in narrative storytelling does, as well, especially when those behind the camera finally get to tell the truth of our stories.
I think Lovecraft Country really opened up a lane for such work to happen, adds Jonathan Majors. To put the organic, communal integrity and decorum of our work and our words inside the industry at large. I look forward to the day when theres a brain trust and unity amongst us as a culture that we create together and collaborate together. Were on our way. We, as a culture, are beginning to beautify ourselves even more. I look forward to when thats commonplace.
Danielle Turchiano contributed to this report.
See the rest here:
Posted in Black Lives Matter
Comments Off on Reckoning With Race in Hollywood: How the Events of 2020 Created Conversations on Set and Off – Variety
‘The White Lotus’: The BLM Mix-Up Could be More Important Than You Think – Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Posted: at 12:36 pm
When Jennifer Coolidges character, Tanya, runs into a man from the BLM inThe White Lotus Episode 4 on HBO, she assumes hes part of the Black Lives Matter movement. However, Jon Gries character, Greg, is a part of a different BLM. Heres why the mix-up regarding the organizations means more than viewers might think.Napoleon Dynamites Uncle Rico might be a part of the death at the tropical Hawaiian resort.
Jon Gries joinsThe White Lotusas a guest star in episode 4 as Greg from the BLM. He appears to be trying to enter Tanyas room after her spa treatment. Greg apologizes to Tanya for attempting to enter the wrong room. Then he tells her that he was on a deep-sea fishing trip with a bunch of guys from the BLM. Greg is a divorced, single older man, and he asks Tanya to dinner.
Although Tanya had dinner plans with the spa manager, Belinda (Natasha Rothwell), she quickly cancels them for the new guy. When Tanya apologizes to Belinda, she adds that Greg is from a Black Lives Matter group hoping that this makes the cancellation better. However, it wasnt the BLM that Tanya thought it was in this episode of The White Lotus.
RELATED: The White Lotus: Which HBO Cast Member Has the Highest Net Worth?
Later at dinner, Tanya asks Greg how he became involved in Black Lives Matter. What made him want to dedicate his life to activism? Greg is momentarily confused and then begins laughing.
Greg is with the Bureau of Land Management, not Black Lives Matter. However, the misunderstanding doesnt matter to Tanya, and she ends the night inviting Greg inside for a nightcap.
HBOsThe White Lotustouches on Kais (Kekoa Scott Kekumano) family land in the same episode someone from the BLM shows up. According to the BLM website, the Bureau of Land Managements mission is to sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of the public lands for the use and enjoyment of present and future generations.
So, the people whose mission is to protect the land vacation together at a resort that stole the land from the native islanders.
They were the ones who actually evicted us, Kai told Paula about the hotel in the first few minutes ofThe White LotusEpisode 4. The government terminated our lease illegally.
RELATED: Succession Fans Moved on to The White Lotus Is It a Similar Series?
Many viewers believe that Kais story about the land is trustworthy and want him to steal the bracelets.
I think his story is true, but I think hes also going to rob the family so that he can get his brothers a good lawyer and they can get their land back, one viewer wrote on Reddit. I honestly like Kai, and to him, I say, do what you need to do, hunk. Steal those infidelity bracelets!
However, other viewers think something might happen between the BLM character on The White Lotus and Kai.
[Its] definitely interesting that [Kai] discusses his family land being stolen, one fan wrote onReddit. Then a government land management agent (the modern-day version of the guys who stole all the land from native Americans) shows up. Something brewing there?
See the rest here:
'The White Lotus': The BLM Mix-Up Could be More Important Than You Think - Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Posted in Black Lives Matter
Comments Off on ‘The White Lotus’: The BLM Mix-Up Could be More Important Than You Think – Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Opinion | Libertarians and the Vaccine: Give Me Liberty and Give Them Death – Common Dreams
Posted: at 12:35 pm
As the super-contagious Delta variant of Covid rips across the country, in no small part due to the behavior of the millions of Americans who have so far chosen to remain unvaccinated, the question of whether to make jabs mandatory is becoming urgent. A lot of libertarians are still voicing opposition. What gives?
An expanding list of employers, universities, and businesses are now requiring vaccines and stipulating that those who remain unvaccinated undergo testing and other protocols, such as masking. As many as seven million federal workers have to show proof of vaccination or be tested weekly and wear masks. Defense Secretary Austin is indicating that will soon hold for the armed forces and military employees. North Carolina, New York, and California are asking the same of their state employees.
As of August 9, United Airlines, Tyson Foods, and Microsoft have mandated vaccines for workers, as have 1,500 health systems. The second largest U.S. teachers' union has also indicated that all teachers should be vaccinated to protect children. If you're a student wanting to attend classes in-person this fall, you'll need to roll up your sleeve and get vaccinated at over 500 colleges and universities, including several large state systems.
On August 3, New York City became the first big city in the country to require proof of vaccination at restaurants, gyms, and other businessesthough the verification system has proven buggy and easy to manipulate.
All this has many libertarians in a tizzy.
Libertarians, known for their free-market ideology and promotion of an idiosyncratic concept of individual liberty, are split badly on the issues. Some, especially in academia, are unwilling to ride on theoretical magic carpets that don't go very far in the real world when it comes to Covid. This group supports mandatory vaccines, admitting that it's not really okay to infringe upon the freedom of others to remain alive and healthy. But many, especially the activist anti-vaxxers and their enablers in the political sphere, argue vociferously against vaccine requirements no matter what the consequences to others. Even if that consequence is death.
These zealots shout: "My body, my decision!" But when it comes to your body and your risks, apparently that's your problem. People like babies and kids, vulnerable to Covid because they aren't eligible for vaccines (currently filling up children's hospitals in many parts of the country), and the immunocompromised, which includes cancer patients, people with diabetes, and pregnant women, are supposed to take all risks of exposure on the chin, including those created by recalcitrant caregivers. At hospitals still without mandates, a person undergoing chemotherapy is expected to accept being surrounded by unvaccinated medical workers whose choices put them in constant mortal danger.
Governor Chris Sununu of New Hampshire, a Republican, just signed one of the "medical freedom" bills currently circulating, which grandly asserts that people have a "natural, essential and inherent right to bodily integrity, free from any threat or compulsion by government to accept an immunization." Tellingly, it doesn't address state laws compelling children to receive various vaccines in order to attend school. That's because the citizens of New Hampshire are unwilling to let deadly diseases like measles and polio tear through their classrooms and disable or kill their kids. Some states allow controversial exceptions to this mandate, such as religious objections, but you don't get out of the requirement by making speeches about bodily integrity.
Let's be clear: Americans have all kinds of awesome rights as individuals. In the majority of cases, you get to decide what risks to take with your own life and property. If you'd like to win the Darwin Award and try to jet ski off Niagra Falls, you can do that.
But you aren't free to subject others to deadly harm. You're not allowed to drive your Corvette at 100 mph and spin donuts on the freeway, because you might hurt somebody. You don't get to fire your AK 47 into the air at a Fourth of July picnic. And you won't be lighting up a Marlboro on an airplane. Your personal liberty, in such cases, is curtailed in order to ensure the safety of others.
You may not like it, but the Supreme Court has supported intrusions on your body in a number of cases in the name of public and individual safety. These include things like blood alcohol testing and strip and body cavity searches. If you are having a psychotic breakdown and you are a criminal defendant, the state can force you to take medication to make you competent to stand trial.
For quite some time, American law has been clear that the bodily intrusion of mandatory vaccinations is necessary in order to shield citizens from harm.
In 1905, in Jacobson v. Massachusetts, the Supreme Court explained that people living in a civil society have obligations to protect one another from dangerous diseases: "In every well-ordered society charged with the duty of conserving the safety of its members, the rights of the individual in respect of his liberty may at times, under the pressure of great dangers, be subjected to such restraint, to be enforced by reasonable regulations, as the safety of the general public may demand."
In that particular case, Cambridge pastor Henning Jacobson had argued that he and his kids had experienced a bad reaction to prior vaccines and so should be given an exemption, but the Court said that he had no proof and would not be getting a pass. As a citizen and a parent, he wasn't permitted to expose anyone, including his own kid or anybody else's, to smallpox, which was raging at the time. The Court sent the message that your individual liberty is never absolute and can be subject to the police power of the state.
There is a teeny tiny risk in taking a vaccine for a disease like Covid, though it is far less of a risk than contracting the disease itself. But there are vastly more risky things a citizen can be required to do for what is determined to be the greater good.
Take national defense. Libertarians get uncomfortable on this subject, and many like to pretend that you can rely on volunteers to get the job done. Reality check: Though it's been almost a half-century since Americans were drafted into military service, the fact is that conscription has been necessary for every major war. Yes, it's often possible to find enough people to volunteer for military service during peacetime, at least if you pay them, but people are generally unenthusiastic about getting maimed or killed during wartime.
During the U.S. Civil War, trying to get anyone to fight was a nightmare. Wealthy people were paying poor people to be cannon fodder in their place. In 1863, New York City erupted in a 4-day deadly riot because people opposed the Civil War draft law which allowed rich men like J.P. Morgan and Andrew Carnegie to pay off substitutes. That racially charged riot, which saw whites attacking blacks throughout the city, was one of the bloodiest in U.S. history.
Certainly, you can argue that the U.S. conscription system is sexist and arbitrary because it only pertains to young men. But the fact is, when American men turn 18, the federal government requires them to register for the Selective Service. Doing so is a prerequisite for things like obtaining student loans or being hired for a federal job, and 41 states make it part of getting a driver's license. Failure to register is a felony offense.
In a 1918 opinion, the Supreme Court equated Congress's constitutional power to "raise and support armies" with the authority to force citizens into service.
The government appeals to fairness in stating why registration is necessary: "Selective Service's mission is to register virtually all men residing in the United States. If a draft is ever needed, the process must be fair, and that fairness depends on having all eligible men register. In the event of a draft, for every man who fails to register, another man would be required to take his place in service to his country."
Recently, Minnesota Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins, who presumably has registered for Selective Service, decided to refuse to be vaccinated for Covid. He states that he is willing surround himself with plexiglass in the team's quarterback room in order to avoid getting jabbed. Unfortunately, there's not much evidence that plexiglass barriers prevent the spread of Covid, because the aerosol particles move through the air like cigarette smoke. Therein lies the problem. There's really no way to seal yourself off from your fellow citizens unless you live alone in quarantine. And the frequency of asymptomatic transmission means you can't tell whether many people near you have the disease or not.
Even when the unvaccinated receive weekly testing, it's still not enough to protect other people, because the virus spreads exponentially, which means that it proliferates in much shorter periods of time. This is particularly concerning in medical facilities, where testing unvaccinated workers once a week risks exposing immunocompromised people to life-threatening conditions. The same goes for nursing homes.
The issue of twice-a-week testing opens yet another can of libertarian worms. Who is expected to pay the hundreds of dollars a week that multiple tests of the unvaccinated will cost in the case, say, of government workers or state university students? The taxpayers? Oh really? Among some libertarians, taxation is regarded as theft. Would they agree that the cancer patient can be taxed to support the constant testing of medical workers whose behavior threatens her life? Let's ask Senators Ted Cruz and Rand Paul about that.
According to Larry Brilliant, a prominent epidemiologist and part of the WHO team that helped eradicate smallpox, the Covid pandemic is nowhere near over, and the Delta variant may be "the most contagious virus ever seen." He believes that the likelihood of more variants arising due to lack of vaccinations is high, and there is even a possibility of a "super variant" emerging that vaccines don't work against. This possibility is currently low, he explains, but we must do everything possible to prevent it now. That means jabs for the unvaccinated ASAP.
John Stuart Mill, a philosopher oft cited by libertarians, wrote in 1859 about the "harm principle," which holds that the state can restrict the actions of individuals to prevent harm to others: "The liberty of the individual must be limited: he must not make himself a nuisance to other people the only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to prevent harm to others. His own good, either physical or moral, is not a sufficient warrant, and in the part, which merely concerns himself, his independence is, of right, absolute. Over himself, over his own body and mind, the individual is sovereign."
Clearly, people electing to remain unvaccinated are violating Mill's harm principle.
Committing suicide by virus is one thing, but inflicting mortal harm on others is another. If libertarians wish to maintain their self-centered fixation on their own freedoms without considering how their behavior injures others, let them do soin indefinite quarantine from the rest of us.
Continued here:
Opinion | Libertarians and the Vaccine: Give Me Liberty and Give Them Death - Common Dreams
Posted in Libertarianism
Comments Off on Opinion | Libertarians and the Vaccine: Give Me Liberty and Give Them Death – Common Dreams
Larry Elders outspoken conservative radio rhetoric under scrutiny in California recall election – The Detroit News
Posted: at 12:35 pm
James Rainey and Seema Mehta| Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles He has on occasion fueled climate change skepticism, depicting global warming as a crock and a myth. He said the medical establishment and professional victims have overblown the danger from secondhand tobacco smoke.
He offered no pushback when a doctor called into his nationally syndicated radio show last month to suggest that COVID-19 vaccines were dangerous and didnt object when the physician then implied that Bill Gates might have backed the experimental immunizations as a form of population control.
Larry Elder created a platform for those views in a more than 30-year career in the media, epitomizing the convention-defying persona that has helped him seemingly leapfrog other candidates in the race to replace California Gov. Gavin Newsom in next months recall election.
On issues like smoking, climate change and the best ways to treat COVID-19, he has sometimes given airtime to views outside the mainstream, simultaneously inspiring those who say he would be a maverick leader and alarming others who say his brand of libertarianism is too extreme for California.
Those conflicting realities have leapt to the fore, less than a month after the talk radio host entered the recall race and as journalists and rivals begin to dive into Elders three-decade record on the radio, as well as his books, newsletters and social media pronouncements.
Elder is being revealed as someone who has occasionally been comfortable standing outside the scientific consensus on issues like secondhand smoke and climate change, while fervently promoting dramatic measures to unravel some of the core policies and beliefs of liberal-leaning California.
He has called the U.S. Supreme Courts Roe vs. Wade decision, which creates a legal right for women to have abortions, one of the worst decisions that the Supreme Court ever handed down, called abortion murder and said abortion rules should be left to the states.
He said he would have voted against the law that requires employers to offer workers 12 weeks of unpaid leave to bond with new children or to care for family members with medical emergencies. He has rejected the notion that women confront a glass ceiling in attempts at career advancement and embraced the libertarian truism that citizens have become too reliant on an overbearing government.
A recent interview with the Los Angeles Times suggested that his introduction to the California electorate will create even more provocative fodder. Elder implied that he might declare a state of emergency in order to fire bad teachers, estimating they make up somewhere between 5% and 7% of the California public school faculty of about 300,000.
He added that he could declare another emergency to suspend the California Environmental Quality Act, the law requiring environmental review of building projects. He depicted the law, known as CEQA, as part of a bureaucracy that is treating contractors and developers like they are criminals.
Such measures would undoubtedly face monumental legal and political hurdles and almost certainly alienate a large number of Californians. But they would also be sure to thrill those who view Elder the self-proclaimed Sage from South-Central Los Angeles as a blast of fresh air in a state foggy with liberal political correctness.
But it appears that, on at least one topic, he wants to make clear he has moved away from a past view. Elder told opinion editors for the McClatchy newspapers last week: I do believe in climate change. I do believe our climate is getting warmer.
Elder would not answer detailed questions and a campaign spokeswoman insisted that many of the past statements and positions highlighted by the Times were not pertinent to the recall.
Some involve statements out of context, while others reflect prevailing notions of political bias, spokeswoman Ying Ma said. For instance, there is a clear inability (to) comprehend why a talk radio host might want to allow a caller to express views different from his own, or why anyone would consider unconventional assertions presented by reputable researchers.
Ma said that the central recall issues should be rampant crime, rising homelessness, out-of-control costs of living, water shortages, disastrous wildfires, rolling brownouts, and repressive COVID restrictions. The spokeswoman said the Times was conducting opposition research, with some topics dating back many years, in a way she said mimicked a (French) laundry list of attacks from the Newsom campaign.
Under the unusual ground rules of California recall elections where Newsom needs a simple majority of the vote to remain in office, while, if Newsom falls short, Elder needs only to defeat other would-be replacements, no matter how small his plurality experts said Elders provocative views actually could advance his cause, and Newsoms.
These kinds of statements and issues benefit both Larry Elder and Gavin Newsom, said Dan Schnur, a University of California, Berkeley and University of Southern California political scientist and previous adviser to numerous Republican candidates. Elder needs only one more vote from conservative voters to prevail over other recall challengers. And his supporters will love these ideas.
Meanwhile, its clear Newsom and his team have decided that rather than motivating progressives by telling them good things about this governor they are better off telling them frightening things about the person who might replace him.
Schnur noted that some politicians viewed as extreme by large numbers of voters like Donald Trump on the right and Bernie Sanders on the left used their plain-spoken personas to push their way into the center of the political debate.
Elder, 69, jumped into the race in mid-July, months after some other candidates, and immediately changed the dynamic in the race. He became the front-runner in the polls and quickly raised significant sums of money, with a particularly strong showing among people who gave less than $100.
Between his entry into the race on July 12 and July 31, he collected nearly $4.5 million, according to fundraising disclosures filed last week with the secretary of state. Thats more than every other GOP candidate in the race except John Cox, who is largely self-funding his campaign.
A graduate of Brown University and the University of Michigan Law School, Elder leaves little doubt that he relishes a good debate. I can articulate these issues in such a way that Joe and Joan Six-pack can go, OK, now I get it, he told the Times in the recent interview.
He said the seed of his candidacy was planted by his talk radio mentor, conservative Dennis Prager. Elder initially demurred because he worried the state had become ungovernable. But further research convinced him he could make dramatic changes, partly by invoking emergency powers, he said.
Elder said he believes such an education emergency declaration would spur reform, particularly for inner-city schools. He said a tiny number of teachers have been fired annually, on average, from among the 300,000 who work in California public schools. Unions are protecting bad teachers, he said, to the point where the worst ones get in the areas where the kids need them the most.
Elder correctly notes that California removes fewer teachers than some other states, though the states practices around teacher performance and retention are complex.
Tenure offers strong protections for teachers against removal after two years on the job. But a significant number of teachers leave the profession anyway, sometimes under pressure because of substandard performance. Some experts argue the greater problem is the loss of effective teachers, many of whom protest a lack of support from their schools and communities.
Someone told me that between 5(%) and 7% of public school teachers need to be fired, Elder said, adding that the emergency declaration would provide the power to get rid of bad teachers faster than the system allows. He concluded: Once you did that, automatically, education would improve overnight.
Because Elder declined to field follow-up questions, it was impossible to know who had advised him on teacher terminations and exactly how he might weed out educators he judged to be underperforming.
Similarly, Elder said in interviews with the Times and opinion editors at McClatchy newspapers that he envisioned an emergency action on homelessness that would allow him to waive the states environmental review law so that I can unleash the developers and contractors who would be able to build low-cost housing and low-cost apartments.
He said many builders had moved their work out of California because CEQA allows almost anybody to stop anything for any length of time.
On the other most pressing issue of the day in California, the COVID pandemic, Elder subscribes to conservative view that the government and health officials should allow individuals to make choices about wearing masks. He has decried attempts to force people to get vaccinated.
He remained silent last month, neither agreeing nor disagreeing, when Kathy, a gynecologist who claimed no expertise in infectious diseases, claimed that vaccines could be a threat and asserted that unnamed individuals are going to specifically target the minority areas first and lower income areas.
When she spun out dark intimations about a Gates-organized plot to administer dangerous vaccines, Elder also did not respond. Instead, as first reported by HuffPost, a page on his website promoted the gynecologists pronouncements, saying, Youll Want to Hear This Physicians Take on the Vaccines.
But Elder has said he has been vaccinated (as an old man with co-morbidities, he told the McClatchy editors) and supports others who have done so. He added: A lot of people have made the choice, rightly or wrongly, not to get a vaccine. And I think in America, you want to have that choice.
As with other topics, Elder prefers to focus the COVID issue on Newsom, saying that the governor hadnt followed his own mandates, as when he didnt wear a mask while attending a party at the tony French Laundry restaurant. Elders website says COVID business shutdowns have gone too far and inflicted unnecessary pain on ordinary Californians, adding: I will govern as your governor, not as your tyrant.
Elders views on other issues, like climate change, have been equally provocative. He recently has contended that he has been either taken out of context or misinterpreted in the past.
He once maintained a page on his website devoted to debunking the Gore-Bull warming myth. (A reference to Al Gore, the former vice president who has made the battle against climate change his lifes work.) The webpage contained links to a list of stories, several rejecting the consensus of mainstream science: that the planet is warming to dangerous levels and that humankind is responsible.
In a 2008 CNN interview, Elder called global warming a crock and disparaged Republicans, such as John McCain and George W. Bush, who disagreed. He rejected Bushs contention that global warming is this big peril to the planet, concluding: It is not.
In his meeting with the opinion editors last week, Elder sounded a markedly different note, expressing his belief in a warming planet and adding, I do believe that human activity has something to do with it. He said he also believes that the warming is a factor in Californias worsening wildfires. But he added: What I dont believe in is climate-change alarmism.
His 2000 book suggesting the dangers of secondhand tobacco smoke have been exaggerated puts his views outside the scientific consensus.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and U.S. surgeon general have long warned of the magnitude of that threat. The CDC estimated in 2014 that 2.5 million people had died over the previous 50 years from health problems caused by secondary smoke exposure. That would average 50,000 deaths a year.
Elders provocative missives have been so frequent and over such a long span that many quickly blew over.
In 2017, he posted a picture on Twitter of three women attending the Womens March in Washington to protest the inauguration of Donald Trump, who faced serial accusations of sexual assault and misconduct. Above the picture, he wrote: Ladies, I think youre safe.
That drew immediate complaints that Elder was suggesting the women were too unattractive to be sexually assaulted. A member of the Nebraska state Senate retweeted Elders post, then, facing a storm of condemnation, resigned his post. The original tweet was apparently deleted.
In a 2000 column, Elder asserted that Democrats had an advantage over Republicans because they were supported by women and women know less than men about political issues, economics, and current events. In the piece for Capitalism Magazine, he added that women could be misled because the less one knows, the easier the manipulation.
In the column, Elder cited research done at the University of Pennsylvanias Annenberg Public Policy Center on gender gaps in political knowledge.
Surveys have detected such gaps and no clear explanation for them, said Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the Annenberg policy center. She said related research has shown that women are factoring in other information and consistently making decisions at the ballot box that are consistent with their self-interests.
Elders late entry into the race, about two months before the Sept. 14 vote on Newsoms future, leaves relatively little time for voters to examine the candidate with arguably the most voluminous record of public policy pronouncements.
I mean, he has created his own opposition research for decades, said Jessica Levinson, an election law professor at Loyola Law School. On the other hand, he does have a shortened timeline here. I think what a lot of people just know is that hes the Republican, leading in the polls, and a talk-show host. Theres not a lot of details that are filled in; its basically a sketch.
So has he been vetted? Levinson asked. Not in the way that were used to of candidates having to go through a process of showing up to town halls and press conferences, and respond to opponents, and provide answers and explanations for what theyve said in their public life.
Originally posted here:
Larry Elders outspoken conservative radio rhetoric under scrutiny in California recall election - The Detroit News
Posted in Libertarianism
Comments Off on Larry Elders outspoken conservative radio rhetoric under scrutiny in California recall election – The Detroit News
Letter: A Wrong Approach | Opinion | thepilot.com – Southern Pines Pilot
Posted: at 12:35 pm
John Hoods July 14 opinion, What To Do When You Think Theyre Wrong, made me stop and think. In it he states as fact that poverty in the U.S. has fallen to less than 3 percent today.
The basis for his claim comes from a long-running calculation by Mayer and Sullivan. Figuring that Mr. Hood leans Libertarian (he is a board member of the John Locke Foundation) I took a look at the research he uses in support of his claim. It doesnt take long to establish that his facts are biased by his political leanings.
His research is supported and reported by The Cato Institute, a Libertarian think tank. The 3 percent number is based on assumptions of government handouts to the poor, not calculated in their earnings.
The 2019 Census Bureau states that 10.5 percent of the population lives at or below the poverty level, or 34 million people.
Thats a big difference. In 2021, an individual earning less than $12,880 a year, or $26,500 for a family of four, makes you poor. The average monthly rent in the U.S. is $997, or just under $12,000 annually, leaving a meager $14,500 for that family of four to live on for the year.
My point is not that Mr. Hood is necessarily wrong in his basic assumption. Regardless of whose numbers you believe, the number of poor in this country has dropped. Yet they are useless to those still left behind. Statistics hide the humanity and suffering of people who cant make ends meet.
Is a pat on the back in order if only 34 million adults and children are hungry tonight? The only good percentage of poor is zero.
Publishers Note: This is a letter to the editor, submitted by a reader, and reflects the opinion of the author. The Pilot welcomes letters from readers on its Opinion page, which serves as a public forum. The Pilot is not in the business of suppressing public opinion. We are a forum for community debate, and publish almost every letter we receive. For information on how to make a submission, visit this page: https://www.thepilot.com/site/forms/online_services/letter/
Here is the original post:
Letter: A Wrong Approach | Opinion | thepilot.com - Southern Pines Pilot
Posted in Libertarianism
Comments Off on Letter: A Wrong Approach | Opinion | thepilot.com – Southern Pines Pilot
Cryptocurrency Regulations On The Horizon; Expect 2 Sets Of Protocols – Investing.com India
Posted: at 12:35 pm
This article was written exclusively for Investing.com.
, , and other cryptocurrencies made a substantial comeback from their lows following the steep correction that occurred after the April and May peaks. Bitcoin dropped from $65,520 on Apr. 14 to a low of $28,800 in late June or over 56%. Ethereum reached its peak at $4,406.50 in mid-May and fell to a low of $1697.75 in late June, a decline of nearly 61.5%.
The market cap of the entire asset class of over 11,180 digital tokens more than halved from around the $2.5 trillion level.
While prices plunged, the speculative frenzy in the cryptocurrency asset class continues to attract new participants each day. On Sunday, Aug. 8, Bitcoin was back above the $43,800 level, with Ethereum at just over $3000 per token. The market cap for the entire class was nearly $1.775 trillion.
Stories of incredible wealth creation from those with the foresight to turn a $1 investment in Bitcoin at five cents in 2010 into over $2 million is a powerful catalyst. Moreover, technology companies continue to embrace the libertarian form of money, with Squares (NYSE:) Jack Dorsey leading the way.
At the recent B-word conference, the CEO of both SQ and Twitter (NYSE:) called cryptocurrency the internets form of money. As more businesses begin accepting tokens for payment, governments are not likely to stand by idly.
Governments have repeatedly challenged cryptos because of their nefarious uses. However, it is control of the money supply that is at the root of their concerns.
Control of the purse strings is the most significant factor in retaining power. Surrendering the money supply to any libertarian currency diminishes control.
The status quo means governments can expand or contract the money supply with the push of a button. The ideological divide between governments and a form of money that transcends borders creates a vast gulf.
Governments embrace Blockchain as it represents the technological evolution of finance. The speed and efficiency of fintech have broad appeal. However, the digital currencies themselves pose a massive threat to power.
China appears to be the first government to issue a digital form of its currency, the yuan. In preparation, the Chinese have cracked down on Bitcoin and other cryptos. It will not be long before the US and Europe roll out digital dollars and euro. Washington DC and the EU are more than likely to follow Chinas lead to retain control of the money supply and hold onto financial power.
Post-2008, in the aftermath of the financial markets crash, the stage was set for cross-border regulatory cooperation. Given the move towards globalism under the Biden administration, we are likely to see regulators in the US, UK, and EU work together to establish a framework for cryptocurrency regulation.
While they will present this as a regulatory environment to protect investors, traders, and the sanctity of money, the underlying factor will be control and maintenance of the monetary status quo.
I expect that fintech will bifurcate into two regulatory protocols. One will cover government-issued digital currencies and could include so-called stablecoins that reflect hard asset values.
These are likely to be the blue chips that will face a more lenient regulatory landscape as control will continue to come from governments, treasuries, central banks, and monetary authorities.
Cryptocurrencies, on the other hand, could face far more regulatory hurdles to mitigate their threat to established power bases.
One of the most potent tools governments have at their disposal is taxation. A sign that cryptocurrencies are already in the US governments crosshairs are two competing crypto tax amendments in the Senates infrastructure legislation. The taxation comes down to defining the role of a broker in cryptocurrencies.
Ironically, Senators initially looked to impose stricter rules on taxing cryptocurrencies to help fund the infrastructure bill. The Wyden-Toomey-Lummis amendment would narrow the broker definition to exclude miners and validators, hardware and software makers, and protocol developers from the designation. The amendment would seek to keep the crypto business and market from moving overseas to less restrictive jurisdictions.
Meanwhile, the Portman-Warner-Sinema amendment would only protect proof of work (PoW) miners from the newly proposed reporting requirement. The amendment would not make proof of stake (PoS) developers, operators, validators, or liquidity providers from the reporting requirements.
The bottom line: strict taxation is on the horizon in some form. Taxation is the most significant device governments can use to maintain a grip on the asset class and exert control.
Under the umbrella of paying for infrastructure, the IRS and other government agencies would have the power to control money flows with complete transparency. Moreover, cross-border cooperation could be a silver bullet that drives the market away from cryptos toward government-issued digital currencies and stable coins that reflect the value of regulated assets.
Libertarian ideology shifts power from the state to individuals. Libertarians believe in free markets where prices come from transparent transactions without government interference. Ironically, many believe that libertarianism is a right-wing doctrine.
When it comes to money, it decreases the governments role. However, socially, libertarianism can also appeal to the political left. Right and left political ideologies embrace different forms of libertarianism.
When it comes to cryptocurrencies, neither the government nor proponents of the burgeoning asset class will be pleased with the outcome. In the US and Europe, the growth of technology companies that have created oligarchies sets the stage for an epic battle over the future of the money supply.
Government officials are on one side, with Jack Dorsey, Tesla's (NASDAQ:) Elon Musk, Amazon's (NASDAQ:) Jeff Bezos, and other titans embracing a fintech world that transcends government control on the other.
Both sides have vested interests. The governments will do anything to preserve their hold on power. The crypto market and technology companies seek to return power to individuals, but they stand to be financial benefactors.
The bottom line: regulations are on the horizon, and they are likely to create a class system where digital currencies and stablecoins are not subject to the same treatment as cryptos.
Two competing payment systems could become mutually exclusive, creating lots of volatility and an epic financial battle for control. Governments may have the right to taxation, regulations, and armies of agents at their disposal. However, the technology sector has know-how and skills that dwarf the capabilities of those looking to maintain the status quo.
Speculative interest is currently fueling the libertarian asset class, which is why Chinese regulators have put their foot down. China is an authoritarian system, making it easy to suppress anything that is not in the governments interest.
Expect the US and Europe to try to do the same. However, in social democracies, that task is far from easy.
Source: CQG
The monthly chart of , above, shows that the speculative frenzy is likely to continue. Nearly 11,200 cryptocurrencieswith more coming to the market each dayis another sign that the asset class has rising appeal. Moreover, the existence of Bitcoin and means the cat is already out of the bag, and the US and Europe will now seek to tax and regulate from a weakened position.
Many agree that Blockchain is the future of the payments system. However, the form of money is an issue that will continue to stoke controversy for years to come.
Read the original:
Cryptocurrency Regulations On The Horizon; Expect 2 Sets Of Protocols - Investing.com India
Posted in Libertarianism
Comments Off on Cryptocurrency Regulations On The Horizon; Expect 2 Sets Of Protocols – Investing.com India
Rand Paul suspended one week by YouTube over COVID-19 mask claims | TheHill – The Hill
Posted: at 12:35 pm
Sen. Rand PaulRandal (Rand) Howard PaulRepublicans are the 21st-century Know-Nothing Party CDC: Unvaccinated more than twice as likely to get COVID-19 reinfection Senate in talks to quickly pass infrastructure bill MORE (R-Ky.) has been suspended from YouTube for a week over a video claiming that masks are ineffective against COVID-19.
In a statement to The Hill, a YouTube spokesperson said theplatform "removed content from Senator Pauls channel for including claims that masks are ineffective in preventing the contraction or transmission of COVID-19, in accordance with our COVID-19 medical misinformation policies."
"This resulted in a first strike on the channel, which means it cant upload content for a week, per our longstanding three strikes policy. We apply our policies consistently across the platform, regardless of speaker or political views, and we make exceptions for videos that have additional context such as countervailing views from local health authorities," the spokesperson added.
If there is another policy violation during the 90-day period, Paul's channel will receive a second strike, and he will not be able to upload for two weeks.
Paul said in a statementthatthis kind of censorship is very dangerous, incredibly anti-free speech, and truly anti-progress of science, which involves skepticism and argumentation to arrive at the truth.
As a libertarian leaning Senator, I think private companies have the right to ban me if they want to, so in this case Ill just channel that frustration into ensuring the public knows YouTube is acting as an arm of government and censoring their users for contradicting the government, Paul added.
The move comes a week afterYouTube removed a video ofPaul being interviewed by a Newsmax journalist on wearing masks during the pandemic.
YouTube said at the time that it removed the video for falsely claiming that masks were ineffective against COVID-19.
But the video that led to the suspension was Pauls response to theYouTube removing the earlier video, his office said.
In that second video, Paul claimed that two different studies showed that surgical masks and cloth masks didnt protect against the coronavirus.
Paul madehis response video available on Rumble.
Earlier this week, Twitter took similar action against Rep. Marjorie Taylor GreeneMarjorie Taylor GreeneGOP efforts to downplay danger of Capitol riot increase The Memo: What now for anti-Trump Republicans? Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene says she's meeting with Trump 'soon' in Florida MORE (R-Ga.), suspending her for seven daysafter she tweetedthat vaccines are failing.
Updated at 10:15 a.m.
Visit link:
Rand Paul suspended one week by YouTube over COVID-19 mask claims | TheHill - The Hill
Posted in Libertarianism
Comments Off on Rand Paul suspended one week by YouTube over COVID-19 mask claims | TheHill – The Hill
Mellman: Your rights and my nose | TheHill – The Hill
Posted: at 12:35 pm
My father, of blessed memory, a stalwart civil libertarian who cut his teeth as a lawyer defending people accused of being communists by McCarthyite goons, used to say, Your rights end where my nose begins.
The aphorism seems particularly apt at a time when one of the greatest collective threats we face is a pathogen transmitted through the air into our nasal passages.
Anti-maskers and anti-vaxxers claim their rights, their freedom, is being violated by requiring them to don a mask or get a shot.
Former Vice President Mike PenceMichael (Mike) Richard PenceThe Hill's 12:30 Report - Presented by AT&T - Rafael Nadal spotted around D.C. during Citi Open Pence urges young conservatives to get COVID-19 vaccine Virginia couple gets home detention in Jan. 6 case MORE encouraged this ludicrous line of reasoning last year when he responded to a reporter who asked about maskless people at Trump rallies by asserting a nonexistent constitutional right: Even in a health crisis, the American people dont forfeit our constitutional rights.
The Supreme Court actually decided this issue more than a century ago when Cambridge, Mass., Pastor Henning Jacobson argued that a state law requiring him to be vaccinated against smallpox was unconstitutional. In a 7-2 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court held mandatory vaccination laws were, in fact, wholly constitutional.
As Justice John Harlan wrote, in every well-ordered society, charged with the duty of conserving the safety of its members, the rights of the individual, in respect of his liberty, may at times, under the pressure of great dangers, be subjected to such restraint, to be enforced by reasonable regulations, as the safety of the general public may demand.
Further, wrote Harlan, liberty for all could not exist under the operation of a principle which recognizes the right of each individual person to use his own [liberty], whether in respect of his person or his property, regardless of the injury that may be done to others.
In other words, my father was correct the rights of anti-vaxxers and anti-maskers end where everyone elses noses begin.
There is no freedom to seriously endanger, no right to infect, others.
If some refuse to wear masks or get vaccinated, the rest of us have the right to keep them away from our nasal passages at work, at school, in stores and elsewhere.
A majority of Americans agree.
Just as COVID-19s scourge was beginning in early March 2020, we had the privilege of working with a great team to defeat Maines Question 1, which would have made it easier for people to evade vaccinations (obviously before there was a COVID-19 vaccine). Seventy-three percent of Mainers voted for strong vaccine requirements. That included majorities in every county in the state.
More recent polls confirm widespread public support for both vaccination and mask mandates.
In a Morning Consult/Politico survey, 68 percent favored federal government officials making it mandatory to wear face masks in public spaces, with 32 percent opposed.
Last weeks Yahoo News/YouGov poll found a lesser but still clear majority, 55 percent, in favor of making it mandatory to wear masks in public, while 45 percent opposed.
On the other end of the spectrum, a Hill/Harris X survey asked about a mask mandate if COVID-19 cases spiked in your area. Seventy-four percent favored the requirement in those circumstances, while 24 percent were opposed.
Americans also favor a vaccine mandate. A Covid States Project survey in June and July pegged approval for government requiring everyone to get a COVID-19 vaccination at 64 percent, with 45 percent of Republicans supporting such action. Seventy percent of Americans approve of a vaccine requirement for air travel.
More than 60 percent support vaccine mandates for federal workers (including members of Congress), teachers, police officers and those working in health care, according to a YouGov survey last week.
Americans recognize our obligation to protect each other and the need for rules and restrictions to accomplish that objective. They know my father was right: Our rights end at the nasal passages of our fellow Americans.
Mellman is president of The Mellman Group and has helped elect 30 senators, 12 governors and dozens of House members. Mellman served as pollster to Senate Democratic leaders for more than 20 years, as president of the American Association of Political Consultants, and is president of Democratic Majority for Israel.
See the original post:
Mellman: Your rights and my nose | TheHill - The Hill
Posted in Libertarianism
Comments Off on Mellman: Your rights and my nose | TheHill – The Hill