Overwhelmed Apathy and the Modern American Socialist

Free healthcare and education.  Land reclamation for public use.  Labor theory of value.  Union representation and collective contracts.  Freedom from advertising.  Legalization of “drugs.”  Rehabilitation over incarceration.  Strength through peace.  Producing, selling, and buying local.  Public transportation.  The end of discrimination in all directions.

We’ve barely scratched the surface.  Want to take a guess why no leftist political movement ever gets far in the United States before fizzling? Continue reading

“Credit Card Transaction Fees” will not be the end of shopping as we know it

I have a tendency to stick with pretty broad topics on the political section of this blog.  I don’t deal with “the news of the moment” too often due to the 24 hour news cycle and all the noise that already exists to debate the day’s happenings.  However, I’ve noticed a keen interest in this topic from my friends, many of whom work in retail, or have in the past.  This week, where allowed by law, businesses which accept credit cards are now permitted to pass along the credit card surcharges to the customer, currently ranging from 1.5% to 4.0%. Continue reading

The average CEO has already made over a million dollars in 2013

(First, on a personal note, sorry for the delay on blog posts lately.  I had a good run for a few weeks and I plan to get back to that consistency.  My post tomorrow (hopefully) will explain in more detail.)

I often hear challenges from my conservative libertarian friends when I raise the issue of wage gaps.  They have a complete list of excuses why it’s completely acceptable for someone to make millions while putting others in the unemployment line.  Here’s some of the best lines I’ve heard from C-Level apologists: Continue reading

Adbusting: An easy way to subvert the brands that invade your life

There isn’t much of a legitimate “free speech” anymore.  We feel like there is, but let’s take a real step back and think about this for a second.

Where do you practice free speech?  First, we have to rule out pretty much the entire internet, because if you’re posting via social media, you’ve agreed to a Terms of Service that gives the service permission to silence any speech, and since they are a private organization and not part of the government, they are not violating the First Amendment.  Even if you’re posting via your own website, odds are that you’re using some form of blogging software or, at the very least, a commercial hosting service that has its own ToS.  Perhaps they’re not very heavy-handed, but they sure comply with those takedown requests pretty quickly and without question. Continue reading

American Media and You: How to Stay Informed in the U.S.

“If people in the media cannot decide whether they are in the business of reporting news or manufacturing propaganda, it is all the more important that the public understand that difference, and choose their news sources accordingly.”

– Thomas Sowell

For years, politicians and pundits have shouted about the “bias” in American media.  The typical theory is that everyone with a different narrative is hellbent on turning America into the next USSR, despite not really being able to pinpoint why this makes any sense other than the reporting not matching up with their preconceived notion of how the world should work. Continue reading

Elyrian blames school shooting on belief in evolution

From today’s Chronicle Telegram‘s opinion page and Elyria resident Bill Hine:

Darwinism is the dominant worldview, despite its scant scientific support. It is the soil from which Nazism and communism sprouted, also the nihilism that shows itself today in senseless mass murders.

If Darwinism is true, there is no God and no judgment after death. Traditional morality is a polite fiction, and there really isn’t any right and wrong. Our young people unconsciously absorb this philosophy and instinctively follow it to its logical conclusion. Continue reading

Details on #PTO15 and building a broader coalition before going live

Last week, I got a bit caught up in the moment.  I didn’t intend to suggest launching a movement at the beginning the blog entry (or even halfway through writing it, for that matter), but sometimes I simply feel like something would be so widely beneficial—and so widely supported—that there’s no reason to avoid it.  The fact is, though, that this is a personal hobby blog that has not published consistent content, has never worked to self-promote, and does not have a passionate (or even dispassionate) following.  Before we move forward with the #PTO15 concept, we need to build a coalition. Continue reading

Revisiting a familiar topic: Paid Time Off

I’m going to start today’s blog with a list.  You’ll recognize that these are countries around the world and that the United States is conspicuous in its absence.  Typically, we’re used to seeing “United States” at the top of lists, even alphabetical ones, because we tend to feel pretty entitled like that.  However, our absence from this list demonstrates one area where we are definitely not on the “entitled” end of the spectrum. Continue reading

Hypocrisy: Blaming Underpaid Consumers for Buying Outsourced Goods

I captioned a photo of the graves for the 112 Bangladeshi workers slaughtered by fire in a garment factory that was locked from the outside, and that picture has been shared a couple of times.  I’m including it (with caption) in this article to drive home the point that 112 individual people lost their lives in a locked-down clothes factory in 2012, despite all the health and safety advancements the world has made, despite the labor laws and regulations in developed countries, so we can think about the real cost of cheap, outsourced goods. Continue reading