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Submitted by Bill St. Clair on Mon, 05 Jun 2000 12:00:00 GMT
Imagination Does not Exist

You should come close to me tonight, wayfarer
For I will be celebrating you.

Your beauty still causes me madness,
Keeps the neighbors complaining
When I start shouting in the middle of the night
Because I can't bear all this joy.

I will be giving birth to suns.
I will be holding forests upside down
Gently shaking soft animals from trees and burrows
Into my lap.

What you conceive as imagination
Does not exist for me.

Whatever you can do in a dream
Or on your mind-canvas

My hands can pull - alive- from my coat pocket.
But let's not talk about my divine world.

For what I most want to know
Tonight is:

All about
You.

The Gift, Daniel Ladinsky

Kenneth Smith at Reason Online - Loaded Coverage: How the news media miss the mark on the gun issue: Guns are used a lot more often to prevent crime than they are to commit it, usually without a shot being fired. But you wouldn't know that listening to the news media. [picks]

Joel on Software - Strategy Letter III: Let Me Go Back! To win customers, you've got to eliminate all the barriers to entry. One of the barriers to entry is a perceived inability to opt out. Good examples: Excel vs Lotus 123, PayMyBills.com stealth lock-in, Barnes & Noble's couches and chairs, ISPs should offer mail-forwarding if you opt out. [latte]

Angus Glashier is running his picture of the lovely Catherine Zeta Jones again today. Yum!

There's a new issue of The Libertarian Enterprise. Choice morsels:

  • Letter from Mark Rogerson: incensed by the abolition of the fourth and fifth amendments contained in the Methamphetamine Anti-Proliferation Act, Mr. Rogerson proposes shutting down most of the federal government. Good idea.
  • Bill Gates Needs Ritalin by Michael Haggard - wonderful exposition of why gifted kids are now drugged with Ritalin and why this is the same reason that the justice department decided to destroy Microsoft.
    As I sat with one particular child who is being pushed into government drug control (less commonly known as chemical restraint) I considered the school's motivation. We played a two hour long, complicated game in a room full of human distraction. He never became distracted in our two hours. In fact, he showed better concentration than I did. Through conversation he proved intelligent and imaginative.

    But I saw what the school feared in him. He asked questions. He wondered why things were so. Life, to him, was to be understood and enjoyed - not accepted and endured.

  • Rediscovering the Fourth Amendment by Vin Suprynowicz - This was Vin's 4/21 editorial: Pat-Down Search. Worth a re-read. Applauds the supreme court for, this time, upholding the fourth amendment in overturning the conviction of Dewayne Bond. Mr Bond's bag of methamphetamine was discovered when a Border Patrol agent felt his luggage at an "immigration checkpoint" (he was travelling on a bus from California to Arkansas).
    As little as 50 years ago, American movie audiences could be expected to hiss and boo as the Nazi Gestapo agent was shown insinuating himself through the passenger cars of some European train, ominously hissing, "Papers, please?"

    Only in totalitarian police states (Americans then understood) were citizens subject to random searches -- or any requirement that they show their "papers" at the mere whim of a suspicious government official.

    ...

    If the War on Drugs cannot co-exist with the Bill of Rights, then it is time to call a halt to the War on Drugs for that reason, alone.

  • Al & Bill vs Electrolux by Minority Mike - compares his mother's Electrolux vacuum cleaner to algore and Komrade Klinton.

Dan Dall at Sierra Times - When do Rights become Privileges? If we require a license to keep and bear arms, we have converted a God given right into a government given privelege. And what leviathan gives, leviathan can take away. What's next, a license to speak or to create a web page or to go to church? [sierra]

Dr. Michael S. Brown at Sierra Times - Canadian Gunfight Headed For Dramatic Showdown: Canada may give us a preview of what would happen if America tried to register guns. Naw, it'll be much bloodier here. [sierra]

Andre Goldman at Laissez Faire City Times - Justice Without Force, Part 3: Parts 1 and 2 described the ideas. This part goes into detail. Includes how to establish free-market criminal law as well as commercial law. Also includes a longish screed on why you should want a free-market justice system, and answers a few of the obvious "I don't want it to work" questions. He was preaching to the choir in my case, so I can't tell how well he did. You'll have to find that our for yourself.

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