240 – Tin Tin / Captive consent / Voting is not the answer

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Mar 082012
 

240 - Tin Tin - 168x100

 
 
 
 

Tintin – A Brief History Of A European Cultural Landmark
Tintin The Movie (2011) – Spielberg Does It Right
Captive Consent – Defending Zero As A Standard Of Excellence
Let’s Vote To Protect Ourselves From Voters

231 – It’s a not so wonderful life – when lived for others / Limericks

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Dec 222011
 

 
 
 
 

It’s A Not-So-Wonderful Life – When Lived For Others
Those Daring Thumbnails Of Poetry: Limericks
– Just Right is the name of our show,
– And for this year, it’s now time to go.
—– We trust you’ll return
—– In the new year, to learn
– About freedom, about life, and what’s so.

139 – Avatar – a critique / Foreign aid / Prorogation / Philanthropy

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Feb 182010
 

Avatar

 
 
 
 

Avatar – A Pandora’s Box Of Subjectivity
Helping Haiti Till It Hurts
No More Aid For Haiti – The Continuing Curse Of Foreign Aid
There’s No Rogue In Prorogue
Philanthropy Misanthropy

129 – Star Trek: A philosphical and cultural overview

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Nov 192009
 

Star Trek

 
 
 
 

Star Trek Bloopers – Where No One Should Go – Ever
Mostly Right – The Prime Directive, Individual Rights, The Hero – Star Trek’s Legacy
“Boldly Going Back To Beginning” – Star Trek 2009

014 – All Suspects Guilty at City Hall

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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.

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