Sanctity of Squirrel Life Sunday: Jerk Cop Edition
By: Barry Belmont

Don’t you love when there’s no consequences for your actions?

Big, important police officer’s gotta show nature who’s boss…

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Pretentious College Students, Or, Why People Don’t Take The Budget Cut Protests Seriously
By: Barry Belmont

It seems like not a day goes by where one is not inundated with the doth-protesting-too-much of college students on the cuts to higher education in Nevada. What strikes me most about these complaints is the self-righteous presumption that these students are ‘owed’ a college education, that they deserve a college education funded through the taxes of their fellow citizens. Showing this attitude in stark banality is this faceless protestor and their hand drawn sign:

This sign holder has such an inflated sense of importance, such a reprehensible sense of self-worth, such a disturbing sense of entitlement that I am left at a loss for words. Cutting our budget is cutting my dream. Our budget meaning the State’s budget meaning the taxes of its inhabitants meaning money taken from innocent people under the threat of violence. These protestors must actually believe that this money should belong to them, to pursue their own ends. They, with their blossoming college educations, know what this state and its inhabitants need more than those whose funds they are plundering. They are, in their opinions after all, the up-coming leaders of the world.

Which brings us to the sad point of contention. These people–these, people–must truly think they cannot accomplish such things on their own. They must truly think they are so helpless that achieving greatness (obtaining a college degree) can only be accomplished by writ of that omnipotent GodPower The State. But if such is the case, then how can they justify their protests? Either they are gifted and talented people (who therefore are likely able enough to support their own endeavors) or they are the weaklings suckling at the teat of bloated Mother Government (and why should coercive funds be so wasted?).

And hence, the reason the vast majority of the population of the state does not care about the cuts to higher education is because of the participants in higher education themselves. The protesting students uncomfortably mix an inflated sense of entitlement (being that they are sooooo important to the future of the state) with a childish weakness unbecoming of anyone who will one day grab the reins of the world. The people who make our higher education system better are those busting their ass studying in the library, writing reports, doing research, coding for hours–the unseen movers of knowledge.

And not the people holding up little crappy signs begging Peter to be robbed for the sake of Paul.

View Comments Posted in Local/Nevada, The State
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Human Beings Helping Human Beings
By: Barry Belmont

I know we were not able to sufficiently answer where exactly it is that the sanctity of human life comes from, but I’m glad to know there are still those out there that believe in it fully. Meet Narayanan Krishnan, a true humanitarian.

CNN Hero Narayanan Krishnan

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Patents on Human Genes
By: Barry Belmont

Today the ACLU, PUBPAT, and the U.S. Solicitor General made their arguments appealing a decision made a few years back to allow companies the right to patent human genetics.

The ACLU and PUBPAT brought a lawsuit in May 2009 against the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), Myriad Genetics and the University of Utah Research Foundation, which hold the patents on two human genes related to hereditary breast and ovarian cancer, BRCA1 and BRCA2. The lawsuit charges that the patents restrict both scientific research and patients’ access to medical care, and that patents on human genes are illegal because genes are “products of nature.” The groups brought the case on behalf of breast cancer and women’s health groups, individual women, geneticists and scientific associations representing approximately 150,000 researchers, pathologists and laboratory professionals.

Their arguments can be heard below

The obvious answer to this whole situation is that genes are merely information, and possessors of information should not be given a government writ to punish those who know as much as they do.

View Comments Posted in Science, Without Patents
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Let Apathy Reign
By: Barry Belmont

In a recent opinion article in the Sagebrush (see cut-out below), GSA President Matt Smith goes through a laundry list of reasons why he perceives students are not becoming more actively engaged in local politics (from Don’t Have The Time to Major’s Not in Danger) without even coming close to addressing the real reason people don’t get involved in political matters: They just plain don’t care.

But Mr. Smith is not alone in his complete obliviousness to strident apathy of the general population, most everyone who cares to discuss such issues overlooks this incredibly pertinent fact. And yet it is only ever one side that cares to cast blame on the other, only the active have the inflated sense of righteousness to say that the Apathetic should be ashamed of their lack of action. Meanwhile, the Apathetic do not bother to point out that it is in fact the actors on stage (and not the sedated audience) that move the plot forward, whether it be to tragedy or farce.

In fact, if we were to examine the situation with an air of skepticism towards the typical claims, it would take but a moment to note that, much to chagrin of most of the platitudinous protestors, the University has never looked better. Nationally ranked, important colleges accredited, test scores going up. And this is all after considerable cutting and accommodation (stuff that’s been happening since even before I attended [and graduated from] UNR). This is because UNR is a good school with smart people at the helm making difficult decisions during difficult times.

And that’s why the rest of us can sit back and not give a damn. The people are good at these sorts of things are handling them. It’s the same principle that gives us electronics we don’t need to really understand, food we could never grow ourselves, and houses we could never build. We can have apathy in the vast majority of the world because the rest of the world has vast apathy of itself. This allows us to become focused and specialized and productive in ways the world has never seen. A keen understanding on the inner workings of memristors, the genetics of wheat strains, or even making a funny homevideo will better the human condition orders of magnitude above giving a single thought to political matters.

So let the apathy on such matters rise. Leave the movers and shakers of the world to move and shake it in the ways they would like to not only as some quasi-political-leader would have them. Let people alone to do their thing, to live their own life. And most importantly, do not get so self-righteous in your demands that they do as they wish.

Live and let apathy reign free.

View Comments Posted in Local/Nevada
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Anarchy Quip 1
By: Barry Belmont

Does no one in the populace realize that there is no mischief government that has snuck in through the dark of night to replace those officials which the majority elected just the day before? The devious schoolboys that seem to cause so much problems are doing precisely so because they have no fear of reprimand: the governed do not wield the proper stick with which to rapt their knuckles, and yet are shocked to see gum under desks, blackboards filled, globes broken. Simply because the youth managed to sit still for a class photo does not mean their destructive naivete will not run rampant when enough backs are turned.

View Comments Posted in Anarchy
Before the Debate: Voluntary Cannibalism
By: Barry Belmont

Armin Meiwes was a man who met another man through the internet. The two agreed to meet. So far so good. However, the terms of their engagement was such that Meiwes would kill and eat the other man. All voluntarily.


In all seriousness, however, this man is now unfortunately imprisoned for life for partaking in a consensual act with another adult. Is this an injustice or merely a sound hearing on the (implicit) rules we have all agreed to play by?

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Before the Debate: Women’s Womb as Property?
By: Barry Belmont

As grotesque as the idea that a woman’s womb is her ‘property’ may sound to some ears, it is in fact the one thing which would guarantee all of her rights. It fact, it is a necessary condition in a libertarian world. However, many people somehow think claiming a womb is property detracts from its ‘sacredness’ or specialness. Economist Walter Block disagrees entirely and feels that it is actually the ‘property’ argument that answers the whole abortion debate. See if you agree…

EDIT: Sorry about the incorrect video. Got my blog-lines crossed there for a moment.

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A Policeman’s Duty
By: Barry Belmont

“It is a policeman’s duty to protect men from criminals—criminals being those who seize wealth by force. It is a policeman’s duty to retrieve stolen property and return it to its owners. But when robbery becomes the purpose of the law, and the policeman’s duty becomes, not the protection, but the plunder of property—then it is an outlaw who has to become a policeman.”

–Ayn Rand

We even made a video emphasizing the point:

View Comments Posted in Law, Police, The State, Videos
Before the Debate: Organ Markets
By: Barry Belmont

Should there be legal organ markets?

WE SHOULD LEGALIZE THE MARKET FOR HUMAN ORGANS from Intelligence Squared US on Vimeo.

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