I was just watching part of a Congressional presentation on C-Span honouring the slaves who built the u.s. capitol – not by making restitution to their heirs, of course, but by setting up some sort of plaque. What especially bugged me was the speakers’ continual references to expressing “thanks” and “gratitude” for the slaves’ “sacrifices” and “contributions.” If I take your wallet at gunpoint, it would be rather a euphemism to call your handing it over a sacrifice, and what I owe you is not gratitude. (Of course the language of sacrifice and gratitude is also used in connection with conscript soldiers shipped off to die in lands they’ve never heard of.)
Archive | July, 2010
Anarchist’s Crossing
Two great anarchist quotes from Miller’s Crossing:
It’s getting so a businessman can’t expect no return from a fixed fight. Now, if you can’t trust a fix, what can you trust? For a good return, you gotta go betting on chance – and then you’re back with anarchy, right back in the jungle.
Which is incidentally a perfect illustration of why big business has never been a fan of the free market.
You don’t hold elected office in this town. You run it because people think you do. They stop thinking it, you stop running it.
The point applies to elected officials too, of course.
Stateless News, Again
A retired Air Force colonel on the Counter Terror Form discovers C4SS. Tom Knapp comments here.
Addendum:
Check out this exchange between Colonel Hesterman and our own Brad Spangler.
Stateless News
Kevin Carson’s latest C4SS study, The Thermidor of the Progressives: Managerialist Liberalism’s Hostility to Decentralized Organization, is now online. As the subtitle suggests, the study documents the tendency of so-called “progressives” to side with power and privilege against genuine left radicalism.
In other C4SS news (not so new at this point), check out the first installment of Gary Chartier’s introductory course on anarchism for Stateless U.:
Watch some more here.
Anti-Consequentialism Is a Sometime Thing
How bad a given policy is depends on which party is in power – according to, this time, Thomas Sowell.
Two Rivers
She’s mysterious and unpredictable.
She’s really good at killing people.
The interplanetary authorities are hunting her.
We’re not sure how far we should trust her.
And her name is River.