Just Right

Just Right is a weekly shortwave radio show. Hosts, Bob Metz and Robert Vaughan analyze issues from a viewpoint of individual rights, freedom, and capitalism.

015 – Paul Lambert: Back from our future?

 Comments Off on 015 – Paul Lambert: Back from our future?
Jul 262007
 

Paul Lambert

 

Paul Lambert, Just Right’s Euro-correspondent, discuses Sweden. Is it really the socialist paradise that many claim it is?

014 – All Suspects Guilty at City Hall

 Comments Off on 014 – All Suspects Guilty at City Hall
Jul 192007
 

Sicko

Municipal politics in London exposes the absurdity of government overreach. City Hall launches a half-million-dollar training program for all employees on “respect” and “woman abuse,” prompted by a 1999 incident long past. Taxpayers foot the bill while basic civility should already be expected from those hired to serve the public. Spending public money to rehabilitate offenders on the public payroll amounts to rewarding bad behavior instead of simply firing those responsible.

Garbage collection policies reveal similar nonsense. New bag limits and weight restrictions punish conscientious residents who already recycle diligently, while ignoring core service improvements. Conscientious citizens struggle under arbitrary rules imposed during extended pickup delays, yet administrators justify restrictions by citing other cities—hardly a principled argument.

Global warming debates shift to economics, where carbon taxes emerge as the latest forced intervention. Proponents promise revenue-neutral shifts that somehow fund everything without consequences, but reality demonstrates otherwise. Artificially hiking energy prices shrinks economies and lowers living standards; no free lunch exists when governments manipulate markets through coercion disguised as “pricing signals.”

Healthcare discussions highlight dangers of single-payer systems. Private insurance faces legitimate criticism for claim denials, yet replacing it with government as both provider and referee guarantees even less accountability. Countries experimenting with fully socialized models now move toward privatization, while advocates here push in the opposite direction. Dental care proposals follow the same flawed logic—promising “free” services that inevitably ration access and inflate costs.

Marijuana prohibition persists as one of the most irrational policies on the books. Canadians consume at rates far exceeding global averages, even surpassing nations where the drug is tolerated. Criminalization creates black markets and inflated prices for a plant that grows virtually anywhere, while legalization with reasonable taxation offers a far more rational approach.

These issues all connect through one common thread: governments assuming control over individual choices, always with unintended consequences that justify yet more control. Recognizing this pattern remains just right.

Transcript Donate

013 – Disarming Citizens Empowers Tyrants | Jim Montag

 Comments Off on 013 – Disarming Citizens Empowers Tyrants | Jim Montag
Jul 122007
 

Knotted Gun 
Gun ownership remains a fundamental right that no law-abiding citizen should ever surrender. In conversation with Jim Montag, operator of Great Lakes Guns and Knives shows, the evidence clearly demonstrates that gun control fails to reduce crime while disarmament invites tyranny.

Statistics reveal the stark reality. Britain’s near-total handgun ban in the late 1990s nearly doubled gun crimes within a decade, while violent crime now leads Western nations. London surpasses even New York in brutality, despite citizens being defenseless. Meanwhile, American states expanding concealed carry rights see crime drop, as criminals fear armed victims far more than distant police.

History offers no exceptions: every totalitarian regime first disarms its population to prevent resistance. Canada treads this dangerous path with ever-tighter restrictions that render self-defense nearly impossible—locked guns, separate ammunition, and proposals to flee one’s own home during invasion. Such laws protect criminals, not citizens.

Lawful gun owners prove overwhelmingly responsible, supporting harsh penalties for violent offenders while opposing registries that burden the innocent. The real solution targets criminals through mandatory sentencing, not disarming the peaceful.

Defending the individual right to bear arms stands just right against both street thugs and state overreach.

Note: Jim Montag passed away on March 24, 2008.

Transcript Clips & Credits Donate

012 – Gas Subsidies Ignite Rage In Iran

 Comments Off on 012 – Gas Subsidies Ignite Rage In Iran
Jul 052007
 

Iranian Gas 

We continue our examination of economic interventions and their unintended consequences, beginning with Iran’s fuel crisis. Despite being the world’s fourth-largest oil exporter, Iran imposes gasoline rationing because decades of subsidies have distorted markets, discouraged domestic refining, and fueled massive imports. When authorities recently raised prices and limited supply, citizens responded by setting gas stations ablaze—an entirely predictable reaction to artificial scarcity created by government controls. We warned months ago that similar price-notification schemes would provoke panic buying; Iran’s experience confirms that intervening in markets only exacerbates shortages and unrest.

We also highlight former chess champion Gary Kasparov’s warnings about Vladimir Putin. Kasparov rightly observes that Western leaders grant democratic legitimacy to authoritarian regimes through incremental concessions. True freedom erodes step by step, just as it does when citizens accept minor encroachments on their rights.

Closer to home, we scrutinize Ontario’s upcoming referendum on electoral reform. The proposed mixed-member proportional system promises “fairer” results and greater choice, yet it merely dilutes individual votes by introducing party lists and expanding the legislature. Citizens trade direct influence over local representatives for partial sway over appointed list members—a classic shell game that weakens accountability while entrenching party power.

Finally, we reflect on the deeper peril of government “doing good.” As Isabel Paterson observed, most harm arises from well-intentioned people pursuing virtuous ends through coercive means. Genuine charity requires voluntary action; when government confiscates resources to redistribute them, it replaces benevolence with force, impoverishing both donor and recipient.

These examples demonstrate why individual freedom and market principles remain essential for prosperity and justice—a perspective that is just right.

Transcript

011 – Junk Science Kills Conservatism

 Comments Off on 011 – Junk Science Kills Conservatism
Jun 282007
 

Global Warming

 

We delve into the pervasive clutter that fills our minds today—junk science and junk politics—drawing from recent discussions and insights that challenge the status quo. Following up on our previous guests, such as Anthony Verberkmos from Indy Media, we examine how anti-globalism and anti-war sentiments often align with the mainstream rather than true radicalism, revealing biases against America and Israel that ignore moral distinctions in conflicts. We highlight articles from the London Free Press, where Licia Corbella praises Israel as a beacon in the Middle East, and Michael Coren exposes the fault lines in blaming the West for Palestinian ills.

Turning to history, we explore how right makes might, as exemplified by the Roman Republic’s principles of representation and voluntary contributions that built its empire, contrasting with today’s moral relativism. We also address Ontario’s coal-fired plants, noting Tom Harris‘s warnings against Premier Dalton McGuinty’s closure plans, as government data shows air pollutants declining while ozone remains steady—proving coal can be clean and efficient.

The death of conservatism looms large, with columnists like Ian Urquhart and Andrew Coyne critiquing John Tory’s vague platform that mirrors liberal spending without real cuts. We recall Ayn Rand‘s 1960 obituary for conservatism, which dares not defend capitalism, the true system empowering individuals over politicians.

In our focus on junk science, we feature Terence Corcoran‘s anecdotes from Junk Science Week, debunking distorted studies and exaggerated risks. Timothy Patterson‘s research on sunspots correlates with climate cycles, showing the sun brighter now than in 8,000 years, shattering CO2 myths. Václav Klaus urges resistance to environmental hysteria that threatens freedom through global planning.

As we confront these deceptions, we advocate for objective truth in a way that is just right.

Clips & Credits