—Shared by Elle.
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—Shared by Elle.
Jailed and ignored for two years, Stephen Slevin was awarded $22 million by a federal jury in Santa Fe in one of the largest prisoner-rights judgments ever.
Stephen Slevin was never convicted of a crime. But for two years, he languished in a New Mexico jail cell, going month after month without showers or outdoor recreation or human contact.
His nails grew so long that they curled. Refused medication and denied access to a dentist, he says he was forced to pull his own tooth.
In the photo on the left, Slevin appears in his mugshot following his August 2005 arrest; on the right, he is malnourished and disheveled after two years in solitary confinement.
Photo: Dona Ana County Sheriff’s Department/AP
Holy shit!
Judge Andrew Napolitano, For Liberty
This quote its a nerve. You have hit or you don’t. Honestly, I believe we all have it.
(via misesman)
Unfortunately, I believe I’ve seen in some people…that they just don’t have it.
The 2012 Index of Economic Freedom. Why are we #10?
Analysis: During a particularly touchy exchange at the ABC News debate, Paul attacked Santorum for being a “big-government, big spending individual.” To back up this claim, Paul offered four substantive examples: that Santorum voted to raise the nation’s debt limit five times, that Santorum voted against “right to work” laws, that he voted for No Child Left Behind, and that he voted for the Medicare Prescription Drug benefit.
Research shows that all four substantive allegations against Santorum are true. Santorum did indeed vote to raise the debt limit five times. (Source: Senate Roll Call Vote #54, 2006; Senate Roll Call Vote #213, 2004; Senate Roll Call Vote #202, 2003; Senate Roll Call Vote #148, 2002; Senate Roll Call Vote #209. 1997)
The “right to work” vote Paul is referring to is a little-known 1996 cloture motion in the U.S. Senate. The vote was on a bill called the “National Right to Work Act of 1995” that would “amend the National Labor Relations Act and the Railway Labor Act to repeal those provisions of Federal law that require employees to pay union dues or fees as a condition of employment, and for other purposes.” Santorum, along with all Democrats and liberal Republicans like Jim Jeffords of Vermont, Frank Murkowski of Alaska, and his fellow Pennsylvanian Arlen Specter all voted against cloture, which would have allowed a final vote on the bill. (Source: Senate Roll Call Vote #188, 1996)
Paul is also right that Santorum voted for No Child Left Behind, which massively expanded the role of the federal government in education. (Senate Roll Call Vote #371, 2001) Finally, Santorum did vote for the new Medicare drug entitlement in 2003 (Source: Senate Roll Call Vote #459, 2003)
During the debate, Santorum rightly pointed out that he had voted for the line-item veto (Senate Roll Call Vote #115, 1995) and for a balanced budget amendment in 1995(Source: Senate Roll Call Vote #98, 1995). The Club for Growth also noted in its Presidential White Paper on Santorum that he was “was a leading author on the bill that completely overhauled the country’s welfare system.” (Source: Club for Growth Presidential White Paper #4: Rick Santorum, http://www.clubforgrowth.org/assets/files/FINAL-Santorum-White-Paper.pdf) However, on balance, Santorum’s record in congress is generally one of favoring bigger government and more spending – not atypical during the Bush years where Santorum served in Senate leadership. (See the Club for Growth’s first fact-check on Santorum, earmarks, and the “Bridge to Nowhere” for more information on Santorum’s spending record during the Bush era.) That Santorum might be better relative to other members of Congress is irrelevant: the claim about him is an absolute statement.
—Shared by Elle.
National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA, as of Monday, December 5th).
—Shared by Elle.
Truth about it.
—Shared by Elle.
Deregulated Roads, in The Netherlands.
—Shared by Elle.
Hah, my brother lives there!
The one downfall I’ve seen is my mother went to Amsterdam and Utrecht and had some issues figuring out the difference between the bike paths, so on and so forth. Second nature to locals, it is, but confusing as all get out of foreigners.
I’d like to see this implemented in smaller cities, at least to start. I’d be wary of New York and Detroit, though. Those are some angry people.
“What if we didn’t live in a free country?” - The Judge nails it again.
I’m reading Lies The Government Told You as I watch this. I like this man.
Does anyone else think his voice sounds like porn?
“…The Bill of Rights is a literal and absolute document.
The First Amendment doesn’t say you have a right to speak out unless the government has a ‘compelling interest’ in censoring the Internet.
The Second Amendment doesn’t say you have the right to keep and bear arms until some madman plants a bomb.
The Fourth Amendment doesn’t say you have the right to be secure from search and seizure unless some FBI agent thinks you fit the profile of a terrorist.
The government has no right to interfere with any of these freedoms under any circumstances.”
By— Harry Browne (1933-2006) American libertarian writer, politician, and free-market investment analyst. Libertarian candidate for US President 1996 & 2000 (via rawrmelissaa)
Really? That’s so cute that you think so. They created those “rights.” What makes you think for one second they cannot bend their own rules?
(via disobey)