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Marakesh π“…¦
dace63b00c42e6e017d00dd190a9328386002ff597b841eb5ef91de4f1ce8491
Christ Follower β€’ Truth Seeker β€’ Freedom Lover The US #GovtIsTheProblem

> Do not be intimidated by the political caste or by parasites who live off the state. Do not surrender to a political class that only wants to stay in power and retain its privileges. You are social benefactors. You are heroes. You are the creators of the most extraordinary period of prosperity we’ve ever seen.

> Let no one tell you that your ambition is immoral. If you make money, it’s because you offer a better product at a better price, thereby contributing to general wellbeing.

>

> Do not surrender to the advance of the state. **The state is not the solution. The state is the problem itself.** You are the true protagonists of this story and rest assured that as from today, Argentina is your staunch and unconditional ally.

>

> Thank you very much and long live freedom, dammit!

[–Javier Milei, speech to the World Economic Forum](https://www.eurasiareview.com/18012024-speech-of-argentinas-president-javier-milei-at-davos-transcript/)

#Milei

"Now what is it that we mean when we talk about libertarianism? And let me quote the words of the greatest authority on freedom in Argentina, Professor Alberto Benegas Lynch Jr, who says that #libertarianism is the unrestricted respect for the life project of others based on the principle of non-aggression, in defence of the right to life, liberty and property."

Ok, I just discovered this version on Nostr and will listen to the rest of this speech this way. Hopefully he gets animated and starts shouting and shaking his fist! πŸ˜„

nostr:nevent1qqsttt2yma4reql9ayyyv0wjnv05mghfs7la00lcpasgc30ks4j7rrspz4mhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuerpd46hxtnfduhsyg8vmfpj3s9mj2w29pdyya30fllavvkntr4yss0ukapykugpy78swgpsgqqqqqqszq3m67

"The state is financed through tax and taxes are collected coercively. Or, can any one of us say that they voluntarily pay taxes? Which means that the state is financed through coercion, and that the higher the tax burden the higher the coercion and the lower the freedom."

–Javier Milei, President of Argentina

https://youtu.be/4z44XP4u9Xs?si=-WxlxliRGyE4t1sH

#Milei

nostr:nevent1qqsx33e7ul4ffz29zv5ta8cajtasxm0c9pt99g96rtm4m20ra2sw0dspr4mhxue69uhkummnw3ezucnfw33k76twv4ezuum0vd5kzmp0qgsgsrukw9z6ke448kwuy7w5f2tj9w58t53jculnmars0508n3pndnsrqsqqqqqpwhtzus

Are you being the change you want to see in the world?

Love those movies. I heard an intense podcast some time ago where the interviewee was an investigative journalist in Europe who alleged to have seen the kinds of things said in this "Mel Gibson" quote and who was supposedly trying to expose this publicly.

I figured the Mel quote could be fake; I am more questioning the source of nostr:npub1e873s875jdfqamskc305g75td6zg8vj239282slwjew762xd758snwekmz's statement...

Reminds me of a quote I read yesterday from Edmund Burke:

"The use of force alone is but temporary. It may subdue for a moment; but it does not remove the necessity of subduing again: and a nation is not governed, which is perpetually to be conquered."

Second Speech on Conciliation with America (1775)

Wow! I wonder if there have been any graphic novels or other comic books made using Midjourney or other computer generated images like this? That would look so much better than the cartoonish line drawings I grew up with in comic books.

#ChurchSign say:

"Love more in '24"

And can you believe Lincoln once said this, given his later history?

β€œAny people anywhere, being inclined and having the power, have the right to rise up and shake off the existing government and form a new one that suits them better. …Nor is this right confined to cases in which the whole people of an existing government may choose to exercise it. Any portion of such people that can may revolutionize and make their own of so much of the territory as they inhabit.”

–Abraham Lincoln, in an 1848 speech in the U.S. House of Representatives, supporting the war with Mexico and the secession of Texas

I suppose "having the power" is the operative phrase 😞

Replying to Avatar jimmysong

On Lincoln

----------------

Lincoln wasn't a good president. He wasn't even a mediocre president. He was a terrible president. He suspended individual rights. He massively expanded the government through money printing. He led millions of people to their deaths. All for power.

What we learn in school is that he was the great emancipator, ending slavery and winning a war that had to be won. That he was some man of genius and virtue, thrust upon the national stage at the right time to progress history.

Such is the result of the history being written by the winners. Similar hagiographies have been written about FDR and even Woodrow Wilson. But like the news, much of history is spun to manipulate us. Most of conventional history is fake and even a cursory study of what actually happened is enough to make you question how virtuous they were, and why they made the decisions they did. Almost always, you find that they were opportunistic cowards that did what would cost them least, even at the expense of the people they affected.

History is a tricky topic because the counterfactuals are always very speculative. But what we can judge is the values played out in actions taken, and in that sense, Lincoln was pretty terrible. He suspended habeas corpus, he cheated in border state elections to keep them in the union, and he massively, massively expanded the scope, power and size of government through inflationary theft.

It's hard to imagine what things were like before Lincoln, because before him, was a string of single-term Jacksonian, hard-money Democrat presidents. This was back when liberal meant being for personal liberty and that era of government before 1860 was insanely small, about 2% of the GDP. He would oversee an unprecedented expansion which would take the government to 20%.

Much of it, was, of course, because of the Civil War, and the popular narrative is that he needed to wage that war to end slavery. And yes, the issue was a major one in that era, but the elimination of slavery was more of a lucky by-product than an aim. His main goal, as he stated over and over again and as acted out in his policies, was to preserve the union, not to end slavery.

In preserving the union, he destroyed the idea that states had the right of secession, he weakened the idea of natural rights and he stole through inflation and sent many to their deaths. The centralizing of the federal government, the behemoth that we live with today began during his heyday.

The main thing that preserved his legacy was his assassination. Had a couple of battles gone the wrong way in 1863 and 1864, he wouldn't have been re-elected and he would have disappeared into the annals of history as a political amateur that lucked into the presidency in 1860 and screwed things up for 4 years. Instead, he was re-elected, assassinated and the horrific legacy of reconstruction was blamed on others. In short, he died at the right time.

There are those, of course, that will argue that Lincoln would have done things differently, and that he would have been more merciful to the south and rebuilt things as to spare them the suffering. But that's inconsistent with everything he did. Like most politicians he was a power grabber and he did what was politically expedient and not what was virtuous or right. He suspended habeas corpus (needing a reason to arrest and detain people)! He made generals do what would make him look good so he would get elected, not what would save the most lives or win the war the quickest. He created the greenback, which was a form of money printing to finance the war. And he spent an insane sum of other peoples' money through implicit and explicit taxes to "preserve the union."

Ending slavery, of course, was a big deal and in the annals of history, it's a dark mark in the history of the US that the institution survived so long. And yes, the Civil War did end it, but that wasn't the objective of the war itself.

Being Republican, he had a large Radical wing that he had to deal with and they wanted abolition, and later full voting rights for blacks. Because the south had seceded, they had the votes to pass the constitutional amendments, though only toward the end of the war when it was clear the north would win. That was a political expediency that ended up defining his legacy. But really, it's his biographers and historians of the winning side that have spun him to be a hero, when he was anything but.

The big flaw of Lincoln is that he created an unnecessary war that cost millions of lives and billions of dollars, one that set back the US by decades. Letting the south secede and revoking the Fugitive Slave Act would have ended the institution just as well, for much less cost. And this isn't idle speculation. Brazil had the second largest slave population in the 19th century that was whittled down quickly because the slaves had northern provinces where they could escape. The price of slaves dropped dramatically and soon, the institution itself was destroyed through economic means, not martial ones.

What's worse about Lincoln's legacy is that he set a precedent for federal power that brought forth the progressive era and eventually to Woodrow Wilson and FDR. The centralization of federal power began with him.

Lincoln wasn't a good president. But the history is written by the winners and they have made a secular saint out of him.

A few #memes illustrating some of these great points:

#m=image%2Fjpeg&dim=634x864&blurhash=_LFN*xiIAa%24zbvWXSf*0VroMbYWVR%2Csmb%7BnOxGbbWVR-xDxGaxWBbbf5oKjZr%3DWCodWXWVsmWXaKoLn%7Ej%5Ba%23oJWVWVjsslRkkCs.WBOEsAs%3AS2jboeWBWEj%3Fs%3AR%2BfkspWB&x=84e8ff654068fbe6d2e7bda66a1f065822a13019d09f5dae4d3f907bdd196b1c

#m=image%2Fjpeg&dim=480x578&blurhash=_JDvl%40M%7BWBIU%25Mofx%5B%25MWBt7t7ayf7Rj%7Eqt7Rjt7RjRjj%5B-%3Bt7ofRjV%5Bt7of-%3BWBaytQofWBWB-%3BWBt7ofM%7BRjWBRjofWBWBj%5Bt7xuxuWBWBayofayRjIUayj%5Bj%5Bj%5Bofay&x=62fe97fcdefcbed1a71e03f2e59528c1101b86c9a8fb3a93cfcad3d29f7001e5

#m=image%2Fjpeg&dim=220x275&blurhash=_EHem_IVau9GRi-%3ARi%7Ept6t7a%7DaxoeWAS-%25L9Gt7obRkRjohM%7C%25LxtWCM%7Coc%25NM%7CxuxtIVWBj%3FM%7CxtM%7CR*xuoeR*M_ay%25MRkt7j%40a%23xtWCM%7CofR*oea%23I9t7WFNG%25Mt7of&x=dd7c6d91f16b3cb5b51c8408129e39f4e5b77ac93113766d6f8878df18e84a62

#m=image%2Fjpeg&dim=480x444&blurhash=%3BGB%7CB5D*4okC-%3AM%7BIVxtof0KxuxtoLRjofaxWCjst8t7%25LWBIot7t7WBRj%7EVM%7BIUkCt7RjWWayj%5BIpxtxtofRjj%5BWBofjsRjRkt8Rjt7kCRjt6WC-%3Aj%5BIUt7RkWBt7RjoeIVofxaf6a%23oej%3Fayj%5B&x=0b6420026c1439ec64e80ee12096adf13c589f99d8f8e304cd74469db18795d2

#m=image%2Fjpeg&dim=872x960&blurhash=%7BCL%3B%7EDvw02-14q%24vM%7DRl01R-t6WEt6bIayj%5B8wyCR-x%5Dfmt7t7WC02WFfhWYt5a%23ofofHX%25zRn%25fWFxuWCof0I8%7CnfDks*Myt6V%5B0ZMxoGICxpIVoeWAMHx%5BWYxuflt7afofIWWBj%5BRkt6afj%5Ds%3A&x=0224fa738bf19fb0507ac55510bd662842c386fb60dd1f0c36168d536755fd7a

This man went to his execution maintaining this:

> β€œGod raised up this man [Jesus] on the third day and caused him to be seen, not by all the people, but by us whom God appointed as witnesses, who ate and drank with him after he rose from the dead.”

>

–Simon Peter, quoted in *The Acts of the Apostles* 10:40-41, The Bible

#Bible #Biblestr #Jesus