Showing posts with label class struggle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label class struggle. Show all posts

Sunday, February 10, 2013

The Bottom Line: It’s Not Dark Yet, But It’s Getting There



[Published at Strike-the-Root.com on January 24, 2013]


The way that America’s political situation is playing out right now has me perplexed. At my own “side” most of all. Not that the president and his ruling party would slam us with more intrusive laws, gun control, financial restrictions, domestic spying, illegal wars, and increased taxes as soon as his election was won that is. No, that was no surprise to me. Who the hell among us didn't see this anti-liberty agenda coming as soon as he was safely re-elected? Bottom line: If you honestly didn’t see this coming then you need to develop a better sense of situational awareness.
So what do I make of Obama’s Great Repression agenda? This short list is what I see happening and what to do about it. Take it for what it’s worth to you.
As things stand today I'd rather have an old, heavily used bolt action rifle and a half box of crusty ammo for it stashed away that the feds/local cops/private data bases have no record of than a brand new M1A and cases of ammo for it stacked to the ceiling if it came via an FFL licensee who has all my information on an ATF Form 4473 in his files. A dinged and scratched “store brand” pump action 12 gauge under the bed that was bought at a garage sale years ago for cash might not impress the guys at the range club with their fancy Benelli trap guns but it is still quite serviceable and well-worth having these days though isn’t it? I sure think so. A clunky old four-inch wheel gun is seen as obsolete by some but it'll still put a hunk of [lead] anywhere you want it with a little practice. And bonus points if you bought it from some friend of a friend for cash. Bottom line: Stop looking at firearms as precious collectables or recreational adult toys and look at them as tools for survival and liberty maintenance which is what they truly are. An old, ugly, banged up, but still serviceable rifle, handgun, or shotgun that came without any “imperial entanglements” attached to it is worth a closet full of newer and better stuff that does in my humble opinion.
All the boasting, bragging, and strutting many of us did on social media websites about our cool new AR-15 or tricked-out Glock seems kind of ill advised now in hindsight doesn’t it? Especially when we knew or should have known all along that the feds routinely monitor social media websites for just such information about us. An anti-gun newspaper in New York recently published the names and addresses of all state licensed handgun owners in their readership area. And unsurprisingly the people named were incensed at this invasion of their privacy. I know I would be myself. But I wonder how many of us gun owners that are now outraged on their behalf have ourselves gone on social media sites like Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and others and posted blog entries, pictures, and videos that in effect “outed” ourselves to the whole world? Bottom line: See the irony here?
Guns aren’t the only things to consider for bolstering your home security. Instead of un-assing $1000+ for a new Sig or Ruger consider obtaining some bags of mixed silver coins instead. It will be vastly simpler to buy food, medicine, new tires, or whatever else you may need in the future with silver coins from someone willing to trade but who isn’t interested in taking piles of worthless government issued paper or in doing e-commerce that can be traced. Value-for-value voluntary transactions build trust between people and can lead to further mutually beneficial transactions down the road. Bottom line: Start thinking about this situation that we’re in as a serious issue of long term personal/family survival and not as a temporary condition to be put up with until it blows over. I have a strong suspicion that this time it isn’t blowing over.
History it has been said doesn’t repeat, but sometimes it rhymes. I believe this is true. For example the first armed rebellion that occurred in America post independence was the so-called Shay’s Rebellion in Massachusetts in 1787. What would cause George Washington’s ex-soldiers and small landowners to take up arms and fight their own state government so soon after securing independence? Hint: It was their inability to pay their property taxes and so having their homes and farms seized for non-payment. This bit of history is something we should all take note of. If things get really bad, and which I have every expectation that they will I’d rather be living in a junky old motor home or a tumbledown shack than in a suburban McMansion even if I owned it free and clear but that I can’t pay the taxes on and so is always on the cusp of a tax foreclosure. I recommend that everyone look up Shay’s Rebellion and read about it. Bottom line: “Home security” takes many forms.
An acre or three out in the woods somewhere with your own water and fuel supply (i.e., trees) can still be had relatively cheap and you can pay the taxes on it by selling off some timber or firewood you harvested, selling fruit, vegetables, or hay that you’ve grown, or even by picking up deposit soda and beer cans on the side of the road if need be. No matter how bad things get for us in the near term local governments are still going to demand property tax payments and for the foreseeable future they’ll have the means to get them too. (At least until we hang abolish them all, but I digress.) Bottom line: Your home should be more than just the dwelling you live inside. It should provide for you as well.
Learn what an actual education is and what it can do for you. As things are going now I’d rather have my kids know how to weld, learn basic carpentry, learn how to type, do nails/hair styling, speak/write Spanish or Chinese, or gain other practical skills or knowledge by whatever means are available than I would have them go to an Ivy League college for four years. Seriously. Being able to scan a balance sheet and understand it, or knowing how to can fruit, or grow hay seems way more useful these days than anything they would likely learn listening to university professors lecture at them all day. Bottom line: Knowing how to do things is preferable to just knowing facts and theories.
 The first time someone shows you who they [really] are,”  an American poet once said, “believe them.” Obama and his ilk have stopped being ciphers and have shown us all who they are and what they intend to do and we should all believe them. It has been pretty apparent for a while now how astonishingly fast our liberty and well-being can be taken away. The burner under this pot of boiling frogs we call America has now been moved from “simmer” to “hot”, so be advised. Bottom line: Don’t depend on government or corporate mass media for anything but basic information or data. (And be skeptical of that too.) Learn to figure things out for yourself.
 
 Maybe we can halt or even roll back this onslaught against our liberties and well-being or maybe we can’t. But either way let’s not kid ourselves any more, eh? For those of you inclined toward religious belief remember that Bible verse warning against “putting your faith in princes”? That is still very good advice. The Republican Party, the NRA, Oath Keepers, Alex Jones, Anonymous, Judge Napolitano, Ron Paul and all the rest of the marginalized and despised mineshaft canaries still left couldn’t rouse us and they can’t save us either. And sad to say as goofy and weird as some of the above-mentioned are they all turned out to be right. (I have a sick feeling that one after another they’re all going to go silent, be intimidated into towing the party line, or just disappear.) Bottom line: What’s over is over. Don’t wallow in your own despair. Instead organize and prepare.
We all need to get cracking if we want to survive what’s coming our way and the chances for success will be much higher if we all have a plan. Good fortune it is said favors the prepared. A word to the wise: Don’t wait until you’re standing on the edge of a trench waiting your turn for a DHS supplied .40 caliber pistol shot to the back of the head.

Ken Kraska is a guy who lives in Michigan.
 

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Definitions of the term "wage slave"

From the Urban Dictionary.

[A wage slave] "Is a person with little to no education who works for wages. These people are usually slaves to their employer and have to kiss butt otherwise they will be fired. Being that these people don't have many other job opportunities, they are forced to live the rest of their lives working for wages and being a slave. Their only other option besides being a wage slave is going to jail or becoming homeless."


Sunday, December 11, 2011

Ann Arbor politicians dither while people freeze

Ann Arbor politicians and their bureaucrats say they want to find a downtown building for a warming center but while they are looking for the perfect site the homeless lumpen freeze. Jeez. So what if this proposed building is not a perfect gem of architectural quality? As a place to avoid freezing to death it will do fine. Clear out some space, get running water, and haul in some porta-potties and it'll do. The city could come with some cash to hire some of their laid off cops to provide overnight security. Not a perfect solution but it'll do.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Credit unions are a better deal for most people than banks are

So says this article from Business Insider. I agree. But then I thought so before the Great Recession hit.

Saturday, July 2, 2011

Weblog

Livonia based U.S. Rep. McCotter decides to run for GOP presidential nomination (Det News)
It's hard to see why though.

Anti-affirmative action Michigan Proposal 2 (passed in 2006) overturned by US Appeals court (Michigan Daily)
The usual suspects are crowing about this big victory. Good for them. But somehow I don't think this is over.

Suburban LA counties looking into seceding, form their own state (CBS-TV)
Fat chance of that ever happening but I understand the sentiment. Futile as it may appear  I support all anti-state activity. Was anybody predicting the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1987? Nope, that was impossible. Until in happened.

Recent Ann Arbor shooting over botched dope rip-off begs the question: "When was the last time anyone got shot over a beer deal?" (Lee Higgins, annarbor.com/)
Enough already. Let people have their dope. Illegal black-market stuff like dope deals breeds this kind of thing. Let's redirect the drug warriors and let 'em get back to real public safety work. Peace and order
first, eh?

Portrait of a "professional activist" (Peter David Blaska, Blaska's Blog)
"Jeremy [Ryan] tells us he is 'vital to the overall movement' because 'I ... make the GOP legislators very nervous. My mere presence causes automatic tension in any committee meeting.' Now, after harassing people in the Capitol for the last four months, the lad is out of money, can't pay the rent on his admittedly expensive apartment. (He does not mention the $3,600 on 15 citations for disorderly conduct.)"
A full-time hell-raiser up in Madison, WI since last January Jeremy Ryan has now run out funds to pay his rent and and other bills and so now is begging for money.  Hope all his friends in the public employee unions and the Madison activist community come through for him. Of course he could always go get a job though, eh? Sheesh. Dipshit slacker.

Living and working in the "1099 economy" (Erik Pages, NewGeography.com/)
"We used to call it 'Free Agent Nation.'  Now, it seems like the new term of art will be 'The 1099 Economy.'   While the names may change, they all point to a phenomenon of rising importance: the growing number of Americans who don’t have a 'regular job'  but instead work on individual contracts with employers or customers.   These folks don’t get the traditional W-2 paystub at the end of the year; they report their taxes with the IRS form"

Google Chrome hits 20% global share as Microsoft continues browser slide (NetWorkWorld)
I'm not sure it's really any smarter to trust Google than it is to trust Micro$oft. Corporations are corporations. A pox on both their houses.

Monday, June 27, 2011

Weblog

The redistribution state can't endure (Victor Davis Hanson, NRO)
Hanson's grumpy old guy grousing act is getting kinda predictable but he still has a point. Eventually all these social justice activists in and out of government run out of other people's money to "redistribute". And that's when the trouble starts.

EMU now looking  to establish entire campus as a no-smoking zone (Julianna Keeping, annarbor.com/)
From the comments @ Ann Arbor.com website: "They should have designated spots for tobacco addicts to fix. Otherwise the EMU police will have to play cat & mouse games of trying to bust them smoking. And, as always, there are the associated problems of suppressing unpopular behavior. Litter, fire hazards, smoking in rest rooms,vandalism, and all the rest. A clear case of the majority acting in an oppressive., heavy handed, ill-liberal manner."

The North Koreans are starving to death (ABC News)
To paraphrase the bumper sticker "you can't fill a grocery bag with nuclear arms". Sad but predictable.

The story of America's founding lumpen (John Payne, American Conservative)
A book review of Thaddeus Russell's A Renegade History of the United States. 
"The cities of colonial and early republican America teemed with whores, homosexual pirates, and illegitimate children; slaves frequently labored less and enjoyed leisure more than free whites in the antebellum era; and the mob is responsible for far more of the freedoms that modern Americans enjoy than are the prudish leaders of the civil rights movement. All that is according to the provocative and revelatory Renegade History of the United States, which Thaddeus Russell describes in the preface as 'history from the gutter up.' ”

Same sex marriages now legal in Bloomberg-istan (Huffington Post)
So now in Manhattan you can marry a person of the same sex, but you can't sprinkle salt on your fries or light up a smoke in the park. The nannies in government have a very skewed idea of what liberty means, eh?

Immigration/Invasion/Demographic News Funnier If You Get The Joke—Which Is ALWAYS On America (Steve Sailor, iSteve blog)
He who laughs last laughs best eh? Hope not.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Weblog

Let them eat iPads!
Federal Reserve apologist shows he's totally disconnected from economic reality.
Human prejudice has ancient evolutionary roots
The tendency to perceive outsiders in a "us versus them" context isn't exclusively human but appears to be shared by other primates as well.
NPR’s Middle-Americaphobia
"'All things considered,' that bunch of decrepit pious prisspots at NPR could stand a breath of 'fresh air.' Today’s 'left' is just the inverse Christian Coalition, only more pious and sanctimonious. Cloistered snooty white bluebloods calling people they’ve never met and wouldn’t touch with a ten-foot pole 'racists.' ”
Why Japanese disaster victims don't riot or loot
" 'Diversity' is a source of conflict and tension, not strength, and the Japanese know it. Thanks to very restrictive immigration [policies], Japan is one of the most homogeneous nations on earth. Its people know that the country belongs to all of them, and they treat it and each other that way. If Japan had let in just a few of the Iraqis and Pakistanis who would love to come, there would not be as many admiring accounts of post-earthquake endurance and self-control."

Friday, January 7, 2011

Sign of the times...cont'd.

Put on your vest and make 'em hot!

The Detroit Free Press has an editorial today featuring numerous bitter complaints about the sky-high auto-insurance rates Detroiters have to pay, blasting term limits, and ending with some shrill comments about what a bitch it is living in the "D". Upshot: Detroit has lots of auto thefts, auto accidents, drivers with bad driving records, as well as lots of unlicensed drivers, many drivers with poor credit ratings (which are used to set rates) and so auto insurance is really high in the Detroit zip codes. Bottom line: It sucks to be part of the lumpen proletariat. Thanks for that news flash Freepers. I knew you were good for something.

Friday, September 24, 2010

weblog

Change we can see with our own eyes: UAW acting more like an agent for the working class rather than a labor agency these days! A welcome change it is too.

People may forgive, but they never forget: Ex-Weather Underground fugitive, retired UIC professor, and Obama political mentor Bill Ayers denied emeritus status by university board. Christopher Kennedy, who chairs the UIC board, objects that Ayers dedicated a book (published in 1974) to Sirhan Sirhan, the man who murdered his father in 1968.

A one-man population bomb: Howard Veal of Muskegon, MI who has fathered 23 children with 14 different women but has paid virtually no support for them was found guilty of felony non-payment and sentenced to 2 -4 years in prison. Veal, who is currently unemployed, owes over half a million in back child support.

Only in America: The story of a transgender, Republican, gun-rights advocate from Fresno, California from the bemused SF Weekly.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

weblog

Ex-LAPD chief and the man who invented the SWAT Team concept Daryl Gates is dead.

The case of Tommy "The Hitman" Hearns: How a highly paid athlete goes broke - Detroit News
John Horgan and George Johnson discuss.
What your deer rifle says about you - American Hunter (Ben O'Brien)
What your hunting style is. Or how much money you have to spend. Or what you inherited from your grandfather. Or something. An interesting read anyhow. (Via The Daily Caller)
A cogent analysis of the disgruntled white working class - Song Writers Notebook (David Rovics)
"If the so-called progressives of this country can't snap out of their Obama-induced slumber, take to the streets and vocally break ranks with both corrupt parties that are driving this country into the ground – if the left can't offer a serious, grassroots, anti-elitist alternative to rightwing populism, but insists on maintaining the ridiculous illusion that we live in a democracy, then the future will indeed be bleak, and ugly, and filled with 'patriots'. ”

Saturday, April 10, 2010

weblog

Rockabilly legend Billy Joe Shaver acquitted of felonious assault - Austin American-Statesman
That's a relief. He still faces a lesser charge of carrying a pistol in a "prohibited place" (i.e. - a bar) though.


Funny. It does save the taxpayers a little money, burns off the nervous energy of the inmates and probably cuts down on mindless TV watching.
"In what other field are people chosen for the very top job based on criteria that should rightly only be considered when they are first hired? If two people have both been practicing law or otherwise occupied in a career for the past 30 years, should we really judge them for achievements that mostly took place before they attained a legal drinking age? Let’s be serious. This is like picking the mayor based on who had the highest GPA in high school."

Sunday, April 4, 2010

weblog


"When the stranger materialized a few years ago, nobody really knew much about him. He seemed like a suitably sympathetic figure and quickly ingratiated himself by offering whatever help he could. No task was too menial for him, and he had a way of finding just what the group needed right when it was required."

Saturday, March 20, 2010

weblog



Screw white working-class voters! - The American Prospect (Alexandra Gutierrez)
The Dems have had it with us! We don't vote for them reliably enough and we're just plain stupid to boot.
"The business cycle has not been eliminated; finance capitalism is by its nature unstable; politically-connected corporations commonly escape market discipline; and there is nothing conservative about the 'creative destruction' of a capitalist economy."
“People routinely mispredict how much pleasure or displeasure future events will bring.” - The New Yorker (Elizabeth Kolbert)
Suspended Animation may be possible soon. - Popular Science
Police may be closing in on Colton Harris-Moore - Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Yeah sure. How many times have we heard that before? Anyhow, they'd better capture him soon or he's gonna become a folk hero to people or something. Not the people who's homes he's burglarized over the years though.
An examination of American conspiracy theorists. - Center For A Stateless Society (Kevin Carson)
"In short, both the Baptists and people like Marshall and Olbermann — like conspiracy nuts — attempt to impose meaning on reality by reading a coherent narrative into random and unrelated events."
The life & death of the Rolodex - Gizmodo (Anna Grossman)
Some history mixed with nostalgia an obsolete technology.