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Archive for November, 2005

Get this… apparently there is legislation before Congress to create a national Department of Peace, which will be tasked with mediating local issues of violence, rehabilitating prisoners, eliminating gangs, and so on.

In other words, it’s another scheme designed to separate hard-working taxpayers from their money, in order to support highly speculative, extremely costly pet projects of people who are having visions… er, sorry, people with vision.

Jumpin’ Jehosaphat, have these people never heard of George Orwell?

Tonight we’re gonna party like it’s 1984.

You want to deal with the rising prison population? There’s an easy way. No, really. And in my mind, it’s a far more humane solution than locking people up:

Deportation.

As bartenders are wont to quip at closing time, “You don’t have to go home, but you can’t stay here.”

Start with the three-strikes laws (though any mandatory restrictions that handcuff our judges constitute a blatant violation of due process, but that’s another post).

There have been valid complaints drawn that someone with two strikes, who has been making an earnest effort to walk the straight-and-narrow, gets hauled in on some piddling traffic offense or minor parole violation and has to be sentenced to some unGodly multi-decade prison sentence. Insane.

Within the judge’s discretion, any offense lesser than strike one and/or two should not count towards the third strike– especially if it’s a reformed felon who bounces a check or some such.

But if someone does pull that third strike, there’s no reason the taxpayers should support them for the next few decades.

Revoke their citizenship. (The felon, not the taxpayers.)

Hand them a check for, say, $50,000. That’s about the cost of keeping them in prison for a year, and it’s more than enough to make a new start in lots of other countries.

Hand them a voucher for, say, another $50,000. That goes to whatever country they decide to relocate to, to soften the blow of accepting a known troublemaker.

Escort them onto the plane. Problem solved, at twenty percent of the cost.

If there was ever any possibility that the felon could rehabilitate, they have one final chance.

After the duration of whatever their prison sentence was, they can apply for citizenship like any other immigrant.

Our American citizenship is a precious gift, and for too long we’ve been taking it for granted. Those who demonstrate repeatedly that they are unable or unwilling to work within our society’s laws should not be allowed to remain. But the taxpayers shouldn’t have to subsidize their keep for years on end, either.

This seems a far more workable, far more concrete solution, than just creating another big Federal agency.

So yesterday’s front page news was that the housing market isn’t going to start dropping any time soon.

One had to read just a little further to find that the source of that bold headline was– surprise!– a Realtor.

What the spice else is a Realtor going to say? “Yeah, people will be losing their shorts soon. I sold everything I own two months ago.”

Actually, I would believe the original premise, except I think there are a tremendous number of people who have recently bought real estate strictly as an investment. They have no real intent to ever live in those homes. But the numbers that drive new home construction, tax revenue projections, urban planning, mortgage rates, and a number of other important factors– these numbers don’t take the investors into account.

To the outside world, the investors are new residents.

Those ghost residents, the investors, are the air inside the bubble. It’s not going to burst, though you’ll hear that inappropriate analogy a lot on the news. But it’s going to deflate, and deflate rapidly, the first time the investors get nervous. And a lot of them will lose their shorts. It’s the dot-com travesty all over again, where people who didn’t know a router from a radish were shoveling their savings into hideously dangerous tech stocks without a backwards thought.

By the way, buried on today’s financial page, was a much smaller article noting that the housing market is cooling.

Tropical Freakin’ Storm Epsilon.

Told ya so.

Now one must ponder two big questions:

1) Does the November 30 hurricane-season cutoff really mean anything this year?

2) What will 2006 be like?

In the paper today…

The newspaper industry is hitting some hard times. Cutbacks and layoffs are plaguing some of the larger and more well-known institutions.

The blame, of course, is being placed on the Internet.

Surprisingly, no one is looking too closely at what the Internet offers that newspapers don’t:

Fair and complete coverage— even though you have to go find it yourself.

Major media have had a monopoly on the information distribution channels for so long that they stopped considering accuracy and fairness to be part of their responsibility.

It’s even more surprising that no one in the industry has yet realized what valuable commodities these are.

All one would need to stand apart from the pack is a public attempt to provide unbiased and complete coverage of the issues.

Unfortunately, they have spent so many years pushing their own agendae that it may be too late to regain the public’s trust.

And the show, and the year, is complete. whew!

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Light-heavyweight division is up.

lucas-photo.com/bodybuilding/contests/nat2K5bb

Middleweight division is up.

lucas-photo.com/bodybuilding/contests/nat2K5bb