Stephen Colbert testified before the House on Friday on migrant farmworkers (the video of his testimony is below). Really this was a testimony to California Democrat Zoe Lofgren's (pictured left) feelings on her work in Congress- Lofgren invited Colbert to speak after he spent one day as a migrant worker. That is just great.
helping readers avoid unintended consequences, negative externalities, and diminishing returns going on 53 years

Saturday, September 25, 2010
Stephen Colbert, Silly Congressional Tool
Stephen Colbert testified before the House on Friday on migrant farmworkers (the video of his testimony is below). Really this was a testimony to California Democrat Zoe Lofgren's (pictured left) feelings on her work in Congress- Lofgren invited Colbert to speak after he spent one day as a migrant worker. That is just great.
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Ayn Rand and Christianity: Glazing Chicken, Not Sausage-Making
Clearly not all Christian thought is in line with Randian thought- however its possible there are ideas that A.) Rand would sympathize with and B.) that Christians can sympathize without being heretics. In fact, its perfectly reasonable for Christians to appreciate free markets, dislike government intervention, and find value in individual decision making while simultaneously loving God and loving thy neighbor.
There is obvious tension between Randian and Christian thought, but there also seems to be a fair amount of overlap to this Venn diagram. Sure, Freeman can cherry pick Rand quotes and they sound bad, but agreeing with the whole body of Rand's work is unnecessary to find sympathy for Rand's ideas on markets and individual choice.
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
Ayn Rand and Christianity- Creating Loving and Selfish Sausage

I am feeling a bit sheepish. A friend gave me a copy of Christianity Today this week and the front cover said Ayn Rand's Alternative Religion- the article was titled "Ayn Rand: Goddess of the Great Recession" written by Gary Moore, founder of The Financial Seminary. Generally, I have always liked Rand, her literature and her relatively ridiculous philosophy "objectivism" because it prized the individual and placed a high value on hard work and self-determination. I was a typical, perhaps naive, Christian that thought I could easily mix her economic opinions with my faith, and separate out ideas that were anti-thetical (or anti-Christian) to my beliefs. Undoubtedly the article points to Randian ideas that are much closer to Nietzsche, Marx or Hegel than Jesus Christ or St. Paul.
Friday, September 3, 2010
A Conversation Hardly Worth Having: On Ron Paul, Mosque Locations and Soccer Fields

Thursday, August 12, 2010
Short on Debate, Long on Conclusions: A Commentary on the American Bar Association

I am a new attorney and member of The Federalist Society. I like the group not necessarily because of it's politics, but because they believe in open, multi-sided and lively debate on particular issues, sometimes political but sometimes not. This allows the audience to hear more than a single opinion on an issue so that a listener is able to make an informed decision, and not just a decision. As my favorite college professor, the late Glenn Martin used to say...
Monday, August 9, 2010
For O'Reilly, the Rain in Spain Falls Mainly on Obama
Bill O'Reilly somehow thinks the Obama's "lavish" vacation to Spain is worth discussing during his nightly, one-hour, no-spin zone. Apparently since we are experiencing an economic downturn, Mr. and Mrs. POTUS should pretend they they are unemployed or at the least, that they go to bed hungry some nights.
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Dodd-Frank Financial Overhaul: Ignoring the Giant Elephant in the Room

The Dodd-Frank Act (DFA) financial reform bill was signed earlier this month and stretches over 2300 pages long, but no where does it spend a sentence to regulate two of the major players in the financial meltdown- government sponsored enterprises (GSEs) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Both are exempted. The bill means very little if a primary cause of the 2008 crisis was ignored.
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