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Modern Age: “What Character from Creative Literature Would Be The Best Choice For President?”

Modern Age is pleased to offer some relief that nonetheless has a measure of relevance. We asked some twenty of our friends and contributors to weigh in on the best choice for president—but not the best choice on the ballot this November. Instead, we asked them to choose the best character from all of creative literature for the role. The result, we hope, is a symposium that’s diverting and amusing, but that may also reveal something valuable about the nature of presidential leadership and the politics of a free society. It certainly reveals some underlying tendencies in conservative and libertarian thought today, although our contributors are not all so readily classified.

Our friends were free to select any character from any book, film, play, television program, poem, or folk tale—and we even let them enter the equivalent of a “write-in” candidate who didn’t fit the formal criteria, if they preferred to imagine some other impossible (yet illuminating) scenario, as some did. So here is a different sort of election survey, for a fictional president, in the service of real principles. —Daniel McCarthy.

RACHEL BOVARD

Vito Corleone, The Godfather
Regina George, Mean Girls (for VP)

There are two movies I use to explain Washington, D.C., to those unfamiliar with how the city truly works. One is, perhaps predictably, The Godfather. The other? Tina Fey’s masterpiece of teen-girl bitchiness, Mean Girls. Together, the movies’ plots and characters capture the essential nature of what makes D.C. function: the revenge-driven, eye-for-an-eye Mafia-style politics that exist alongside the petty rules that enforce the hierarchies of a high school lunchroom.

Vote wrong? You can’t sit with us! Don’t raise us enough money for the party? You broke my heart, Fredo. Everyone wants to make you a deal you can’t refuse while secretly plotting to push you in front of a bus. Should you violate the city’s unwritten and unspoken rules (on Wednesdays, we wear pink!), revenge will be served (cold, of course). As a senator, you may have elected those party leaders, but don’t be jealous. They can’t help it that they’re popular.

We’ve spent years governing Washington aspirationally, but perhaps we should govern it as it actually is: a giant high school with deadly, high-priced vendettas. Put the Godfather himself, Vito Corleone, in the Oval Office to manage the political alliances, while the head of the Plastics, Regina George, takes on the role of vice president to execute the side-eye tyrannies that keep the proletariat in line.

Washington, D.C., is about two things: power and pettiness. Vito and Regina are thus an unstoppable force. Kiss the ring. And slay, kween.

Rachel Bovard is the senior director of policy at the Conservative Partnership Institute.

 

Breonna Taylor Grand Jurors: Police Actions Were ‘Negligent’ And ‘Criminal’

Two grand jurors in the Breonna Taylor case said the actions of Louisville, Kentucky, police officers the day of the botched raid at her apartment were “negligent” and “criminal.”

“They couldn’t even provide a risk assessment,” one of the anonymous grand jurors, identified as juror one, said in an interview scheduled to air Wednesday on “CBS This Morning.” “And it sounded like they hadn’t done one.”

Read the rest of the story at NBC News.

Why We Need a Fully Free Marketplace of Ideas

No true seeker of truth can oppose the fully free marketplace of ideas. For details of the hardheaded practical case, you can do no better than to consult chapter 2 of John Stuart Mill’s On Liberty. If you can’t spare the time to read this short chapter and book, here’s the money quote: “He who knows only his own side of the case, knows little of that.”

Techno-Agorist: Local Politics Is Still Politics

Techno-Agorist: Local Politics Is Still Politics

My name is Ryan and I am an agorist. Today we are talking about the different yet equally-destructive levels of government

There is a pervading idea among many people that somehow local government is less bad, less corrupt, or easier to control than higher levels of government. Unfortunately, that just isn’t the case. Government on all levels is excellent at making shady deals and screwing over their populace.

I recently left Allentown, the third-largest city in Pennsylvania. The previous mayor of Allentown is currently in prison. He had announced lots of new public investment into the city. They roped off a large portion of the downtown and designated it as the “neighborhood improvement zone.” They drove out the local, small, minority-run businesses and then the city promised to pay up to 50% of the building costs of any new builds approved by the city in that zone. Over time, old buildings were torn down and a number of fancy new buildings went up. Of course, the city was broke, but that didn’t stop them. Afterward, it was found out that ALL of the contracts for building those fancy new buildings went to one single business with political connections to the mayor. All the things he had done to “improve the city” were actually just schemes to move huge amounts of money from the city to his friends.

We were lucky that he actually went to prison for it. Most politicians get away with it.

I can understand why if you don’t think much about it, local politics seems less frightening. It feels like since it is closer to home, it will be easier to control. Maybe that is the case in some extremely limited cases, but Allentown is hardly unique in how corrupt it is. Just ask Marvin Heemeyer. Rest in peace.

The problem is that when you give a person or group of people coercive control over your life, you set them up for failure. It doesn’t matter whether it is a government, a social media site, or even parents. Abuse flows from unchecked power. When you add legal violence into the mix, it just exacerbates the problem.

Avenged Sevenfold released a song a few years back called “Hail to the King.” In it, you see a seemingly-innocent boy find a crown and take it. Over time, you watch as the boy grows into a man of violence. At the end, you see him sitting on his throne. What once was an innocent boy is now a skeleton, a symbol of death, sitting on his throne while smoke from all of his destruction rises around him.

Power corrupts. That’s the story of humanity. Don’t ever excuse people who use violence to control you. Don’t ever make excuses for people who make up laws then point a gun at you if you don’t follow them.

Instead, ignore these people. Don’t take part in their systems. Make your own systems, your own markets. Appeal to people’s humanity in your interactions. Don’t ever use violence to coerce people to your will. The only way we can break free is if we stop justifying violent coercion on all levels, both public and private.

This is Techno-Agorist, episode 41.


Originally posted at: https://technoagorist.com/41

Techno-Agorist on LBRY: https://lbry.tv/@TechnoAgorist:8

Techno-Agorist is a production of the MLGA Network. Find more great content at: https://mlganetwork.com

YouTube Censoring Veterans’ Antiwar Video

WEST CHESTER, PA. — Silicon Valley’s selective censorship of news stories isn’t limited to just the U.S. presidential election, a right of center veterans group said Monday. YouTube and Google platforms are violating the free speech rights of an Afghanistan and Iraq war veterans organization, a veteran and the group’s founder said, by refusing to allow online promotion of its video honoring a U.S. Marine two-time Medal of Honor recipient and urging an end to U.S. military involvement in “endless wars” in the Middle East.

Watch video HERE

Dan McKnight, a Marine and U.S. Army veteran who served with the Idaho Army National Guard in Afghanistan and founded the veterans group BringOurTroopsHome.US, said the right-of-center group’s 13-minute video recorded last Monday at the grave site of Maj. Gen. Smedley Butler, USMC, marking the 19th anniversary of the first U.S. troops landing in Afghanistan in 2001, is being “censored” by YouTube and Google, which he accused of erroneously labeling the video “election year advertising.”

“YouTube and Google censors are clearly violating our free speech rights,” McKnight said, “the very thing General Butler and every other American who’s worn the uniform swore an oath and was willing to fight to protect. We’ll fight to protect those rights in court now if necessary.”

“Our video praised Gen. Butler for his condemnation of American corporations who make money off U.S. service members’ blood, sweat, and tears, and featured veterans calling for an end to the endless trillion-dollar wars in the Middle East,” McKnight said. “The video makes no mention of the 2020 election, and there’s not one word of ‘express advocacy’ — as recently defined by the U.S. Supreme Court — expressing support or opposition to any candidate for public office.”

“That means there’s no defensible rationale for refusing to allow us to pay to promote our video, except that YouTube and Google speech suppressors are engaging in outright censorship of our views — and under false pretenses — simply because they don’t like the content of our message calling on politicians of both parties to bring our troops home, a plea that public opinion polls find is supported by the overwhelming majority of Americans, military personnel, and veterans,” McKnight said.

“This is a clear case of viewpoint discrimination, plain and simple,” McKnight said, “and those of us who’ve fought for our country and Constitutional rights before aren’t afraid to fight for them again now if necessary, this time in American courtrooms instead of on foreign battlefields.”

McKnight said after YouTube blocked his attempt to purchase online promotion of the video, he asked Bill Hillman of Mohawk Public Affairs, a Pennsylvania public relations consultant who is certified to post “political” advertisements, to try boosting the video. Hillman was also refused.

McKnight said the group’s attorney will be sending a letter to YouTube and Google this week, demanding they stop blocking the video.

The video depicts McKnight and other speakers Oct. 19th at the West Chester, Pa., gravesite of the late Marine war hero, who after his retirement in the 1930s traveled the country promoting his book War is a Racket and calling for the U.S. to return to its policy of non-intervention in other countries’ civil wars.

McKnight was joined by Maj. Danny Sjursen (Ret.), an Iraq war veteran and former Military History instructor at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point and author of the book Patriotic Dissent, Diego Rivera, an Iraq war veteran, and Scott Horton, author of the book Fool’s Errand, a critique of the two-decade old War on Terror.

In the video, the speakers were equally critical of politicians in both parties who’ve supported continuation of U.S. troop involvement in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, and other Middle Eastern countries.

Sjursen said after two decades, many Americans have grown “numb” to Middle Eastern wars, blaming their continuation on “a bipartisan enterprise…certain Republicans, it’s a lot of the Democrats, which some people might not assume.”

“We see the absurd situation where all of the Democrats and many of the Republicans are cutting off the funds to end the war because they don’t like the person ending it,” Sjursen said, “and it really doesn’t matter what you think about the individual person, that seems pretty obscene.”

“I’m glad to be just a small part of the urgency this group is bringing together,” he said, “the big tent aspect…it’s not black white, it’s not red blue, it’s the nation.”

Horton said President Jimmy Carter’s administration worked with Afgan mujahideen to bleed the former Soviet Union of its military personnel and resources in a long drawn out guerrilla war in Afghanistan, a strategy continued during the Reagan Administration and one he said Osama Bin Laden openly admitted he was trying to repeat with the U.S. military now.

McKnight criticized former President Bush for expanding the Afghanistan war beyond — as authorized by Congress — specifically killing those who planned, authorized, committed, aided, or harbored those who attacked the U.S. in the terrorist attacks of Sept. 1, 2001.

McKnight said President Trump in 2016 campaigned on and probably won the election based on his pledge to “end the endless wars,” and he cited comments by Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Jim Risch, R-Id., who appears in another BringOurTroopsHome.US video that has not been blocked by YouTube, in which Risch seemed to declare a dramatic change in U.S. foreign policy when he told a business group in Boise last year that he is “tired of nation building.” See Risch’s comments on YouTube HERE.

McKnight said conservative and liberal Americans are uniting in opposition to “the neocons and liberal war hawks who keep us in perpetual and endless wars,” criticizing prominent figures in both parties. “America is repudiating the war hawks John Bolton, Liz Cheney, Hillary Clinton, John Kerry,” McKnight said in the video.

But now, in addition to fighting the military industrial complex to achieve the group’s goal of bringing U.S. troops home from endless wars, McKnight and his fellow veterans are preparing to fight tech giants in Silicon Valley as well just to protect their right to be heard.

Walter Wallace’s Mother Called the Cops on Him

Philadelphia cops killed a black man, Walter Wallace, who was, despite early reports that he was standing still, charging them with a knife. A massive riot has broken out in response.

They almost certainly could have tried to tase him first. Instead they shot him 10 times to death.

But guess who called the Nazi Gestapo White Supremacist Strormtroopers of Death to come and “help” Wallace: His own mother. Good old government. They’re here to take real good care of us all, right? That’s what it says on the TV.

Lesson learned the hard way.

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