Page 2,401«..1020..2,4002,4012,4022,403..2,4102,420..»

Category Archives: Transhuman News

Ron Paul: Shut down Homeland Security

Posted: March 10, 2015 at 3:42 am

Many Americans associate Homeland Security with the colorcoded terrorist warning system and the "if you see something, say something" public relations campaign. These programs were designed to inspire public confidence in the department, but instead they inspired public ridicule.

Ironically, the best case for shutting down this department is its most well-known component the Transportation Security Administration (TSA). More terrorist attacks have been thwarted by airline passengers than by the TSA! The TSA may be ineffective at stopping terrorists, but it is very effective at harassing innocent Americans like Lucy Forck. Three-year-old Lucy, who uses a wheelchair, not only had to endure an intrusive screening from TSA agents, but the agents also took away her beloved stuffed animal.

Read MoreWhy the Homeland Security standoff is riskier for Republicans

TSA also subjects airline passengers to rules that seem designed to make air travel as unpleasant as possible. For example, TSA recently forced a Campaign for Liberty staffer to throw away a jar of Nutella she had in her carry-own luggage. I am sure all airline passengers feel safe knowing that TSA is protecting them from sandwich spreads.

Ending the TSA would return responsibility for airline security to airports and airlines. Private businesses have a greater incentive than a government bureaucracy to ensure their customers' safety. Those conservatives who think this is a radical idea should try to think of one area where they trust government bureaucrats to do a better job than private business owners.

Another agency within Homeland Security that the American people could do without is the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). Having spent fifteen years in Congress representing a coastal area subject to hurricanes and floods, I have seen first-hand how FEMA places adherence to bureaucratic rules ahead of aiding victims of a natural disaster. As a result, it is not uncommon for disaster victims to wait months or even years for assistance.

Read MoreElizabeth Warren's new crusade

FEMA not only fails to provide effective relief to disaster victims, it also impedes private disaster relief efforts. FEMA even hinders disaster victims' efforts to help themselves. While in Congress, I heard stories of individuals being threatened with fines or even jail time if they returned to their property without FEMA's permission. One individual in my district was threatened with arrest if he removed a tarp that FEMA put on his house even though FEMA was supposed to have put it on his neighbor's house!

Ten years after the creation of the Department of Homeland Security, it is clear that this department has failed to protect our security, but has infringed on liberty. If Congress really wanted to enhance our security and our liberty it would shut down this unnecessary, unconstitutional department.

Original post:
Ron Paul: Shut down Homeland Security

Posted in Ron Paul | Comments Off on Ron Paul: Shut down Homeland Security

Edward Snowden, Ron Paul kick off Students for Liberty conference

Posted: at 3:42 am

WASHINGTON (Tribune News Service) Youre going to make me blush, said Edward Snowden.

It was a little after 6 p.m. Friday, and the National Security Agency whistleblowers face and shoulders were gazing out, billboard-sized, at hundreds of cheering young libertarians. Snowden was beamed in to talk to the largest-ever International Students for Liberty conference, newly relocated to Washingtons largest hotel. Snowden, whose highest degree was a GED, was honored as an honorary alumnus of the 8-year-old organization. For 15 minutes he restated a case against the surveillance state that had no rebuttal in the room.

As they take the private records of all our lives, and they aggregate a dossier, how can that be said to be constitutional? asked Snowden. Why have we been funding and instituting this system of mass surveillance of people in our country and people around the world if theres no track record that shows it works?

As he honed in on his argument, Snowden tailored it to young libertarians most of them college students. I think many of the people in this room take a more pro-liberty pro-rights perspective than others in the U.S. political agreement, said Snowden. Theres an argument to be made that perfect enforcement of the law is not a good thing. In fact, its a very serious threat. law is a lot like medicine. When you have too much it can be fatal.

Alexander McCobin, the president of the Students for Liberty, posed a few friendly questions. First, did Snowden regret anything?

Im concerned that wed be in a better place if Id come forward sooner, said Snowden. He described a conversation hed had with Daniel Ellsberg, and how both of them came to regret how long it took them to produce their leaks. He like myself couldnt get over the psychological burden of fear of law-breaking, said Snowden.

In a small moment of irony, the Moscow-bound Snowden remembered how he had talked to colleagues at the NSA, and found them quietly agreeing with his worries, but unready to expose the agency. We had more on Americans than we had on Russians, for example, he said. Should we be focusing on ourselves more than we focus on our adversaries?

After Snowden wrapped, a slightly smaller audience remained in chairs to hear former Texas Congressman Ron Paul chat with Fox News commentator Andrew Napolitano and Reason.com editor Nick Gillespie.

You know, my name was connected to Edward Snowden, said Paul. They really wanted to blackball him, to destroy him, so they said: He donated to the Ron Paul campaign!

Paul called Snowden a truth-teller, and asked why whistleblowers like him were demonized.

Read the original:
Edward Snowden, Ron Paul kick off Students for Liberty conference

Posted in Ron Paul | Comments Off on Edward Snowden, Ron Paul kick off Students for Liberty conference

Ron Paul: Black lawmakers oppose war because they the money for food stamps

Posted: at 3:42 am

Former Texas congressman and three-time presidential candidate Ron Paul has long been one of the most vociferous opponents of interventionism in American foreign policy, but the libertarian-leaning conservative has some harsh i.e., racist words for some of his allies in that fight.

In an interview earlier this month with Lew Rockwell flagged today by BuzzFeeds Andrew Kaczynski and Megan Apper Paul asserted that members of the Congressional Black Caucus oppose military intervention abroad because theyd rather spend funds on food stamps than war.

I was always annoyed with it in Congress because we had an anti-war unofficial group, a few libertarian Republicans and generally the Black Caucus and others did not they are really against war because they want all of that money to go to food stamps for people here, Paul told Rockwell.

Paul proceeded to criticize Black Caucus members as ineffective advocates against war, arguing that too many of them voted for sanctions against U.S. adversaries, which Paul said never get the results that they thought there were going to get.

Listen to Pauls remarks below:

Here is the original post:
Ron Paul: Black lawmakers oppose war because they the money for food stamps

Posted in Ron Paul | Comments Off on Ron Paul: Black lawmakers oppose war because they the money for food stamps

Ron Paul: Vaccine mandates are dangerous

Posted: at 3:42 am

Those who are willing to make an "exception" to the principle that parents should make health-care decisions for their children should ask themselves when, in history, has a "limited" infringement on individual liberty stayed limited. By ceding the principle that individuals have the right to make their own health-care decisions, supporters of mandatory vaccines are opening the door for future infringements on health freedom.

Read MoreVaccines should be voluntary: Rand Paul

If government can mandate that children receive vaccines, then why shouldn't the government mandate that adults receive certain types of vaccines? And if it is the law that individuals must be vaccinated, then why shouldn't police officers be empowered to physically force resisters to receive a vaccine? If the fear of infections from the unvaccinated justifies mandatory vaccine laws, then why shouldn't police offices fine or arrest people who don't wash their hands or cover their noses or mouths when they cough or sneeze in public? Why not force people to eat right and take vitamins in order to lower their risk of contracting an infectious disease? These proposals may seem outlandish, but they are no different in principle from the proposal that government force children to be vaccinated.

By giving vaccine companies a captive market, mandates encourage these companies to use their political influence to expand the amount of vaccine mandates. An example of how vaccine mandates may have led politics to override sound science is from my home state of Texas. In 2007, the then-Texas governor signed an executive order forcing 11- and 12-year-old girls to receive the human papilloma virus (HPV) vaccine, even though most young girls are not at risk of HPV. The Texas legislature passed legislation undoing the order following a massive public outcry, fueled by revelations that the governor's former chief of staff was a top lobbyist for the company that manufactured the HPV vaccine.

Follow this link:
Ron Paul: Vaccine mandates are dangerous

Posted in Ron Paul | Comments Off on Ron Paul: Vaccine mandates are dangerous

What makes Rand Paul strange

Posted: at 3:41 am

Put into practice, libertarianism can make a mess. If parents have the right to endanger others by not getting their children immunized, why cant individuals decide whether theyre too drunk to drive? writes syndicated columnist Froma Harrop.

U.S. Sen. Rand Paul believes that vaccinating children should be up to the parents, an increasingly unpopular view after recent outbreaks of measles, mumps and other diseases. And throwing a newts eye of quack science into the vat, the Kentucky Republican promotes the myth that these shots put children at risk.

The political results have been toil and trouble.

Its not easy being a politician and a principled libertarian. One who believes in the primacy of individual freedom often takes stances far from the mainstream. It is the true libertarians lot to be unconventional, to bravely accept unwanted consequences in the name of liberty. By not going that extra philosophical mile and adding junk science to the mix Paul comes off as merely weird.

He was already fighting blowback when he ventured into an interview with CNBCs Kelly Evans.

Well, I guess being for freedom would be really unusual, he responded to a question about whether vaccinations should be voluntary. I dont understand why that would be controversial.

Does he not? Then he again gave credence to crazy talk of healthy children ending up with profound mental disorders after being vaccinated.

When the chat moved to taxes and Evans challenged some of his statements, he shushed her as if she were a little girl. Calm down a bit here, Kelly, he said.

Clearly, it wasnt Kelly who needed calming.

By the end, Paul had accused Evans of being argumentative and blamed the media for distorting positions he had left purposely vague. Not his finest hour.

Continued here:
What makes Rand Paul strange

Posted in Libertarianism | Comments Off on What makes Rand Paul strange

Libertarianism is for petulant children: Ayn Rand, Rand Paul and the movements sad rebellion

Posted: at 3:41 am

This article originally appeared on AlterNet.

Libertarians believe themselves controversial and cool. Theyre desperate to package themselves as dangerous rebels, but in reality they are champions of conformity. Their irreverence and their opposition to political correctness is little more than a fashion accessory, disguising their subservience tofor all their protests against the political elitethe real elite.

Ayn Rand is the rebel queen of their icy kingdom, villifying empathy and solidarity. Christopher Hitchens, in typical blunt force fashion, undressed Rand and her libertarian followers, exposing their obsequiousness toward the operational standards of a selfish society: I have always found it quaint, and rather touching, that there is a movement in the US that thinks Americans are not yet selfish enough.

Libertarians believe they are real rebels, because theyve politicized the protest of children who scream through tears, Youre not the boss of me. The rejection of all rules and regulations, and the belief that everyone should have the ability to do whatever they want, is not rebellion or dissent. It is infantile navet.

As much as libertarians boast of having a political movement gaining in popularity, youre not the boss of me does not even rise to the most elementary level of politics. Aristotle translated politics into meaning the things concerning the polis, referring to the city, or in other words, the community. Confucius connected politics with ethics, and his ethics are attached to communal service with a moral system based on empathy. A political program, like that from the right, that eliminates empathy, and denies the collective, is anti-political.

Opposition to any conception of the public interest and common good, and the consistent rejection of any opportunity to organize communities in the interest of solidarity, is not only a vicious form of anti-politics, it is affirmation of Americas most dominant and harmful dogmas.In America, selfishness, like blue jeans or a black dress, never goes out of style. It is the style. The founding fathers, for all the hagiographic praise and worship they receive as ritual in America, had no significant interest in freedom beyond their own social station, regardless of the poetry they put on paper. Native Americans, women, black Americans, and anyone who did not own property could not vote, but taxation without representation was the rallying cry of the revolution. The founders reacted with righteous rage to an injustice to their class, but demonstrated no passion or prioritization of expanding their victory for liberty to anyone who did not look, think, or spend money like them.

Many years after the nations establishment as an independent republic, President Calvin Coolidge quipped, The chief business of the American people is business. It is easy to extrapolate from that unintentional indictment how, in a rejection of alternative conceptions of philosophy and morality, America continually reinforced Alexis De Tocquevilles prescient 1831 observation, As one digs deeper into the national character of Americans, one sees that they have sought the value of everything in this world only in the answer to this single question: How much money will it bring in?

The disasters of reducing life, the governance of affairs, and the distribution of resources to such a shallow standard leaves wreckage where among the debris one can find human bodies. Studies indicate that nearly 18,000 Americans die every year because they lack comprehensive health insurance. Designing a healthcare system with the question, How much money will it bring in? at the center, kills instead of cures.

The denial of the collective interest and communal bond, as much as libertarians like to pose as trailblazers, is not the road less traveled, but the highway in gridlock. Competitive individualism, and the perversion of personal responsibility to mean social irresponsibility, is what allows for America to limp behind the rest of the developed world in providing for the poor and creating social services for the general population.

It also leads to the elevation of crude utility as a measurement of anythings purpose or value. Richard Hofstadter, observed in his classicAnti-Intellectualism in American Life, that many Americans are highly intelligent, but their intelligence is functional, not intellectual. They excel at their occupational tasks, but do not invest the intellect or imagination in abstract, critical, or philosophical inquiries and ideas. If society is reducible to the individual, and the individual is reducible to consumer capacity, the duties of democracy and the pleasures of creativity stand little chance of competing with the call of the cash register.

Excerpt from:
Libertarianism is for petulant children: Ayn Rand, Rand Paul and the movements sad rebellion

Posted in Libertarianism | Comments Off on Libertarianism is for petulant children: Ayn Rand, Rand Paul and the movements sad rebellion

Thats something that should make libertarians nervous: Inside the tumultuous rise of an American ideology

Posted: at 3:41 am

Libertarianism, like its ideological cousin neoliberalism, is one of those words that people in the political world use a lot without establishing whether everyone agrees on its meaning. This doesnt really matter in the vast majority of cases (because nothing that happens during a fight in a comment thread or on Twitter matters). But as support for libertarian-backed causes like marriage equality, opposition to the war on drugs, and resistance against the rise of mass incarceration become ever-greater parts of U.S. politics, the definition of libertarianism will matter more, too for the sake of apportioning credit and blame, if nothing else.

In the interest of nailing down a famously elusive and controversial term, then, Salon recently spoke over the phone with David Boaz, longtime member of the influential and Koch-founded Cato Institute think tank and author of Libertarianism: A Primer, which was just updated and rereleased as The Libertarian Mind: A Manifesto for Freedom. Our discussion touched on the big issues mentioned above, as well as Boazs thoughts on what liberals and conservatives misunderstand about libertarianism, and why he thinks his favored political philosophys future is so bright. Our conversation is below and has been edited for clarity and length.

If you had to pick one defining or differentiating characteristic of the libertarian mind, what would it be?

The first line of the book says that libertarianism is the philosophy of freedom, so what distinguishes libertarians is their commitment to freedom. That can manifest itself in lots of different issues, from marijuana and gay marriage to smaller government and lower taxes, but the fundamental idea of freedom as the proper political condition for society is the thing that unites libertarians.

Wouldnt most Americans say they care deeply about freedom, though? So is it the definition of freedom that distinguishes libertarianism from liberalism and conservatism? Or is it where freedom ends up in the hierarchy of values?

In America, virtually everybody comes out of the classical liberal tradition. The classical liberal tradition of John Locke, Adam Smith, Thomas Jefferson, and John Stuart Mill stresses freedom under law and limited government and most Americans share that. The difference with libertarians is that we do make freedom our political priority. Freedom is not necessarily any persons primary value. Your primary value may be courage or friendship or love or compassion or the arts; but freedom is the primary political value for libertarians.

I do think that is a difference between libertarians and liberals or conservatives who value freedom but also value other things. Modern American liberals would say, I believe, that they value equality along with freedom. Libertarians would tend to respond, well, in the real world you get more equality when you have freedom and free markets, though libertarians certainly believe in equal rights and equal freedom. Some conservatives value doing Gods will or maintaining social order or maintaining tradition along with freedom.

In that sense, I do think libertarians put freedom at the center of their political philosophy in a way that many liberals and conservatives do not.

If you had to pick one thing about libertarianism that liberals misunderstand the most, what would it be?

I think there is first a misunderstanding that libertarians are conservatives and I think thats wrong. Libertarians are classical liberals. We trace our heritage back to, not the aristocracy or established church, but to the liberal thinkers and activists who challenged those institutions.

Read the original here:
Thats something that should make libertarians nervous: Inside the tumultuous rise of an American ideology

Posted in Libertarianism | Comments Off on Thats something that should make libertarians nervous: Inside the tumultuous rise of an American ideology

21 Rand Paul quotes that expose libertarianism for the con job it is

Posted: at 3:41 am

This article originally appeared on AlterNet.

Senator Rand Paul, of Kentucky, seems to have no problem contradicting himself. The self-proclaimed constitutional conservative is typically lost in libertarian thought leading him to make inflammatory sexist, racist and overbearingly hypocritical comments on nearly every issue he faces. Whether hes attempting to police womens bodies, ignoring police brutality for stingy tobacco taxes, or speaking out against vaccines and posting himself receiving booster shots only days later, Ron Pauls son is one politician you can unabashedly hate or enjoy laughing at.

1. When Paul spoke outagainst vaccines:

I have heard of many tragic cases of walking, talking normal children who wound up with profound mental disorders after vaccines.

Click to enlarge.

Rand Paul /Twitter

2. When he backedvoter ID laws:

I dont think theres a problem with showing your ID, but I do think theres a problem with Republicans saying, Hey, our big issue for the campaign is going to be voter ID, because what it creates is a lot of African-Americans understandably remember the 40s and 50s in the South, and they remember suppression of the vote.

See original here:
21 Rand Paul quotes that expose libertarianism for the con job it is

Posted in Libertarianism | Comments Off on 21 Rand Paul quotes that expose libertarianism for the con job it is

Google Ventures' Bill Maris says humans could live for 500 YEARS

Posted: at 3:41 am

Google Ventures' Bill Maris said he thinks humans can live to 500 years old This will be due to medical breakthroughs and a rise in biomechanics Google's director of engineering Ray Kurzweil previously said we'd be uploading our brains to machines by 2045 Google Ventureshas invested in genetics firms and cancer startups Tech giant also set up Calico - anti-ageing research and development labs Mr Maris said: 'We have the tools to achieve anything that you have the audacity to envision. I just hope to live long enough not to die' But professor Sir Colin Blakemore believes there's a limit on human life Neurobiologist believes 120 years might be an absolute to human lifespan This is because living for longer is so rarely exceeded that even with medical advances, it is unlikely this threshold will be raised

By Victoria Woollaston for MailOnline

Published: 10:20 EST, 9 March 2015 | Updated: 10:47 EST, 9 March 2015

165 shares

138

View comments

In an interview with Bloomberg, Google Ventures' president Bill Maris (pictured) said he thinks it's possible for humans to live to 500 years old

Google has invested in taxi firms, smart thermostats and even artificial intelligence but it is also setting its sights on immortality - or at least increasing our lives five-fold.

In an interview with Bloomberg, Google Ventures' president Bill Maris said he thinks it's possible to live to 500 years old.

And this will be helped by medical breakthroughs as well as a rise in biomechanics.

Read more here:
Google Ventures' Bill Maris says humans could live for 500 YEARS

Posted in Immortality Medicine | Comments Off on Google Ventures' Bill Maris says humans could live for 500 YEARS

Craig Mello 82 gives biology keynote

Posted: at 3:41 am

Gene expression is really simple. Everyone should know it and feel comfortable thinking about it, said Nobel laureate Craig Mello 82, professor of molecular medicine at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, at a lecture Saturday morning in a packed Salomon 101.

Mellos keynote lecture, entitled RNA memories: Secrets of inheritance and immortality, kicked off Day of Biology, a day-long event commemorating life sciences at Brown. His lecture was followed by colloquia on a variety of topics in biology as well as current relevant University research. Mello provided an introduction to genetics before delving into his own research on RNA interference, which won him the 2006 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

He began by discussing germ lines, the cells used for sexual reproduction. Germ lines exist on a cosmic time scale. Every animal on this planet is related to each other were all related to each other.

The germ lines of humans and nematodes also known as roundworms have journeyed together on this planet for three million years, he said, adding that a wide range of animal biology can inform the study of human anatomy and physiology.

Mello discussed the relationship between DNA, RNA, ribosomes the part of the cell that creates proteins and gene expression. DNA encodes information that is transformed into messenger RNA, which brings the genetic information to the ribosomes, linking amino acids in ordered pairs to create an organisms proteins.

Mello said there are four building block nucleotides that combine to form codons, which code for the twenty amino acids the precursor molecules of proteins.

Four letters in the alphabet make 20 different words, which are the amino acids, Mello said, adding that RNA is really simple, but proteins are really diverse.

Mello also discussed his research on RNA interference, for which he and his collaborator Andrew Fire, professor of pathology and genetics at the Stanford University School of Medicine, shared their Nobel Prize. RNA interference can turn genes off, preventing their expression in the organism and its offspring.

We discovered that cells need a search engine, Mello said. Theyre dealing with information in much the same way that we all do on the (Internet). The precise chemical information allows a query to precisely identify a matching RNA cell.

By targeting messenger RNA, Mello and Fire learned how to enter search queries inside of cells. We can find genes and regulate them. This is really transforming what we can do in the laboratory.

Read the original post:
Craig Mello 82 gives biology keynote

Posted in Immortality Medicine | Comments Off on Craig Mello 82 gives biology keynote

Page 2,401«..1020..2,4002,4012,4022,403..2,4102,420..»