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Government should always be minimized


               
2023 Jul 18, 5:56am   26,670 views  313 comments

by Patrick   follow (59)  

https://boriquagato.substack.com/p/setting-the-stage-for-your-own-execution


i’m such a fan of “coyote’s law” coined by longtime gatopal™ warren meyer of coyoteblog fame.

i shall paraphrase:

“before granting any new power or prerogative to the state, first imagine that power wielded by the politician you hate most, because one day it will be.”


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280   Patrick   2024 Dec 27, 8:28pm  

https://www.coffeeandcovid.com/p/doge-days-of-the-color-war-friday


Never forget that the deep state and its revolutionary toolbox are amoral, in the same way that sharks and coral snakes are amoral. It’s a kind of amorality that always produces evil. The government justifies these tactics by claiming color revolution is cheaper and less destructive than waging kinetic war using missiles, tanks, bombs, and space lasers. But they know what they’re doing is wrong, which is why it is always kept secret.

They don’t care about anything except power. They don’t care about you, me, life, death, or even their precious jabs. Remember this summer, when we learned the Pentagon got caught pushing anti-vaccine propaganda in the Phillippines while it was mandating the shots at home?

The quantum of official evil is nearly indescribable. If the Pentagon truly believed the vaccines saved lives, then they intentionally doomed countless Filipinos who believed the Pentagon’s anti-vax propaganda (not to mention others outside Phillippines to whom the Pentagon’s propaganda leaked). On the other hand, if the Pentagon knew the vaccines did not work, then knowing that they still forced our U.S. service members to take the shots anyway, along with the unnecessary risks.

It’s calculated hypocrisy. This is how the deep state operates—playing both sides of every conflict, every crisis, every debate, as long as it serves the ultimate goal of consolidating power. They don’t just manipulate narratives; they manufacture them. When caught, they simply pivot, bury the truth under layers of mind-numbing obfuscation, or dismiss critics as conspiracy theorists. It’s a game of plausible deniability, where the human cost is nothing more than a line item on the geopolitical spreadsheet.

In the Philippines, the propaganda wasn’t just a one-off mistake—it was a deliberate operation, coldly calculated to overthrow a government that was becoming too friendly to the Chinese. And it worked. The new regime is enthusiastically pro-American and anti-Chinese, and it already allowing us to build more military bases there.
286   Patrick   2025 Mar 23, 5:45pm  

Well, what's the rest of the story?
287   HeadSet   2025 Mar 23, 7:19pm  

Patrick says

Well, what's the rest of the story?

That is a well-known story of how the Federal government was able to regulate this farmer through the Federal government's ability to "regulate interstate commerce" even though the farmer never had any commerce out of his state.
288   FortWayneHatesRealtors   2025 Mar 23, 7:28pm  

Patrick says

Well, what's the rest of the story?


his name was Filburn, government and scotus full of communist faggots fucked him. it’s a very sad story.
289   FortWayneHatesRealtors   2025 Mar 23, 7:33pm  

@patrick there’s another case that is the reason for our cultural struggles. it was 1962. Engel vs Vitale. that was the case that doomed our nation.
290   Patrick   2025 Mar 24, 11:03am  

Thanks @FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden I had not heard of it.

Grok:


The 1962 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Engel v. Vitale (370 U.S. 421) was a landmark case that ruled it unconstitutional for public schools to sponsor or require official prayers, even if they were nondenominational and voluntary. It’s a cornerstone of First Amendment jurisprudence, specifically the Establishment Clause, which prohibits the government from establishing or promoting religion.
292   FreeAmericanDOP   2025 Apr 22, 5:07pm  

Imagine how far less intrusive a government that gets it's revenue from:

* Tariffs
* Per Capita/Head Tax

would be over income taxes.

Why are so many glibertarians opposed to replacing the income tax with Tariffs?
293   HeadSet   2025 Apr 22, 7:08pm  

AmericanKulak says

Why are so many glibertarians opposed to replacing the income tax with Tariffs?

Because one of the Libertarian tenets is the free flow of people and capital across borders.
297   FreeAmericanDOP   2025 May 27, 12:46pm  

HeadSet says

Because one of the Libertarian tenets is the free flow of people and capital across borders.

Correct.

"I'll shoot you if you enter my private property border, which is an abstract concept guaranteed by governance, but I don't recognize national borders, which is also an abstract concept..."
298   Patrick   2025 May 27, 1:30pm  

Libertarians seem to lack the concept of civic virtue.
299   FortWayneHatesRealtors   2025 May 27, 3:50pm  

Patrick says

Libertarians seem to lack the concept of civic virtue.


Life experience taught me that libertarians are just people who believe in freedom when it benefits them, and not at all when there is no benefit. Being for free trade is great when you get cheap labor from overseas but sell in US at higher prices. They aren't too crazy about you buying stuff from China directly without them as a middle man... suddenly needs regulation. I don't see libertarians any different than anyone else.

Everything is so manipulated, I don't even know what the truth is anymore. Liberals used to be for freedom, now are like zombies on a farm repeating whatever left wing propaganda about illegals being more important than the rest of us. Conservatives basically were assholes who loved money and big corporate donors while hating working man, that is still there, but kinda mixed with Trump populism. I don't know it anymore.
300   HeadSet   2025 May 27, 6:50pm  

Fortwaye says

Conservatives basically were assholes who loved money and big corporate donors while hating working man

That is a left-wing caricature of a Conservative. What you are actually describing is the elite, which is what today's Dems have evolved into.
305   Patrick   2025 Jul 10, 1:17pm  

Wealthiest counties in the US by median household income:

Loudoun County, Virginia $178,707
Santa Clara County, California $159,674
San Mateo County, California $156,000
Falls Church, Virginia $154,734
Fairfax County, Virginia $150,113
Howard County, Maryland $146,982
Douglas County, Colorado $145,737
Nassau County, New York $143,408
Los Alamos County, New Mexico $143,188
Marin County, California $142,785

4/10 are in the DC area.

Why are they so rich? It's not because they have a lot of entrepreneurs who have found ways to serve their fellow man.
306   HeadSet   2025 Jul 10, 2:07pm  

Patrick says

Wealthiest counties in the US by median household income:

Loudoun County, Virginia $178,707
Santa Clara County, California $159,674
San Mateo County, California $156,000
Falls Church, Virginia $154,734

Falls Church is not a county. I presume they included Falls Church because in Virginia, cities and counties are completely separate. No city in VA is part of any county.
307   Patrick   2025 Jul 10, 2:25pm  

I asked AI about that:


Falls Church is not a county but an independent city in Virginia with county-level governance. In the U.S., some cities, like Falls Church, function as county equivalents for statistical and administrative purposes, separate from surrounding counties (in this case, Fairfax County). This explains why it appears in lists of "wealthiest counties" despite being a city.
308   Patrick   2025 Jul 11, 9:37pm  

https://billionairepsycho.substack.com/p/soviet-america


Today’s Soviet America has been objectively worse than many sci-fi dystopian movies. Because cinema needs to entertain an audience — narratives require dramatic suspense, wish fulfillment, and a charismatic hero. Real life, in contrast, has no such requirement to elevate heroism above the sordid slums of the favela. Many aspects of modern American life resemble the opaque bureaucracy of a Kafka novel, but in this absurdist and hyperreal version of America, the tangled maze of circuitous, redundant, and arbitrary paperwork is a ritual humiliation staffed by obese black women who mock their own customers.

A recent Frontier Airlines incident, captured in a viral video, involved a
passenger being refused check-in and taunted by staff after being hit with a
$25 fee. The situation escalated, leading to the termination of the employees
involved.

A passenger, flying from Raleigh-Durham International Airport (RDU) to Boston,
arrived 50 minutes before his flight but hadn't checked in online.

He was informed that he would need to pay a $25 fee to check in at the counter
because he missed the airline's 60-minute check-in deadline.

The passenger was then allegedly refused service and taunted by Frontier Airlines
employees.

A viral video captured the heated exchange, showing the employees arguing with the
passenger and refusing to let him check in.

Frontier Airlines confirmed the individuals in question, who work for a third-party
contractor, were no longer associated with the airline account, according to ABC11 News.

The incident highlights potential issues with Frontier Airlines' check-in policies and
customer service training, as well as the agency's reliance on third-party
contractors.

This video shows the Frontier Airlines agents taunting a passenger...
309   mell   2025 Jul 11, 9:58pm  

Patrick says

Many aspects of modern American life resemble the opaque bureaucracy of a Kafka novel, but in this absurdist and hyperreal version of America, the tangled maze of circuitous, redundant, and arbitrary paperwork is a ritual humiliation staffed by obese black women who mock their own customers

Haha perfectly said!
311   Patrick   2025 Aug 27, 5:31pm  

Thomas Jefferson “believed that the sole function of government was to protect citizens in the enjoyment of their lawfully acquired rights and goods, and that when it had gone so far it should shut down. But today its field of operation has been immensely widened, and its principal aim, in nearly all the great countries of the world, is to maintain itself in power by transferring rights and goods from those who oppose it to those who support it. The object vended is always somebody else’s property. The consideration is votes.”

H.L. Mencken, On Politics: A Carnival of Buncombe

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