Prop. 8 financial supporters named on Web site - Press-Telegram

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A Long Beach resident has compiled and posted the names of all contributors to the Yes on Prop 8 campaign. Raphael Mazor is reported to have said that these contributors "voted to undermine families by taking away someone's right to get married. It was a personal attack, so you cannot call this just another political disagreement."

This seems to be another example of how our legal culture's enshrinement of super-democratic standards seeks to antagonize our traditional democratic legislative processes. What a shame.


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Bush Through the Obama Prism - Victor Davis Hanson - The Corner on National Review Online

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Victor Davis Hanson has this interesting article at NRO. In particular:

Second, we will come, through the Obama prism, to see that Bush's sins were largely the absence of rhetorical skills, unfortunate shoot 'em braggadocio in 2003-4, the federal response to Katrina, and a certain administration haughtiness about the problems in Iraq between 2002-6, but not most of his policies that included prescription drugs, No Child Left Behind, AIDs relief in Africa, the removal of two odious regimes, and consensual governments in their places, a framework at home to stop 9/11-type terrorism, and good working partnerships with key allies abroad such as Britain, Germany, France, Italy, India, et al, and a pragmatism in handling rivals like Russia and China.

Hanson also mentions that objections towards Bush's heavy-handed approach in the "war on terror," which I myself share to some degree, may at the least be overstated in light of the recent Mumbai seige.


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Mad Max and the Meltdown - WSJ.com

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Dan Henninger suggests that the declines in American moral and economic values are linked. Although it's a near impossible thing to prove, I tend to agree.


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Obama's "Change" May Not Apply to Foreign Policy -- Which May Be a Bit of a Relief

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Stephen Bainbridge has this post, remarking that Obama's likely appointments in his national security team may point to a foreign policy similar to Bush I. Bainbridge points to the flaws with the 41st president's foreign policy, but I would be relieved to know that we are not tossing the entire rulebook under the bus.

Truth be told, I have been a little anxious, but mostly nervous, to see just what would happen with Obama's professed policy of openness with leaders of nations with which we have a troubled relationship. If it turns out that Obama actually does not regard the entire conservative rulebook in foreign affairs as rubbish, then that might just flip my anxiety/nervous ratio the other way round.


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Would Plural Marriage Be On the Heels of Gay Marriage?

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A popular and, to my thinking, convincing argument against unmooring the definition of marriage from the traditional/historical "one man, one woman" construct is that, once so unmoored, there would be no stopping point. That is, if the alternative view, that "love is love," is taken seriously, then there would be no reason that the numerical restriction should any longer be taken seriously, and plural marriages would be on the table.

I came across this article in which a Mormon mucky-muck agrees, and suggests that a win for gay marriage would result in new lawsuits bringing polygamy and embarrassing Mormon doctrine and history into the limelight. In particular:

Should any state succeed in allowing homosexual, same-sex marriages to become law, it is almost certain that polygamy will rush in on its heels. Should same-sex marriages become legal, there will be no moral high ground for the court to take. I can assure you that it will not be long before petitions come before our lawmakers demanding similar recognition for plural marriages.

It is important to note that, if we eventually recognize gay marriage, it must be done through the political process, not the courts. Through the political process, we can simply declare that the sensibilities and culture of the people dictate that marriage include...whathaveyou. If we opt for a shortcut through the courts, we will be forced to follow that wormhole through to its logical conclusion. In other words, the court-route would require the court to declare, by fiat, a principle by which marriage would be defined. If that principle is something amorphous like "a committed and loving relationship," as the pro-gay marriage folks would have it, then there is absolutely no reason why such a principle would not extend to any such relationship, regardless of number. Being thus tethered to principle, rather than to the sensibility of the people, there would be no stopping point, and plural marriage must also be recognized as a matter of judicial and logical consistency.


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Professor Balkin's Abortion Compromise

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Jack Balkin suggests that a "durable compromise over abortion" would look something like this:

if you wanted to imagine how the U.S. would come to a durable compromise over abortion, it would probably look something like this new approach: Pro-life advocates continue to believe that abortion is immoral but agree that the criminal law is not the best way to solve the problem of protecting unborn life. Pro-choice advocates in turn agree to new social services and support for poor women that make it easier for them to choose to have children. (This is something that many pro-choice advocates will agree to because many of them also support expanded social welfare programs.) The result is a coalition of social justice pro-life advocates with traditional pro-choice liberals.

The problem with such a view, however, is that it presupposes, wrongly, that pro-life advocates have adopted the muddle-headed definitions that the pro-choice advocates have put forth, such as "future potential person," "point of viability," etc. Instead, pro-life advocates see no non-arbitrary line other than the moment of conception at which to assign personhood, and thus abortion is, quite simply, the unjustified killing of a human person, i.e., murder. To merely suggest that pro-lifers may continue to believe that the act is immoral, while removing the possibility of criminal sanction for an act that they quite rightly believe to be murder, is merely to toss them an irreverent biscuit.


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Who Cares About the Constitution? Not Laura Von Harten

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Here's another example of relativism transcending personal moral choices all the way to undermining federal statutes and even our Constitution. Laura Von Harten, a Beaufort, South Carolina county council member, objected to rezoning a parcel occupied by a Catholic church because official Catholic policies are an "affront to my dignity and all of womankind." Ms Von Harten, you are perfectly free to express those views in an op-ed, or in a blog, or into a stiff wind. But once you allow your purely personal views to prevail in a direct contest against the Constitution and federal statutes (e.g., the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, or RLUIPA), you wield your power as a tyrant, not as an official elected to uphold the rule of law.


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Who Cares About the Constitution?

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Not Pittsburgh city council member Tonya Payne. Upon the passage of a controversial, and probably unconstitutional, gun ban, Ms. Payne remarked:

"Who really cares about it being unconstitutional?" said Councilwoman Tonya Payne, a supporter. "This is what's right to do, and if this means that we have to go out and have a court battle, then that's fine ...

We care about laws being constitutional, Ms. Payne, for the same reason we don't simply sweep all laws aside and solve our problems in the most expedient way we can imagine. We care about the rule of law not because it is the best way of combating crime--certainly we could achieve this more effectively by vesting unfettered discretion in a crime czar. No, we care about it because it guarantees the only way of life that has any objective basis for regarding crime as morally evil, and may thus undertake to root it out. When we leave the rule of law behind, we are no different from gangsters.

Unfortunately, Ms. Payne's attitude will soon be shared by the very top level of our government.


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Obama Team Said to Explore `Prepack' Auto Bankruptcy

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Bloomberg.com has this article on Obama's ideas regarding a prepackaged bankruptcy for the Big 3. However, establishing bankruptcy laws is a power vested in Congress under Article I, section 8 of the Constitution. Bankruptcy judges, appointed by the U.S. court of appeals for each circuit, exercise the discretion to apply these laws and create the kind of "packages" that Obama is thinking about. (Albeit they do not "pre"-package--judges review the facts at hand, not the facts as they may be.)

I don't want to sound like I'm being critical of every idea that seems to pop into our President-to-be's head, but is this constitutional? Or is this another example of how "important" things (like saving inept companies and corrupt union contracts) are ruining our constitutional framework?


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A Rebuttal to “Small Government” Conservativism?

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Many “centrists” I know don’t think too much of the “smaller government” rallying cry of many conservatives. This mantra sounds well and good, as anyone can recognize the government’s ineptitude in handling all sorts of affairs, and the free market’s myriad benefits. However, the free market has always faced criticism for what is called “market failure”—the inability of the market to take certain types of consumer preferences into account, the lack of information regarding various kinds of externalities created, the maximization of long term rather than immediate concerns, etc. And, given that we now have a full-blown international economy, it certainly seems that a truly “free” market is out of the question. After all, our founders envisioned a largely local and agrarian economy, limited to towns or, at most, the individual states. To get where we are, we made mincemeat of the interstate commerce clause and the non-delegation doctrine (the doctrine that prohibits Congress from delegating law-making authority to agencies—which it now does with impunity), to the chagrin of conservatives and originalists.

My question is, do those same conservatives and originalists who decry the expansion of our federal government into all matters of our economy really want what seems to be the only logical alternative: a return to the decidedly localistic economic recipe espoused by the antebellum Democratic party? [More...]

Without big government, certainly we would have to abandon most of our environmental efforts, leaving this to the individual states’ discretion. Most if not all of the administrative agencies would have to be disbanded. Certainly, there would be fewer asinine regulations to contend with. But without a single federal regulatory system, companies will be forced to contend with 50 different state systems of asinine regulations. This may give fidelity to the text of our Constitution, but it would be a nightmare for business.

It seems safe to say our founders did not thoroughly consider this issue. It could hardly have been imagined the extent the technology in the following centuries would bring the states and world into a necessarily united economy. It probably could hardly have been imagined that the Union would endure that long. At any rate, I submit that the question of expansion of our federal government into all manners of our economic life has not been subjected to an appropriate analysis. Instead of treating this as a constitutional issue, which I believe it is, we have at all times simply presupposed that economic prosperity is the sine qua non of our republic—that as long as our economy is flourishing, our country is succeeding. Is that truly the case? At what point do we look at government expansion and say, even though this will clearly advance our collective prosperity, it should not be done? Is there such a line?


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From RealClearMarkets: Auto Bailouts Will Give Us Detroitsky

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It can be tricky to distill something so complex down to something so simple, but Robert Tracinski does it well here:

That is what a bailout is really meant to avoid: anything that would break the power of the unions. This is not a bailout for GM. It is a bailout for the UAW.


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eHarmony Settlement in Gay Discrimination Suit

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Eharmony, having been sued under New Jersey's anti-discrimination laws, has settled a lawsuit and agreed to design a separate site for gay-seeking singles. A copy of the settlement can be found here.

Back in May 2007, the company was sued in California. That lawsuit is moot now that the company has agreed to launch its new site.

As a Californian, I find this a very ironic juxtaposition with Prop 8, which reaffirmed the right of the citizens of this state to refrain from issuing a badge of cultural normalcy to certain lifestyles that do not yet resonate with their sensibilities. [more...]

As long as gays are not treated with hostility, or deprived of useful employment or services because of some invidious, wholly irrational purpose, private companies and individuals must be permitted to make up their own minds and make their own choices. But I see no reason why a dating service, especially one that prides itself on an innovative mechanism for pairing certain types of individuals for life-long relationships, should not be entitled to determine whether or not it wants to monkey with its own system to see if it can work as well for same-sex couples. Eharmony should be permitted to decide for itself whether it wants to make this investment, take this risk, and modify its business and marketing models to provide this entirely new service.

In California, Prop 8 just passed because people felt, just as a matter of knee-jerk reaction, that traditional heterosexual relationships were most conducive for marriage. But in New Jersey, a legal system cajoled a company—whose business it is to study hard, empirical data about relationships and make money off of its ability to achieve consistent success in pairing certain types of people—into experimenting with this model and gambling with its success rate by promoting nontraditional, less studied types of relationships. It makes perfect sense, then, that eHarmony reserved for itself in the settlement the right to display disclaimers that its new “CompatibleCouples” website for gay customers “was developed on the basis of research limited to married heterosexual couples,” given that eHarmony has no idea whether this thing is going to float—a company built on data and research is certainly entitled not to move into new sectors in which there is a dearth of data and research.

Apparently recognizing this, the settlement also requires that eHarmony “enlist the assistance of a media consultant experienced in promoting and ensuring fair, accurate and inclusive representation of gay and lesbian people in the media.” In other words, the settlement itself recognizes that this was not just a matter of discrimination—it is a big, risky undertaking that eHarmony should properly have the discretion to determine for itself and its shareholders.

“Discrimination” is a lost word. It no longer means what it used to mean, and it is no longer appropriate in communicating any serious thought. It now lives in the unscrupulous civil rights attorney’s toolkit.


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Rebuttal to "Abortion and Abolition"

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Several weeks back, I posted a response to Diana Hsieh’s op-ed, “Abortion and Abolition” over at NoodleFood. I was struck by the title since I had also always thought of abortion and slavery as linked—albeit in the opposite way that Ms. Hsieh conceives. As the post and the responses that followed gave me an opportunity to flesh out some of the more amorphous points of the debate, I thought I would try to compile it for my own edification, and for that of whoever happens to stumble upon this post. [more...]

The primary similarity between the respective arguments for slavery and for “reproductive rights” is the focus on the “personhood” of the slave and embryo/fetus, respectively. Both arguments for slavery and abortion succeed or fail on this point. If slaves are something less than persons, we are morally permitted to enslave them. (It still may not be a good idea, or a wholesome idea, but at least Aristotle even defended the idea of grooming slaves to be good citizens who would eventually gain their freedom.) And if embryos or fetuses are less than persons, then whatever rights they may or may not have are eclipsed by the woman’s privacy rights. (Or “reproductive rights,” if we are given to such fashionable, albeit droll, terminology.)

Lincoln himself did not believe (as far as the historical record can support) that blacks were “equal” to whites in all respects. And in fact today we know that there are intrinsic inequalities between races. Some races are more predisposed to certain diseases. (My grasp of detailed examples is poor, but I believe the point is readily conceded.) In our personal lives, we need not pretend that we are each equal. We are not. We probably should have a good reason when doing so, but it is not legally required.

We do require our state to have a good reason, however. The state has to have a non-arbitrary basis for treating ANYONE differently. And the forcefulness of the reasoning required escalates depending on the importance of the right at stake. In the case of abortion, we are talking about the most important, most fundamental right that can possibly belong to anyone: the right to life.

But this is getting ahead of ourselves, of course, because we first must decide whether that issue is actually in play—that is, is the fetus a “person”? Can we draw a non-arbitrary line at which a fertilized egg becomes a “person”? No. It simply cannot be done. The best we can do is make approximations, or come up with other fictions that are not any better than the vague term “person” (e.g., “self-awareness” – good luck with that one; I know grown adults who fail this test). Specifically, the argument that personhood depends on self-containment and lack of dependence on the mother is rebutted by pointing to the “famous violinist” hypothetical: waking up and finding that a world-renowned violinist has been grafted to your organs in order to keep him alive brings up some problems of justice, privacy, and self-determination, but one is hard-pressed to argue that the violinist has lost his status as a “person.”

Another less imaginary example is Siamese twins. That these folks are most definitely persons I will take to be uncontroversial. (One reader pointed out that this point was indeed controversial because the twins do not possess “individual” rights. Even assuming, arguendo, that that were true, our Constitution guarantees rights of “persons,” not “individuals.” Thus, such a semantic shift is unwarranted in this context.) What might be controversial is the question of rights as asserted by one twin against the other. For example, if the twins could be separated, but one would certainly die where the other would not, does the latter have a “right” to separate, and thus kill, the other? What about if one had more control over the motor functions? Does the one with less control have any less right to life than the one with more?

These questions lend to solutions that are more pragmatic than rational. That is, they force us to define the meaning and purpose of the lives at stake, and thus make a determination that will best effectuate that purpose. This, of course, irreparably short changes the lives at stake, as their telos (purpose) is defined by the preliminary rule that guarantees their existence. Thus, in an abortion culture, all persons who are born have a right to their lives, but only to the extent of the telos that effectuated their being carried to term, i.e., being wanted by the mother. When it is no longer the case that the new person is wanted by any other living person, their rights terminate. This is the inevitable conclusion of defining the right to life teleologically (i.e., by whether or not the mother “wants” the child) rather than deontologically (i.e., by a society that defines the child’s life as unequivocal, inviolable, and inalienable—the same way it defines the life of any other person).

One of the differences between Siamese twins and a pregnant woman is the issue of timing: one Siamese twin generally cannot claim a superior right to life based on time, although the pregnant woman can. But can this have any bearing? Does a young man have less of a right to life than an old man? We sometimes talk about potential, etc., which might even suggest that the young man has more of a right than the old. But again, this would be a way of defining the right to life teleologically. At any rate, this is too sloppy a way of determining something so important.

Now that we have spent some time talking about the fetus’s right to life, we must discuss the countervailing right that is indisputably at issue, the mother’s right to her body. Abortion rights advocates suggest that requiring a woman to assume the risk of pregnancy and childbearing in order to be sexually active deprives her of liberty in sexual matters. (Although it always seems highly implausible that someone would make this gigglesome argument, I come across it again and again.) There are few areas in which we have perfect, unrestrained liberty. Any number of our actions mete out externalities, and we glean a better and better understanding of the nature and extent of these externalities as time and technology progress. To say that prohibiting one form of “birth control” (a horrifyingly benign expression for abortion, in my opinion) is a “deprivation of liberty” is pointless rationalism. “Pointless” because, yes, it admittedly is a deprivation of liberty; but because nearly all of our liberties are limited in certain ways in order to make political life possible, a mere “deprivation” is not the standard for determining whether it is appropriate or not. There are myriad ways to prevent getting pregnant. Abortion hardly seems a necessary precondition for a woman to enjoy her “sexual liberty” (whatever that means).

It has also been suggested that, even if we assume both the woman and unborn have rights, we don’t require one to sacrifice its rights for the life of another. This is not always the case. Although common law doesn’t impose a “Good Samaritan” duty to affirmatively provide help, the law provides the doctrine of private necessity as a defense to trespassing, for example. In other words, there is no affirmative duty, but there is a negative duty (you cannot recover against one who uses your property, without consent, for his health or safety). One will certainly point out that with pregnancy we are talking about one’s body, not merely property. And I will concede that the doctrine of private necessity certainly has not been construed to this extent. On the other hand, there is the issue of consent that is also different -- private necessity applies even where there is no consent on the part of the landowner, but with pregnancy, the woman has tacitly consented through the volitional act of intercourse. (Again, instances of rape notwithstanding.)

As far as the state is concerned, there are two beings with rights. Given that there is no non-arbitrary way that the state can take the position that the fetus is not a “person,” and given that the right to life is necessarily of greater weight than a right to “sexual liberty,” or to “reproductive liberty” (especially given that in the vast majority of cases, the mother had some say in the conception process), the balancing is a no-brainer—abortion is indefensible in a government that purports to defend life and forbid arbitrary enforcement of rights.

In the end, I believe the only reason people can stomach abortion is the simple pragmatic reason that, hey, I don’t care if the baby is born, and if the mother doesn’t even want it, then who gives a rip?? Abortion can only be “lawful” in the sense that it simply has not yet aroused enough passion in enough people do undo that unrigorous and approximated judicial fiat that now governs the matter.

But that is a debate for the touchy-feelies, not those of us who want a rational explanation. And if we’re being rational, we have to recognize there is no non-arbitrary line. Conception creates a “person.” We can strip away its rights because of the number of cells it has, or because it is located inside its mother’s womb, but we only get away with such justifications if we squint our eyes real hard and pretend they’re good answers. And this is the same way our nation stomached slavery for so long. We might always wonder whether, without Lincoln, we might still have slavery; but we now know that, with or without our current emotional disposition towards that vile institution, it is and always was intrinsically evil. It is my humble and hopeful prognostication that it will be just so with this issue.


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A Note from Underground

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Never has there been, nor never will there be, a truer, more forceful observation of the debauched nature of man's cherished free will than this:

In short, anything can be said about world history, anything that might just enter the head of the most disturbed imagination. Only one thing cannot be said--that it is sensible. You'd choke on the first word. And one even comes upon this sort of thing all the time: there constantly appear in life people of such good behavior and good sense, such sages and lovers of mankind, as precisely make it their goal to spend their entire lives in the best-behaved and most sensible way possible, to become, so to speak, a light for their neighbors, essentially in order to prove to them that one can indeed live in the world as a person of good behavior and good sense. And what then? It is known that sooner or later, towards the end of their lives, many of these lovers have betrayed themselves, producing some anecdote, sometimes even of the most indecent sort. Now I ask you: what can be expected of man as a being endowed with such strange qualities? Shower him with all earthly blessings, drown him in happiness completely, over his head, so that only bubbles pop up on the surface of happiness, as on water; give him such economic satisfaction that he no longer has anything left to do at all except sleep, eat gingerbread, and worry about the noncessation of world history--and it is here, just here, that he, this man, out of sheer ingratitude, out of sheer lampoonery, will do something nasty. He will even risk his gingerbread, and wish on purpose for the most pernicious nonsense, the most noneconomical meaninglessness, solely in order to mix into all this positive good sense his own pernicious, fantastical element. It is precisely his fantastic dreams, his most banal stupidity, that he will wish to keep hold of, with the sole purpose of confirming to himself (as if it were so very necessary) that human beings are still human beings and not piano keys, which, though played upon with their own hands by the laws of nature themselves, are in danger of being played so much that outside the calendar it will be impossible to want anything. And more than that: even if it should indeed turn out that he is a piano key, if it were even proved to him mathematically and by natural science, he would still not come to reason, but would do something contrary on purpose, solely out of ingratitude alone; essentially to have his own way. And if he finds himself without means--he will invent destruction and chaos, he will invest all kinds of suffering, and still have his own way! He will launch a curse upon the world, and since man alone is able to curse (that being his privilege, which chiefly distinguishes him from other animals), he may achieve his end by the curse alone--that is, indeed satisfy himself that he is a man and not a piano key! If you say that all this, the chaos and darkness and cursing, can also be calculated according to a little table, so that the mere possibility of a prior calculation will put a stop to it all and reason will claim its own--then he will deliberately go mad for the occasion, so as to do without reason and still have his own way! I believe in this, I will answer for this, because the whole human enterprise seems indeed to consist in man's proving to himself every moment that he is a man and not a sprig! With his own skin if need be, but proving it; by troglodytism if need be, but proving it.

Fyodor Dostoevsky, Notes From Underground.


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What Use Are Arguments Unless They Persuade?

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I enjoy this passage from Robert Nozick's Philosophical Explanations:

Wouldn't it be better if philosophical arguments left the person no possible answer at all, reducing him to impotent silence? Even then, he might sit there silently, smiling, Buddhalike. Perhaps philosophers need arguments so powerful they set up reverberations in the brain: if the person refuses to accept the conclusion, he dies. Hows that for a powerful argument? Yet, as with other physical threats ("your money or your life"), he can choose defiance. A "perfect" philosophical argument would leave no choice.


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Interesting Perspective on Israel's Holocaust Mentality

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Very interesting article and a worthwhile read, despite coming from the LA Times.


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From Freespace: Who's the anti-intellectual?

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Here's an excerpt from a good piece on Tim Sandefur's blog:


Liberals believe that government can efficiently allocate resources, and run, say, a health care system for hundreds of millions of people, despite the basic failures of such systems in other countries. And they believe this, not because they disagree with the discoveries of economists like Friedrich Hayek, or have an answer to the problem of rent-seeking, a term which most Democrats have probably never heard. No, they believe this because of their emotional commitment to wealth-redistribution, a commitment based on a moral premise—that the wealthy should pay the bills of the poor because poverty is “unfair”—which they rarely even bother to defend. Ask why your earnings should be taken from you by the state and given to someone else, and you will rarely get an intellectual answer. I’ve certainly never been given one. I’ve heard a lot of emoting, and a lot of accusations of nefarious corporate meanness, and a lot of heart-rending stories about how hard it is to be poor. But an intellectual defense of redistributive government? That’s a rarity.


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Politicians Should Be Seen and Not Heard

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I have only one very simple expectation of my elected officials -- that they be utterly ineffectual. Government has a tremendous ability to do harm and very little ability to do good. Thus, while many folks grimly wonder whether Mr. Obama will falter on his campaign promises, I put my "hope" in the prospect that he will do just that. (After all, did you hear his campaign promises?)

It is to my horror, then, that the face of our new federal Leviathan will apparently now be coming to us on a regular basis via a weekly video broadcast. So if you didn't fully understand Mr. Obama's gameplan in his upcoming deathmatch with the free market, you can get the full blow-by-blow.

Kidding aside, what truly bothers me about this is that Mr. Obama apparently wants to continue placing America's trust in himself and the government, and to continue distrusting the market, and causality in general. People need to get off their high on political leaders and just get back to their work, start making responsible choices, without wondering whether the government is going to fix things for them.


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Why the Wholesale Separation of Church and State Is Tantamount to Anarchy

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The very use of language in our Constitution presupposes some transcendental, extra empirical source of truths that go behind the written text of the founding document itself. The use of words as if they have an objective, universal meaning, in crafting them using rules of grammar and syntax, such that each clause, each sentence, each paragraph, and the work as a whole, exhibit continuity, consistency, and collaboration in bringing about a manifest purpose—all of these things indicate something more fundamental than anything actually written in the document. In other words, for the Constitution to make any sense, we have to accept certain transcendental rules before we even come to the text. We have to bring a certain set of presuppositions, such as that words have a certain meaning, and that their meaning is resolute; that concepts have a real, objective relation to concretes; that the rules of logic have universal application, etc. Although this is not a complete list of the presuppositions necessary to make a constitution intelligible, at a minimum, these things at a minimum must be included. [more...]

To illustrate, consider that the Constitution never says that a law enacted by Congress abridging the freedom of speech is unconstitutional. What it does say is "Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech." It seems obvious to the point of silliness to bother explaining why it would be "unconstitutional" for Congress to make such a law. The Constitution says "shall make no law." Congress makes such a law. We take for granted the rules—the laws—that get us from those two things to "unconstitutionality." However, the word "unconstitutional" does not even appear in the Constitution, so what could we possibly mean by saying such a thing? Clearly then, what we are doing is employing presuppositions: the rules of logic, the rules against contradiction, the rules of concepts and self-identification, etc., operate as our implicit, extra constitutional premise: a governmental action in consistent with the Constitution is unconstitutional.

This incredibly critical interplay between the language expressed in our founding document and the transcendental precepts is put in danger of being utterly trampled by rash talk about erecting a “wall” between government and religion. Whatever the relationship between government and religion, it is most certainly not the case that there can be NO relationship. By suggesting otherwise, we would throw out the baby with the bathwater: if government is to be forbidden from espousing any transcendental, extra empirical truths, government would be rendered forbidden to exist in the first place. In other words, and as David Hume identified, there can be no intelligibility of any truth in this world, observable or otherwise, which does not itself depend on the existence of some truth that, by its nature, cannot be observed.

This is why the appeal to "the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God" in the Declaration of Independence is critical: it establishes that very necessary precondition for that makes anything in our world, and particularly in our constitutional republic, intelligible and rational in the first place.


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Our Constitutional "Ship"

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I see our founding documents as something like guidelines for building a ship. It specifies the kinds of materials to use, some of the key design elements, etc. There is one key omission from those plans, however: they never lay out the maximum size or occupancy of the ship. However, by looking at the specifications that it does provide, we can see that there is no way that it could ever grow past a certain size and still be seaworthy.

As the ship took its initial voyages, it became apparent that there were some changes that needed to be made. In our case, it seems that we allowed an original defect to be left unresolved -- slavery. This "defect" might be compared to something like providing that an enormous boiler was to be placed in an unbuttressed part of the ship that would eventually give way and cause the vessel to break apart. When that portion of the ship indeed started to give way, we permitted the designers to put the plans aside for a moment so that we could toss the old boiler overboard and repair the gaping hole. But in so doing, we changed the way that the designers would forever be permitted to make changes to the design over the rest of the vessel. (I.e., the balance of states' vs. federal rights was forever changed.) [more...]

A bit later, it seems that we let the ship grow a bit over-large because we happened to be in calm waters. But when the storm season came along (WWII and then the New Deal), we again permitted the architects great leeway over making changes to keep the vessel seaworthy, to again keep it from breaking up. We allowed hundreds of mini-teams of designers to make improvements and additions throughout the vessel (agencies -- our "fourth branch" of government). And we made sweeping changes to what was permitted and not permitted on the vessel. In order to make all these changes, we had to allow great leeway in the way we read the original plans. No longer would we just use wood and nails -- those requirements of the kinds of materials that must be used are now read as being flexible, merely suggestions, because now of course we need steel and rivets to support the ever growing vessel.

But I think it may have been a mistake to do this. The original materials requirements were not so simply because the original designers could not imagine that later generations might like a larger boat. Instead, perhaps they intended to impose a limitation on the size and scope of our political "ship." Perhaps they believed that such an enormous vessel as we now have--which continues to grow without foreseeable limit--could not possibly be expected to remain seaworthy.

They did, however, have a pretty good idea how to build a modest vessel that would suit any reasonable political necessity. Sure, if our ship came to be populated by many new people of different ends--such as those who want a very fast ship, or those who want a pleasure cruiser--then most likely a new design would have to be drawn up. But it is perhaps dangerous to suppose that the framers meant that the original vessel is so malleable that its design can be tweaked to fit these new whims. The appeal of the original design would be lost forever, and the new amalgamation, designed to appease the fancies of all, will wind up an unworkable contraption capable of achieving none of the ends for which a constitutional government is needed in the first place.


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Empiricists Can Be Fanatical, Too

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Back when I was the editor of the Chapman Law Review, I signed off on the publication of an article on the issue of intelligent design. (The article, "Evolution, Science, And Ideology: Why The Establishment Clause Requires Neutrality in Science Classes,” by Stephen W. Trask, can be found online here.) Not surprisingly, the article found several critics (including this rebuttal article by fellow Chapman Law School alumnus Timothy Sandefur, published in the following issue of the Chapman Law Review).

Although many shallow and ad hominem attacks abounded -- including some lodged against me for having chosen to publish the article -- what disappointed me, and still disappoints me, is that none of the responses to Mr. Trask's article seriously address the epistemological concerns raised therein. I raised that dearth of serious response in an earlier post at Ed Brayton's site, although the discussion abruptly ended thereafter. (Even Tim Sandefur's well-written response linked above fails to go much further down this tough philosophical road than to merely cite an anecdote by pop-atheist Richard Dawkins that "there are no postmodernists at 30,000 feet." 11 Chap. L. Rev 129, 135 (2008). But as I had previously noted, usefulness is not the same thing as knowledge. The question is how we test whether things are useful, but how we can justify our claims to knowledge in them.)

Because I think it important to keep fanatical empiricsts' feet to the fire on these crucial points, I am reposting it here....

I was the editor-in-chief of the Chapman Law Review, which published the paper that set off this cheery debate. One of the reasons we chose the article for publication is that it presented the vexing epistemological problem posited by Hume and Kant, and weaved it into the current debate on ID and the religion clauses. In hindsight, I would tread much more lightly into such hotly debated areas. Like any controversial work, some of the criticism is valid, and some is simply reactionary.

I took the author's key premise to be that both science and religion require the adoption of some fundamental premises that are not subject to observation. This was the key problem submitted by Hume and which endures to this day. Trask argues in his paper that the problem basically puts science and religion on the same epistemological footing. The rest of his arguments take off from there. Love or hate that argument, it is a legitimate philosophical quandary. Ayn Rand and her followers have made light of the problem, but have done little to solve it, other than to set forth their own amalgamation of transcendental, empirically unjustifiable premises. Mixed with vitriol and indignation for good measure.

Most of the article's critics seem to take the pragmatic approach. As I understand it, pragmatism basically takes the different systems of belief, including religious and scientific, and examines which is most practically useful. It then validates the one that provides the most useful information--which, of course, is science. Pragmatism, however, is not really epistemology, but a substitute for it. It simply redefines the term "truth." Truth is no longer defined in the classical sense, as a logically necessary conclusion of undeniable premises. It is instead merely defined in terms of utility, and thus "truth" is recast as that which is most useful.

I doubt anyone will deny the utility of science. And that is not the subject of the paper. Recasting "truth" does not an epistemology make. Many serious philosophers are still concerned with the classical epistemological problems set off by Hume. Many folks are not, and are content with assuming the premises necessary to make science possible and proceeding with a utility-based definition of truth. So to those folks, this paper is, quite literally, written in a different language, and simply does not concern them. Ed Brayton, for example, says that "there is no such thing as a 'scientific fact', there are just facts." This simply misunderstands (or ignores) the epistemic problem. A scientific worldview makes certain epistemic assumptions, such as whether impressions correspond with a physical reality, whether causal relationships exist and can be understood, whether we can expect the future to resemble the past, etc. Such premises, necessary to establishing "truth" and "knowledge," are simply not observable, and thus cannot be explained other than by transcendental argumentation--that to make sense of anything, we must assume certain things to be true.

I do not mean to subject anyone to the convolutions of epistemological arguments. My point is that most of the criticisms against the article completely miss the point, because they fail to go toe to toe at the epistemological level. (Incidentally, I do not mean here to suggest any allegiance on my own part for or against the article or its arguments.) The criticisms instead simply assume the primacy of the scientific method for ascertaining knowledge, and then proceed to argue on the basis of that worldview. This is akin to arguing that Joe is lousy at baseball because Bob throws more touchdowns. Even the terms we use are meaningless until we are talking about the same game.

At bottom, whether or not you agree with the article, or find it persuasive, it was published because it made arguments that would stimulate thought on an important area of intellectual life. Despite Tim Sandefur's suggestion that my colleagues and I should be "ashamed" for publishing the piece, I believe that the apparent failure to understand and confront directly the key epistemological issues it raised suggest the very reason that such articles must be published.


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Iran Says Thanks But No Thanks To Unconditional Negotiations

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Frankly, I didn't see this coming. Does this mean that the neo-con hardliners who have been saying that these theocracies just hate us, and that's that, have been right all along? Not sure, but this seems to invigorate the argument.


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Maybe Christmas Will Be Celebrated on November 4 From Now On...

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I made it 54 seconds into this carol to the new Christ. How far can you get?



Thanks to Moonbattery.


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Al Gore's Diminishing Returns

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I actually liked An Inconvenient Truth. As long as you take it for what it is -- infotainment -- it is well done, and it gave me some helpful perspectives on the environment and the possible effects of human activities.

Problem is, however much I want to give consideration to Gore's position, I want to do so less and less each time he submits a new op-ed or sound bite. And they each seem to get successively doomier and gloomier. The warnings of apocalypse sound crazier and crazier over time. And at some point people are going to grow to positively loathe "Baby 3000," who ostensibly we are going to all this trouble for.


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Lessons From Hayek

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The seemingly imminent surge of social planning suggests we could all use some reminders from F.A. Hayek's The Road to Serfdom.

According to the views now dominant, the question is no longer how we can make the best use of the spontaneous forces found in a free society. We have in effect undertaken to dispense with the forces which produced unforeseen results and to replace the impersonal and anonymous mechanism of the market by collective and "conscious" direction of all social forces to deliberately chosen goals.


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Limitless Knowledge

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Is there anything that we truly do not know, in the analytic sense? Could it not be said that all things that we do not presently "know" are merely outworkings of things that we do know? For example, I had no idea that when a special shareholders meeting is called, the company has to contact the record holder(s) to do a search of all present securities holders who are entitled to vote at the meeting. Or, in some circumstances the company can freeze the record date for the purpose of determining such securities holders. I didn't know this, but then again, would it not have been possible for me to figure it out if I set to the task of really working through how a public company would operate? This process is reasonable after all, the holders need to be ascertained so they can be noticed, be noticed so they can vote. Or, as a simpler example, do we "know" that 52 plus 13 equals 65? We do not memorize such statements -- instead, we say that we "know" the nature of numbers, and we "know" the nature of arithmetic. Accordingly, we can say that we "know" all valid arithmetical statements.

Thus, maybe there is no need to assume that the continued accumulation of knowledge comes from "out there" somewhere. Maybe it is all analytic, in a sense.


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Why I Am Not a Utilitarian

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Why I am not a utilitarian. Some negatives are immoral and others are not. We remember bad decisions for a time. We remember immoral ones for a lifetime. Utilitarianism depends on being able to unpack all things to their simplest essences. But practically speaking, we cannot. We are not binary. We are bound up not in ends, but in means, in giving consideration and dignity to all aspects of our humanity, not only what we can classify as "valid" or "invalid" in syllogistic terms. Our sensibilities are not binary. But they are not for nothing.


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Socialized Healthcare -- Why Now of All Times?

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Proponents of socialized healthcare argue that healthcare is too important to leave to the market. Implicit in this argument is the idea that government can indeed do a better job than the private sector, to which all anyone needs to do is point up and observe how our North American neighbors are doing with their socialized system. But even assuming that government could pull this one out of its hat, do we really not understand that giving the government such a foothold into our private lives will not stop there? With the government footing our doctor bills, do we really doubt that the nanny laws will start hitting the books in full force? [More]
Indeed, it will be incumbent on the government to do so: I don’t want my tax dollars wasted on dentist bills for people who eat too much junk food -- so let’s make with the candy regulations. In other words, the government will all of a sudden have a serious interest in passing all sorts of laws that deprive our liberties in unprecedented ways.

But even more fundamentally, what do we mean to say that something is “too important” to be left to the market? Do we really think that, when things need to be done right, they need to be done by bureaucrats? When has that ever been the case? No, what this really comes down to is an irrational, flailing hatred at corporations, at “fat cats.” (Note all the “Main Street vs. Wall Street” rhetoric during the campaigns.)

The state needs to be abated, not sated. Dostoyevsky's Grand Inquisitor said that Christ should have taken the bread from Satan, because people follow leaders who give them what is important. This is, of course, the opposite lesson. There will always be times when we let things become so important that we will say, "make us your slaves, but feed us." This desperation was at the root of the rise of the Nazi party. And that was probably more defensible than Americans clamoring for healthcare. At this age, and with all of the economic and technological opportunities we have at our disposal, now is the time we choose to abandon our freedom and give the government an open invitation to regulate our lives? Is a relatively affliction-free 71 year average lifespan so sub-par that we have to demand such a radical and dangerous upheaval of our entire constitutional-economic way of life? To invoke Mr. Stossel: Give me a break.


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We Are Not Constitutionally Entitled to the State’s Badge of Normalcy

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Lots of folks, gay and straight, are good and upset about Prop 8. The former I can understand; the latter is giving me more trouble. Just why would a straight person care whether anyone else considers gay unions to be considered normal and entitled to the state’s encouragement? We seem to live in this weird time in which everyone not only wants tolerance, but full acceptance and validation. But people are not entitled to a badge of normalcy. And this is just what Prop 8 was about: a declaration of the people of this state that gay unions are not ready for prime time. Without a doubt, our sensibilities will continue to evolve in this regard, one way or another. But as this issue is not about tolerance, but rather encouragement of gay unions, there is no legal right to accelerate our cultural and moral evolution. [More]

To be fair, I do fine a weakness in the pro-traditional marriage position, in that government has to have a rational justification for everything it does. I do think there is some traction to the argument that there is little if any reason for the government to be involved one way or the other in the marriage business. Would any fewer or more people get married if not for the tax breaks and legal benefits the state gives marriage? Doubt it. So if it's going to give marriage to some, why not all? (Of course, this argument proves too much: Yes! Why not all? Let's not stop at male-male couples or female-female couples; what about cousins or siblings getting married, etc. And why stop at two people? Who are you to tell me that two is some kind of magic number? The state must also legalize polygamy. The “love is love” argument gives us no non-arbitrary way to draw the line anywhere.)

In other words, the government-wary libertarian in me who is skeptical of everything the government does wants to say, what is your basis for being in the marriage game? And does that basis have a good reason for stopping at homosexuals? In this regard, I think it is a much more elegant approach to governmental theory to just say, stop the whole nonsense. Let people make up their own institutions. Don't let the government issue badges of normalcy one way or the other.

But this is one of the key differences I see between libertarians and conservatives: conservatives don't think that our sensibilities are for nothing. In the book of Leviticus, God told the Jews to leave their fields fallow every seven years as a dedication to Him. At the moment of that decree, there was no "rational" (i.e., empirical) basis for following it. Thus, a law requiring such would be invalid. But mankind later discovered the phenomena of crop rotation, and at that point had an empirical, rational basis for following the command that God had given long ago (and which was of course for the purpose of the people’s prosperity and happiness.)

The example is illustrative here. The reasons for promoting heterosexual marriage are there, but they're not all that compelling. They're mostly based on the general impression that a lifetime of experiences gives us. Thus, while we might not have a fully researched empirical explanation why any number of off-beat lifestyles might not be the best path, I cannot say that this means there is no reason not to encourage traditional paths, and it certainly does not mean that all things are permissible, that all paths are correct, and that none is better than another. We should be tolerant of those who choose these off-beat, non-traditional paths. I do believe that such paths are difficult, and that they are not chosen but thrusted upon them by nature. These folks are thus deserving of empathy and dignity. These ways of life are hard. It is true that we each have challenges in our personal constitutions that we have to overcome. But none of this means that the state should issue a culture-shifting proclamation endorsing any number of alternative lifestyles just to make these folks feel normal. I wish those folks the best, but that is not what the state is for.

Point is, this is probably one of the few kinds of things that are proper for a voter initiative. Most things are too cumbersome and complicated to be left to an up-down vote. But in this case, it's a simple matter. No one has the evidence to make a duly supported rational decision about whether gay marriage should be grafted in as a cornerstone of our culture. So, in the absence of the support for such a decision for either side, the people must follow their sensibilities. Our sensibilities are not for nothing, after all, and in the absence of invidious motivations, and accompanied by serious and thoughtful reflection, I believe they can form the basis for certain kinds of laws. Prop 8 was a good example of that, in my opinion.


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The Road to Serfdom Just Got a Little Bit Shorter

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This is why Barack and his crack team's plans to fix the economy and save the world from slight discomfort and personal responsibility terrify me.


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Notes From Babel

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I set up this blog to post some of the notes I keep reflecting on issues that might interest friends and anyone else who share similar interests in politics, culture, and philosophy. I have had trouble keeping blogs in the past mainly because I have a very hard time posting thoughts that have not been fully developed -- and who has the time to do that? Nonetheless, and with that disclaimer, here goes.

All facets of humanity strive inexorably to greater and greater heights. Why is this? Even by the 18th century, Rousseau observed that man had the tools to be perfectly happy enough, and that in fact perhaps we had already overdone things. A family that relies on hunting, growing, and preparing its own food was not likely to be less happy than those who paid others to do so for them. In fact, having been stripped of the excitement and satisfaction in the hunting, growing, and preparing of their own meals, rich folks took to wearing elegant clothes and arranging to have fine entertainment provided at meals. Thus, where we strive to remove toil, we inevitably remove an important aspect of natural human satisfaction, and consequently must replace it with some artificial mode of satisfaction. Thus Rousseau's theme of the natural versus the artificial.

Mankind has been building his Tower of Babel in this way throughout history. Of course, he cannot keep from doing this. Man does not seek progress only or even primarily for the sake of achieving some greater convenience (certainly we have enough convenience and comfort already). That is indeed what we have on our minds -- we become convinced that only a 50 inch television will do, that we can't be taken seriously in a car that costs less than a two-bedroom house in the 80's. But in this new Obama-age where we are willing to sacrifice our prosperity and happiness for the generation of the next millennium, we start to find that we still can't stop stacking one stone on top of another. We have to keep progressing, we have to keep making our minds productive. Not because we need comfort, and not even because we need to figure out a way to help the lot of the folks who will be born hundreds of years from now. (I suppose we should give them some clean air so they can keep working to pay off that boondoggle of a light rail.) We do it because it's our function.

The problem is, however, that tower is getting too damn big. We've retrofitted it and widened the base, but as it gets ever taller, eventually it'll give way. The faster we make it stretch to the heavens, the sooner it will all be leveled to the ground.

When I turn my toaster oven off in the morning, if I move the dial too far to the left of "Off," I reach the "Stay On" setting. Consequently, there is a very uncomfortable margin of error over whether I will come home to a burned down house or not. There is a similar margin of error between Utopia and Armageddon. The harder we try at perfection, the more certainly we are going to create worse problems.

I do not have an optimistic view of humanity, I'm afraid to say. Eventually, we will ruin ourselves, I'm convinced. We will continue to replace the natural with the artificial, just because we need something to do, something to keep our hands from being idle. And we'll continue to forsake the wisdom of the past as we continue to assert that progress is the standard of veracity, and thus novelties will continue to be regarded as self-authenticating truths.

Perhaps all we can do is direct our stone-stacking instinct towards undoing the damage done by some of our fellow stone-stackers.


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