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About theartfuldilettante

The Artful Dilettante is a native of Pittsburgh, PA, and a graduate of Penn State University. He is a lover of liberty and a lifelong and passionate student of the same. He is voracious reader of books on the Enlightenment and the American colonial and revolutionary periods. He is a student of libertarian and Objectivist philosophies. He collects revolutionary war and period currency, books, and newspapers. He is married and the father of one teenage son. He is kind, witty, generous to a fault, and unjustifiably proud of himself. He is the life of the party and an unparalleled raconteur.

Chickens Coming Home to Roost at Twitter

One way or another, chickens always come home to roost. Now it’s the turn of the little Commie snowflake twits working for Twitter to get the emotional trigger to end all triggers for their fragile psyches. Here’s hoping Elon Musk does not disappoint us–and turns out to be their worst nightmare.

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It’s not “hate speech”, you fools. It’s LOVE speech: LOVE of freedom, truth, individualism, rationality, intelligence, capitalism, beauty, reason and liberty. A love without limits.

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Use of government schools to indoctrinate children is NOT a right. Discretion on what or how to teach your children IS a right.

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Who needs Disney? Ideology makes for bad art. Disney is rnow an overpriced, overrated wing of the Chinese-Biden Communist Party.

Move on.

Michael J. Hurd, Daily Dose of Reason

Green Fascism: The Greatest Danger Since Hitler & Stalin (Maybe Worse)

The green movement is not merely well-intentioned but stupid. The green movement is evil.

Think about it. Green energy suppliers are for-profit companies — solar, wind, electric cars. Nothing wrong with for-profit. Nothing wrong with people buying whatever they wish to buy in a free, open market. But unlike other for-profit companies, green companies get to shut down their competitors with the force of government. Joe Biden was put in office, in part, to pay off these green companies. By shutting down oil production in the U.S. and destabilizing the world through deliberate American military weakness (remember Afghanistan?), green companies get to reduce the competition against them.

Of course, they’re doomed to lose in the end. If wind, solar and battery power were able to get the job done, they would have already won in the private market. Fossil fuels would be going the way of the horse and buggy. Instead, green companies depend on government subsidies AND (much worse) the elimination of competition through throttling and ultimately shutting down the fossil fuel industry.

Green companies still must lose, no matter what the government does, because at the end of the day their products cannot provide the energy the world requires at an affordable price.

A century ago, cars began to overtake the horse and buggy industry. This happened naturally, in the marketplace, and not through government pull. Today’s Bidenistas and other green fascists think they pull off the same thing for wind, solar and battery power by simply having the government order fossil fuel industries to shut down (indirectly, by driving up the cost so high that most will not be able to afford it.)

In such a scenario, there are no winners, except for the 1-5 percent of people who will still be able to afford fossil fuels, and who WILL, most certainly (thanks to political pull), be allowed to use it. The Biden crime families of the world and their descendants down the road will be just fine. The children and grandchildren of Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, Nancy Pelosi, and Jeff Bezos will still be using fossil fuels 10 and 30 and 50 years from now, most likely. 95 percent of the world will be thrown back into the 1700s or worse, and millions will actually die, because our very survival depends on the use of fossil fuels for heating, air conditioning, and the transportation of life-saving medical and other supplies, like food. When fossil fuels go away in 2030 or whenever, with nothing but inadqeuate battery-charged cars and trucks to replace them, millions are going to die.

THIS is what makes green fascism not just dysfunctional but EVIL. Biden, the people who work for him and the people he works for, are orchestrating the greatest mass murder since the purges of Stalin and the extermination campaigns of Hitler. If allowed to continue, these campaigns and edicts of green fascism will probably kill more than Hitler or Stalin.

Thank you for that, you sanctimonious Biden voters and ignorant supporters of the green movement.

Michael J. Hurd, Daily Dose of Reason

It Can’t Happen in America. Can it ?

Anthony Fauci, Joe Biden’s chief medical adviser and the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told Bloomberg Television on Wednesday that it’s likely that the United States will experience a surge in coronavirus cases in the fall once again. [Breitbart]

TRANSLATION: “We plan to ensure Democratic victory in the fall elections via mail-in-voting.”

Lockdowns will return. Maybe they’ll even find a way to cancel elections.

Can’t happen in America, right?

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“Texas To Start Busing Illegal Immigrants To Washington, D.C., As Biden Scraps Trump-Era Border Policy” [Daily Wire headline]

Good for Texas. But the fascists in D.C. really are totalitarians. They will find ways to retaliate against Texas, and Texas will retaliate further against the federal regime. Florida will be similar, and other red states — and perhaps counties or portions of blue states — will follow.

The breakup of America isn’t coming; it has already started. We have our own Putin in D.C. Its name isn’t Biden. Biden is a demented, goofball placeholder; he will be gone soon.

Our Putin is the Democratic Communist Party. They seek to crush freedom. But millions of Americans, in Texas and Florida, WILL be fighting back, to the end.

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“Wokeness gives people a shield to be mean and cruel, armored in false virtue.”

— Elon Musk

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“Unvaccinated people did their homework early on, and this is precisely why they are still unvaccinated.” [a Facebook meme]

It’s not homework so much as THINKING: “Gee, it takes years — not weeks — to do the controlled studies required to properly test a new vaccine’s effectiveness and safety. And it’s surely unwise to inject myself with a product whose manufacturer will make billions while facing ZERO liability.”

But I guess that’s just me.

Michael J. Hurd, Daily Dose of Reason

Welfare State

Over the past decade, California has made a number of significant reforms to its criminal justice system that not only made important steps toward turning around a deeply troubled prison system but retained voters’ support on the 2020 ballot. Now the state is implementing a set of reforms to its juvenile justice system that, while low‐​profile, are set to replace California’s historically flawed state Division of Juvenile Justice (DJJ).

The plan to close DJJ reflects two important realities: California imprisons fewer juveniles than before, and the cost of incarcerating those who remain is unsustainable (almost $300,000 per person). There are causes for not only optimism about the reforms, but to think that they could be a model for other states.

As Governor Newsom’s original proposal noted, juvenile detention facilities at the county level have more than enough space to accommodate offenders currently held in state facilities, and housing offenders in county facilities allows them more access to their families and home communities, who can be important resources in the rehabilitation process. DJJ, on the other hand, has a higher recidivism rate than California’s adult prison system does, and has failed to eliminate perennial reports of abuses.

Governor Newsom and the legislature took the first steps toward closing DJJ in last year’s legislative session, passing SB 823, and added further details this year with SB 92. These bills started the process of zeroing out DJJ’s population by barring it from accepting most new inmates after July 1, 2021, and transferring any remaining inmates to their home counties by July 1, 2023. SB 823 would also create a Juvenile Justice Realignment Block Grant program to fund county‐​level services for the children who would have otherwise been wards of DJJ. Alongside the Juvenile Justice Block Grant, SB 823 created the Office of Youth and Community Restoration (OYCR) to collect data from counties and use this data to identify best practices and policy recommendations.

California’s plan to close DJJ includes several provisions that will help ensure that the reforms amount to an improvement rather than an exercise in bureaucratic buck‐​passing:

  • Collecting data to evaluate counties’ performance
  • Providing a resource with best practices so counties know what works
  • Ensuring accountability and maintaining oversight through the block grant program

SB 823 established new data collection requirements and the requirement to make data publicly available online. This system will collect, compile, and publish data from California’s 58 counties, which is necessary for transparency and for outside researchers and watchdogs to understand and constructively critique the new system. Too often, California’s 58 county governments collect or store important data separately, making it hard for citizens to understand how — and how well — their government is working. One example of this is data about the recidivism rate for county juvenile justice programs, which (in contrast to DJJ’s statistics) are decentralized and hard to find.

The data collection requirement could also enable counties to experiment with new, innovative models that could prove to be a significant improvement over existing systems. San Francisco is one such example, with its plan to close its juvenile detention facility and replace it with home‐​like rehabilitative centers. If San Francisco’s experiment is a success, and admittedly, there is no guarantee that it will, this reform should be adopted by other counties.

California’s juvenile justice reforms also include an important potential incentive for counties to adopt best practices compiled by the state and work toward improving their systems. The new Juvenile Justice Block Grant takes roughly the amount of money spent on DJJ and provides it to counties toward their spending on juvenile offenders who would previously have been sent to DJJ. Notably, this makes realignment budget‐​neutral relative to the previous system. The block grant program, in exchange for providing additional funding to counties, imposes additional reporting requirements, and requires counties to provide their plans for using the funds, with these plans published by OYCR. To ensure that the block grant money is spent responsibly, California should condition funding on counties’ juvenile justice systems being adequate, instead of turning approval and funding into a formality as in other policy areas. California policymakers have not only the opportunity but the duty to incentivize counties to adopt evidence‐​based practices to improve outcomes for youths in the justice system, as well as to collect the data from which to derive these best practices.

There are, of course, reasons for optimism about California’s juvenile justice reforms to remain measured. This is not the first time that California transferred responsibilities from a scandal‐​ridden state agency to its 58 counties. In large part due to a 1991 reform law, California transferred the responsibility for providing mental health services from the state level to the counties. At the least, this parallel should inspire great care in the plan for juvenile justice realignment: mental health realignment was flawed in many ways, and California’s mental health system has serious shortcomings.

Juvenile justice realignment, on the other hand, has a number of provisions that allay some of the concerns about parallels with mental health realignment. After mental health realignment, despite some measure of legislative tinkering, the reform program strayed from its intended goals. After California voters approved a new tax that provided a designated funding stream for mental health services, a state audit found that county mental health agencies had poor processes for spending the funding, and that they received insufficient oversight from the state. In juvenile justice, on the other hand, the state is maintaining the capacity for oversight through OCYR, and a capacity to hold counties accountable, through the juvenile justice block grant authorized by the legislature instead of mandated by a ballot initiative.

It’s also necessary to give DJJ credit where it is due: leading up to the Covid pandemic, DJJ made reforms intended to shift the facilities to a more rehabilitative model, taking Missouri’s juvenile justice system as an example. These reforms provided a degree of momentum in the right direction, and California can maintain this momentum at the county level by putting its Missouri Model plan in writing, and providing it to counties as a recommendation. Of course, as noted above, San Francisco has its own plan for shifting to a more rehabilitative model, as does Los Angeles (although Los Angeles’ plan has already encountered problems). But the shift from state to county‐​level responsibility for serious or violent juvenile offenders must continue the progress that DJJ appeared to be making, however limited.

Some of the causes for caution are more structurally ingrained than a realignment plan, however detailed, can address. In some ways, California’s county governments are designed in a way that makes them susceptible to poor governance. Counties (with the combined city and county of San Francisco being the only notable exception) are governed by Boards of Supervisors, who are, in general, lower‐​profile than mayors, but farther removed than city council members. Without a centralized authority or comprehensible separation of powers at the county level, voters can have trouble understanding who to blame for poor management — a major obstacle when deciding whether to throw out lousy elected officials.

This governance problem with California’s county governments underlines the importance of a robust state‐​level source of oversight to spur transparency and good management. But it would be, to some extent, naive to expect proper oversight: the only guarantee of decent government management is an active, educated bloc of voters who care deeply about the issues and hold elected officials accountable. Coincidentally, voters are paying more attention to criminal justice — and considering more drastic reforms — than they have before. While the center of today’s criminal justice reform movement is policing, the movement can expand its impact by demanding a new focus on rehabilitation, or at least good management, at county juvenile justice agencies.

Admittedly, transferring responsibility from the state to counties has a checkered history, but California has an opportunity to change that, and this set of reforms has meaningful details designed to avoid possible pitfalls. The stakes are high not only for the 800 young people locked up by the Division of Juvenile Justice, but for California’s adult prison system and the nation’s emerging prison abolition movement: these new reforms are too important to get wrong.

Federal Debt is Soaring

Federal government debt rose from $3.3 trillion in 2001, to $10.1 trillion in 2011, to $23.0 trillion in 2021. Under current law, the CBO expects debt to rise to $35.8 trillion by 2031. If Congress passes the spending increases in the Democratic budget resolution, debt will rise to $40.1 trillion by 2031, according to CRFB. This is “debt held by the public,” meaning federal borrowing from domestic and foreign creditors.

The chart scales the debt to the number of U.S. households. Debt per household under the Democratic plan would rise from $179,082 in 2021 to $288,047 by 2031. That debt is not like mortgage debt where households have a hard asset to match what they owe. Rather, it is the government going on a consumption spending spree and putting $288,047 on each household’s credit card. That is because just 5 percent of federal spending is for hard assets such as highways and fighter jets. By ballooning the debt today, politicians are imposing large and rising burdens on households tomorrow.

Here are further observations:

  • Federal debt today is 103 percent of GDP and would rise to 119 percent by 2031 under the Democratic spending plan. That level of debt is higher than the 31 percent reached in the Civil War, 33 percent reached in World War I, and 106 percent reached in World War II. Today we are not at war, and politicians show no interest in paying down the debt as they did after past wars.
  • Bill Clinton was the last president to balance the budget, but the chronic red ink began in the 1930s with the rise of Keynesian economics and the invention of auto‐​pilot entitlement programs. Deficit spending has been supercharged in recent years by the rise in global capital markets, which makes vast borrowing much easier. From 1791 to 1930, federal politicians balanced the budget 68 percent of the years, but since 1931 they have balanced it only 13 percent of the years.
  • America’s combined federal and state government debt in 2021 at 141 percent of GDP is far higher than the OECD average of 100 percent of GDP, and much higher than debt levels in Australia, Denmark, Ireland, Israel, Germany, Korea, the Netherlands, New Zealand, and Sweden.
  • Rising debt may trigger an economic crisis with soaring interest rates and falling output. Greece’s debt crisis a decade ago created long‐​lasting damage, and the country’s real income per capita is still down one‐​quarter from its pre‐​crisis level. America’s government debt today is about the same size relative to GDP as was Greece’s before its debt crisis.
  • With the Democratic spending plan, federal interest costs will top $1 trillion a year by 2031. But that assumes the CBO baseline projection of interest rates rising only to 1.9 percent on short‐​term federal debt and 3.2 percent on long‐​term debt. I think that is a rosy scenario. The risk is on the upside. If interest rates rise more than projected, it will have a huge budget impact because the debt is so large.

Chris Edwards

Ayn Rand: on Poverty

If concern for human poverty and suffering were one’s primary motive, one would seek to discover their cause. One would not fail to ask: Why did some nations develop, while others did not? Why have some nations achieved material abundance, while others have remained stagnant in subhuman misery? History and, specifically, the unprecedented prosperity-explosion of the nineteenth century, would give an immediate answer: capitalism is the only system that enables men to produce abundance—and the key to capitalism is individual freedom.

Poverty is not a mortgage on the labor of others—misfortune is not a mortgage on achievement—failure is not a mortgage on success—suffering is not a claim check, and its relief is not the goal of existence—man is not a sacrificial animal on anyone’s altar nor for anyone’s cause—life is not one huge hospital.