Archive for November, 2011

TOR and online anonymity

Here is an extreme example of how TOR and other services allow private web surfing:

Bit Coins for Black Markets

http://news.nhpr.org/post/bit-coins-black-markets#.TtCdqpkLqwc.twitter

The Future of Anonymous Digital Cash? – we can only hope…

Local transactions by Kenya’s mobile money service, M-Pesa exceeds Western Union’s global transactions

The following story illustrates the power of technology for mobile, person to person payments. While there is no substitute for cash, it would be nice to see this type of widespread use of private digital currencies like bitcoin, et al.:

From TheNextWeb.com:

Local transactions by Kenya’s mobile money service, M-Pesa exceeds Western Union’s global transactions

Local transactions by Kenya’s mobile money service, M-Pesa currently exceed transactions made by Western Union globally, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) reports. According to the IMF, “M-Pesa now processes more transactions domestically within Kenya than Western Union does globally, and provides mobile banking facilities to more than 70 per cent of the country’s adult population.”

Launched in March 2007 by Kenyan telecoms operator, Safaricom, the service which now has over 14 million users in Kenya is currently the world’s most successful mobile payments system.

As a testament to its power, millions of Kenyans used M-Pesa for social impact this year to raise millions of dollars to fight hunger in Kenya. Through the Kenyans for Kenya campaign, small donations as low as Ksh10 or about $0.10 USD were made by citizens in both urban and rural areas. Though the campaign had the goal of raising about Kshs 500 million (about USD $5 million) in one month, this goal was reached in only two weeks. As of September 2011, the campaign had raised about Kshs 672 million  or about USD $6.7 million.

To replicate its success, the World Bank has since picked former Safaricom CEO, Michael Joseph to spearhead the expansion of mobile money transfers in its member states.

For more on M-Pesa, watch a brief documentary on the service below.

 

Julie Borowski on Thanksgiving

Thanks to EPJ for this:

 

Shock Statistic: Americans Freely Spend Twice The Amount On Private Security vs. Police

November 23, 2011

By

Seriously, this just blew me away.

William Norman Grigg writes:

According to the most recent available statistics regarding incarceration, however, people convicted of actual crimes compose a very small minority of America’s vast and growing federal prison population. As of 2009, crimes of violence accounted for roughly eight percent of that total, and property crimes contributed a bit less than six percent. More than half of all inmates were convicted of non-violent drug offenses, and thirty-five percent were caged for what are called “public order” offenses.

Libertarian activist Michael Suede points out that eighty-six percent of all federal inmates were punished for what are called “victimless crimes” – that is to say, offenses not properly described as crimes at all. It is reasonable to assume that similar trends exist at the state and local level as well.

There are instances in which police act in defense of persons and property. Those are genuinely exceptional, because rendering that service is not part of their formal job description: The Supreme Court has repeatedly ruled that police have no enforceable duty to protect individual rights. This helps explain why, as economist Robert Higgs pointed out roughly a decade ago, “there are three times as many private policemen as there are public ones.”

In choosing to pay for private security assistance, Americans freely spend more than twice the amount stolen from us each year to pay for the government’s armed enforcement caste. This is because the government that takes our money fails to provide the promised social good – protection of life and property.

Continue reading…

 

Who’s on the Line? Increasingly, Caller ID Is Duped

By
Published: November 22, 2011

Caller ID has been celebrated as a defense against unwelcome phone pitches. But it is backfiring.

Michelle Litvin for The New York Times

Julie Schultz of Chicago hired a lawyer after being peppered with calls from debt collectors that were wrongly identified.

Telemarketers increasingly are disguising their real identities and phone numbers to provoke people to pick up the phone. “Humane Soc.” may not be the Humane Society. And think the I.R.S. is on the line? Think again.

Caller ID, in other words, is becoming fake ID.

“You don’t know who is on the other end of the line, no matter what your caller ID might say,” said Sandy Chalmers, a division manager at the Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection in Wisconsin.

Starting this summer, she said, the state has been warning consumers: “Do not trust your caller ID. And if you pick up the phone and someone asks for your personal information, hang up.”

Regulators in Wisconsin and many other states are hearing a significant jump in complaints about what is often called “caller ID spoofing” or “call laundering.”

Continue reading…

License plate readers: A useful tool for police comes with privacy concerns

An armed robber burst into a Northeast Washington market, scuffled with the cashier, and then shot him and the clerk’s father, who also owned the store. The killer sped off in a silver Pontiac, but a witness was able to write down the license plate number.Police figured out the name of the suspect very quickly. But locating and arresting him took a little-known investigative tool: a vast system that tracks the comings and goings of anyone driving around the District.

Continue reading…

The Difference Between OWS and Anti-Vietnam Protests – by Jeffrey Tucker

The Difference Between OWS and Anti-Vietnam Protests
The Occupy protesters imagine that they stand in a great tradition of American radicalism, willing to stand up to the man and risk arrest in order to achieve their goals. The most obvious case of such a mass movement would be the anti-war protests of the 1960s. They started small and grew and grew until they became mainstream and actually affected a dramatic policy change. The U.S. military pulled out of Vietnam, implicitly conceding defeat and mourning the long history of calamity.

But consider the gigantic differences. The Vietnam protest movement had a clear goal. It wanted to end the war. It had a clear enemy: the politicians and bureaucrats who wanted the war to last forever. It had a clear message: this war is wrong. It had an intense motivation: the protesters were terrified of being drafted to kill and be killed. This is what standing up to power is all about.

So far as anyone can tell, the Occupy movement has none of this clarity. Ten thousand articles have been written on these people and there is still no consensus concerning what the issue really is. The goals of the movement are posted here and there, but not everyone among the protesters agrees with them. The motivation is just as amorphous and varied: unemployment, sinking job prospects, sinking incomes, blowback from the bailouts, the desire to slum around in a decadent sort of way, and the destructive urge to trample down the pea-patch of life itself.

Worse, from my point of view, is that the movement isn’t really standing up to power. It is standing in for power to urge that the state take on more responsibilities and control people’s lives even more than it does already. They imagine that they are demanding human rights, but the main agenda as listed in public websites amounts to a list of ways for the government to violate human rights, or at least intrude aggressively upon them.

Raising the minimum wage, for example, amounts to a limitation on the rights of workers to negotiate their own employment contracts. The minimum wage says: you have no right to offer less for your services than the state gives you permission to offer. Thus, the minimum wage not only promotes unemployment; it restrains the human right to associate on any terms of a person’s choosing.

Likewise, the demand to nationalize health interferes with the rights of doctors and patients to negotiate their own contracts. The demand for tariffs interferes with the rights of people to peacefully trade with anyone from around the world, and effectively entrenches the nation-state as the only permitted geographic range of economic associations.

The imposition of new taxes takes people’s property. This is property acquired through their own labor which is then forcibly taken by the state to use for political purposes. This demand is a prescription for further impoverishment.

The push for refunding domestic infrastructure denies private entrepreneurs the opportunity to use their resources and talents to rebuild on a for-profit basis and in a manner that that can actually be maintained. There is a reason that state infrastructure always seems to be crumbling: it is built by the state with all the inherent economic irrationality of most state projects.

The real problem with the OWS movement is its political naiveté. The protestors imagine that by attacking free enterprise and the capitalist system they are upholding the rights of the common man. The exact opposite is true. The only real alternative to free enterprise is an economy owned and administered by society’s most ruthless and cruel elements, who always seems to gravitate toward statist means.

If OWS is successful, it will wake up to a world that is lorded over by federal bureaucrats and jack-booted enforcement thugs. The entire world will be run like the Post Office, the TSA, the IRS, and the Customs Bureau. This has nothing to do with freedom and nothing to do with human rights.

For this reason, the OWS protest is not really a threat to the establishment. So far, its message has been that the state needs to be truer to itself, that the worst aspects of both the Democratic and Republican platforms need to be implemented with a vengeance. This is a movement the state can come to love. Indeed, the White House has drawn closer and closer to this movement, saying that Obama “will continue to acknowledge the frustration that he himself shares.”

Again, the contrast with the Vietnam protests of the 1960s cannot be starker. The White Houses hated these people. The politicians of both parties were terrified of what “people power” meant in those days.

If we had the equivalent movement as it relates to economics today, it would be calling for an end to the Fed, privatization of education, privatization of health care, the right to global free trade, an end to state robbery of persons and their businesses, and a right to keep what you own. In short, a truly radical protest movement would be calling for a consistent and authentic capitalism as a corollary to the peace agenda in international politics.

Now that would be radical.

Regards,

Jeffrey Tucker

Source

The Black Market Always Wins… Even in Communist China

November 18th, 2011

Imagine you’re a 26 year old high-school dropout working as a factory grunt for a measly $100 a month. And that’s 2010 dollars, not some distant past when that was worth something. You’d probably be pumping your fist against the bourgeoisie in your Che Guevara T-shirt down at Occupy Wall Street right now. But what if you knew that just 6 years later, if you played your cards right, you’d be managing your own factory employing more that 100 people? And what if this wasn’t some economic miracle, but it was a normal occurrence for enterprising young entrepreneurs? Wouldn’t you want to know how it was possible? Well the answer is the black market.

See, that’s a true story. It happened to Cai Shuxian, and it happens to many entrepreneurs in Wenzhou, China where every road eventually leads back to the company that built it. The saying goes among the Wenzhounese, “the mountains are high and the emperor is far away” because for the past 30 years private citizens have virtually nullified government central planning simply by ignoring it, and the government just doesn’t have the resources to crack down. Private firms now build roads, bridges, highways, and even airports to bring their goods to market, and even though it’s not always pretty it is crudely efficient. There’s still a taxation bureaucracy, but tax evasion is typical, even routine. The primary role of local government has been to protect the city from higher levels of government.

When state-run banks became averse to lending to small private enterprise citizens of Wenzhou developed an underground financial system of their own. So called, “gray-market” lending, though technically illegal, is used by nearly 90% of individuals and 60% of companies according to official figures from the People’s Bank of China (China’s central bank). Non-bank lending of venture capital has been the single most important development to the economic success of Wenzhou, and that combined with a blasé disregard for regulatory laws has produced a business environment that borders on market anarchism.

Continue reading…

“People are bad so we need a government made up of people…”

Interview of J. Neil Schulman – author of Alongside Night

Listen to this recorded interview with J. Neil Schulman, author of Alongside Night the “must read” novel
for anyone who cares about freedom and wishes to survive the coming economic collapse:

.mp3 file:

http://tinyurl.com/7ma7z9n

.wav file:

http://tinyurl.com/7ma7z9n

Here are a few notable quotes of praise for Alongside Night:

“An absorbing novel–science fiction, yet also a cautionary tale
with a disturbing resemblance to past history and future
possibilities.”
– Milton Friedman, Nobel laureate in Economics

“I received Alongside Night at noon today. It is now eight in the
evening and I just finished it. I think I am entitled to some
dinner now as I had no lunch. The unputdownability of the book
ensured that. It is a remarkable and original story, and the
picture it presents of an inflation- crippled America on the
verge of revolution is all too acceptable. I wish, and so will
many novelists, that I, or they, had thought of the idea first. A
thrilling novel, crisply written, that fires the imagination as
effectively as it stimulates the feelings.”
–Anthony Burgess

“Alongside Night is terribly accurate. Whenever the American
crack-up boom happens, few libertarians would disagree with his
outline of the scenarios. But Neil went one step farther than
most of the libertarians of the time. He integrated the new
science of countereconomics and the economic philosophy of
Agorism, which I had only begun to develop in 1974…. When? You
decide, dear reader; but you are now well armed to see the signs
and know what actions to take. Thanks to Ludwig von Mises, a
small band of rational revolutionary students, and J. Neil
Schulman, artist.”
–Samuel Edward Konkin III

“One of the most widely hailed libertarian novels since the
classic works of Ayn Rand.”
–Reason Magazine

Download your FREE copy at:

http://www.AlongsideNight.com

For information on the movie project:

http://www.AlongsideNightMovie.com

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