The Economist takes a crack at it here.
The subtitle reads: Official covid-19 death tolls still under-count the true number of fatalities
The Economist takes a crack at it here.
The subtitle reads: Official covid-19 death tolls still under-count the true number of fatalities
There are tons of people out and about in Austin. At rush our the other day the freeway wasn’t slow, but it was full.
Here’s the Angelenos deciding they’ve had enough too.
Current status on the 10 East heading to downtown LA. Way worse than yesterday. It seems the stay at home order is a paper tiger at this point. People are over it and patience is at an all time low. Local officials are losing control of their messaging. #COVIDー19 @FOXLA pic.twitter.com/TXGNMuMuaE
— Bill Melugin (@BillFOXLA) April 16, 2020
It’s not rotting in a prison cell, but this sort of public self-immolation on Biden’s part will have to suffice. Go get yourself Joe!
"Um, you know there's a, uh, during World War II, uh, you know, where Roosevelt came up with a thing, that uh, you know, was totally different, than a, than the, he called it the, you know, the World War II, he had the War Production Board." pic.twitter.com/BwzaW88awD
— Zach Parkinson (@AZachParkinson) April 17, 2020
Tommy was joined by entrepreneur, activist, agorist, and podcaster John Bush to discuss how those effected by the financial crisis may utilize counter-economic strategies to ensure their family is taken care of.
The Conscious Resistance Network
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Watch a cop jack up a doctor for preparing to go out testing homeless people for the Coronavirus.
Well, to the cop, he was just another n– out there causing trouble.
Here’s a profile of the only hero in this story.
Since the cop has full immunity for any crime he commits while on the clock, it is a foregone conclusion that there will be no accountability for him whatsoever.
Today is the 100th anniversary of the birth of Thomas S. Szasz (1920-2012), the most unappreciated libertarian in modern times. Beginning with his book The Myth of Mental Illness in 1961 and proceeding through dozens of books and hundreds of articles, Szasz, a Hungary-born physician and psychiatrist, spent more than half a century analyzing and debunking the myriad violations of individual liberty committed in the name of health, public health, and mental health. He dubbed the union of government and medicine The Therapeutic State.
In this cause, Szasz, who was also a historian and philosopher, not only documented the many ways in which the so-called mentally ill have been persecuted, imprisoned (involuntarily hospitalized), and tortured (drugged, lobotomized, electroshocked, etc.), he also demolished the establishment’s case for the oppression and so-called “treatment” of recreational drug consumers, sellers, and manufacturers; homosexuals; would-be suicides; and other officially disapproved persons. No one was better at exposing the horror of the “war on drugs” — it’s a war on people not drugs, of course — than Szasz. And keep in mind that when he defended the liberty of gays and lesbians, psychiatry still listed homosexuality as a mental illness. (Organized psychiatry voted [sic] it off the list in the 1970s.)
Most relevant to the world today, Szasz insisted on the traditional liberal distinction between personal health and public health, specifically, between conditions that may be harmful only to oneself and conditions that may be harmful to others, such as through a serious, contagious disease. He objected to the illiberal blurring of that line, which has justified interventions against people who have not harmed others and could not do so by, say, breathing on them. No one, Szasz wrote, has the right to declare someone else a patient — whether sick or not — against his will.
Many libertarians have ignored Szasz, who was my friend and mentor, because they have regarded psychiatry as beyond their expertise. But they missed the point. Szasz insisted that libertarian principles pertain even to people who are stigmatized by the medical establishment, which has long been deputized by the state. Until someone threatens to harm or actually harms another person, the state should leave him alone.
Pick up any book by Szasz, including his collections of aphorisms, and you’ll profit immensely. He was a wonderful writer and a fascinating thinker.
You can find a list of his writings here. Lots more information is available at the Thomas S. Szasz Cybercenter for Liberty and Responsibility. See my post “Szasz in One Lesson” here. Other posts that I’ve written over the years are here, here, and here. Also see Jacob Sullum’s interview here and Jim Bovard’s appreciation here.
And the biggest treat of all is this video interview I did with Tom in 2005.