"We risk becoming the best informed society that has ever died of ignorance"
- Rubén Blades

"You can't make up anything anymore. The world itself is a satire. All you're doing is recording it"
- Art Buchwald

"It's getting exciting now, two and one-half. Think of everything we've accomplished, man. Out these windows, we will view the collapse of financial history. One step closer to economic equilibrium"
- Tyler Durden

"It is your corrupt we claim. It is your evil that will be sought by us. With every breath, we shall hunt them down."
- Boondock Saints

Saturday, February 18, 2012

If 'x' Is The Population Of The United States & 'y' Is The Degree Of Imbecility Of The Average American, Then Democracy Is The Theory That 'x' Times 'y' Is Less Than 'y'”

Does anybody in this country have an original, fact-based, objective opinion about the current state of this country that wasn't read from a teleprompter or repeated from some spineless Orwellian blob on a party hack news station that is used as a soundbite to rally the ADD and double-digit IQ population around some Sociopath that sells his core values for soft money and perverts the very system that claim these terrorists are perverting?  Much to CC's joy, yes, but they're an endangered species that perhaps federal funding could save if it wasn't wasted on Western education.



The current "majority" in America seems to have trouble thinking for themselves.  The fact that direct democracy does not exist in an age where direct Idol and Superbowl Commercial democracy does exist, speaks volumes to the shallow brain power of America's 51%.  Consider the selfish and very distorted stories we're told when data and a fact are twisted to met an agenda that is self serving and designed to create an appeal to security over freedom.

Consider this view point from The World Complex:
The "Harper Government's" new online privacy bill, which requires that telecom companies hand over subscriber information to police without a warrant, had already generated a great deal of excitement--but when Public Safety Minister Vic Toews accused any opposition to the bill as supporting child pornographers, the online chatter went stratospheric.

Toews argument is yet another iteration of the old saw that you have nothing to fear if you have nothing to hide.

I, and many others, beg to disagree.

The reason I disagree is my long experience with authority figures and a certain creeping inevitability to the abuses that power entails. Once you are put in a position where you are to investigate crime, you begin to colour innocuous events with your own suspicions.

For instance, for years I have collected nickels. I would go to the bank, buy a number of rolls, pick out the ones I wanted, and returned the rest. There is nothing wrong with doing this, apart from whatever annoyance it might cause the tellers at the bank. But now I have these strings of petty cash transactions at the bank--20 dollars out, 18 dollars in, 40 dollars out, 35 dollars in, etc., each one separated by a day or two. I feel I have nothing to hide, but what might a CRA agent or some other suspicious member of the law think of this? How might they interpret all of this moving cash in and out of the account? Who knows.

A few years ago my bank offered me a free financial consultation, so I could talk to an "investment professional" about my progress towards my retirement goals. As per usual I told him that I was a significant shareholder and an insider of a reporting issuer--this is information that they are supposed to know in the event that I trade any securities of a company at which I am an insider. As he looked over my portfolio, he commented on how risky many of holdings were--there were a lot of junior miners there. I told him that I work in the industry, which helps me interpret the press releases and the geology of the various projects, some of which I have visited in the past. He threw off a light comment, "Well, I guess it's easy to make money when you trade on insider information."

Excuse me? Are you accusing me of something? This is a very dangerous accusation to hear from your banker, as he is required by Canadian law to report such suspicions through Fintrac. The guy knows nothing about me, but one look at my portfolio and he's sure I'm trading on insider info. This is the mindset of those who seek to use this information. You are a criminal; they just need to find the right information to prove it.

Suppose you have a favourite niece (or grandchild) going to university near your home. So you go to visit her every couple of weeks, bringing her a small bit of spending cash that you take from your bank on your way to visit her. Perhaps you email her before these visits. Now, suppose that this niece has been caught once with a small amount of some recreational drug (shocking, I know, but not unheard of at university). How might the police look at your pattern of small cash withdrawals from the bank followed by visits to this known drug offender?

Perhaps you are a Muslim youth struggling to keep to a moral path in what might appear to be an amoral world. For support you write your cleric with your questions about your struggle (perhaps you use the word jihad in this context). Might the police look at this discussion as a coded cover for something more ominous? Remember, that's their job.