Thursday, March 6, 2014

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Shut Up.... Or We Will Arrest You For Thinking....

To hear Alex Hundert tell it, Canada, and more specifically, Toronto, is a cruel and awful place, rife with systemic rot and racism, ill intentioned, over-armed and heavy-handed police thugs, a prison apparatus that swallows the innocent whole and a judicial system where there is no justice for the oppressed.
To listen to Alex Hundert tell it, a complementary pair of earplugs would have been nice. The young anarchist and alleged G20 riot ringleader held court at his lawyer’s office on Monday afternoon after appearing in court on Monday morning. The problem was not the decibel-level. It was Mr. Hundert’s subject matter: The System.
The System, you see, sucks. The System is repressive. The System “criminalizes dissent” and it needs to be replaced by any means necessary — if necessary. Such is the way an anarchist prattles on when speaking about, well, you know what.

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Gary Brooks Faulkner

Where do I start? Not Unlike the War On Drugs, America is Brain Washed into Radical Right Wing Mud Slinging.... A 600 Billion Dollar Industry is Covertly Covered with the Ramp Up of a Nazi Styled Police Force... Google Germany's 20th Century War Efforts and you'll See the Strange Photographic Parallels to Today's Paramilitary Local Law Enforcement. Hey, it's all for Your Own Protection....Right. What's a Few Constitutional Amendments and a few Billion Dollars of your Tax Money (Siphoned into Any "Cunt-ry" that's willing to accept our Blah, Blah, Blah & $$$$$.) Even the Presidents Speeches are geared for a Ninth Grade Education (Americans are Dumbshit's.) Gary Brooks Faulkner, Shows us that One Man, Not one Army, Drones, Draft's, and Cash, is all that's needed to Pay Back and End Our "War On Terror." That's a War on Emotion for You Ninth Graders... Are You Scared Yet. This ain't a Tea Party Folks it's a Fleecing. Read Your History. Cocaine Built the Good ole USA. It was the staple of every good slave not long ago. Given to them for Greater Production and Larger Profits. Now It's Just for the Rich. And Marijuana is to easy to grow cutting out the Profiteer. Which finally brings us to My Point. Osama Bin Laden is the shell game to Avoid the Point. $$$,$$$,$$$,$$$,$$$. And lots of it. Our poor Mexican Neighbors are being Killed Daily with Our Blood Money, Not from Drugs........ WAR, WAR, WAR... TAX, TAX, TAX.... CORPORATE, MONEY, MONEY, MONEY... Shhhhhhh.... Calm Down, It's Okay. By July 2011 as we begin to pull out of Afghanistan and Iraq is in Full on Civil War, the United States will be so Broke and Currupt that Not even a Uneducated Muslim with a First Grade Equivalent will give a Shit About Us. And to think, a Liver Transplant is all That's Stopping us From the Boogie Man....  Right On Mr. Faulkner.... Now I Know the Meaning of HERO....

Who's Your Daddy !!!!!!!!!!!

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

TEA..... Anyone?

Drug Czar Should Go

Washington, D.C. -- Voters are disgusted by the reckless spending of politicians in Washington. The backlash is coming, so policymakers are now scrambling to do something, or at least be seen as doing something, about the enormous federal debt. Now is a good time for Congress to abolish government agencies that are outdated, dysfunctional or just unnecessary.
A prime candidate for abolition is the office of the so-called "drug czar."
The conservative firebrand William Bennett became the first czar and made headlines with brash talk of beheading drug dealers. The nation's capital was declared to be a "high intensity drug-trafficking" zone.
In theory, the drug czar's office was supposed to develop a long-term strategy to win the drug war and bring about a "drug-free society." Each year, the czar would call for more governmental efforts to "reduce demand" and to "disrupt the supply" of narcotics. Instead of millions, the government started to spend billions.
The bureaucracy flourished as more agents were hired and more high-tech equipment was purchased. The criminal justice system expanded to handle the influx of cases. More prosecutors. More judges. More prison guards.
And yet, millions and millions of Americans continued using drugs.We now know that Presidents Obama and Clinton were among them. Indeed, nowadays, police agencies like the FBI can only recruit young people if the agencies are willing to overlook past drug use. More than a decade after the drug czar went into business, a commission on federal law enforcement practices gave this blunt assessment: "Despite a record number of seizures and a flood of legislation, this Commission is not aware of any evidence that the flow of narcotics into the United States has been reduced." No one thinks that hiring more Border Patrol agents will make a dent.
The violence and destabilization have become most acute at our southern border. According to the Los Angeles Times' ongoing project on the drug war in Mexico, more than 9,900 people have been slain in Mexican drug-related violence since January 2007. 
Government efforts in Colombia have already cost U.S. taxpayers more than $5 billion, and Mexico is slated to receive about $1.4 billion. Meanwhile, the killings continue at a rate that has prompted the State Department to issue travel advisories to Americans traveling to our southern neighbor.
The office of the drug czar issues an annual report regarding the efficacy of drug policies. Scholars are skeptical of those reports because the bureaucrats invariably prepare reports that come to the defense of existing policy and "spin" the data to find good news and "progress." An independent analysis of the drug office in 2007 found "overwhelming evidence of consistently false and dishonest claims."
Perversely, Congress tends to reward government agencies that perform poorly. When the drug czar's office was created in 1990, its budget was $12 million; this year, the office will cost more than $400 million.
If Congress wants to take a serious step to curb reckless and wasteful spending, it ought to admit the futility of the drug war in the same way we came to realize that alcohol prohibition was misguided. If Congress is only ready to abolish some of its very worst mistakes, it should get rid of our drug czar.

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Friday, January 22, 2010

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

So I Was Thinking. . .

WTF. After a Rowdy Night of Heavy Drinking at some Roadside Cantina, I got to Thinking. . . I Think I was Thinking. I need to see some Daylight. Which turns out is a Really Bad Idea. Not the Thinking. The Daylight. I desperately needed something to "Clear My Mind". Suggestions Anyone. Yeah, Your Right. Let's go to the Bull Fights. Interestingly Enough, the Scalper I/We Purchased Our tickets from, had more paper than just the passes. Sure as Shit, I Cleared My Mind Up. . .

Bull Fights On Acid. What else are Saturdays For?

Monday, January 18, 2010

Art Mann Rules

Art Mann, Travels all over the US. Following Every Cool Happening that ever was. Check out his Link.

Saturday, January 9, 2010


Editers Note

Try This Site Campfire Crony. ( Caution: Your Head My Implode Upon Opening This Link.)http://www.jimkoch.com/