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Jim Allen

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RE: The BUZZ2YA Presents Your Daily Dose Of Insanity USA Style
5/24/2014 3:55:33 AM
Now this is funny

May Wisdom and the knowledge you gained go with you,



Jim Allen III
Skype: JAllen3D
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Jim
Jim Allen

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RE: The BUZZ2YA Presents Your Daily Dose Of Insanity USA Style
5/24/2014 3:48:57 PM

Mexican Drug Cartels Threaten Texas Cops: Take the Bribe or Die

May Wisdom and the knowledge you gained go with you,



Jim Allen III
Skype: JAllen3D
Everything You Need For Online Success


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Jim
Jim Allen

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RE: The BUZZ2YA Presents Your Daily Dose Of Insanity USA Style
5/24/2014 3:51:33 PM
Funny check it out on Twitter #bat****crazy
Quote:
Now this is funny

May Wisdom and the knowledge you gained go with you,



Jim Allen III
Skype: JAllen3D
Everything You Need For Online Success


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Jim
Jim Allen

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RE: The BUZZ2YA Presents Your Daily Dose Of Insanity USA Style
5/24/2014 7:44:34 PM
This we can file under #bat****crazy for sure.

Federal Regulations Have Made You 75 Percent Poorer


U.S. GDP is just $16 trillion instead of $54 trillion


The growth of federal regulations over the past six decades has cut U.S. economic growth by an average of 2 percentage points per year, according to a new study in the Journal of Economic Growth. As a result, the average American household receives about $277,000 less annually than it would have gotten in the absence of six decades of accumulated regulations—a median household income of $330,000 instead of the $53,000 we get now.

The researchers, economists John Dawson of Appalachian State University and John Seater of North Carolina State, constructed an index of federal regulations by tracking the growth in the number of pages in the Code of Federal Regulations since 1949. The number of pages, they note, has increased six-fold from 19,335 in 1949 to 134,261 in 2005. (As of 2011, the number of pages had risen to 169,301.) They devise a pretty standard endogenous growth theory model and then insert their regulatory burden index to calculate how federal regulations have affected economic growth. (Sometimes deregulation extends rather than shortens the number of pages in the register; they adjust their figures to take this into account.)

Annual output in 2005, they conclude, "is 28 percent of what it would have been had regulation remained at its 1949 level." The proliferation of federal regulations especially affects the rate of improvement in total factor productivity, a measure of technological dynamism and increasing efficiency. Regulations also affect the allocation of labor and capital—by, say, raising the costs of new hires or encouraging investment in favored technologies. Overall, they calculate, if regulation had remained at the same level as in 1949, current GDP would have been $53.9 trillion instead of $15.1 in 2011. In other words, current U.S. GDP in 2011 was $38.8 trillion less than it might have been.

Let's use those results as the starting point for some rough calculations. The Bureau of Economic Affairs estimates that real GDP in 1947 was $1.8 trillion in 2005 dollars. The real GDP growth rate between 1949 and 2011 averaged 3.2 percent per year. Compounded over the period, that would yield a total real GDP of about $13.3 trillion in 2011; that's the same figure the bureau gives for that year. If regulation had remained fixed at 1949 levels, GDP growth would have averaged 2 percent higher annually, yielding a rate of about 5.2 percent over the period between 1949 and 2011. Compounded, that yields a total GDP in 2005 dollars of approximately $43 trillion, or $49 trillion in 2011 dollars, which is in the same ballpark as the $53.9 trillion figure calculated by Dawson and Seater.

But let’s say that the two economists have grossly overestimated how fast the economy could have grown in the absence of proliferating regulations. So instead let’s take the real average GDP growth rate between 1870 and 1900, before the Progressives jumpstarted the regulatory state. Economic growth in the last decades of the 19th century averaged 4.5 percent per year. Compounding that growth rate from the real 1949 GDP of $1.8 trillion to now would have yielded a total GDP in 2013 of around $31 trillion. Considerably lower than the $54 trillion estimated by Dawson and Seater, but nevertheless about double the size of our current GDP.

All this means that the opportunity costs of regulation—that is, the benefits that could have been gained if an alternative course of action had been pursued—are much higher than the costs of compliance. For example, the Competitive Enterprise Institute's report Ten Thousand Commandments 2013 estimates that it costs consumers and businesses approximately $1.8 trillion—about 11 percent of current GDP—to comply with current federal regulations. That's bad enough, but it pales in comparison to the loss of tens of trillions in overall wealth calculated by Dawson and Seater.

Defenders of regulation will argue that regulations also provide benefits to Americans: lower levels of air pollution, higher minimum wages, and so forth. But the measure devised by Dawson and Seater accounts for both the aggregate benefits and the costs of the regulations. The two researchers note their results "indicate that whatever positive effects regulation may have on measured output are outweighed by negative effects." There may be some unmeasured positive outputs that result from regulation. But the benefits would have to be hugely substantial to offset the loss of $39 trillion in output in 2011 alone. Is that plausible?

Dawson and Seater explicitly do not attempt to separately measure the benefits of regulation in their study, only its overall effects on output. But the Office of Management and Budget does claim to measure the costs and benefits of federal regulation. In the most recent Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) report, the highest estimates for costs and benefits for regulations adopted from 2002 to 2012 are $84 billion and $800 billion respectively. Let's be extremely generous in calculating regulation's benefits and assume that they provide not just $800 billion in total benefits over 10 years, but that much in just one year. Then, just to be sure that we haven't overlooked any non-monetized benefits unaccounted for the OIRA, and to take into account of the fact that number of pages in the CFR have risen six-fold, let's multiply that by 6, yielding an estimated annual regulatory benefit of $4.8 trillion.

That's just a bit more than a quarter of the current GDP. Recall that Dawson and Seater have calculated that if the regulatory burden had remained the same as it was in 1949, the U.S. economy would be about $38 trillion bigger than it currently is. So the upshot of this wildly optimistic set of assumptions regarding the benefits of regulation is that Americans have foregone $33 trillion in income that we otherwise would have had. Or in the alternative case, where a lower rate of growth results in a GDP of only $31 trillion, that would mean that Americans have foregone about $10 trillion in income due to overregulation.

Whatever the benefits of regulation, an average household income of $330,000 per year would buy a lot in the way of health care, schooling, art, housing, environmental protection, and other amenities.

Since GDP growth rates in other industrialized countries more or less track U.S. growth rates over the period, I asked both Dawson and Seater via email if it would be fair to conclude that those countries had also adopted a similar suite of regulations that also slowed their potential GDP gains. Being careful not to go beyond the data in the study, Dawson replied, "Similarity of growth rates really doesn't tell us anything about the growth effects of regulations in the different countries. However, it would be fair to say that many studies (cited in our paper) examine the effects of regulation in many European countries and find large negative effects on employment, investment, rates of new business start-up, and so on."

For example, a 2004 World Bank study of the effects of regulation in a large sample of industrial and developing countries constructed an index of severity of regulation. It revealed that increasing a country's index of regulation by one standard deviation (34 percent) reduces its per capita GDP growth by 0.4 percent. Dawson and Seater's article, in comparison, finds that "an increase in total regulation of 600 percent reduces growth by just 2 percentage points. Relatively speaking, our effect is smaller." With appropriate caveats about differences in various studies, Seater told me via email, "The uniform message that comes through from all the studies I have seen is that regulation has strong negative effects on economic growth."

So if the effects of regulation are so deleterious to economic growth and the prosperity of citizens, why do countries enact so much of it? Dawson and Seater's paper mentions three theories: Arthur Pigou's notion that governments enact regulations to improve social welfare by correcting market failures, George Stigler's more cynical view that industries capture regulatory agencies in order exclude competitors and increase their profits, and Fred McChesney's argument that regulations are chiefly aimed at benefiting politicians and regulators. I asked if their results fit most closely with McChesney's. Dawson replied: "This could be the conclusion that one reaches based on our empirical results (since they show a net cost of regulation over time), but again we did not set out to prove or disprove any particular theory." Seater added that their research does not address the question of "why society allows excessive regulation....It's an important [issue], but it is one for the public choice people to study, not for macroeconomists like me and my coauthor."

One such public choice theorist, Mancur Olson, argued in The Rise and Decline of Nations(1982) that economic stagnation and even decline set in when powerful special-interest lobbies—crony capitalists if you will—capture a country's regulatory system and use it to block competitors, making the economy ever less efficient. The growing burden of regulation could some day turn economic growth negative, but in a note Dawson and Seater suggest that in the long run that will "not be tolerated by society." Let's hope that they are right.

http://reason.com/archives/2013/06/21/federal-regulations-have-made-you-75-per?utm_campaign=learnliberty+CS&utm_medium=learnliberty&utm_source=facebook&utm_content=How+much+better+could+we+have+it%3f

May Wisdom and the knowledge you gained go with you,



Jim Allen III
Skype: JAllen3D
Everything You Need For Online Success


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Jim
Jim Allen

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RE: The BUZZ2YA Presents Your Daily Dose Of Insanity USA Style
5/27/2014 7:47:11 PM

A handy guide: How to spot ‘hate speech’

| May 21, 2014 | 5 Comments

We all know that the Tea Party is racist for disagreeing with President Obama. But there are many other things that are racist. As reported at Liberty Unyielding, Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz recently observed that criminalizing speech is a “worldwide trend.” In fact, Sen. Ed Markey of Massachusetts, believes it is the federal government’s job to determine what speech is “hateful” and legislation is pending.

It is more important than ever for you to be aware of what you are allowed to say.

Furthermore, people who are not racist should look out for these behaviors, so that they know who they should be condemning:

  1. Opposition to watching grown men make out during a sports event is racist.
  2. As pointed out by Rusty Weiss at Liberty Unyielding, John King, New York’s State Education Commissioner, implied that opposition to Common Core is racist.
  3. Dressing like the “Village People” is racist.
  4. Your local ice cream truck is racist.
  5. The terms ‘citizen’ and ‘brown bag’ are racist.
  6. The Fashion industry is racist.
  7. Pollution is racist.
  8. The “Hump Day camel” is racist.
  9. Avril Lavigne’s Hello Kitty music video is racist.
  10. “Chippy on the Green” sign touting English owners making English food is racist.
  11. Disney is racist and only black people like Jazz.
  12. Babies are racist.
  13. The Death Penalty is racist.
  14. Army’s hair rule is racist.
  15. Sky Ferriera’s “I Blame Myself” video is racist.
  16. Opposition to raising the minimum wage is racist.
  17. Opposition to Medicaid expansion is racist.
  18. Waving the American Flag is racist.
  19. The movie “Noah” is racist.
  20. The word “Fiesta” is racist.
  21. Almost everybody” is racist.

It should be noted that the above infractions may eventually be illegal. As of today, however, the First Amendment still applies.

Again, because I am all about helping Americans understand what is acceptable speech. Note that it is entirely acceptable to accuse people, even people you never met in your life, without any evidence at all, of being “racist,” “anti-gay,” “anti-women,” “anti-poor,” “Islamaphobic,” “xenophobic,” etc.

Image Source: sodahead.com

Please note that any racial or otherwise offensive comments directed at black conservatives are considered to be Perfectly Acceptable Speech (PAS).

Some examples:

  • “A handkerchief-head, chicken-and-biscuit-eating Uncle Tom.” -Spike Lee referring to Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas
  • Delegate Salima Siler Marriott, a black Baltimore Democrat, said Lt. Gov. Michael S. Steele invites comparisons to a slave who loves his cruel master or a cookie that is black on the outside and white inside because his conservative political philosophy is, in her view, anti-black.
  • During the 2002 campaign, Democratic supporters pelted Mr. Steele with Oreo cookies during a gubernatorial debate at Morgan State University in Baltimore.
  • Nationally syndicated cartoonist Jeff Danziger on former Secretary of State designate Condoleezza Rice: “She reminded me of Prissy, a character in the film ‘Gone With the Wind,’ who knew all about ‘birthin’ babies,’ until an actual baby was on the way, and then she didn’t know ‘nuthin’ about birthin’ babies…’
  • Janeane Garofalo: Says Herman Cain supporters only like him because he is black. “Look, this is not a racist, anti-immigrant, anti-female, anti-gay movement.” She said, “Look we have a black man.”
  • Malik Zulu Shabazz of the New Black Panther Party: “Only bootlicking Uncle Toms such as Clarence Thomas and Herman Cain pledge loyalty to this racist party that is overtly contemptuous and hostile to poor and working people, unions, and the like.”
  • Washington Monthly’s Ed Kilgore referred to Ben Carson theblack avenger for white self-pity.”
  • Rep. Bennie Thompson referred to Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas as an “Uncle Tom.”
  • Black Conservative Crystal Wright discusses the “under reported story of liberals vicious attacks on black conservatives” and posted some of her hate mail at Town Hall.
  • A blog post by the “Blue Light Buzz” dedicated to bashing black conservatives, and includes a lovely video “exposing” “Uncle Toms.”
  • After daring to support Mitt Romney, actress Stacey Dash said she had “death threats, people calling me Uncle Tom, telling me I didn’t like black people…”
  • In the United Kingdom, Black followers of the UK Independence Party (UKIP) are bashed as Uncle Toms, as well.
  • Hamas apologist Richard Silverstein called Chloé Simone Valdary, a black supporter of Israel a “negro” and he even questioned her ability — as a black woman — to write an article about Israel and anti-Zionism. “They finally did it: found a negro Zionist,” He declared. ”Uncle Tom is dancing’ for Joy!”
  • Rep. Clyburn on Senator Tim Scott: “If you call progress electing a person with the pigmentation that he has, who votes against the interest and aspirations of 95 percent of the black people in South Carolina, then I guess that’s progress.”
  • And then there is this:

If one speaks derisively of the Tea Party, for example, it is never, ever ”hate speech.” It does not matter how violent or absurd the language happens to be, as long as it is aimed at the Tea Party, it is PAS. Here are some examples:

  • CNN’s Michael Holmes: The Tea Party consists of radicals.
  • Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid: “the anarchists have taken over” the government.
  • Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid: “Tea Party anarchists” committing “extortion.”
  • Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid: The Tea Party hates the government so much that they “would rather tear down the house our founders built than govern from it.”
  • Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid: The Tea Party Republicans are “extremists” who “are more interested in putting on a show… than in legislating”
  • President Obama: “Tea Party extremists” caused the government shutdown.
  • President Obama: Tea Party Republicans are holding the “entire economy hostage.”
  • President Obama: Will not negotiate with with Republicans who have ”a gun held to the head of the American people.”
  • Vice President Joe Biden: Republicans are ”holding middle-class tax cuts hostage.”
  • Rep. Peter King: Ted Cruz is engaged in “governmental terrorism.”
  • Obama’s spiritual adviser Jim Wallis: Tea Party is “unbiblical” and are ”political extremists”
  • House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi: Tea Party Republicans are “legislative arsonists” attempting to “burn down what we should be building up in terms of investments and education and scientific research…”
  • Rep. George Miller: Tea Party Republicans are “committing Jihad” for shutting down national parks.
  • White House Communications Director Dan Pfeiffer: Obama will not negotiate with Tea Party Republicans because they have a “bomb strapped to their chest (sic).”
  • Rep. Peter DeFazio: Tea Party conservatives are “holding the federal government hostage.”
  • Former Vice President Al Gore: The Tea Party wants to “blow up the global economy,” and are “holding a gun to the head of Americans.”
  • Senator Chuck Schumer: the Tea Party is racist, misogynistic and anti-gay. He also said, “When things get bad, there are always those who appeal to our lesser instincts…to fear and to anger and to negativity and to division. That is where the Tea Party finds it’s appeal.”
  • In the creepiest ranting speech nobody watched, Senator Chuck Schumer said that the Tea Party:
    • “drove the nation and the world to the brink of default, risking economic collapse,”
    • “irresponsibly shutdown the government in pursuit of an undesirable and unachievable result,”
    • was “purposefully” causing “gratuitous political dysfunction,”
    • ”emboldened our competitors like China, who urged all nations to accelerate the pursuit of a world where America does not play a crucial role.”
    • “cruelly and needlessly put 800,000 government workers and others out of work…”
    • “insists on weighing down the middle class at every turn.”
    • needs to be “channeled into effective solutions,” or America will become a “different, more sour, less successful place for a generation.”
  • White Privilege conference: “Not only are all members of the tea party movement racists, but the longer a person associates with the tea party, the more racist he becomes.”
  • Rep. Charlie Rangel: Tea Party is made up of “mean, racist people” from former “slave-holding” states.

As observed at the Washington Times,

“The left slaps the ‘hate speech’ label on just about anything with which it disagrees. They aim to shut down conservative voices.”

As illustrated above, hate speech has nothing to do with hateful speech. Hate speech is really about speech suppression.

As Frederick Douglass said,

“It is a frequent and favorite device of an indefensible cause to misstate and pervert the views of those who advocate a good cause.”

Image Source: blackcommentator.com

Follow Renee Nal on Twitter @ReneeNal and Facebook.

Check out her news and political commentary at the Examiner, Liberty Unyielding, EAG News and the Brenner Brief for news you won’t find in the mainstream media.

http://tavernkeepers.com/a-handy-guide-how-to-spot-hate-speech/

May Wisdom and the knowledge you gained go with you,



Jim Allen III
Skype: JAllen3D
Everything You Need For Online Success


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