Sunday, August 12, 2012

Punishment vs. Reward

Punishment vs. Reward: Articles about how two major companies treat potential and existing customers produce good examples of the free market promoting good will.

First, to get the negative example out of the way, here's how one Visa customer reacted to the company, as an Olympic sponsor, securing the right to be the only credit provider to attendees of the games. (This made it impossible for him to use another card that offered him better terms in Europe, and it leaves cash as the only option for non-customers.)
... If you've never been to such an event it's hard to imagine how huge the venues are, and once you entered a stadium in the morning, you're not allowed to exit and return with your ticket. Which practically means that once you're inside, you can either use Visa or cash, that's it. ...

... Getting a credit card is not something you do in a minute, certainly not in a foreign country. So Visa couldn't really expect international visitors holding other cards to actually switch to Visa on the spot, right?
...

[W]hat could Visa do? Again I'm not an expert on credit card marketing, but ... Visa could just appeal to Visa owners by giving them something. A discount for using Visa. A special gift for buying with Visa above some amount. Whatever. As long as you're giving something to your customers, and not taking away something from those who aren't.
Roee Adler's take-home is this: "If you want people to like you, give them something. If you want people to hate you, take something away from them."

Moving to the positive example. we see how cloud storage pioneer Dropbox used small freebies to both educate and expand its customer base:
The real magic happens once the user has already installed Dropbox and signed up for an account. In order to better explain the service and provide the user with authentic, personal use cases, the Get Started page includes a list of tasks essential to the Dropbox experience. The tasks include items like "Install Dropbox on other computers you use" and "Share a folder with friends and colleagues" -- fundamental activities which might not be obvious when explained in a video or tour. To incentivize completion of the list, Dropbox offers users an additional 250 MB of storage for finishing the tasks.

This solution is much more elegant than simply forcing users to sit through instructions. For one thing, it offers them a choice; nobody is forced to go through the steps, but most people will anyway in order to gain the reward. Furthermore, the reward is intrinsically linked to the product -- it isn't a tangential incentive like a badge, but rather more of the product itself. Rewarding appropriate use of a product with more of the same product is simple and elegant.
What a stark contrast: Visa annoys potential and existing customers by making an obstacle of itself, while Dropbox uses a few well-placed inducements to get customers to overcome a learning curve. Each company has competitors. Which will approach will attract more business?

-- CAV

Looming Defeat for "High Speed" Rail?

Looming Defeat for "High Speed" Rail?: George Will maintains that Californians have noticed that high-speed rail keeps costing more and more, may remember its original price tag, and might even apply common sense at the ballot box come November. 
In 2008, Californians passed an initiative authorizing $9.95 billion in bonds to build what they were told would be a $33 billion high-speed rail system. California, constantly lurching from one budget crisis to a worse one, could not nearly afford even that, and soon the price was re-estimated at about $100 billion. Not to worry, said Gov. Jerry Brown -- the real price will be only $68.5 billion. Why? Partly because it will be less than bullet-like, not requiring extra-expensive roadbed.
The Obama administration has offered a $3.3 billion subsidy for track construction, but the project is already way over budget and the original funding measure forbids operating subsidies. On top of this:
California's voters evidently understand that Washington's $3.3 billion is spending for the purpose of committing Sacramento to much greater spending: Polls show that 59 percent would now reject the project they authorized.
Will notes further that Governor Jerry Brown continues to back this rail "plan", which a majority of voters may feel they didn't sign up for, and, for that purpose is actually backing "temporary" income tax hikes on the wealthy and sales taxes for everyone. Will holds that even California voters won't buy this at election time.

We'll see.

But even if Will proves not to be a mere optimist on that score, too many still imagine that central planning can work, as evidenced by the rail opponent he cites, who nevertheless favors high speed rail "done right". So long as too many voters think that doing high speed rail "right" involves anything other than a private company building and operating it for profit -- and at a financial risk to nobody but themselves -- high speed rail won't get "done right", if it should be done at all.

-- CAV

"The Result of Reasoned Engineering and Thought"

"The Result of Reasoned Engineering and Thought": An interesting video summarizing the challenges the Mars lander had to overcome.  (I wish the whole project had been left in private hands, under private funding; nonetheless it's an impressive accomplishment of reason and technology.)

Communist America?

Communist America?:
When I saw this image on Facebook a few weeks ago, I was utterly aghast. See for yourself:

Communism has been attempted in a multitude of countries around the globe. The result has always been shortages, privation, starvation, labor camps, misery, and death. What kind of evasion must be required to think that the results would be any different in America?!?
Alas, we see the same kinds of evasions from the mainstream progressives and conservatives in America. They demand more spending on welfare programs, even while deficits balloon. They want to stop the drug trade, heedless of the cost to innocent lives and civil liberties. They want stricter immigration laws, even though that makes criminals of hard-working people seeking to improve their lives. They want more government regulation, even at the cost of strangling business. In essence, they continue to advocate policies that they know have failed in the past — and that they should know will only fail in the future.
I love the quip, “Good judgment comes from experience, and experience comes from bad judgment.” Alas, that doesn’t seem to be the way of politics these days. The vast majority of people deeply misunderstand individual rights — or worse, ignore them entirely. Without the guidance offered by those fundamental moral principles, the result can only be one variant of bad judgment after another.
(If you were hoping for an optimistic ending to this post… sorry!)

Liberty on the Rocks Talk in Louisville on Monday

Liberty on the Rocks Talk in Louisville on Monday:
On Monday evening, I’ll be speaking at the Happy Hour of Liberty on the Rocks – Flatirons. The event runs from 6 to 9 pm. It’s at Ralphie’s Sports Tavern at 585 East South Boulder Road, Louisville, Colorado.
Here’s what I’ll discuss:
How to Be Principled about Election Politics
As the 2012 election approaches, many politically-active people are busy stumping for their preferred party and its candidates.  Alas, too many become wrapped up in “party politics,” attacking the opposition as entirely without merit and ignoring the defects on their own side.  They’ve lost sight of what really matters — the principle of individual rights.  The result is ever-worse violations of our rights by politicians of all stripes. It’s time for advocates of liberty to reverse that trend, and Dr. Diana Hsieh will discuss how we can get started.
Dr. Diana Hsieh received her Ph.D in philosophy from the University of Colorado at Boulder in 2009.  Now she focuses on the application of rational principles to the challenges of real life in two weekly internet radio shows.  The live broadcasts happen every Sunday morning and Wednesday evening at PhilosophyInAction.com.
If you’re local, please join us!

2012 Top Sex Bloggers Nominations Open!

2012 Top Sex Bloggers Nominations Open!:
by Jason Stotts
Nominations for the top sex bloggers of 2012 are now open at Between My Sheets.  The nomination process is easy, either go to that page and leave a comment there like “I nominate Jason Stotts of Erosophia (www.JasonStotts.com) for the top 2012 sex bloggers” or some comment to that effect that includes my name, Erosophia’s name, and the url here, or you can tweet to @SweetRori with the same info.  Each of you can vote once and I would really appreciate the vote and the increased visibility for Erosophia.
Last year Erosophia made it into the top 100 sex bloggers in the world at #93 and this year I’d like to make it even higher.
Please take a moment and go and vote for me for the awards.

Mistakes Couples Make about Sex: Philosophy in Action Interview with Diana Hsieh

Mistakes Couples Make about Sex: Philosophy in Action Interview with Diana Hsieh:
by Jason Stotts
Last night I was interviewed on Diana Hsieh’s Blog Talk Radio show Philosophy in Action and we talked for about an hour on issues in sexual ethics and four common mistakes that couples make about sex.  It was really interesting being interviewed.  I’ve been writing for many years now, I’ve presented at multiple conferences, I even (briefly) started a podcast for Erosophia, and yet none of that was the same as someone else interviewing me.  I’m not sure if it was because I wasn’t in charge of the proceedings (since it was Diana’s show) or whether the knowledge that it wsa being recorded for posterity, but honestly I felt a little nervous.  Not in my beliefs or material, mind you.  Rather, just in that I would be able to present my views well in an interview setting and make it interesting.
Happily, I think the show went really well and the discussion was lively and interesting.  Diana later told me that we had over 90 live listeners!  And, so far, the feedback has been very positive.  If you want to listen to the interview yourself, check out this link: “Mistakes Couples Make about Sex.”  I also encourage you to leave feedback here after you listen to the interview, whether positive or negative.  While you’re on Philosophy in Action, you should check out some of Diana’s other episodes.  She does good work and I’m sure that there will be something of value to you there.
I want to thank Diana for having me on Philosophy in Action and hopefully it won’t be the last time.  I had a really good time and it might even have been what I needed to restart the Erosophia Podcast.

Regulation of Property Leads to Censorship

Regulation of Property Leads to Censorship: Is there a correlation between the establishment of a welfare state and a trend towards censorship? Do growing restrictions of freedom of speech (e.g., the notion of "hate speech") occur inevitably with the congealing of a welfare state or an increasing regulation and expropriation of property? Must the expropriation of private property (including money) ultimately lead to the expropriation of one's freedom of speech? Can legalized theft of property ultimately lead to the legalized theft of speech? Are statism and censorship distinct, separate phenomena that tend to converge to establish totalitarianism, or are they inherently partners in same means and ends?

In short: Is there a crucial, fundamental connection between property rights and freedom of speech?

In 1962, novelist-philosopher Ayn Rand observed:

The legal hallmark of a dictatorship [is] preventive law—the concept that a man is guilty until he is proved innocent by the permissive rubber stamp of a commissar or a Gauleiter.

Or of a commissioner, director, or "czar."

No, America does not yet have a dictatorship. Rather, it is governed by myriad satrapies of statist agencies, bureaus, and departments controlling or regulating virtually every realm of human action. Today, virtually every statist law on federal and state books falls into the category of "preventive" law – laws that protect "consumers," laws that protect children, laws that protect investors, laws that protect employees, laws that protect patients. For over a century, as the volume of these laws has swollen to hundreds of thousands of pages of legislation, there have been men of the Left and Right who wish to organize them all under one unified rĂ©gime: A dictatorship.

The McCain-Feingold law (or the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002) that regulates political speech is evidence that, yes, such expropriation or regulation will lead to the regulation or suppression of speech, and ultimately, to across-the-board censorship. Political views expressed by private individuals or organizations through private means (especially in broadcast media) have been barred and later granted limited sanction in court rulings (e.g., Citizens United vs. the FEC). But such suppression is not only blatantly expressed in law, but it also comes in through the back door, as witness the experience of Diana West and the Washington Examiner "spiking" her column. The editor's refusal to run a column by a nationally syndicated writer for unknown, unstated reasons, is not strictly censorship (for the paper is private property), but it does smack of a degree of political correctness that would sanction overt censorship.

The regulation of private property spawned various kinds of mutated offspring. The regulation of political "campaign" speech in which certain entities are prohibited by laws such as the McCain-Feingold law from engaging in "for" or "against" particular candidates or a specific candidate's policies, could be said to be a result of law that regulates advertising.

In the beginning of a slide towards censorship, there may be no speech restrictions on regulated property. The regulation may be intended solely to control product pricing, or sales of certain products to various classes of potential buyers (such as alcohol or cigarettes to "minors"), or places of lawful sale (e.g., of beer in Pennsylvania, and of hard liquor in Virginia).

Mandatory "speech" is another form of censorship or speech regulation, such as on product labels bearing nutritional or compositional information, or restaurant menus that must include calorie information. Cigarette and tobacco packaging must carry warnings about smoking. Medicinal packaging must contain warnings and advisories about dosages. Because of an outrageous settlement from a lawsuit against McDonald's, coffee and other beverage containers served in fast food restaurants carry warnings on the containers that the contents are hot. This is "reverse censorship" because the omission of information has been deemed by a government authority or a court not in the "public interest."

Go to a Wal-Mart and tally up the number of things for sale that carry warning labels. These would include such things as pillows, tools, electrical appliances, toys, and food. While many manufacturers will claim that their warning labels are voluntary for liability reasons, one can be sure that another motive is to preempt government mandatory regulations.

Producers of these products have submitted to regulation as a defensive liability tactic and also to protect themselves from frivolous but expensive lawsuits. Such labels and warnings are ubiquitous in our culture. One wonders why warning labels for books and computer screens have not yet been mandated: "Reading this book or computer screen may lead to impaired vision or blindness."

In 1997, Mary L. Azcuenaga, head of the Federal Trade Commission, was "sorta" for the freedom of speech in advertising, and "sorta" against it:

The Commission has referred to the unfairness doctrine as "the FTC's general law of consumer protection, for which deception is one specific but particularly important application." The concept of unfairness potentially is so expansive that it could include virtually any practice that Commissioners do not like for one reason or another. Because of the potential breadth of unfairness, it is important that the Commission have a well-articulated standard for delineating this authority. Otherwise, the law could result in having the government make choices it thinks are good for consumers, instead of allowing consumers to make decisions for themselves.

The Federal Trade Commission, created in 1914, was another child of President Woodrow Wilson, its statist siblings being the federal income tax and the Federal Reserve Banking System.

Censorship can also take the form of Ad Usum Delphini*, more commonly known as politically correct speech, in which potentially offending terms or phrases are expurgated or substituted with bland or "non-offensive" proxies or euphemisms.

The notions of "hate speech" and "hate crime" are two such offspring of the regulation of political "campaign" speech. One's money – or property – may or may not be used to express one's opinion of a political candidate or his policy, depending on utterly arbitrary rules established by congressmen and at the discretion of policing bureaucrats. Such regulation is the natural result of state regulation of private property (from zoning laws to the composition of your home insulation and electrical wiring). If it was deemed "unfair" or "Illegal" to question a candidate's character and known policies during an election campaign in a privately produced and privately broadcast ad – and depending on the tone of the questioning, it could be deemed "hateful" – it was but a short step to criminalizing "sexist" language, racial epithets, or any other speech considered by the authorities, the courts, and "community standards" as demeaning, discriminatory, defamatory, or just plain "hateful."

Perhaps the most perilous instance of imposing politically correct speech in its own literature is the purging of FBI training documents of all references to Islam and jihad. Minnesota Representative Michele Bachmann – famous for her calling the Obama administration's takeover of General Motors "gangster government" – is also a member of the House Intelligence Committee. She reviewed, under close FBI scrutiny, just what had been done. Creeping Sharia wrote:

“This is truly censorship by our government, the government purging itself of documents,” Bachmann said. “We are not only seeing documents purged. We are seeing trainers purged and we are seeing the FBI library purged.”

The FBI began reviewing all of its counter-terror training materials last September in response to media reports describing controversial statements in documents and lectures, allegedly including the assertion that devout Muslims are more likely to become terrorists.

Islamic and Arab-American groups protested and demanded removal of all references they deemed to be anti-Islamic. Within days, the bureau launched a review to ensure all FBI training materials are factual and do not rely on stereotypes.

To lead its review, the bureau created a five-member advisory panel that includes three outside Islamic experts, whose identities the agency will not disclose publicly. After six months, almost 900 pages of documents were removed from the curriculum. Those are the materials members of Congress have been reviewing, but cannot discuss.

How can a devout Muslim not be "stereotyped"? How can a goose-stepping Nazi not be stereotyped? But stereotyping is not the chief fear of "Islamic experts." The stereotypical Muslim is just a straw man. Rather, it is the education of FBI personnel about the true, barbaric, totalitarian nature of Islam that Islamists and their dhimmi defenders wish to truncate. The FBI is charged with "fighting terrorism," but now is forbidden to identify the terrorists.

The regulation of speech, in our republic, at least in the 19th century, could not have been introduced "cold," that is, without precedents being set in courts, abetted by a co-opted and muckraking press and subtly advanced in incremental stages by a government-dominated education system, both institutions working to inculcate in men's minds the concept of regulated speech as a norm.

Principles of property and speech must first be interpreted in a "populist" vein, reinterpreted, suborned, and ultimately discarded. A nation's citizenry must not be spooked or shocked by overt censorship. It must be "conditioned" to accept it in stages. It must be hypnotized, or anesthetized, slowly introduced to friendly gagging so as not to risk untoward opposition. The citizenry must "educated," that is, indoctrinated with cultural relativism, cultural and moral diversity, subjectivism as a rigid "world view," and reduced to submissive, unquestioning, unexceptional individuals who need the tonic of "self-esteem" to become more productive and contributory members of the collective.

All this would be in conjunction with a number of Supreme Court and other judicial decisions that would serve to obfuscate the "social" purpose of private property and freedom of speech, and ultimately abolish them. (e.g., Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. on falsely shouting "fire" in a theater, leaving the government to determine what is a "false" alarm.)

Observers of these phenomena have attributed them to conspiracies, that is, to "master plans" of conquest conceived and carried out by evil geniuses. This is the easiest and least credible explanation of why statism has grown in the U.S. Certainly there are minds in existence that plot against freedom and freedom of speech. George Soros comes to mind. But such "geniuses" are not true geniuses. Theirs is a feral intelligence that can only detect and exploit the perceived faults and weaknesses of their prey. They can only react, not act. This is also the tactic and game plan of the Muslim Brotherhood in its "civilizational jihad".

The agenda of the current administration is copasetic with that of the Muslim Brotherhood, with similarities in means and ends. The Left wishes to impose secular totalitarianism. The Brotherhood and all its organizational offspring in this country wish to impose totalitarian Sharia law, which is more totalitarian than is Communism or Socialism, that is, it prescribes behavior and approved values from head to toe, from morning to night, from diet to sex, from birth to death. Hassidic Jews also live under similar rules, but there is no deadly retaliation against them if they fail to obey such rules, as there is in Islam, nor have Hassidic Jews declared jihad against the Western cultures they live in. Secular totalitarianism wishes to control men's physical existence. Sharia aims to control both his physical and spiritual existence.

And there is this crucial difference between Islam and Hassidic Judaism: The members of the latter wish to remain as insular as possible, while obeying secular law. Islam also encourages an insular policy, but its intolerable nature impels it to suborn and conquer the very secular society in which it may exist.

Evil, however, is inherently impotent. Why? It derives its alleged strength from its enemy's actual and demonstrable weaknesses. Evil is not self-sustainable. Its basic nature is nihilistic; as a parasite, it does not strive to live, per se, but merely to exist effortlessly for as long as its host is able to survive. If a host perishes from having to sustain a parasite, the parasite will perish with it or seek another host.

The teleological means and end of evil is not life, but negation, in other words – death, or non-existence, or existence without cause – which, in stricter terms, means non-existence, because existence without effort or cause is a metaphysical impossibility.

The United States has left itself vulnerable to the inroads and the debilitating and corrupting cancers of statism and Islam. One can trace this vulnerability all the way back to John Marshall era of the Supreme Court. Many of Marshall's decisions began a long succession of Court rulings that were concessions to statist power and controls over freedom of speech. Aristotle was a philosophical cofounder of the United States, but in virtually no time the philosophical termites of statism began eating away at that foundation.

Upon America's declaration of war against Germany in 1917, the Espionage and Seditions Acts of 1917 and 1918 contained provisions for censoring mail, newspapers, pamphlets and public speaking that directly questioned the war effort or that could be interpreted as materially frustrating or obstructing the war effort.

From that era we traversed to the Obama administration and the reign of Cass Sunstein, the "Regulatory Czar," who has announced his resignation from the administration. Among other things, he wished to criminalize politically incorrect speech and thought:

WND first reported in 2008 Sunstein’s proposal that the government ban “conspiracy theorizing,” including by sending agents to infiltrate websites and chat rooms. Among the beliefs Sunstein would ban, is that the theory of global warming is a deliberate fraud.

WND reported that in his 2009 book, “On Rumors,” he argued websites should be obliged to remove “false rumors” while libel laws should be altered to make it easier to sue for spreading such “rumors.” In the book, Sunstein cited as a primary example of “absurd” and “hateful” remarks, reports by “right-wing websites” alleging an association between President Obama and Weather Underground terrorist William Ayers.

Ostensively, Sunstein is leaving because of new "family obligations" and a chance to oversee a new Harvard Law School program. But it is only fair to speculate that he is leaving because it has been decided that he is a reelection liability. Back at Harvard, however, he will be up to his old tricks. The Washington Post reported:

Sunstein will depart by the end of the month, officials said. He is returning to the job he left, a professorship at Harvard Law School. In addition, Sunstein will head a new Harvard program on “behavioral economics and public policy.” Scholars who study Obama say that Sunstein had a major influence on Obama’s view of government — stressing pragmatism over ideology.

Sunstein’s work emphasizes the importance of consensus, social equality and broad political participation in American democracy. These themes are often echoed in Obama’s speeches.

Also, as a member of the Harvard Law Review editorial board in 1989, Obama helped oversee the publication of one of Sunstein’s most important essays. Titled "Interpreting Statutes in the Regulatory State," it argued that regulations are always open to interpretation based on “culture and context.”

One thing the author of the Post got wrong, as did the Obama scholars: Barack Obama is no pragmatist, but is an ideologue down to his golf clubs.

Remember that in totalitarian countries there is no private property through which citizens may protest or criticize government policies. All means of communications are owned or dominated by the state. This includes such countries as the former Soviet Union (and now Putin's fascist Russia, where successful businessmen are jailed and their property expropriated, and where journalists risk death for reporting the truth), Red China, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Vietnam, North Korea, and even Venezuela. In Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, the press was nominally private (as was much private property, including banks), but controlled by the parties in power. Their editors dared not contradict the Party line in the least without risking arrest or a state take-over of the paper, or its simple dissolution.

American institutions are surrendering to de facto censorship with little or no such threat of force or government retaliation. Freedom of speech is intimately tied to the status of property. If a government can license and tax one's soapbox, prescribe what materials it can be made of, what times and where it may be used and when, and what may be said from it, it is only a matter of time before one is compelled to relinquish ownership of it altogether.

*"At the court of the king of France Louis XIV the education of the crown prince (Delphinus) was also pursued by streamlined [i.e., Bowdlerized] versions of classical Latin writers. These versions were written ad usum Delphini, that is, 'for the use of the crown prince,' and they were later adopted as textbooks in French schools."

Keeping Crime Risks in Perspective

Keeping Crime Risks in Perspective:
Understandably, the horrific murders at a movie theater in Aurora, Colorado, have put many people around the country on edge.
Obviously, we want to do what we reasonably can to protect ourselves and our families from criminal attacks. And we want our government to take seriously its responsibility to protect individual rights, a major aspect of which is protecting people from crime.
However, it is counterproductive to obsess about crime or to make decisions based on irrational fears about crime. So let us put the risks of crime in context:
  • There are nearly 40,000 movie screens in the country, showing movies daily, and the risk of suffering a criminal assault in one is miniscule.
  • Violent crime has declined in recent years (while gun sales have skyrocketed).
  • Of the 2.5 million deaths in 2010, around 118,000 were from unintentional injuries, 38,000 were by suicides, and 16,000 were by homicide. (Note that some homicides are justified.)
  • Centers for Disease Control notes, “Assault (homicide) fell from among the top 15 leading causes of death in 2010, replaced by Pneumonitis [a lung disease] . . . as the 15th leading cause of death.”
  • The same year, over twice as many people died in auto wrecks as died in homicides.
Death by a criminal assault is particularly horrifying. A murder, the ultimate act of injustice, ends a life prematurely and is beyond agonizing for the victim’s loved ones.
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Nevertheless, even as we recognize the remote possibility that we or a loved one could be a victim of violent crime, we should treat the scant possibility of criminal assault as we treat other scant but awful possibilities, such as car crashes.
Life in America is still generally good and generally safe. Let’s remember to live it.
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Image: iStockPhoto

Iran Calls Yet Again for Annihilation of Israel

Iran Calls Yet Again for Annihilation of Israel:
Mahmoud_AhmadinejadIranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has called yet again for the “annihilation of the Zionist regime”—that is, the nation of Israel. What threat is posed by the regime over which this madman presides? As Craig Biddle notes:
[T]he Islamist regime in Iran is sponsoring the slaughter of American soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan, funding Hamas and Hezbollah in their efforts to destroy our vital ally Israel, building nuclear bombs to further “Allah’s” ends, chanting “Death to America! Death to Israel!” in Friday prayers and political parades, and declaring: “With the destruction of these two evil countries, the world will become free of oppression.”
Meanwhile, libertarian “thinkers” at the Cato Institute have this to say:
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has claimed that Hezbollah—the Lebanon-based, Iranian-backed, politico-military terrorist organization–was responsible for the suicide bombing in Bulgaria that killed five Israeli tourists. Amid ongoing U.S. and Israeli threats to strike Iran’s nuclear facilities, the bombing raises a critical concern about any potential conflict: a very capable Hezbollah, together with Iran, would likely strike back hard—and not only in the Middle East—drawing the United States into another prolonged and bloody conflict in the Muslim world that it doesn’t need.
In other words, goes this argument, because genocidal Islamists are so powerful now, Israel and the United States should sit back and let Iran build nuclear bombs undeterred. What will these Islamists do once they have nuclear bombs at their disposal? Best not to “think” about that.
Those who do not wish for America to engage in suicidal appeasement should heed the warning of the late great John David Lewis:
The power of the Islamic Totalitarians grows every day that we wait. The strategic balance will shift—the Islamic Totalitarians will have the capacity as well as the will to bring about the nuclear Armageddon that they so deeply crave—if Iran acquires nuclear bombs. It is not a kindness to wait, knowing that our response will have to be even more lethal after a mushroom cloud rises over American soil. To wait, in light of that knowledge, is irrational—criminally irrational.
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Help Joshua Lipana Fight Cancer—Update

Help Joshua Lipana Fight Cancer—Update:
A hearty “thank you!” to everyone who has contributed to help Joshua Lipana cover the costs of his cancer treatment. To date we’ve raised $13,642 (that’s $2,000 more than GoFundMe shows because one couple generously made a direct donation of $2,000 to Joshua’s PayPal account). But we still have a long way to go to reach our goal of $25,000.
Toward inspiring more donations, let me say a few words about Joshua and why helping him is, in fact, helping yourself.
Joshua is a warrior for liberty. He has dedicated his life to fighting for reason, egoism, and capitalism. And, in this regard, he is the most promising young man I have ever met. The reason is threefold: his ambitiousness, his intelligence, and his independence.
At the age of 18, Joshua emailed me saying, “Are you still looking for a paid blogger for TOS? If you are, I want the job and I’d like to apply. Plus, I’m from South East Asia. So you’ll get a hard-worker for a fraction of the cost of an American writer. It’s time to outsource, Mr. Biddle.”
Impressed with that bold email, I asked Joshua for samples of his writing, which he promptly forwarded. I was impressed with those too. So I hired him on a trial basis to do some blogging.
But I was in for even more pleasant surprises.
In addition to writing a steady stream of good blog posts, Joshua told me that he wanted to help with our social media and marketing efforts. And he had a lot of ideas at the ready. So I hired him to help in these areas as well, and our engagement numbers and website traffic immediately began to grow.
And there was more. Joshua proved not only ambitious and full of ideas, but also able to think at a highly abstract level. Talking with him was like talking with a 40-year-old seasoned businessman-intellectual. Of course he didn’t possess all the knowledge of an accomplished thinker of that age. But he was able to detect relationships, make integrations, and see implications at a level that few people ever reach.
And there was still more. I soon saw the most impressive and promising thing about Joshua: his independence. He was always eager to learn and even more eager to be corrected when wrong. But if I thought he was wrong and he thought he was right about something important, and if I couldn’t convince him that he was in error (and sometimes he wasn’t), then he would tenaciously stand his ground.
This is the essence of Joshua’s character. And this endeared him to me. Independence—the commitment to forming one’s own judgments based on one’s own observations and reasoning—is the single most important characteristic in an intellectual or a businessman or anyone else for that matter. Joshua had proven himself invaluable to TOS.
Joshua was now writing blog posts and articles well beyond his years; he was helping increase TOS’s reach and traffic; he was arguing with me via Skype practically every day about something or other; he had been promoted to Assistant Editor of TOS Blog; he was soaring. And then he was diagnosed with cancer.
Fortunately, the treatment regimen Joshua’s doctors have prescribed appears to be killing the cancer. After four rounds of chemo, the large tumor in his left lung has shrunk to less than half its original size. (The doctors recently preformed a bone marrow biopsy, but the results of that are not yet in.)
Unfortunately, the treatment is extremely expensive—the bills exceed $30,000 and continue to mount—and Joshua has no insurance.
Our goal in this fundraiser is to help defray the costs by raising $25,000, and we’re just over half way there.
Joshua needs our help. And to help this young man is to help ourselves. If the treatment works and Joshua is able to get back to work, he will be fighting for reason, egoism, and capitalism—and doing so very effectively—for many years to come. Let’s see to it that he’s not saddled with hospital bills when he’s ready to get back in the saddle.
If you haven’t yet donated, please make a donation today. If you have donated, please consider making an additional donation. And, in any event, please share this post with your friends on Facebook and Twitter. Every dollar counts.
Thank you,

Craig Biddle
P.S. If you’d like to donate directly to Joshua’s PayPal account, you can do so by sending money to joshualipana (atsign) yahoo (dot) com. If you’d prefer to mail a check, please make it out to “The Objective Standard,” write “Donation for Joshua” on the memo line, and mail the check to: The Objective Standard, P.O. Box 5274, Glen Allen, VA 23058.