Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2017-01-05 Thread Razer


On 01/04/2017 10:00 PM, juan wrote:
> \
>> Much as Neonazis are leeches on
>> whatever host society they infest.
>   
>   speaking of leeeches...
>

Classic example. Tail-ending with absofuckinglutely nothing to add.

Rr


Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2017-01-04 Thread juan
On Wed, 4 Jan 2017 21:11:07 -0800
Razer  wrote:

> The Jesuits and Israel are on EXACTLY the same page. Catholicism is
> Christianity's Zionism. A Fascist socio-politcal leech on an
> ostensibly spiritual religion. 


What a sick piece of shit you are rayzer - why don't you join
some commmie 'religious' 'community'? That would the sort of
'spiritual' fascist cesspool where the likes of you thrive. You
could run a concentration camp in soviet russia...or cuba.



> Much as Neonazis are leeches on
> whatever host society they infest.


speaking of leeeches...



> 
> Rr
> 
> 



Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2017-01-04 Thread Razer

On 01/04/2017 08:35 PM, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 20, 2016 at 02:31:19PM +, Ben Tasker wrote:
>> Or perhaps it's simply because Japan's efforts in the middle east are
>> limited to Humanitarian aid. Makes it far harder to find victims willing to
>> get angry at the Japanese when they're not dropping bombs.
>>
>> And "no terrorists" is taking it a bit far. No jihadi's maybe, but Japan
>> has had it's own share of terrorism in the past.
> Speaking of the middle east, a quote that resonates personally:
>
>   "Every time anyone says that Israel is our only friend in the
>Middle East, I can't help but think that before Israel, we had
>no enemies in the Middle East."
>- John Sheehan, S.J. (Jesuit priest)
>
>URL with photo of this man and quote:
>http;//bbs,dailystormer,com/t/retiring-from-the-forum/74918/115

The Jesuits are the military and spying wing of the Vatican.

A hella set of credentials.

The Jesuits and Israel are on EXACTLY the same page. Catholicism is
Christianity's Zionism. A Fascist socio-politcal leech on an ostensibly
spiritual religion. Much as Neonazis are leeches on whatever host
society they infest.

Rr




Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2017-01-04 Thread Zenaan Harkness
On Tue, Dec 20, 2016 at 02:31:19PM +, Ben Tasker wrote:
> Or perhaps it's simply because Japan's efforts in the middle east are
> limited to Humanitarian aid. Makes it far harder to find victims willing to
> get angry at the Japanese when they're not dropping bombs.
> 
> And "no terrorists" is taking it a bit far. No jihadi's maybe, but Japan
> has had it's own share of terrorism in the past.

Speaking of the middle east, a quote that resonates personally:

  "Every time anyone says that Israel is our only friend in the
   Middle East, I can't help but think that before Israel, we had
   no enemies in the Middle East."
   - John Sheehan, S.J. (Jesuit priest)

   URL with photo of this man and quote:
   http://bbs.dailystormer.com/t/retiring-from-the-forum/74918/115


"right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-24 Thread Madlib
> jdb10987 at yahoo.com:
> you don't believe in the concept of 'private property',
> which is often defined as 'the right to exclude others'.
> Ironically, Communists believe in the concept of public,
> or collective, ownership.

These things aren't  _, fam

Who owns the ___ and the ___ in this post-public _?

And what happens to the ___, the internet?

Please ___ yourself, sir.



"right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-24 Thread rooty
For record - Žarko is correct.

In 2015, Japan received 7,586 refugee applications but accepted only 27 of them.

And out of those 27, majority male, 2 were convicted of a violent rape just a 
few weeks after arriving in Japan.

Extreme vetting

http://www.breitbart.com/london/2016/01/23/contrast-to-europe-japan-accepts-27-refugees-last-year-rejects-99-per-cent/

http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2015/12/30/national/social-issues/wary-outsiders-japan-keeps-doors-closed-refugees/

Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-24 Thread juan
On Tue, 20 Dec 2016 21:21:27 + (UTC)
jim bell  wrote:


> 
> This essay by Christopher Cantwell pretty much destroys the
> "libertarians must be in favor of open borders" idea.

> https://christophercantwell.com/2015/09/28/open-borders-or-market-immigration/


"For a libertarian, the answer may at first seem quite obvious,
open borders." 

"Governments obtain everything they have from coercive
violence, and thus have no legitimate claim to control what are
commonly considered public spaces." 

That is the libertarian position. It is then REJECTED by
cuntwell because it is not 'practical'.

"A practical and strategic problem then presents itself." 


So I hope that now  Jim won't misrepresent what I say and
won't pretend that I'm misrepresenting cantwell.

Notice also how there's an obvious LIBERTARIAN patch for the
alleged problem. Have open borders and don't give any 'welfare'
to immigrants.  Oddly enough, arch-clown cantwell 'forgets' to
mention that option. But even the likes of cantwell can't be
that stupid.


PS : Let me know when you Jim and cantwell start deporting
statist but 'legal' americans. There must be some >250 millions
of them? 


J.



Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-24 Thread juan
On Sat, 24 Dec 2016 01:27:33 + (UTC)
jim bell  wrote:


> And there are probably 20+ million illegal aliens in America.


Only the most crass statist believes in the concept of 'illegal
alien'.


By the way Jim you and cuntwell never explained what you are
going to do with the 'legal' 'american' 'citizens' who don't
really belive in rights. Are you going to deport them? Or you
think they don't actually exist? 





Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-24 Thread juan
On Fri, 23 Dec 2016 21:17:27 + (UTC)
jim bell  wrote:

> 
> 
>  From: juan 
> 
> On Tue, 20 Dec 2016 21:21:27 + (UTC)
> jim bell  wrote:
> 
> >> This essay by Christopher Cantwell pretty much destroys the
> >> "libertarians must be in favor of open borders" idea.
> >> https://christophercantwell.com/2015/09/28/open-borders-or-market-immigration/
> 
> 
> >    So, to wrap this 'issue' up :
> Which is apparently what you say when you're planning to misrepresent
> things.]


I am not misrepresenting anything. So now you are just outright
lying, like cantwell eh.



> 
> >    In his article, cantwell correctly describes and acknowledges 
> >    the libertarian position and then DISMISSES it and REJECTS it as
>  >   'not practical'.

> And you misrepresent it by referring to it as "THE libertarian
> position". 

Again, I am not misrepresenting anything. Perhaps YOU need to
really read the article. cuntwell is the the typical
"but-who-will-pick-the-cotton" 'practical' advocate of slavery.
Or state borders in the case. 


> (emphasis mine).It's quite the opposite, so I wonder if
> you really read Cantwell's essay, or whether you are simply
> deliberately misrepresenting things. 

I am not misrepresenting anything. Your saying so obviously
doesn't make it so.


> The truth is that Cantwell makes
> clear his opinion is that some people are MIS-representing the
> 'open-borders' position as being the ONLY "libertarian" position.


Respect for individual rights is indeed the only libertarian
position. Support for the fascist american state (cuntwell's
position) is the exact opposite of the libertarian position.

 
> As Cantwell states:
> " But open borders in the presence of a command economy and welfare
> state is decidedly anti-market, anti-freedom, and anti-peace."

That's yet another mental vomit from cuntwell. His stating
that sort of nonsense doesn't make it true though. 




> >    "But the (good) libertarian will tend to put principle first,
>  >   no doubt" 
> 
> >    Or perhaps that was meant in a mocking tone, which would be
>  >   further proof that cantwell is his own parody. 

> I see nothing wrong with presenting this 'pro-open-borders' position
> in a mocking fashion.  


cuntwell is mocking the principled libertarians because they
are not 'practical' - Did I mention that cuntwell subscribes to
the "but-who-will-pick-the-cotton" variety of political
anti 'philosophy'? 


>     
>    > Then he embarks on a pseudo-economical tangent (conservatives
>    > like to pretende they know 'economics') and introdudes the
>   >  laughable lie that immigration to the US is driven by state
>   >  'welfare'.

> Depends a lot on what you mean by "driven by".   I'd say, instead, it
> is "affected by state 'welfare'".  

And you'd be parroting cuntwell's lie. 


> In other words, don't imply that
> the only factor affecting immigration is 'welfare'.  It's just a big
> factor.  

You parroting conservative propaganda only means that you
parrot conservative propaganda. 


> 
>     
>  >   So cantwell knows what the libertarian position should be and
> >    rejects it.

> Not at all.  Cantwell knows what a SIMPLISTIC 'libertarian' position
> looks like, notices the inconsistencies, and rejects it.

Sure, the real 'consistent' libertarian position is to lie and
support the borders of the fascist american state. Hey Jim you
really are an 'anarchist' eh. And what really makes you a real
anarchist is your support for the current american state. 

So, the principled and libertarian rejection of state borders
is according to you 'simplistic' and not really libertarian.
Pathetic.



>  Not the
> same thing.
> 
> > He then lies about immigration
> How does he lie about immigration?
> >, and doesn't even

> >    have the balls to explicitly admit that he's nothing but the
> >    cheapest conservative DEFENDING THE STATE'S BORDERS. 

> If 'public property' were eliminated,


The idea that every single square foot of land is going to be
owned by americunt fascists is nonsense at so many levels. 

And notice how you go from whining about real principled
libertarianism not being 'practical' to invoking a complete
utopian or I should say dystopian scenario.

But in the real world there's unowned land and common land. And
lots of land WRONGFULLY owned by 'private' criminals.



> it would be possible to
> eliminate "state's borders", converting them to private borders.


Houses have private borders. Not countries. 


>  What we now know as "illegal aliens" could be excluded not by things
> called "governments", but instead by agreements among private
> individuals to block entry by those people. 

> 
>  >   Just in case : libertaria

Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-23 Thread John Newman

> On Dec 23, 2016, at 4:17 PM, jim bell  wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> From: juan 
> 
> On Tue, 20 Dec 2016 21:21:27 + (UTC)
> jim bell  wrote:
> 
> >> This essay by Christopher Cantwell pretty much destroys the
> >> "libertarians must be in favor of open borders" idea.
> >> https://christophercantwell.com/2015/09/28/open-borders-or-market-immigration/
> 
> 
> >So, to wrap this 'issue' up :
> 
> Which is apparently what you say when you're planning to misrepresent things.
> 
> >In his article, cantwell correctly describes and acknowledges 
> >the libertarian position and then DISMISSES it and REJECTS it as
>  >   'not practical'.
> 
> And you misrepresent it by referring to it as "THE libertarian position".  
> (emphasis mine).
> It's quite the opposite, so I wonder if you really read Cantwell's essay, or 
> whether you are simply deliberately misrepresenting things.
> The truth is that Cantwell makes clear his opinion is that some people are 
> MIS-representing the 'open-borders' position as being the ONLY "libertarian" 
> position.
> 
> As Cantwell states:
> 
> " But open borders in the presence of a command economy and welfare state is 
> decidedly anti-market, anti-freedom, and anti-peace."
> 
> >"But the (good) libertarian will tend to put principle first,
>  >   no doubt" 
> 
> >Or perhaps that was meant in a mocking tone, which would be
>  >   further proof that cantwell is his own parody. 
> 
> I see nothing wrong with presenting this 'pro-open-borders' position in a 
> mocking fashion.  
> 

The suffering of others is certainly amusing to some people, of a certain ilk. 
The elimination of artificial economic zones and their endemic poverty, all 
enforced at the barrel of a gun, makes for great "mocking" material ;)

The so called libertarian party in America is a true fucking joke. Gary Johnson 
is an affable buffoon. I wouldn't mind smoking a bowl with him, I guess. But 
otherwise he and his compatriots and those who vote for them are a total and 
complete waste of space.

> 
>> Then he embarks on a pseudo-economical tangent (conservatives
>> like to pretende they know 'economics') and introdudes the
>   >  laughable lie that immigration to the US is driven by state
>   >  'welfare'.
> 
> Depends a lot on what you mean by "driven by".   I'd say, instead, it is 
> "affected by state 'welfare'".  In other words, don't imply that the only 
> factor affecting immigration is 'welfare'.  It's just a big factor.  
> 
> 
>  >   So cantwell knows what the libertarian position should be and
> >rejects it.
> 
> Not at all.  Cantwell knows what a SIMPLISTIC 'libertarian' position looks 
> like, notices the inconsistencies, and rejects it.  Not the same thing.
> 
> 
> > He then lies about immigration
> 
> How does he lie about immigration?
> 
> >, and doesn't even
> >have the balls to explicitly admit that he's nothing but the
> >cheapest conservative DEFENDING THE STATE'S BORDERS. 
> 
> If 'public property' were eliminated, it would be possible to eliminate 
> "state's borders", converting them to private borders.  What we now know as 
> "illegal aliens" could be excluded not by things called "governments", but 
> instead by agreements among private individuals to block entry by those 
> people. 
> 
>  >   Just in case : libertarianism and the state are 'incompatible'.
> 
> Libertarianism and 'public property' are more clearly 'incompatible' than 
> that pair.  The inconsistency is that generally, people who advocate 'open 
> borders' do so with the conceit that they are maintaining a 'welfare state' 
> and 'public property' (both non-libertarian principles, at least not without 
> voluntary agreements) while simultaneously eliminating 'state borders'. 
> 
> 
> >It painfully follows that no libertarian worth his salt would
> >defend such crass statist device as the state's borders.
> 
> I advocate private borders upon America's adoption of libertarian principles. 
>  That, of course, may eliminate the concept of 'America' as a monolithic 
> entity.
> 
> Jim Bell
>  
> 


Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-23 Thread Rayzer
On 12/23/2016 05:27 PM, jim bell wrote:

>
>
> *From:* Rayzer 
>
> On 12/23/2016 04:07 PM, jim bell opined:
>>
>> >>That outburst simply shows that you don't believe in the concept of
>> 'private property', which is often defined as 'the right to exclude
>> others'.   Ironically, Communists (of which you are obviously one)
>> believe in the concept of public, or collective, ownership.
>>
>> >>Nations such as Venezuela are doing so well these days due to the
>> wonders of Socialism.
>>
>> >>Jim Bell
>>
> >You aren't talking about "Collective" anything because collectives
> don't "Exclude" anyone in the sense you mean it...
>
> If a "collective" doesn't take the position that a given property is
> owned by everyone in the world, it is "excluding" the rest.
>

Collective. Let's say I'm a carpenter who makes furniture with political
leanings towards anarchism and the collective I meet is within those
parameters. In an anarchist society you wouldn't be "Excluded" from that
collective. You may not have decision making rights until some other
criteria are met, but you ARE part of that collective. Exclusion IS NOT
an Anarchist ethic. You don't carry a card.

Some collectives a larger and more encompassing... For instance the IWW
and more recently CrimethInc.


>
> > and not-so-ironically I don't believe you're anything more than a
> right-wing Republican. 
>
> And you are pretending to be unaware that for 40+ years, libertarians
> have been viewed by lefties as "right-wing Republicans", and have been
> viewed by righties as "left-wing Democrats".   Your saying what you
> think libertarians are classifies you as well as anything.
>

In the US they are right wing republicans.  Whereas there's a great deal
of confusion about what left means because anything to the 'left' of ...
Oh let's say Donald Trump, is 'left'... But Libertarian has definable
parameters that are easily observed in the US. White. Middle Class.
Socially Liberal with a NOT SO LIBERAL economic belief. Use words like
Communist, Marxist, Anarcho-Syndicalist, etc if you want to define what
you mean by left because a Dixiecrat Democrat (constituting the majority
philosophical underpinning of the Democratic party whether they're from
"Dixie" or not) is not to the left of anything socially or economically.

>
> >Obviously.
>
> >There are at least 35 million homeless citizens in the US. That's
> about ten percent of the total population. Many of them are working
> and living in cars and shelters. Many of them are children.
>
> And there are probably 20+ million illegal aliens in America.

Eaten any good strawberries or lettuce recently? Actually, I mis-speak
because I drove truck from the fields of California and they ALL had
green cards. Every single one of them I ever met. Which is good. Because
you wouldn't have any strawberries or lettuce without them seeing as
white people have an aversion to hard labor that won't make the rent
pay-wise.

So where exactly are the illegal aliens? Doing nudie photoshoots without
work permits and marrying Donald Trump. Working at an Armour meat
packing plant in Iowa after the company arranged to have them brought
directly there. Making US military supplies at a Pentagon contracted
factory in Maine (the company was allowed to keep the contract too)

In other words, rich white males hire them, and a LOT of those RWMs
would consider themselves libertarian too!


And you still haven't responded to the contention below that the
Venezuelan "Socialist" government isn't the primary reason for their
economic woes, albeit a dependence on a very volatile oil market isn't
helping, OR Saudi Arabia's failing economy for that matter, that
Venezuela is continually being destabilized by direct US covert
operations and it's surrounding US Satrap nations like the narco-state
Colombia.

The Cuban economy is doing quite fine... Has done quite fine over the
last half century despite the fact that CIA gusanos dropped diseased
chickens on the island and wiped out their poultry industry etc.

You'd be a fucking idiot if you think the CIA isn't doing that sort of
thing to Venezuela.

Rr

>
>> "Photo: Associated Press reporter Matt Lee laughs at a US State
>> Department Spokesperson’s contention the U.S. is NOT involved in the
>> recent Venezuelan coup attempt" 
>> I notice that anti-government Venezuelans control about 2/3s of its
>> legislature, and are following the law to have Maduro removed from
>> power, but they are being illegally and unconstitutionally thwarted
>> by  Maduro and his cronies.
>>
>>  Jim Bell
>>
>>
>>
>



Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-23 Thread jim bell


 From: Rayzer 

 On 12/23/2016 04:07 PM, jim bell opined:
  
  
>>That outburst simply shows that you don't believe in the concept of 
'private property', which is often defined as 'the right to exclude others'.   
Ironically, Communists (of which you are obviously one) believe in the concept 
of public, or collective, ownership.
  
  >>Nations such as Venezuela are doing so well these days due to the wonders 
of Socialism. 
  >>            Jim Bell  
   
 >You aren't talking about "Collective" anything because collectives don't 
 >"Exclude" anyone in the sense you mean it...
If a "collective" doesn't take the position that a given property is owned by 
everyone in the world, it is "excluding" the rest.

> and not-so-ironically I don't believe you're anything more than a right-wing 
> Republican. 
And you are pretending to be unaware that for 40+ years, libertarians have been 
viewed by lefties as "right-wing Republicans", and have been viewed by righties 
as "left-wing Democrats".   Your saying what you think libertarians are 
classifies you as well as anything.
 
>Obviously.
 
>There are at least 35 million homeless citizens in the US. That's about ten 
>percent of the total population. Many of them are working and living in cars 
>and shelters. Many of them are children.
And there are probably 20+ million illegal aliens in America.

"Photo: Associated Press reporter Matt Lee laughs at a US State Department 
Spokesperson’s contention the U.S. is NOT involved in the recent Venezuelan 
coup attempt" 

I notice that anti-government Venezuelans control about 2/3s of its 
legislature, and are following the law to have Maduro removed from power, but 
they are being illegally and unconstitutionally thwarted by  Maduro and his 
cronies.




 Jim Bell





 


   

Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-23 Thread Rayzer
On 12/23/2016 04:07 PM, jim bell opined:

>
> That outburst simply shows that you don't believe in the concept of
> 'private property', which is often defined as 'the right to exclude
> others'.   Ironically, Communists (of which you are obviously one)
> believe in the concept of public, or collective, ownership.
>
> Nations such as Venezuela are doing so well these days due to the
> wonders of Socialism.
>
> Jim Bell
>

You aren't talking about "Collective" anything because collectives don't
"Exclude" anyone in the sense you mean it... and not-so-ironically I
don't believe you're anything more than a right-wing Republican.

Obviously.

There are at least 35 million homeless citizens in the US. That's about
ten percent of the total population. Many of them are working and living
in cars and shelters. Many of them are children.

AmeriKa is doing well ... If you're RICH WHITE AND MALE ... so what's
your point ... White Male Republican?

I KNOW you aren't really interested in anyone upsetting your
rotten-apple cart of a belief shitstem but if you need the laugh see
this AP Diplo reporter literally crack up over a State Dept hack
alleging the US isn't destabilizing Venezuelan society and it's economy.

As far as my politics... Keep guessing. I need the laugh.

Rr

> "Photo: Associated Press reporter Matt Lee laughs at a US State
> Department Spokesperson’s contention the U.S. is NOT involved in the
> recent Venezuelan coup attempt"
>
> Crooks and Liars:
>
> Which brings us to the laughing stock State Department
> spokesperson Jen Psaki became yesterday when she claimed [VIDEO] in
> response to Maduro’s accusations:
>
> As a matter of long standing policy the United States does not
> support transitions by non-constitutional means. Political transitions
> must be democratic, constitutional, peaceful, and legal.
>
> We’ve seen many times that the Venezuelan government tries to
> distract from its own actions by blaming the United States or other
> members of the international community for events inside Venezuela.
> These efforts reflect a lack of seriousness on the part of the
> Venezuelan government to deal with the grave situation it faces.
>
> The Associated Press reporter, Matt Lee, immediately jumped in
> with quite reasonable incredulity saying “I’m sorry. Whoah, whoah,
> whoah. The US has a long-standing practice of not promoting [coups] –
> how long-standing would you say?” Lee continued audibly scoffing and
> laughing “In particular in South and Latin America that is not a
> long-standing policy.”

http://crooksandliars.com/2015/03/press-laughs-after-us-ambassador-claims-we





Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-23 Thread jim bell


 From: "Rayzer@Riseup" 
 On 12/23/2016 01:17 PM, jim bell wrote:

 >>If 'public property' were eliminated, it would be possible to eliminate 
 >>"state's borders", converting them to private borders.  What we now know as 
 >>"illegal aliens" could be excluded not by things called "governments", but 
 >>instead by agreements among private individuals to block entry those people.

 >As I've been saying Libertarians are feudalist pieces of shit and need to 
 >meet the same fate as fascists.
 >Rr
That outburst simply shows that you don't believe in the concept of 'private 
property', which is often defined as 'the right to exclude others'.   
Ironically, Communists (of which you are obviously one) believe in the concept 
of public, or collective, ownership.

Nations such as Venezuela are doing so well these days due to the wonders of 
Socialism.
            Jim Bell 
  
  
 
  From: juan 
  
  On Tue, 20 Dec 2016 21:21:27 + (UTC)
 jim bell  wrote:
 
 >> This essay by Christopher Cantwell pretty much destroys the
 >> "libertarians must be in favor of open borders" idea.
 >> https://christophercantwell.com/2015/09/28/open-borders-or-market-immigration/
 
 
 >    So, to wrap this 'issue' up : 
  Which is apparently what you say when you're planning to misrepresent things.
 
 >    In his article, cantwell correctly describes and acknowledges 
 >    the libertarian position and then DISMISSES it and REJECTS it as
  >   'not practical'. 
  And you misrepresent it by referring to it as "THE libertarian position".  
(emphasis mine). It's quite the opposite, so I wonder if you really read 
Cantwell's essay, or whether you are simply deliberately misrepresenting 
things. The truth is that Cantwell makes clear his opinion is that some people 
are MIS-representing the 'open-borders' position as being the ONLY 
"libertarian" position.
 
 As Cantwell states: 
  " But open borders in the presence of a command economy and welfare state is 
decidedly anti-market, anti-freedom, and anti-peace." 
 >    "But the (good) libertarian will tend to put principle first,
  >   no doubt" 
 
 >    Or perhaps that was meant in a mocking tone, which would be
  >   further proof that cantwell is his own parody.  
  I see nothing wrong with presenting this 'pro-open-borders' position in a 
mocking fashion.  
 
     
    > Then he embarks on a pseudo-economical tangent (conservatives
    > like to pretende they know 'economics') and introdudes the
   >  laughable lie that immigration to the US is driven by state
   >  'welfare'. 
  Depends a lot on what you mean by "driven by".   I'd say, instead, it is 
"affected by state 'welfare'".  In other words, don't imply that the only 
factor affecting immigration is 'welfare'.  It's just a big factor.  
 
     
  >   So cantwell knows what the libertarian position should be and
 >    rejects it. 
  Not at all.  Cantwell knows what a SIMPLISTIC 'libertarian' position looks 
like, notices the inconsistencies, and rejects it.  Not the same thing. 
  
  > He then lies about immigration 
  How does he lie about immigration? 
  >, and doesn't even
 >    have the balls to explicitly admit that he's nothing but the
 >    cheapest conservative DEFENDING THE STATE'S BORDERS.  
  If 'public property' were eliminated, it would be possible to eliminate 
"state's borders", converting them to private borders.  What we now know as 
"illegal aliens" could be excluded not by things called "governments", but 
instead by agreements among private individuals to  block entry by those 
people. 
 
  >   Just in case : libertarianism and the state are 'incompatible'. 
  Libertarianism and 'public property' are more clearly 'incompatible' than 
that pair.  The inconsistency is that generally, people who advocate 'open 
borders' do so with the conceit that they are maintaining a 'welfare state' and 
 'public property' (both non-libertarian principles, at least not without 
voluntary agreements) while simultaneously eliminating 'state borders'.  
  
 >    It painfully follows that no libertarian worth his salt would
 >    defend such crass statist device as the state's borders. 
  I advocate private borders upon America's adoption of libertarian principles. 
 That, of course, may eliminate the concept of 'America' as a monolithic 
entity. 
              Jim Bell
   
   
 
 

   

Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-23 Thread Rayzer



On 12/23/2016 01:17 PM, jim bell wrote:

If 'public property' were eliminated, it would be possible to 
eliminate "state's borders", converting them to private borders.  What 
we now know as "illegal aliens" could be excluded not by things called 
"governments", but instead by agreements among private individuals to 
block entry by those people.




As I've been saying Libertarians are feudalist pieces of shit and need 
to meet the same fate as fascists.


Rr




*From:* juan 

On Tue, 20 Dec 2016 21:21:27 + (UTC)
jim bell mailto:jdb10...@yahoo.com>> wrote:

>> This essay by Christopher Cantwell pretty much destroys the
>> "libertarians must be in favor of open borders" idea.
>> 
https://christophercantwell.com/2015/09/28/open-borders-or-market-immigration/



>So, to wrap this 'issue' up :

Which is apparently what you say when you're planning to misrepresent 
things.


>In his article, cantwell correctly describes and acknowledges
>the libertarian position and then DISMISSES it and REJECTS it as
 >   'not practical'.

And you misrepresent it by referring to it as "THE libertarian 
position".  (emphasis mine).
It's quite the opposite, so I wonder if you really read Cantwell's 
essay, or whether you are simply deliberately misrepresenting things.
The truth is that Cantwell makes clear his opinion is that some people 
are MIS-representing the 'open-borders' position as being the ONLY 
"libertarian" position.


As Cantwell states:

"But open borders in the presence of a command economy and welfare 
state is decidedly anti-market, anti-freedom, and anti-peace."


>"But the (good) libertarian will tend to put principle first,
 >   no doubt"

>Or perhaps that was meant in a mocking tone, which would be
 >   further proof that cantwell is his own parody.

I see nothing wrong with presenting this 'pro-open-borders' position 
in a mocking fashion.



   > Then he embarks on a pseudo-economical tangent (conservatives
   > like to pretende they know 'economics') and introdudes the
  >  laughable lie that immigration to the US is driven by state
  >  'welfare'.

Depends a lot on what you mean by "driven by".   I'd say, instead, it 
is "affected by state 'welfare'".  In other words, don't imply that 
the only factor affecting immigration is 'welfare'.  It's just a big 
factor.



 >   So cantwell knows what the libertarian position should be and
>rejects it.

Not at all.  Cantwell knows what a SIMPLISTIC 'libertarian' position 
looks like, notices the inconsistencies, and rejects it.  Not the same 
thing.



> He then lies about immigration

How does he lie about immigration?

>, and doesn't even
>have the balls to explicitly admit that he's nothing but the
>cheapest conservative DEFENDING THE STATE'S BORDERS.

If 'public property' were eliminated, it would be possible to 
eliminate "state's borders", converting them to private borders.  What 
we now know as "illegal aliens" could be excluded not by things called 
"governments", but instead by agreements among private individuals to 
block entry by those people.


 >   Just in case : libertarianism and the state are 'incompatible'.

Libertarianism and 'public property' are more clearly 'incompatible' 
than that pair.  The inconsistency is that generally, people who 
advocate 'open borders' do so with the conceit that they are 
maintaining a 'welfare state' and 'public property' (both 
non-libertarian principles, at least not without voluntary agreements) 
while simultaneously eliminating 'state borders'.



>It painfully follows that no libertarian worth his salt would
>defend such crass statist device as the state's borders.

I advocate private borders upon America's adoption of libertarian 
principles.  That, of course, may eliminate the concept of 'America' 
as a monolithic entity.


Jim Bell





Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-23 Thread jim bell


 From: juan 

On Tue, 20 Dec 2016 21:21:27 + (UTC)
jim bell  wrote:

>> This essay by Christopher Cantwell pretty much destroys the
>> "libertarians must be in favor of open borders" idea.
>> https://christophercantwell.com/2015/09/28/open-borders-or-market-immigration/


>    So, to wrap this 'issue' up :
Which is apparently what you say when you're planning to misrepresent things.

>    In his article, cantwell correctly describes and acknowledges 
>    the libertarian position and then DISMISSES it and REJECTS it as
 >   'not practical'.
And you misrepresent it by referring to it as "THE libertarian position".  
(emphasis mine).It's quite the opposite, so I wonder if you really read 
Cantwell's essay, or whether you are simply deliberately misrepresenting 
things.The truth is that Cantwell makes clear his opinion is that some people 
are MIS-representing the 'open-borders' position as being the ONLY 
"libertarian" position.

As Cantwell states:
" But open borders in the presence of a command economy and welfare state is 
decidedly anti-market, anti-freedom, and anti-peace."
>    "But the (good) libertarian will tend to put principle first,
 >   no doubt" 

>    Or perhaps that was meant in a mocking tone, which would be
 >   further proof that cantwell is his own parody. 
I see nothing wrong with presenting this 'pro-open-borders' position in a 
mocking fashion.  

    
   > Then he embarks on a pseudo-economical tangent (conservatives
   > like to pretende they know 'economics') and introdudes the
  >  laughable lie that immigration to the US is driven by state
  >  'welfare'.
Depends a lot on what you mean by "driven by".   I'd say, instead, it is 
"affected by state 'welfare'".  In other words, don't imply that the only 
factor affecting immigration is 'welfare'.  It's just a big factor.  

    
 >   So cantwell knows what the libertarian position should be and
>    rejects it.
Not at all.  Cantwell knows what a SIMPLISTIC 'libertarian' position looks 
like, notices the inconsistencies, and rejects it.  Not the same thing.

> He then lies about immigration
How does he lie about immigration?
>, and doesn't even
>    have the balls to explicitly admit that he's nothing but the
>    cheapest conservative DEFENDING THE STATE'S BORDERS. 
If 'public property' were eliminated, it would be possible to eliminate 
"state's borders", converting them to private borders.  What we now know as 
"illegal aliens" could be excluded not by things called "governments", but 
instead by agreements among private individuals to block entry by those people. 

 >   Just in case : libertarianism and the state are 'incompatible'.
Libertarianism and 'public property' are more clearly 'incompatible' than that 
pair.  The inconsistency is that generally, people who advocate 'open borders' 
do so with the conceit that they are maintaining a 'welfare state' and 'public 
property' (both non-libertarian principles, at least not without voluntary 
agreements) while simultaneously eliminating 'state borders'. 

>    It painfully follows that no libertarian worth his salt would
>    defend such crass statist device as the state's borders.
I advocate private borders upon America's adoption of libertarian principles.  
That, of course, may eliminate the concept of 'America' as a monolithic entity.
            Jim Bell
  
   

Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-23 Thread juan
On Tue, 20 Dec 2016 21:21:27 + (UTC)
jim bell  wrote:


> 
> This essay by Christopher Cantwell pretty much destroys the
> "libertarians must be in favor of open borders" idea.

> https://christophercantwell.com/2015/09/28/open-borders-or-market-immigration/


So, to wrap this 'issue' up :

In his article, cantwell correctly describes and acknowledges 
the libertarian position and then DISMISSES it and REJECTS it as
'not practical'.

"But the (good) libertarian will tend to put principle first,
no doubt" 

Or perhaps that was meant in a mocking tone, which would be
further proof that cantwell is his own parody. 


Then he embarks on a pseudo-economical tangent (conservatives
like to pretende they know 'economics') and introdudes the
laughable lie that immigration to the US is driven by state
'welfare'.


So cantwell knows what the libertarian position should be and
rejects it. He then lies about immigration, and doesn't even
have the balls to explicitly admit that he's nothing but the
cheapest conservative DEFENDING THE STATE'S BORDERS. 

Just in case : libertarianism and the state are 'incompatible'.
It painfully follows that no libertarian worth his salt would
defend such crass statist device as the state's borders. 




J.



> 
>                Jim Bell
> 
> 
>



"right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-22 Thread Hashist
> Cecilia Tanaka:
> in my country, we [are] 'racist'

Onli rasict iz yu

An doze whu ack raice

Othurist slym



Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-22 Thread grarpamp
On Thu, Dec 22, 2016 at 9:19 PM, Cecilia Tanaka
 wrote:
> Pretty sweet of you!

Not really, because I failed to note that even defining biological race
is hard. The real term is just people being assholes to other [loosely]
definable groups of people. But no worries, we all do it, it's in the DNA.
Which is what makes the hypocrisy of SJW a bit silly. And the wars
among worlds peoples often happen. And makeout sessions while in
the shower with someone different all the more hotter.



Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-22 Thread Cecilia Tanaka
On Dec 22, 2016 3:59 PM, "grarpamp"  wrote:
>
> > An article that mentions "No Muslims, no terrorism" in its title [...]
racist ...
>
> Islam is not a biological race (though after 1350 years it probably is).

Sorry, dear, you are very correct and I can explain my strange mistake.  :P

Here, in my country, we use the adjective 'racist' only when happens
discrimination against a race.  When we talk about discrimination against
creeds or origins, we use the adjective 'prejudiced'.

In the last months, because of all the Trump news, I was finding a lot of
texts in English using 'racist' to make reference to any kind of
discrimination, against Muslims, Jews, Mexicans, LGBT, etc.

It doesn't make much sense in Latin languages, but when I asked about it to
a North American friend whether this use was correct, he said it was pretty
usual to call 'racist' an anti-semitic person, for example.

Until I know, prejudice against Jews is terribly stupid, but it is not
racism.  The same about prejudice against Muslims.  It is not racism, but a
horrible prejudice against a creed.  Prejudice against someone's origins
(Mexicans, for example)  is not racism too.  :P

Sorry for the confusion and thanks for the lesson, my dear!  Now I learned
how to express correctly my revolt against prejudiced people, aww...
Pretty sweet of you!  <3
On Dec 22, 2016 3:59 PM, "grarpamp"  wrote:

> > An article that mentions "No Muslims, no terrorism" in its title [...]
> racist ...
>
> Islam is not a biological race (though after 1350 years it probably is).
> As with all religions, what it *is* should make you laugh... in particular
> at the ridiculous ways in which they all are adopted, followed,
> hypocritized and twisted by their claimed believers, adherants, judges,
> proselytizers and executives, executioners and tax collectors, etc.
>


Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-22 Thread grarpamp
> An article that mentions "No Muslims, no terrorism" in its title [...] racist 
> ...

Islam is not a biological race (though after 1350 years it probably is).
As with all religions, what it *is* should make you laugh... in particular
at the ridiculous ways in which they all are adopted, followed,
hypocritized and twisted by their claimed believers, adherants, judges,
proselytizers and executives, executioners and tax collectors, etc.


Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-21 Thread Razer
When I quote something I take responsibility for 'writing' it. In the
context you used it, which you set up thusly:


>  People of the left who are simply pretending to be "libertarian".  
>

And then using some guy who wasn't even Left at the time he was
contemporary except among liberal democrats like my 90 year old mother
(who btw also had a copy of Rand's Atlas Shrugged on her bookshelf) as
example of 'left'? ... you own it guy.

>
> Further, you demonstrate yourself to be a clueless leftist dweeb when
> you said,   "US 'libertarians' are absolutely right wing republicans
> with a socially liberal streak".
>
> From my earliest acquaintance with libertarianism in the mid-to-late
> 1970's, "libertarians" were described as "socially liberal" and
> "economically conservative".  So, referring to them as "absolutely
> right wing Republicans" shows that you are entirely unaware of, or at
> least strongly mischaracterizing, libertarians as a group.

Z.

You mis-characterize "Left".

Rr




Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-21 Thread jim bell
Your message below implies that it was me who typed "Rothbardians".  I didn't.  
You need to be more careful about what you type.

Further, you demonstrate yourself to be a clueless leftist dweeb when you said, 
  "US 'libertarians' are absolutely right wing republicans with a socially 
liberal streak".From my earliest acquaintance with libertarianism in the 
mid-to-late 1970's, "libertarians" were described as "socially liberal" and 
"economically conservative".  So, referring to them as "absolutely right wing 
Republicans" shows that you are entirely unaware of, or at least strongly 
mischaracterizing, libertarians as a group.
            Jim Bell

  From: Razer 
 To: cypherpunks@lists.cpunks.org 
 Sent: Wednesday, December 21, 2016 5:29 PM
 Subject: Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no 
terrorists"
   
 On 12/21/2016 11:23 AM, jim bell wrote something I was grokking until I got 
to...
  
 
Rothbardians
 
 ...in some context to 'left' of anything, and threw up a little in my mouth.
 
 It's easy to see, empirically in my life, and in ur irl, that US 
'libertarians' are absolutely right wing republicans with a socially liberal 
streak ... "Socially liberal" in a 'fratboy date rape' sort of way if you were 
describing their relationship with others in the society.
 
 Rr
 
 
  
  Juan, I'm still waiting for you to justify your claim that Christopher 
Cantwell isn't a libertarian.  Your merely pointing to his assertion that 
libertarians shouldn't be (or need not be) in favor of open borders, simply 
highlights which side of the  argument you are on:  It doesn't say that 
Cantwell is necessarily wrong.   It would help your position immensely if you 
could point to a substantial number of positions Cantwell has taken which 
libertarians would generally agree that contradict libertarian philosophy. I 
suggest you read  
https://christophercantwell.com/2015/12/06/why-libertarians-are-hopeless/    
which I include a segment of, below.   I suspect you are exactly the kind of 
problem that Cantwell is referring to:  People of the left who are simply 
pretending to be "libertarian".   
  ×
               Jim Bell 
  
[partial quote below]
 
Why Libertarians Are Corrupted By The Left
 I should again explain, I am discussing libertarians, not libertarianism. The 
following critique would rightly be met with complaints by well read 
Rothbardians as containing a great many falsehoods. I have made these 
complaints repeatedly myself. In their efforts to grow their numbers, and in 
the face of perpetual frustrations in getting wolves and rabbits to shrug off 
their evolutionary psychology, libertarian groups have resorted to recruiting 
non-libertarians into their ranks. This presumably was perceived as a 
competitive advantage in  a political system which favors numbers over reasoned 
arguments or factual correctness. In the course of so doing, it is my 
perception that leftists are particularly more prone to swing toward 
libertarian social circles than rightists, due primarily to a lack of ingroup 
preference. It is not that they become libertarians or suddenly shrug off their 
rodent like evolutionary psychology. They are simply more prone to novelty 
seeking ,and lack any group loyalty or attachment to any particular idea. They 
are still rodents, but they realize they can have a higher social status in 
this smaller group than in their larger openly left wing group. A left 
libertarian blogger may become the envy of his left libertarian peers, but 
would accomplish absolutely nothing when competing against the vast expanse of 
mainstream liberal media. The rightist on the other hand is less prone to 
novelty seeking, has a higher ingroup preference, and is more averse to radical 
changes in the existing social and economic order. Additionally, he is aware 
that his inferior numbers make his absence in a democratic contest far more 
consequential than that of the leftist. So he is far more averse to radically 
altering his thinking, his social circles, or his political activity to favor a 
more libertarian order. Thus, while libertarianism as a well thought out 
philosophy would be more appealing to the rightist than the leftist, the 
leftist gains undue influence in the libertarian social and political scene. 
That leftist influence dilutes the body of thought as left tainted media is 
produced and distracts from the writings of the Rothbards and Hoppes of the 
world 
 
 
   
 
 Redacted with malice aforethought.
 
 
 
 

   

Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-21 Thread juan
On Wed, 21 Dec 2016 17:29:04 -0800
Razer  wrote:

> 
> It's easy to see, empirically in my life, and in ur irl, that US
> 'libertarians' are absolutely right wing republicans 


just like you are a commie. Left and right, both
enemies of freedom. You as a castro's cock sucker are even a
more glaring example of totalitarian scumbag than the
repuglicans. 


> with a socially
> liberal streak ... "Socially liberal" in a 'fratboy date rape' sort of
> way if you were describing their relationship with others in the
> society.
> 
> Rr
> 
> 
> > Juan, I'm still waiting for you to justify your claim that
> > Christopher Cantwell isn't a libertarian.  Your merely pointing to
> > his assertion that libertarians shouldn't be (or need not be) in
> > favor of open borders, simply highlights which side of the argument
> > you are on:  It doesn't say that Cantwell is necessarily wrong.
> > It would help your position immensely if you could point to a
> > substantial number of positions Cantwell has taken which
> > libertarians would generally agree that contradict libertarian
> > philosophy. I suggest you read
> >  https://christophercantwell.com/2015/12/06/why-libertarians-are-hopeless/  
> >  which I include a segment of, below.   I suspect you are exactly
> > the kind of problem that Cantwell is referring to:  People of the
> > left who are simply pretending to be "libertarian".  
> >
> > ×
> >
> >  Jim Bell
> >
> >
> > [partial quote below]
> >
> >
> > Why Libertarians Are Corrupted By The Left
> >
> > I should again explain, I am discussing libertarians, not
> > libertarianism. The following critique would rightly be met with
> > complaints by well read Rothbardians as containing a great many
> > falsehoods. I have made these complaints repeatedly myself.
> > In their efforts to grow their numbers, and in the face of perpetual
> > frustrations in getting wolves and rabbits to shrug off their
> > evolutionary psychology, libertarian groups have resorted to
> > recruiting non-libertarians into their ranks. This presumably was
> > perceived as a competitive advantage in a political system which
> > favors numbers over reasoned arguments or factual correctness.
> > In the course of so doing, it is my perception that leftists are
> > particularly more prone to swing toward libertarian social circles
> > than rightists, due primarily to a lack of ingroup preference. It is
> > not that they become libertarians or suddenly shrug off their
> > rodent like evolutionary psychology. They are simply more prone to
> > novelty seeking ,and lack any group loyalty or attachment to any
> > particular idea. They are still rodents, but they realize they can
> > have a higher social status in this smaller group than in their
> > larger openly left wing group. A left libertarian blogger may become
> > the envy of his left libertarian peers, but would accomplish
> > absolutely nothing when competing against the vast expanse of
> > mainstream liberal media.
> > The rightist on the other hand is less prone to novelty seeking,
> > has a higher ingroup preference, and is more averse to radical
> > changes in the existing social and economic order. Additionally, he
> > is aware that his inferior numbers make his absence in a democratic
> > contest far more consequential than that of the leftist. So he is
> > far more averse to radically altering his thinking, his social
> > circles, or his political activity to favor a more libertarian
> > order. Thus, while libertarianism as a well thought out philosophy
> > would be more appealing to the rightist than the leftist, the
> > leftist gains undue influence in the libertarian social and
> > political scene. That leftist influence dilutes the body of thought
> > as left tainted media is produced and distracts from the writings
> > of the Rothbards and Hoppes of the world
> >
> >
> 
> Redacted with malice aforethought.
> 
> 
> 



Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-21 Thread Razer
On 12/21/2016 11:23 AM, jim bell wrote something I was grokking until I
got to...


> Rothbardians

...in some context to 'left' of anything, and threw up a little in my mouth.

It's easy to see, empirically in my life, and in ur irl, that US
'libertarians' are absolutely right wing republicans with a socially
liberal streak ... "Socially liberal" in a 'fratboy date rape' sort of
way if you were describing their relationship with others in the society.

Rr


> Juan, I'm still waiting for you to justify your claim that Christopher
> Cantwell isn't a libertarian.  Your merely pointing to his assertion
> that libertarians shouldn't be (or need not be) in favor of open
> borders, simply highlights which side of the argument you are on:  It
> doesn't say that Cantwell is necessarily wrong.   It would help your
> position immensely if you could point to a substantial number of
> positions Cantwell has taken which libertarians would generally agree
> that contradict libertarian philosophy.
> I suggest you read
>  https://christophercantwell.com/2015/12/06/why-libertarians-are-hopeless/  
>  which I include a segment of, below.   I suspect you are exactly the
> kind of problem that Cantwell is referring to:  People of the left who
> are simply pretending to be "libertarian".  
>
> ×
>
>  Jim Bell
>
>
> [partial quote below]
>
>
> Why Libertarians Are Corrupted By The Left
>
> I should again explain, I am discussing libertarians, not
> libertarianism. The following critique would rightly be met with
> complaints by well read Rothbardians as containing a great many
> falsehoods. I have made these complaints repeatedly myself.
> In their efforts to grow their numbers, and in the face of perpetual
> frustrations in getting wolves and rabbits to shrug off their
> evolutionary psychology, libertarian groups have resorted to
> recruiting non-libertarians into their ranks. This presumably was
> perceived as a competitive advantage in a political system which
> favors numbers over reasoned arguments or factual correctness.
> In the course of so doing, it is my perception that leftists are
> particularly more prone to swing toward libertarian social circles
> than rightists, due primarily to a lack of ingroup preference. It is
> not that they become libertarians or suddenly shrug off their
> rodent like evolutionary psychology. They are simply more prone to
> novelty seeking ,and lack any group loyalty or attachment to any
> particular idea. They are still rodents, but they realize they can
> have a higher social status in this smaller group than in their
> larger openly left wing group. A left libertarian blogger may become
> the envy of his left libertarian peers, but would accomplish
> absolutely nothing when competing against the vast expanse of
> mainstream liberal media.
> The rightist on the other hand is less prone to novelty seeking, has a
> higher ingroup preference, and is more averse to radical changes in
> the existing social and economic order. Additionally, he is aware that
> his inferior numbers make his absence in a democratic contest far more
> consequential than that of the leftist. So he is far more averse to
> radically altering his thinking, his social circles, or his political
> activity to favor a more libertarian order.
> Thus, while libertarianism as a well thought out philosophy would be
> more appealing to the rightist than the leftist, the leftist gains
> undue influence in the libertarian social and political scene. That
> leftist influence dilutes the body of thought as left tainted media is
> produced and distracts from the writings of the Rothbards and Hoppes
> of the world
>
>

Redacted with malice aforethought.





Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-21 Thread Razer
On 12/21/2016 11:52 AM, juan wrote:


> right wing/conservatives pretending to be libertarians.  Which is
> actually quite common in the 'libertarian' movement


ROTF NO!

Rr

> On Wed, 21 Dec 2016 19:23:22 + (UTC)
> jim bell  wrote:
>
>> Juan, I'm still waiting for you to justify your claim that
>> Christopher Cantwell isn't a libertarian.
>   As luck would have it I replied to your previous message
>   literally 10 seconds before you sent this one. So my reply
>   should be just arriving =P
>
>
>
>>  Your merely pointing to
>> his assertion that libertarians shouldn't be (or need not be) in
>> favor of open borders, simply highlights which side of the argument
>> you are on:  It doesn't say that Cantwell is necessarily wrong.   It
>> would help your position immensely if you could point to a
>> substantial number of positions Cantwell has taken which libertarians
>> would generally agree that contradict libertarian philosophy.  
>
>   It doesn't matter if he got 7 out of 10 positions right but
>   still tries to justify anti-libertarian aberrations like state
>   borders. 
>
>
> I
>> suggest you read  
>>  https://christophercantwell.com/2015/12/06/why-libertarians-are-hopeless/
>>  which I include a segment of, below.   I suspect you are exactly the
>> kind of problem that Cantwell is referring to:  People of the left
>> who are simply pretending to be "libertarian". 
>
>
>   Right back at you. You and cantwell are right
>   wing/conservatives pretending to be libertarians.  Which is
>   actually quite common in the 'libertarian' movement because
>   it's kinda easy to dishonestly twist libertarianism into a
>   defense of the status quo. You know, all those poor big
>   business who pay too much taxes, let's bail them out again.
>
>
>
>
> × Jim Bell
>> [partial quote below]
>>
>> Why Libertarians Are Corrupted By The Left
>
>   Spare me the typically RIGHT WING, mccarthist nonsense. Haven't
>   you learned yet that libertarianism is not left wing NOR right
>   wing? 
>
>   cantwell should be talking abou how libertarianism is corrupted
>   by right wingers like him.
>
>   
>   Then again, thanks for illustrasting that cantwell is a RIGHT
>   WINGER or CONSERVATIVE, not a libertarian.
>  
>
>
>
>
>
>> I should again explain, I am discussing libertarians, not
>> libertarianism. The following critique would rightly be met with
>> complaints by well read Rothbardians as containing a great many
>> falsehoods. I have made these complaints repeatedly myself.In their
>> efforts to grow their numbers, and in the face of perpetual
>> frustrations in getting wolves and rabbits to shrug off their
>> evolutionary psychology, libertarian groups have resorted to
>> recruiting non-libertarians into their ranks. This presumably was
>> perceived as a competitive advantage in a political system which
>> favors numbers over reasoned arguments or factual correctness.In the
>> course of so doing, it is my perception that leftists are
>> particularly more prone to swing toward libertarian social circles
>> than rightists, due primarily to a lack of ingroup preference. It is
>> not that they become libertarians or suddenly shrug off their
>> rodent like evolutionary psychology. They are simply more prone to
>> novelty seeking ,and lack any group loyalty or attachment to any
>> particular idea. They are still rodents, but they realize they can
>> have a higher social status in this smaller group than in their
>> larger openly left wing group. A left libertarian blogger may become
>> the envy of his left libertarian peers, but would accomplish
>> absolutely nothing when competing against the vast expanse of
>> mainstream liberal media.The rightist on the other hand is less prone
>> to novelty seeking, has a higher ingroup preference, and is more
>> averse to radical changes in the existing social and economic order.
>> Additionally, he is aware that his inferior numbers make his absence
>> in a democratic contest far more consequential than that of the
>> leftist. So he is far more averse to radically altering his thinking,
>> his social circles, or his political activity to favor a more
>> libertarian order.Thus, while libertarianism as a well thought out
>> philosophy would be more appealing to the rightist than the leftist,
>> the leftist gains undue influence in the libertarian social and
>> political scene. That leftist influence dilutes the body of thought
>> as left tainted media is produced and distracts from the writings of
>> the Rothbards and Hoppes of the world. They focus on equality and
>> diversity, which are not libertarian goals in the slightest. They
>> will favor recruiting women and non-whites into libertarian scenes,
>> even as these demographics tend to work against libertarian goals.
>> More leftists are attracted to the left tainted libertarian media,
>> and so more leftists are introduced into the social and political
>>

Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-21 Thread juan
On Wed, 21 Dec 2016 19:23:22 + (UTC)
jim bell  wrote:

> Juan, I'm still waiting for you to justify your claim that
> Christopher Cantwell isn't a libertarian.

As luck would have it I replied to your previous message
literally 10 seconds before you sent this one. So my reply
should be just arriving =P



> Your merely pointing to
> his assertion that libertarians shouldn't be (or need not be) in
> favor of open borders, simply highlights which side of the argument
> you are on:  It doesn't say that Cantwell is necessarily wrong.   It
> would help your position immensely if you could point to a
> substantial number of positions Cantwell has taken which libertarians
> would generally agree that contradict libertarian philosophy.  


It doesn't matter if he got 7 out of 10 positions right but
still tries to justify anti-libertarian aberrations like state
borders. 


I
> suggest you read  
>  https://christophercantwell.com/2015/12/06/why-libertarians-are-hopeless/
>  which I include a segment of, below.   I suspect you are exactly the
> kind of problem that Cantwell is referring to:  People of the left
> who are simply pretending to be "libertarian". 



Right back at you. You and cantwell are right
wing/conservatives pretending to be libertarians.  Which is
actually quite common in the 'libertarian' movement because
it's kinda easy to dishonestly twist libertarianism into a
defense of the status quo. You know, all those poor big
business who pay too much taxes, let's bail them out again.




× Jim Bell
> 
> [partial quote below]
> 
> Why Libertarians Are Corrupted By The Left


Spare me the typically RIGHT WING, mccarthist nonsense. Haven't
you learned yet that libertarianism is not left wing NOR right
wing? 

cantwell should be talking abou how libertarianism is corrupted
by right wingers like him.


Then again, thanks for illustrasting that cantwell is a RIGHT
WINGER or CONSERVATIVE, not a libertarian.
 





> I should again explain, I am discussing libertarians, not
> libertarianism. The following critique would rightly be met with
> complaints by well read Rothbardians as containing a great many
> falsehoods. I have made these complaints repeatedly myself.In their
> efforts to grow their numbers, and in the face of perpetual
> frustrations in getting wolves and rabbits to shrug off their
> evolutionary psychology, libertarian groups have resorted to
> recruiting non-libertarians into their ranks. This presumably was
> perceived as a competitive advantage in a political system which
> favors numbers over reasoned arguments or factual correctness.In the
> course of so doing, it is my perception that leftists are
> particularly more prone to swing toward libertarian social circles
> than rightists, due primarily to a lack of ingroup preference. It is
> not that they become libertarians or suddenly shrug off their
> rodent like evolutionary psychology. They are simply more prone to
> novelty seeking ,and lack any group loyalty or attachment to any
> particular idea. They are still rodents, but they realize they can
> have a higher social status in this smaller group than in their
> larger openly left wing group. A left libertarian blogger may become
> the envy of his left libertarian peers, but would accomplish
> absolutely nothing when competing against the vast expanse of
> mainstream liberal media.The rightist on the other hand is less prone
> to novelty seeking, has a higher ingroup preference, and is more
> averse to radical changes in the existing social and economic order.
> Additionally, he is aware that his inferior numbers make his absence
> in a democratic contest far more consequential than that of the
> leftist. So he is far more averse to radically altering his thinking,
> his social circles, or his political activity to favor a more
> libertarian order.Thus, while libertarianism as a well thought out
> philosophy would be more appealing to the rightist than the leftist,
> the leftist gains undue influence in the libertarian social and
> political scene. That leftist influence dilutes the body of thought
> as left tainted media is produced and distracts from the writings of
> the Rothbards and Hoppes of the world. They focus on equality and
> diversity, which are not libertarian goals in the slightest. They
> will favor recruiting women and non-whites into libertarian scenes,
> even as these demographics tend to work against libertarian goals.
> More leftists are attracted to the left tainted libertarian media,
> and so more leftists are introduced into the social and political
> circles and thus the cycle perpetuates itself to a point where
> economics are barely even part of the discussion, and instead it
> descends into senseless race baiting, feminism, and dare I incur the
> ire of my regular readers by saying it, irrational ha

Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-21 Thread juan
On Wed, 21 Dec 2016 05:46:12 + (UTC)
jim bell  wrote:



> I don't try to deny that it would be possible to design a society
> that is more free than what we have.

No doubt things could be better, but I wouldn't word it that
way. I am not into designing societies, something that doesn't
sound too different from central planning.


> 
>  >   At any rate, it's quite absurd for any consistent (that is
> >    anarchist) libertarian to defend the STATE'S borders. Even
> >    advocates of 'limited' statism don't have any legitimate
> >    argument to defend the state's borders. 

> The issue isn't "defending the state's borders". 


I think it completely is. A couple of messages ago you stated

"This essay by Christopher Cantwell pretty much destroys the
"libertarians must be in favor of open borders" idea.  "

Just in case it is not obvious enough : you are either for open
borders, or not. And if you are not for open borders, then you
are supporting the absurd, wholly anti-libertarian claim that a
gang of thieves and murdereres - the state - has 'jurisdiction'
over land and people.


> The issue is, how
> do we improve society? 

Again, I wouldn't put it that way. I am not an utilitarian nor
a socialist. 'Society' is a rather blury concept if seen from
the point of view of individuals are their natural rights. 



> It is possible to make changes which are
> good, which will make things better, which fall short of complete
> perfection.  But it is also possible to imagine making changes which
> will make things worse.  If you are really trying to achieve a free
> society (or a freer society),

You would never defend the state's borders, or lend the
slightest support to the idea that the state can create a
concentration camp - and that's what borders are for. 


> can you imagine that letting in a few
> hundred million people, mostly from societies that have little or no
> respect for rights, might make things worse?  


You can't be seriously saying that. No respect for rights? you
mean fucking american psychos from the baking mafia and the
military, who are raping the whole world? Again, are you and
cantwell going to DEPORT all your jew-kristian religious
fanatics who also happen to be pure blood 'legal' 'american'
'citizens'?  I'm hoping you won't ignore this little problem
and show some consistency.



> If you can't imagine
> that, you're the problem. 

Actually, considering what you are saying, you and cantwell are
the problem...Especially cantwell.



> >    I mostly agree, though I don't think it's OK to use any amount
> >   of force to stop any crime. Force has to be proportional.

> This amounts to you saying that YOU would prefer that "force should
> be proportional". 

Yes, BUT, I would prefer that force  be proportional because it
is the only reasonable and justified aproach. It's not a
matter of arbitrary, 'subjective' preference. So force SHOULD
be proportional as a matter of 'objective' morality.



> The NIOFP doesn't require proportional force.  You
> are entitled to state your preferences.  You are not entitled to
> force your preferences on everyone else.

"The NIOFP doesn't require proportional force." 

Did you get that from the bible? Or any other 'authority'?
Actually common sense morality DOES require proportionality.
It should be self evident...

> 
> >    Though in the case of attacks by state agents, they are likely
> >    to escalate so ultimately the only form of self-defense might be
> >    to kill them.

> Exactly.


But that's in the case of state agents, not a general rule.

>     
> 
> >> Libertarian philosophy generally
> >> has, at its heart, the Non Initiation of Force and Fraud Principle
> >> (NIOFP).  Above, Jody adds the peculiar limitation to self-defense:
> >> "According to Jody Underwood, only violence in immediate defense of
> >> life or limb actually counts as self-defense."  Adding the portion
> >> "in immediate defense of life or limb" is the trick. 
> 
> 
>  >   The wording may be muddled, but I assume she is referring to
>  >   proportional self-defense. You know, for instance, you can't
>  >   execute on the spot your neighbor's kid if he steps on your
>  >   lawn.

> But the NIOFP doesn't restrict the level of force.  YOU would do that.

Of course basic moral and 'libertarian' principles restrict the
level of force. Even yourself acknowledge that, despite arguing
for the opposite nonsensical position here. 

Or are you saying that you are going to pull a gun on anybody
who you *think* is attacking you? If somebody tries to cheat you
by any means or amount, you are going to execute him on the
spot? Are you that 

Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-21 Thread jim bell
Juan, I'm still waiting for you to justify your claim that Christopher Cantwell 
isn't a libertarian.  Your merely pointing to his assertion that libertarians 
shouldn't be (or need not be) in favor of open borders, simply highlights which 
side of the argument you are on:  It doesn't say that Cantwell is necessarily 
wrong.   It would help your position immensely if you could point to a 
substantial number of positions Cantwell has taken which libertarians would 
generally agree that contradict libertarian philosophy.I suggest you read  
https://christophercantwell.com/2015/12/06/why-libertarians-are-hopeless/    
which I include a segment of, below.   I suspect you are exactly the kind of 
problem that Cantwell is referring to:  People of the left who are simply 
pretending to be "libertarian".  
×   
             Jim Bell

[partial quote below]

Why Libertarians Are Corrupted By The Left
I should again explain, I am discussing libertarians, not libertarianism. The 
following critique would rightly be met with complaints by well read 
Rothbardians as containing a great many falsehoods. I have made these 
complaints repeatedly myself.In their efforts to grow their numbers, and in the 
face of perpetual frustrations in getting wolves and rabbits to shrug off their 
evolutionary psychology, libertarian groups have resorted to recruiting 
non-libertarians into their ranks. This presumably was perceived as a 
competitive advantage in a political system which favors numbers over reasoned 
arguments or factual correctness.In the course of so doing, it is my perception 
that leftists are particularly more prone to swing toward libertarian social 
circles than rightists, due primarily to a lack of ingroup preference. It is 
not that they become libertarians or suddenly shrug off their rodent like 
evolutionary psychology. They are simply more prone to novelty seeking ,and 
lack any group loyalty or attachment to any particular idea. They are still 
rodents, but they realize they can have a higher social status in this smaller 
group than in their larger openly left wing group. A left libertarian blogger 
may become the envy of his left libertarian peers, but would accomplish 
absolutely nothing when competing against the vast expanse of mainstream 
liberal media.The rightist on the other hand is less prone to novelty seeking, 
has a higher ingroup preference, and is more averse to radical changes in the 
existing social and economic order. Additionally, he is aware that his inferior 
numbers make his absence in a democratic contest far more consequential than 
that of the leftist. So he is far more averse to radically altering his 
thinking, his social circles, or his political activity to favor a more 
libertarian order.Thus, while libertarianism as a well thought out philosophy 
would be more appealing to the rightist than the leftist, the leftist gains 
undue influence in the libertarian social and political scene. That leftist 
influence dilutes the body of thought as left tainted media is produced and 
distracts from the writings of the Rothbards and Hoppes of the world. They 
focus on equality and diversity, which are not libertarian goals in the 
slightest. They will favor recruiting women and non-whites into libertarian 
scenes, even as these demographics tend to work against libertarian goals. More 
leftists are attracted to the left tainted libertarian media, and so more 
leftists are introduced into the social and political circles and thus the 
cycle perpetuates itself to a point where economics are barely even part of the 
discussion, and instead it descends into senseless race baiting, feminism, and 
dare I incur the ire of my regular readers by saying it, irrational hatred of 
military and law enforcement.
[end of partial quote]

  From: jim bell 
 To: juan ; cp  
 Sent: Tuesday, December 20, 2016 9:46 PM
 Subject: Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no 
terrorists"
   
From: juan 



On Tue, 20 Dec 2016 23:22:45 + (UTC)
jim bell  wrote:

>> Sorry, but I very much disagree.  Based on the limited amount of
>> information I've read, from
>> http://morelibertynow.com/fsp-cantwell/    he is more accurately a
>> libertarian than those who expelled him from the "Free State
>> Project".   

>    Thay may be the case. A 'free' state is pretty much a
>    contradicion in terms. But hasn't cantwell joined that
>    contradictory organization? 

I don't try to deny that it would be possible to design a society that is more 
free than what we have.

 >   At any rate, it's quite absurd for any consistent (that is
>    anarchist) libertarian to defend the STATE'S borders. Even
>    advocates of 'limited' statism don't have any legitimate
>    argument to defend the state's borders. 
The issue isn't &quo

"right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-21 Thread rooty
don misgendur me zi zi - it a crime


 Original Message  On Dec 21, 2016, 2:21 PM, Cecilia Tanaka 
wrote:

A new email address and new patterns... Sorry, you are not the same boy who was 
pretending to be a bot. It was a pretty strange idea, but pretending to be him 
is much stranger and creepier, ugh! :-/

It is not 'hate', only disgust, disregard and mistrust. Instead faking to be 
another person, read his messages with attention, so you will understand why I 
do definitely not respect him.

Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-21 Thread John Newman

> On Dec 20, 2016, at 7:47 PM, Zenaan Harkness  wrote:
> 
>> On Tue, Dec 20, 2016 at 04:31:34PM -0500, John Newman wrote:
>> 
>>> On Dec 20, 2016, at 4:21 PM, jim bell  wrote:
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> From: Zenaan Harkness 
>>> 
 I've heard at least one "libertarian utopian" position that movement of
 humans, i.e. emmigration and immigration, ought be by the free will of
 the individual human(s).
>>> 
>>> This essay by Christopher Cantwell pretty much destroys the "libertarians 
>>> must be in favor of open borders" idea.  
>>> 
>>> https://christophercantwell.com/2015/09/28/open-borders-or-market-immigration/
>>> 
>>>   Jim Bell
>> 
>> 
>> "Fuck The Border"
>> 
>> A friend of mine dropped me a line, 
>> it said, "man, I gotta run to the USA. I got no money, got no job." 
>> She skipped out of Mexico to stay alive. 
>> You've got a problem with her living here, 
>> but what did you do to help her before she fucking came? 
>> What did the country do? What did the people do? 
>> I stand not by my country, but by people of the whole fucking world. 
>> No fences, no borders. Free movement for all. 
>> Fuck the border. 
>> It's about fucking time to treat people with respect. 
>> It's our culture and consumption that makes her life unbearable. 
>> Fuck this country; its angry eyes, its knee-jerk hordes. 
>> Legal or illegal, watch her fucking go. 
>> She'll take what's hers. Watch her fucking go. 
>> Fuck the border.
> 
> So subtle and well reasoned, as allways (((John Newtman))).
> 
> Phone us when you're in Somalia saving the poor black blighters over
> there..
> 
> 


Eat a dick, "Zen". I understand you like white meat.



> 
> -- 
> * Certified Deplorable Neo-Nazi Fake News Hunter (TM)(C)(R)
> * Executive Director of Triggers, Ministry of Winning
> * Weapons against traditional \/\/European\/\/ values:
> http://davidduke.com/jewish-professor-boasts-of-jewish-pornography-used-as-a-weapon-against-gentiles/
> * How Liberal Lefties view the world:
> http://bbs.dailystormer.com/uploads/default/optimized/3X/0/4/042cb95724339d5df43eab11e5e714e506dadc7e_1_600x329.jpg



Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-21 Thread Cecilia Tanaka
A new email address and new patterns...  Sorry, you are not the same boy
who was pretending to be a bot.  It was a pretty strange idea, but
pretending to be him is much stranger and creepier, ugh!  :-/

It is not 'hate', only disgust, disregard and mistrust.  Instead faking to
be another person, read his messages with attention, so you will understand
why I do definitely not respect him.
On Dec 21, 2016 4:09 AM, "rooty"  wrote:


"right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-20 Thread rooty
lotta hate zi zi - me feel saad

 Original Message 
On Dec 20, 2016, 7:39 PM, Cecilia Tanaka wrote:

Zzz's,
lack of intelligence
not an intelligent person
very slow and limited
stupid and disgusting
small-minded
prejudiced jerk
don't have a heart
burrinho

"right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-20 Thread liburtee
> jdb10987 at yahoo.com:
> You are not entitled to force your preferences on everyone else

Unles yur preferinse iz eskalate defenze; kihl theibes lyk biach

> Who says?

U doo:
http://www.outpost-of-freedom.com/jimbellap.htm

Don endup ahn yur ls lol



Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-20 Thread jim bell
From: juan 



On Tue, 20 Dec 2016 23:22:45 + (UTC)
jim bell  wrote:

>> Sorry, but I very much disagree.  Based on the limited amount of
>> information I've read, from
>> http://morelibertynow.com/fsp-cantwell/    he is more accurately a
>> libertarian than those who expelled him from the "Free State
>> Project".   

>    Thay may be the case. A 'free' state is pretty much a
>    contradicion in terms. But hasn't cantwell joined that
>    contradictory organization? 

I don't try to deny that it would be possible to design a society that is more 
free than what we have.

 >   At any rate, it's quite absurd for any consistent (that is
>    anarchist) libertarian to defend the STATE'S borders. Even
>    advocates of 'limited' statism don't have any legitimate
>    argument to defend the state's borders. 
The issue isn't "defending the state's borders".  The issue is, how do we 
improve society?  It is possible to make changes which are good, which will 
make things better, which fall short of complete perfection.  But it is also 
possible to imagine making changes which will make things worse.  If you are 
really trying to achieve a free society (or a freer society), can you imagine 
that letting in a few hundred million people, mostly from societies that have 
little or no respect for rights, might make things worse?  If you can't imagine 
that, you're the problem. 
>> Quoting  the article:   "Just a few days after this news broke, Chris
>> wrote a blog post in which he said that “the answer [to things like
>> the Bearcat issue], at some point, is to kill government agents” and
>> “any level of force necessary for anyone to stop any government agent
>> from furthering said coercion [tax collection in the context of
>> funding the salaries of all government employees] is morally
>> justifiable.” Nothing wrong with that, from a Libertarian
>> perspective.   


>    I mostly agree, though I don't think it's OK to use any amount
>   of force to stop any crime. Force has to be proportional.
This amounts to you saying that YOU would prefer that "force should be 
proportional".The NIOFP doesn't require proportional force.  You are entitled 
to state your preferences.  You are not entitled to force your preferences on 
everyone else.

>    Though in the case of attacks by state agents, they are likely
>    to escalate so ultimately the only form of self-defense might be
>    to kill them.
Exactly.
    

>> Libertarian philosophy generally
>> has, at its heart, the Non Initiation of Force and Fraud Principle
>> (NIOFP).  Above, Jody adds the peculiar limitation to self-defense:
>> "According to Jody Underwood, only violence in immediate defense of
>> life or limb actually counts as self-defense."  Adding the portion
>> "in immediate defense of life or limb" is the trick. 


 >   The wording may be muddled, but I assume she is referring to
 >   proportional self-defense. You know, for instance, you can't
 >   execute on the spot your neighbor's kid if he steps on your
 >   lawn.
But the NIOFP doesn't restrict the level of force.  YOU would do that.


> Libertarian
> philosophy doesn't restrict self-defense of physical force against a
> human body; theft of his property is plenty to allow self-defense.


 >   Yes, you can defend yourself against theft, but you can't
 >  automatically go around killing people even if they are
  > thieves. 
Who says?   Let me point out that if the NIOFP was so obviously limited and 
flawed, libertarians would have long ago modified it to include an explicit set 
of restrictions.  I have heard of none.  And looking at the Wikipedia article   
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-aggression_principle  , I see virtually no 
discussion of that issue.  
    

>>  And I see no legitimate restriction that such a threat must be
>> "immediate", at least not if it credible.In other words, if a
>> government agent threatens to later come to you, with his buddies,
>> and kill you if you don't pay your taxes, the FSP apparently believes
>> it is somehow to be considered a violation of NIOFP if YOU kill him.
>>  Somehow, you're obligated to let HIM show up, with dozens of his
>> colleagues, at which point self-defense amounts to suicide. 


>    Well, state agents are in a category of their own, true.
    
    

>> In my
>> view, a credible threat of use of force or fraud against a person
>> amounts to the use of force against him, and justifies whatever level
>> of self-defense (including lethal self-defense) he chooses to employ.


>    Not in general. Just do a reduction ad absurdum. Are you saying
>   that if somebody 'threatens' to swindle you for, say, 20
>    dollars, you can use 'lethal self defense' against him?. Even
>   if somebody *actually* swindles you, you can't kill him in 'self
    defense'.
Are you saying that YOU get to decide that limitation for ME, and everyone 
else?!?Please tell us who died and made you king.  

>>  I consider that non-libertarian government, 

>    There's n

Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-20 Thread juan
On Tue, 20 Dec 2016 23:22:45 + (UTC)
jim bell  wrote:


> Sorry, but I very much disagree.  Based on the limited amount of
> information I've read, from
> http://morelibertynow.com/fsp-cantwell/    he is more accurately a
> libertarian than those who expelled him from the "Free State
> Project".   

Thay may be the case. A 'free' state is pretty much a
contradicion in terms. But hasn't cantwell joined that
contradictory organization? 

At any rate, it's quite absurd for any consistent (that is
anarchist) libertarian to defend the STATE'S borders. Even
advocates of 'limited' statism don't have any legitimate
argument to defend the state's borders. 



> I can already read evidence of their errors in the
> article above. It is easy to make the error of thinking that use of
> force by government agents doesn't qualify as "initiation of force",
> simply because in most cases it is 'merely' the credible threat of
> use of force.  They claimed Cantwell was "promoting violence" when
> what he was actually doing was simply advocating self-defense against
> the continual and credible threat of force by government agents.  


Cantwell got that part of the theory right. But that's not an
argument against open borders, is it?

> 
> Quoting  the article:   "Just a few days after this news broke, Chris
> wrote a blog post in which he said that “the answer [to things like
> the Bearcat issue], at some point, is to kill government agents” and
> “any level of force necessary for anyone to stop any government agent
> from furthering said coercion [tax collection in the context of
> funding the salaries of all government employees] is morally
> justifiable.” Nothing wrong with that, from a Libertarian
> perspective.   


I mostly agree, though I don't think it's OK to use any amount
of force to stop any crime. Force has to be proportional.
Though in the case of attacks by state agents, they are likely
to escalate so ultimately the only form of self-defense might be
to kill them.



> Also, from the article: "Whereas the FSP Board
> believes this view exceeds the right of self-defenseWhereas the
> Policy and Procedure for Removing Participants (passed 7/11/04)
> states:"Participants may be removed for promoting violence, racial
> hatred, or bigotry. Participants who are deemed detrimental to the
> accomplishment of the Free State Project’s goals may also be
> removed."Therefore, according to the Policy and Procedure for
> Removing Participants, the FSP Board removes Chris Cantwell as a
> participant and declares him unwelcome to attend FSP-organized
> events.[end of quote]The clueless person, apparently George Donnelly,
> who wrote this article said:   "His statements also went beyond what
> is apparently the very limited view of legitimate defensive violence
> held by a number of FSP trustees. According to Jody, only violence in
> immediate defense of life or limb actually counts as
> self-defense."Aha!   See the trick? 

There isn't necessarily any trick.


> Libertarian philosophy generally
> has, at its heart, the Non Initiation of Force and Fraud Principle
> (NIOFP).  Above, Jody adds the peculiar limitation to self-defense:
> "According to Jody Underwood, only violence in immediate defense of
> life or limb actually counts as self-defense."  Adding the portion
> "in immediate defense of life or limb" is the trick. 


The wording may be muddled, but I assume she is referring to
proportional self-defense. You know, for instance, you can't
execute on the spot your neighbor's kid if he steps on your
lawn.


> Libertarian
> philosophy doesn't restrict self-defense of physical force against a
> human body; theft of his property is plenty to allow self-defense.


Yes, you can defend yourself against theft, but you can't
automatically go around killing people even if they are
thieves. 



>  And I see no legitimate restriction that such a threat must be
> "immediate", at least not if it credible.In other words, if a
> government agent threatens to later come to you, with his buddies,
> and kill you if you don't pay your taxes, the FSP apparently believes
> it is somehow to be considered a violation of NIOFP if YOU kill him.
>  Somehow, you're obligated to let HIM show up, with dozens of his
> colleagues, at which point self-defense amounts to suicide. 


Well, state agents are in a category of their own, true.



> In my
> view, a credible threat of use of force or fraud against a person
> amounts to the use of force against him, and justifies whatever level
> of self-defense (including lethal self-defense) he chooses to employ.


Not in general. Just do a reduction ad absurdum. Are you saying
that if somebody 'threatens' to swindle you for, say, 20
dollars, you can use 'l

Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-20 Thread Zenaan Harkness
On Tue, Dec 20, 2016 at 04:31:34PM -0500, John Newman wrote:
> 
> > On Dec 20, 2016, at 4:21 PM, jim bell  wrote:
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > From: Zenaan Harkness 
> > 
> > >I've heard at least one "libertarian utopian" position that movement of
> > >humans, i.e. emmigration and immigration, ought be by the free will of
> > >the individual human(s).
> > 
> > This essay by Christopher Cantwell pretty much destroys the "libertarians 
> > must be in favor of open borders" idea.  
> > 
> > https://christophercantwell.com/2015/09/28/open-borders-or-market-immigration/
> > 
> >Jim Bell
> > 
> > 
> 
> 
> "Fuck The Border"
> 
> A friend of mine dropped me a line, 
> it said, "man, I gotta run to the USA. I got no money, got no job." 
> She skipped out of Mexico to stay alive. 
> You've got a problem with her living here, 
> but what did you do to help her before she fucking came? 
> What did the country do? What did the people do? 
> I stand not by my country, but by people of the whole fucking world. 
> No fences, no borders. Free movement for all. 
> Fuck the border. 
> It's about fucking time to treat people with respect. 
> It's our culture and consumption that makes her life unbearable. 
> Fuck this country; its angry eyes, its knee-jerk hordes. 
> Legal or illegal, watch her fucking go. 
> She'll take what's hers. Watch her fucking go. 
> Fuck the border. 

So subtle and well reasoned, as allways (((John Newtman))).

Phone us when you're in Somalia saving the poor black blighters over
there..



-- 
* Certified Deplorable Neo-Nazi Fake News Hunter (TM)(C)(R)
* Executive Director of Triggers, Ministry of Winning
* Weapons against traditional \/\/European\/\/ values:
http://davidduke.com/jewish-professor-boasts-of-jewish-pornography-used-as-a-weapon-against-gentiles/
* How Liberal Lefties view the world:
http://bbs.dailystormer.com/uploads/default/optimized/3X/0/4/042cb95724339d5df43eab11e5e714e506dadc7e_1_600x329.jpg


Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-20 Thread Zenaan Harkness
On Tue, Dec 20, 2016 at 03:06:28PM -0300, Juan wrote:
> On Tue, 20 Dec 2016 23:56:29 +1100
> Zenaan Harkness  wrote:
> 
> > The primary God-given role of government is to keep us safe. 
> 
>   fuck you.

To be sure, I agree with you, that was a quote of course. I am not the
author of that article.



-- 
* Certified Deplorable Neo-Nazi Fake News Hunter (TM)(C)(R)
* Executive Director of Triggers, Ministry of Winning
* Weapons against traditional \/\/European\/\/ values:
http://davidduke.com/jewish-professor-boasts-of-jewish-pornography-used-as-a-weapon-against-gentiles/
* How Liberal Lefties view the world:
http://bbs.dailystormer.com/uploads/default/optimized/3X/0/4/042cb95724339d5df43eab11e5e714e506dadc7e_1_600x329.jpg


Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-20 Thread jim bell


 From: juan 
On Tue, 20 Dec 2016 21:21:27 + (UTC)
jim bell  wrote:
> 
>  From: Zenaan Harkness 
> 
> >I've heard at least one "libertarian utopian" position that movement
> >of humans, i.e. emmigration and immigration, ought be by the free
> >will of the individual human(s).
> 
> This essay by Christopher Cantwell pretty much destroys the
> "libertarians must be in favor of open borders" idea.

    cantwell is not a libertarian
> https://christophercantwell.com/2015/09/28/open-borders-or-market-immigration/
>                Jim Bell

Sorry, but I very much disagree.  Based on the limited amount of information 
I've read, from   http://morelibertynow.com/fsp-cantwell/    he is more 
accurately a libertarian than those who expelled him from the "Free State 
Project".    I can already read evidence of their errors in the article above.  
It is easy to make the error of thinking that use of force by government agents 
doesn't qualify as "initiation of force", simply because in most cases it is 
'merely' the credible threat of use of force.  They claimed Cantwell was 
"promoting violence" when what he was actually doing was simply advocating 
self-defense against the continual and credible threat of force by government 
agents.  

Quoting  the article:   "Just a few days after this news broke, Chris wrote a 
blog post in which he said that “the answer [to things like the Bearcat issue], 
at some point, is to kill government agents” and “any level of force necessary 
for anyone to stop any government agent from furthering said coercion [tax 
collection in the context of funding the salaries of all government employees] 
is morally justifiable.”
Nothing wrong with that, from a Libertarian perspective.    Also, from the 
article:
"Whereas the FSP Board believes this view exceeds the right of 
self-defenseWhereas the Policy and Procedure for Removing Participants (passed 
7/11/04) states:"Participants may be removed for promoting violence, racial 
hatred, or bigotry. Participants who are deemed detrimental to the 
accomplishment of the Free State Project’s goals may also be 
removed."Therefore, according to the Policy and Procedure for Removing 
Participants, the FSP Board removes Chris Cantwell as a participant and 
declares him unwelcome to attend FSP-organized events.[end of quote]The 
clueless person, apparently George Donnelly, who wrote this article said:   
"His statements also went beyond what is apparently the very limited view of 
legitimate defensive violence held by a number of FSP trustees. According to 
Jody, only violence in immediate defense of life or limb actually counts as 
self-defense."Aha!   See the trick?  Libertarian philosophy generally has, at 
its heart, the Non Initiation of Force and Fraud Principle (NIOFP).  Above, 
Jody adds the peculiar limitation to self-defense:   "According to Jody 
Underwood, only violence in immediate defense of life or limb actually counts 
as self-defense."  Adding the portion "in immediate defense of life or limb" is 
the trick.  Libertarian philosophy doesn't restrict self-defense of physical 
force against a human body; theft of his property is plenty to allow 
self-defense.  And I see no legitimate restriction that such a threat must be 
"immediate", at least not if it credible.In other words, if a government agent 
threatens to later come to you, with his buddies, and kill you if you don't pay 
your taxes, the FSP apparently believes it is somehow to be considered a 
violation of NIOFP if YOU kill him.  Somehow, you're obligated to let HIM show 
up, with dozens of his colleagues, at which point self-defense amounts to 
suicide.  In my view, a credible threat of use of force or fraud against a 
person amounts to the use of force against him, and justifies whatever level of 
self-defense (including lethal self-defense) he chooses to employ.  I consider 
that non-libertarian government, merely by its existence, amounts to such an 
ever-present threat of force.   Christopher Cantwell, far from not being a 
Libertarian, is actually much more accurately a libertarian than those of the 
FSP who expelled him.  They expelled him simply because Cantwell's 
understanding of libertarianism was more accurate than theirs was.I don't know 
whether Christopher Cantwell has ever said anything showing him to be a 
non-libertarian, but so far I haven't seen it.       Jim Bell


   

Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-20 Thread Cecilia Tanaka
On Tue, Dec 20, 2016 at 7:31 PM, John Newman  wrote:

>
> *"Fuck The Border"*
> A friend of mine dropped me a line,
> it said, "man, I gotta run to the USA. I got no money, got no job."
> She skipped out of Mexico to stay alive.
> You've got a problem with her living here,
> but what did you do to help her before she fucking came?
> What did the country do? What did the people do?
> I stand not by my country, but by people of the whole fucking world.
> No fences, no borders. Free movement for all.
> Fuck the border.
> It's about fucking time to treat people with respect.
> It's our culture and consumption that makes her life unbearable.
> Fuck this country; its angry eyes, its knee-jerk hordes.
> Legal or illegal, watch her fucking go.
> She'll take what's hers. Watch her fucking go.
> Fuck the border.
>


​https://youtu.be/x3eQv9YC6NI  :)

http://propagandhi.com/lyrics/empires/

"*Some people have to stay and fight for survival in the country they live
in while others have to leave to survive.  Corporations cross international
borders all the time in search of people to exploit for profit and no one
stops them.  They call it globalization.  On the other hand, the victims of
corporate domination are told that they can’t cross borders in search of
better lives, and are forced to stay and deal with the social, economic and
environmental messes the companies leave behind when they inevitably move
their operations to places with even more “favourable business climates”
(re: lower wages, lax environmental laws, tax breaks).  Looks like
capitalism and human-rights don’t mix."*​


Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-20 Thread juan
On Tue, 20 Dec 2016 21:21:27 + (UTC)
jim bell  wrote:

> 
> 
>  From: Zenaan Harkness 
> 
> >I've heard at least one "libertarian utopian" position that movement
> >of humans, i.e. emmigration and immigration, ought be by the free
> >will of the individual human(s).
> 
> This essay by Christopher Cantwell pretty much destroys the
> "libertarians must be in favor of open borders" idea.


cantwell is not a libertarian





> https://christophercantwell.com/2015/09/28/open-borders-or-market-immigration/
> 
>                Jim Bell
> 
> 
>



Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-20 Thread John Newman

> On Dec 20, 2016, at 4:21 PM, jim bell  wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> From: Zenaan Harkness 
> 
> >I've heard at least one "libertarian utopian" position that movement of
> >humans, i.e. emmigration and immigration, ought be by the free will of
> >the individual human(s).
> 
> This essay by Christopher Cantwell pretty much destroys the "libertarians 
> must be in favor of open borders" idea.  
> 
> https://christophercantwell.com/2015/09/28/open-borders-or-market-immigration/
> 
>Jim Bell
> 
> 


"Fuck The Border"

A friend of mine dropped me a line, 
it said, "man, I gotta run to the USA. I got no money, got no job." 
She skipped out of Mexico to stay alive. 
You've got a problem with her living here, 
but what did you do to help her before she fucking came? 
What did the country do? What did the people do? 
I stand not by my country, but by people of the whole fucking world. 
No fences, no borders. Free movement for all. 
Fuck the border. 
It's about fucking time to treat people with respect. 
It's our culture and consumption that makes her life unbearable. 
Fuck this country; its angry eyes, its knee-jerk hordes. 
Legal or illegal, watch her fucking go. 
She'll take what's hers. Watch her fucking go. 
Fuck the border. 



> 


Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-20 Thread jim bell


 From: Zenaan Harkness 

>I've heard at least one "libertarian utopian" position that movement of
>humans, i.e. emmigration and immigration, ought be by the free will of
>the individual human(s).

This essay by Christopher Cantwell pretty much destroys the "libertarians must 
be in favor of open borders" idea.  
https://christophercantwell.com/2015/09/28/open-borders-or-market-immigration/

               Jim Bell


   

Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-20 Thread Cecilia Tanaka
Just a little fun and pretty OT observation...  ;)

All the times when I criticize Zzz's racist posture or lack of intelligence
in this list, an interesting 'coincidence' always happens:  -  I receive
much more spam than usual.  At least three times more, usually.  :)

It always makes me smile because it means he read my message, felt the burn
and is showing me his true colors.  Always coward anonymous attacks,
because has no _rational_ arguments to justify his own ideas in public and
no courage to talk to me.  Why are all the racists so coward?


Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-20 Thread juan
On Tue, 20 Dec 2016 23:56:29 +1100
Zenaan Harkness  wrote:


> The primary God-given role of government is to keep us safe. 

fuck you.



Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-20 Thread Cecilia Tanaka
On Tue, Dec 20, 2016 at 12:31 PM, Ben Tasker  wrote:

> Or perhaps it's simply because Japan's efforts in the middle east are
> limited to Humanitarian aid. Makes it far harder to find victims willing to
> get angry at the Japanese when they're not dropping bombs.
>

​Oh, you know, our tradition is being bombed, not drop the bombs!  ;)

And "no terrorists" is taking it a bit far.
>

​Sincerely?  An article that mentions "No Muslims, no terrorism"​ in its
title and defends this racist idea, this disgusting kind of prejudice, was
completely too far, not just a bit far.


> No jihadi's maybe, but Japan has had it's own share of terrorism in the
> past.
>

​Correct, we had some terrorist attacks in Japan in the past and some of
them were pretty cruel because they used chemical weapons in closed places
with few chances of escape, like the subway, and tried to attack the
buildings where the Japanese government is located.  Sad...  :((

Oh, Lord, Zzz was able to send to our list a fascist article which last
paragraph is:

"
Taking humble and grateful pride once again in what God has done to make
​ ​
America the most exceptional nation in history is not only the right
​ ​
thing to do, it is the safest thing to do.​"


​Yeah, copying a idiot and very racist Japanese concept  ('Sakoku', in
nihongo/Japanese language)  will really help God to make the USA "the most
exceptional nation in History". ​

The racist moron who wrote this article is so stupid and disgusting as the
prejudiced jerk who sent this small-minded and intolerant garbage to a
cypherpunk list.


Re: "right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-20 Thread Ben Tasker
Or perhaps it's simply because Japan's efforts in the middle east are
limited to Humanitarian aid. Makes it far harder to find victims willing to
get angry at the Japanese when they're not dropping bombs.

And "no terrorists" is taking it a bit far. No jihadi's maybe, but Japan
has had it's own share of terrorism in the past.



On Tue, Dec 20, 2016 at 12:56 PM, Zenaan Harkness  wrote:

> I've heard at least one "libertarian utopian" position that movement of
> humans, i.e. emmigration and immigration, ought be by the free will of
> the individual human(s).
>
> Japan is a useful information point in this debate, and the following
> article lays out the Japanese experience with respect to immigration to
> Japan, and in particular, Japan's treatment of Islamic immigration to
> Japan.
>
> In an era where many in the West proudly proclaim that race and cultural
> heritage are nothing but social constructs, Japan provides a compelling
> counter point to what some might term "neo-liberal hogwash".
>
> In the past, attempts to engage this particular discussion come up
> pretty short, with flippant rejection of the 'cultural desires' of large
> portions of the population of many countries; certainly we live in
> interesting times..
>
>
>
>
> Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists
> https://www.onenewsnow.com/perspectives/bryan-fischer/
> 2016/01/04/japan-no-muslims-no-terrorists
>
> There is a simple reason we never read about jihadi attacks in Japan.
> There are no Muslims there. No Muslims, no terrorists.
>
> This is a significant data point in the public debate over Muslim
> immigration. Donald Trump, of course, has famously proposed a suspension
> of Islamic immigration until we can figure out a way to screen out
> jihadis, and Franklin Graham is backing that suggestion to the hilt.
>
> The primary God-given role of government is to keep us safe. According
> to Romans 13, this involves the use of lethal force, when necessary, to
> administer justice and to protect our national security.
>
> The number-one fear today among the American people is a Muslim terror
> attack. It is our government's chief responsibility to enact whatever
> public policies are necessary to reduce that fear and eliminate the
> threat.
>
> This means there is much we can learn from Japan, which has been
> virtually free from Islamic unrest. Simple demographics tell the story.
>
> Dr. Mordechai Kedar, writing in The Jewish Press, offers some of the
> details (emphasis mine throughout):
>
> This country keeps a very low profile on all levels regarding the Muslim
> matter: On the diplomatic level, senior political figures from Islamic
> countries almost never visit Japan, and Japanese leaders rarely visit
> Muslim countries. The relations with Muslim countries are based on
> concerns such as oil and gas, which Japan imports from some Muslim
> countries. The official policy of Japan is not to give citizenship to
> Muslims who come to Japan, and even permits for permanent residency are
> given sparingly to Muslims.
>
> Japan is a nation of roughly 126 million people. And yet, according to
> Dr. Kedar, there are only 10,000 Muslims in the entire country. This
> represents less than one hundredth of one percent. (Other estimates are
> higher, but none suggest a number above 100,000.) Muslim immigration is
> officially and culturally discouraged, and a Japanese woman who marries
> a Muslim man becomes a social outcast.
>
> Contrast this with many European nations who have allowed Muslims with
> their death-to-the-West ideology to reach 5 to 10 percent of their
> populations. In France, authorities were relieved disaffected Muslim
> teenagers only torched 804 cars on New Year's Eve, down from over 900
> the year before. These young devotees of the religion of peace also
> managed to blow up a public Christmas tree in between firebombing
> automobiles, and the mere threat of a Muslim terror attack shut down a
> huge fireworks display in Brussels.
>
> Islamic proselytization is forbidden in Japan, it is very difficult to
> import Qur'ans into the country, and there are very few mosques. In
> Japan, Muslim men are expected to pray at home, not in mosques or in the
> middle of the street as they do in France. Islamic organizations are not
> allowed, so the Japanese do not have to deal with the incessant stream
> of propaganda coming from pro-jihadi groups like CAIR. There is only one
> imam in Tokyo, a city of over 13 million people.
>
> Virtually the only Muslims who are in Japan come as employees of foreign
> companies. And even that is the exception rather than the rule. "The
> official policy of the Japanese authorities is to make every effort not
> to allow entry to Muslims, even if they are physicians, engineers and
> managers sent by foreign companies that are active in the region."
>
> The Japanese have a patriotic pride in Japanese exceptionalism, Japanese
> culture and Japanese traditions, and instinctively recognize that
> enculturating Islam t

"right" vs permission, to immigrate - "Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists"

2016-12-20 Thread Zenaan Harkness
I've heard at least one "libertarian utopian" position that movement of
humans, i.e. emmigration and immigration, ought be by the free will of
the individual human(s).

Japan is a useful information point in this debate, and the following
article lays out the Japanese experience with respect to immigration to
Japan, and in particular, Japan's treatment of Islamic immigration to
Japan.

In an era where many in the West proudly proclaim that race and cultural
heritage are nothing but social constructs, Japan provides a compelling
counter point to what some might term "neo-liberal hogwash".

In the past, attempts to engage this particular discussion come up
pretty short, with flippant rejection of the 'cultural desires' of large
portions of the population of many countries; certainly we live in
interesting times..




Japan: No Muslims, no terrorists
https://www.onenewsnow.com/perspectives/bryan-fischer/2016/01/04/japan-no-muslims-no-terrorists

There is a simple reason we never read about jihadi attacks in Japan.
There are no Muslims there. No Muslims, no terrorists.

This is a significant data point in the public debate over Muslim
immigration. Donald Trump, of course, has famously proposed a suspension
of Islamic immigration until we can figure out a way to screen out
jihadis, and Franklin Graham is backing that suggestion to the hilt.

The primary God-given role of government is to keep us safe. According
to Romans 13, this involves the use of lethal force, when necessary, to
administer justice and to protect our national security.

The number-one fear today among the American people is a Muslim terror
attack. It is our government's chief responsibility to enact whatever
public policies are necessary to reduce that fear and eliminate the
threat.

This means there is much we can learn from Japan, which has been
virtually free from Islamic unrest. Simple demographics tell the story.

Dr. Mordechai Kedar, writing in The Jewish Press, offers some of the
details (emphasis mine throughout):

This country keeps a very low profile on all levels regarding the Muslim
matter: On the diplomatic level, senior political figures from Islamic
countries almost never visit Japan, and Japanese leaders rarely visit
Muslim countries. The relations with Muslim countries are based on
concerns such as oil and gas, which Japan imports from some Muslim
countries. The official policy of Japan is not to give citizenship to
Muslims who come to Japan, and even permits for permanent residency are
given sparingly to Muslims.

Japan is a nation of roughly 126 million people. And yet, according to
Dr. Kedar, there are only 10,000 Muslims in the entire country. This
represents less than one hundredth of one percent. (Other estimates are
higher, but none suggest a number above 100,000.) Muslim immigration is
officially and culturally discouraged, and a Japanese woman who marries
a Muslim man becomes a social outcast.

Contrast this with many European nations who have allowed Muslims with
their death-to-the-West ideology to reach 5 to 10 percent of their
populations. In France, authorities were relieved disaffected Muslim
teenagers only torched 804 cars on New Year's Eve, down from over 900
the year before. These young devotees of the religion of peace also
managed to blow up a public Christmas tree in between firebombing
automobiles, and the mere threat of a Muslim terror attack shut down a
huge fireworks display in Brussels.

Islamic proselytization is forbidden in Japan, it is very difficult to
import Qur'ans into the country, and there are very few mosques. In
Japan, Muslim men are expected to pray at home, not in mosques or in the
middle of the street as they do in France. Islamic organizations are not
allowed, so the Japanese do not have to deal with the incessant stream
of propaganda coming from pro-jihadi groups like CAIR. There is only one
imam in Tokyo, a city of over 13 million people.

Virtually the only Muslims who are in Japan come as employees of foreign
companies. And even that is the exception rather than the rule. "The
official policy of the Japanese authorities is to make every effort not
to allow entry to Muslims, even if they are physicians, engineers and
managers sent by foreign companies that are active in the region."

The Japanese have a patriotic pride in Japanese exceptionalism, Japanese
culture and Japanese traditions, and instinctively recognize that
enculturating Islam threatens all that because its value system is so
antithetical to what makes Japan Japan.

The resistance to Islamic infiltration is universally shared by the
populace at large. "Japan manages to remain a country almost without a
Muslim presence because Japan's negative attitude toward Islam and
Muslims pervades every level of the population, from the man in the
street to organizations and companies to senior officialdom."

What's more, because the Japanese are proud of who and what they are,
and because of their allegiance to their own cultural v