Monthly Archives: September 2014

What is Censorship? – Free Talk Live 2014-09-12 – Video

Posted: September 16, 2014 at 7:41 am


What is Censorship? - Free Talk Live 2014-09-12
Liberty Bits from Free Talk Live. For the best in liberty talk catch Free Talk Live every night of the week at 7pm - 10pm Eastern at http://lrn.fm Be sure to like Liberty Bits on Facebook....

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What is Censorship? - Free Talk Live 2014-09-12 - Video

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censorship in cinema [funny video] – Video

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censorship in cinema [funny video]
censorship in cinema [funny video] censorship in cinema [funny video] censorship in cinema [funny video] censorship in cinema [funny video] censorship in cinema [funny video] censorship in...

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censorship in cinema [funny video] - Video

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Chinese authorities detain elderly journalist over censorship criticism

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Chinese authorities have detained an 81-year-old journalist with a failing memory who recently criticized heavy censorship that he said is doing great damage to Chinas media.

Tie Liu, a writer and journalist who spent decades in work camps as a young man, had thought he was too old to draw the attention of authorities. He had for decades offered unvarnished opinions of the Chinese state, and recently directed withering criticism at Liu Yunshan, the elite politician and propaganda czar. In August, Mr. Tie released an online article accusing Mr. Liu of further sullying Chinas already obedient state press and making the media lose its credibility in China.

But at 1 a.m. on Sunday, his phone rang. Soon after, one of Beijings highest-ranking police officials was in his house, presenting him with a summons paper that accused him of causing a disturbance.

In the midst of a broad effort led by Chinese President Xi Jinping to stifle critical expression on the Internet, in churches and in the courts, even an octogenarian one who had recently agreed with his wife he would lay down the verbal hatchet at the end of this year is a target in China today.

Not long after police arrived, he was escorted from the house with a suit jacket over his pyjamas to protect against the cold in the deep of night, his wife, Ren Hengfang, said. Less than 24 hours later, after also arresting his domestic helper and publishing assistant, the police were back, with papers from cybersecurity police confirming he had been formally detained. He is being held at the Beijing municipal detention house.

The notice may have set a kind of grim record for China.

He might be the oldest suspect in China on charges of creating a disturbance, said Liu Xiaoyuan, a Chinese human-rights lawyer, on Twitter.

It also marks a return into state hands, a grimly familiar place for Mr. Tie, whose real name is Huang Zerong although he is best known by his pen name.

In the mid-1950s, in one of Mao Zedongs uglier social engineering efforts, Chinese people were encouraged to vent their problems with the Communist Party. The so-called Hundred Flowers Campaign brought fourth an outpouring of criticism. Mr. Tie contributed an article about civil servants. It was published in my newspaper and nobody thought much about it, he said in a 2010 interview with Radio Netherlands Worldwide.

Then, Mao changed course, labelled the critics rightists and oversaw a massive purge. All of a sudden, I was sent to a work camp for 23 years, Mr. Tie told RNW.

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Ron Paul in 1988 John Birch Society ‘NWO’ Propaganda Piece – Video

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Ron Paul in 1988 John Birch Society #39;NWO #39; Propaganda Piece
The John Birch Society has become infamous for it #39;s crossover with Neo-Nazis and their devout hatred of communists, so Ron Paul was elated to participate in this 1988 propaganda video.

By: Reich-Wing Watch

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Ron Paul in 1988 John Birch Society 'NWO' Propaganda Piece - Video

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Ron Pauls Audit the Fed bill returns to Congress – Finance Analysis – Video

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Ron Pauls Audit the Fed bill returns to Congress - Finance Analysis
Ron Paul #39;s #39;Audit the Fed #39; bill returns to Congress Ron Paul may not be in Congress anymore, but his Audit the Fed bill lives on after him. House Republican leaders scheduled a...

By: Daily Voice News 2014

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Ron Pauls Audit the Fed bill returns to Congress - Finance Analysis - Video

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Ron Paul Calls for a Race War – Video

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Ron Paul Calls for a Race War
Jimmy speaks with Ron Paul. Follow Jimmy on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jimmy_dore Follow TYTComedy on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TYTComedy Visit: http://www.jimmydorecomedy.com/ Filmed ...

By: The Jimmy Dore Show

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Ron Paul Calls for a Race War - Video

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The Fix: Rand Paul Ron Paul. Is that good thing or a bad thing?

Posted: at 7:41 am

Dave Fahrenthold wrote a big piece in today's Post on Rand Paul'sevolution (to be nice) or flip-floppery (to be not so nice) on a variety of issues -- from how to deal with the Islamic State to what to do with Medicare -- in advance of his near certain 2016 presidential bid. It's a great piece and contains two absolutely critical sentences when it comes to understanding what makes Rand different from his father, Ron, who ran for president in 2008 and 2012. Here they are:

As the prospect of a 2016 presidential bid looms larger, Paul is making it clear that he did not come to Washington to be a purist like his father, former congressman Ron Paul.He came to be a politician, like everybody else.

Then, later in the piece, Dave quotes a "longtime [Paul] friend and adviser" saying:Rands a pragmatist. He realizes weve got a really large federal government....I think that Rand has a picture of what a utopia would look like. And hes very realistic about how long it would take to get there.

For those paying close attention to Rand Paul since he arrived in the Senate in 2011 -- and I count myself among that group -- it's been clear for a very long time that he is not a facsimile of his father. Not only is Rand more naturally able as a campaigner than his father -- that's not saying all that much -- but he is also far more willing to tweak and adjust his policy positions to appeal to an electorate that is broader than simply the libertarian wing of the GOP base.

That flexibility has always been cast -- including by me -- as something that works in Paul's favor in a likely presidential bid. After all, we learned in 2008 and 2012 that running as a pure libertarian doesn't win you much other than a loyal, loud and too-small following. (Ron Paul didn't win a single caucus or primary in either 2008 or 2012.)But, Fahrenthold's piece raises the specter that Rand's willingness to massage where he stands could have far more politically painful consequences.

The first, and perhaps most important, is that much of Paul's early support in places like Iowa and New Hampshire comes from the hardcore libertarian base who not only voted for his father but also volunteered and donated money. These are the cause people, not the campaign people. And they are not likely to be all that keen on someone who sees them as one point of a triangulation strategy.

Fahrenthold also quotes social conservative leaders raising questions about just how committed Rand is to working to make abortion illegal and/or roll back gay marriage. While Paul was never going to be the "social conservative guy" in the 2016 field -- that's likely to be Texas Sen. Ted Cruz -- he also can't afford to have that segment of the party actively opposed to him. Social conservatives have become a dominant voice in the Iowa caucuses and remain a major factor in the South Carolina primary as well.

Remember that the most important anything a politician can be -- or at least be perceived to be -- is authentic. Voters like to vote for people that they think a) have convictions and b) are willing to stick by those convictions even in the face of public disagreement. Of course, the best politicians are the ones who give off the impression of being utterly steadfast in their principles while also adjusting those principles to fit the times and the mood of the electorate. Think Bill Clinton.

That's who Matt Lewis, a columnist at the conservative Daily Caller website, sees when analyzing Rand's dexterity on position taking. Writes Lewis:

No, Rand Paul is not in danger of entering John Kerry territory. Kerry wouldn't dare attempt to pull something like this off. He knew he didn't have what it takes to get us to suspend reality and embrace his delusions of grandeur.

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The Fix: Rand Paul Ron Paul. Is that good thing or a bad thing?

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Rand Paul Ron Paul. Is that good thing or a bad thing?

Posted: at 7:41 am

Dave Fahrenthold wrote a big piece in today's Post on Rand Paul'sevolution (to be nice) or flip-floppery (to be not so nice) on a variety of issues -- from how to deal with the Islamic State to what to do with Medicare -- in advance of his near certain 2016 presidential bid. It's a great piece and contains two absolutely critical sentences when it comes to understanding what makes Rand different from his father, Ron, who ran for president in 2008 and 2012. Here they are:

As the prospect of a 2016 presidential bid looms larger, Paul is making it clear that he did not come to Washington to be a purist like his father, former congressman Ron Paul.He came to be a politician, like everybody else.

Then, later in the piece, Dave quotes a "longtime [Paul] friend and adviser" saying:Rands a pragmatist. He realizes weve got a really large federal government....I think that Rand has a picture of what a utopia would look like. And hes very realistic about how long it would take to get there.

For those paying close attention to Rand Paul since he arrived in the Senate in 2011 -- and I count myself among that group -- it's been clear for a very long time that he is not a facsimile of his father. Not only is Rand more naturally able as a campaigner than his father -- that's not saying all that much -- but he is also far more willing to tweak and adjust his policy positions to appeal to an electorate that is broader than simply the libertarian wing of the GOP base.

That flexibility has always been cast -- including by me -- as something that works in Paul's favor in a likely presidential bid. After all, we learned in 2008 and 2012 that running as a pure libertarian doesn't win you much other than a loyal, loud and too-small following. (Ron Paul didn't win a single caucus or primary in either 2008 or 2012.)But, Fahrenthold's piece raises the specter that Rand's willingness to massage where he stands could have far more politically painful consequences.

The first, and perhaps most important, is that much of Paul's early support in places like Iowa and New Hampshire comes from the hardcore libertarian base who not only voted for his father but also volunteered and donated money. These are the cause people, not the campaign people. And they are not likely to be all that keen on someone who sees them as one point of a triangulation strategy.

Fahrenthold also quotes social conservative leaders raising questions about just how committed Rand is to working to make abortion illegal and/or roll back gay marriage. While Paul was never going to be the "social conservative guy" in the 2016 field -- that's likely to be Texas Sen. Ted Cruz -- he also can't afford to have that segment of the party actively opposed to him. Social conservatives have become a dominant voice in the Iowa caucuses and remain a major factor in the South Carolina primary as well.

Remember that the most important anything a politician can be -- or at least be perceived to be -- is authentic. Voters like to vote for people that they think a) have convictions and b) are willing to stick by those convictions even in the face of public disagreement. Of course, the best politicians are the ones who give off the impression of being utterly steadfast in their principles while also adjusting those principles to fit the times and the mood of the electorate. Think Bill Clinton.

That's who Matt Lewis, a columnist at the conservative Daily Caller website, sees when analyzing Rand's dexterity on position taking. Writes Lewis:

No, Rand Paul is not in danger of entering John Kerry territory. Kerry wouldn't dare attempt to pull something like this off. He knew he didn't have what it takes to get us to suspend reality and embrace his delusions of grandeur.

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Rand Paul Ron Paul. Is that good thing or a bad thing?

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Libertarianism: Why I’m a libertarian. – Video

Posted: at 7:41 am


Libertarianism: Why I #39;m a libertarian.
Government have been encroaching and infringing on our personal rights for hundreds of years. Why aren #39;t most people concerned about this issue?

By: Sami Al-Suwaidi

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Libertarianism: Why I'm a libertarian. - Video

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Hedge fund offers $1M to cure aging

Posted: at 7:41 am

The $1 million "Palo Alto Longevity Prize" will be split in two, but teams can try for both. One $500,000 award will go to the first team to show, using a mammal for testing, that it can restore a youthful heart rate to an aging adult. The second $500,000 pot will be awarded to the first group that can extend lifespan by 50 percent.

Eleven teams have already signed up to compete and more can apply. They include researchers from Stanford, George Washington University and Washington University in St. Louis who will experiment with gene modification and the hormone oxytocin.

"Now is the time to launch this prize because we have reached the point in science where we really do have the opportunity to solve aging," Dr. Doris Taylor, director of the regenerative medicine research at Texas Heart Institute, said in a statement. Taylor is a leader of an initial team competing for the prize using a stem cell approach.

Prize organizers are also working with private investors and foundations to provide access to additional money to the teams. The effort's advisory board includes Eric Weinstein of Thiel Capital, Graham Spencer of Google Ventures and Steve Jurvetson of Draper Fisher Jurvetson.

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Hedge fund offers $1M to cure aging

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