"Is that the most important thing about America? Our morality or our morale?"
Friday, April 24, 2009
Walking and Chewing Gum
Sullivan writes,
I see no reason why a mature democracy cannot both investigate its own failures while addressing its current problems
I don't disagree, but whether or not we are a "mature democracy" is debatable.
What is NOT debatable, though, is that the MSM is certainly not mature enough to do both; their business model forbids it.
Monday, April 20, 2009
Why Healthcare Is So Expensive
This morning my grandfather told me he was considering leg surgery. Worried that he was facing a new series of "senior challenges," I pressed for details: no new pain or loss of mobility; indeed, he played golf yesterday.
Then he revealed that his doctor recommended the surgery...TO OPEN UP HIS BACK SWING! And that Medicare was covering it in full!
He's a staunch libertarian, so I asked him outright if he thought it proper for the government to cover the cost of what is for all intents and purposes an elective procedure. This isn't a matter of "quality of life" so much as it is "quality of play," I said. "Aaron," he responded. "At this age, all life is is play."
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Whopper, large fries and a small mexican
A whopper of an insult, indeed.
Mexico's ambassador to Spain decried the ad.
Mexico's ambassador to Spain said Monday he has written a letter to Burger King's offices in that nation objecting to the ad and asking that it be removed. Jorge Zermeno told Radio Formula that the ads "improperly use the stereotyped image of a Mexican."One wonders what are the proper uses of stereotypical Mexican images.
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Legalize Pot, Save America
Mark Kleinman is totally wrong.
According to the Federal Government's own figures:
7,135 metric tons of pot are imported from Mexico each year. The wholesale value of this product alone (assuming an average wholesale price of $1500/pound) is:
$23,479,230,000
Break the Mexican pot down into $300 ounces, and you have a street value of:
$75,133,536,000
I think it is safe to assume that less than half of pot consumed by Americans comes from Mexico, so the total value of American-consumed pot has to be at least twice that.
He also seems oblivious to the fact that legalized pot = heavily taxed pot.
On an industrial scale, growing pot wouldn't be any more expensive than growing lettuce which, the last time I checked, goes for about $1/pound at the grocery store. In other words, the government could tax it on the order of 1500% and it would still cost less than what is illicitly available on the street.
Even if contraband weed were still available at less than the government taxed rate (assume police stop going after grow houses), are you really going to go on waiting on your asshole weed dealer when you can just go down to 7-11 and pick up a pack of Marlboro Greens?
And every longitudinal study of decriminalization efforts has shown a marked decrease in total consumption of whatever is being decriminalized because it removes the rebel/cool factor. Alcohol consumption tripled during prohibition because drinking was suddenly edgy.
Plus he does not take into account whatsoever the billions upon billions we save by abolishing the DEA.
Labels:
drug policy,
legalization,
mark kleinman,
pot,
war on drugs
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