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Jan-Michael Rives
June 12, 2011
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April 23, 2011
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Not JMR's Profile

Not JMR
Name:
Not JMR
Joined:
Nov 30, 2010

Recent Comments

Not JMR

CandE

Silly.  That's the perfect word to describe the negative reactions to this post.  The topic is parking - parking - and yet we have the comparisons to Nazis, tyranny, the works.  Please.  

-E

Edit: "Off with their head" was a good example too.  Yes, because $20 parking fine is the equivalent of the guillotine. · 18 minutes ago

Edited 15 minutes ago

Try $200. I am almost pathologically careful about how I park in New York City, reading the parking signs with the attention to detail of a talmudic scholar, and I still manage to get a 100+ dollar parking ticket every other months.

Or here, interpret this: http://www.newyorkparkingticket.com/Portals/41340/images/NYPT---Parking%20signs__5%20on%20one%20pole1.JPG

Edited 12 hours ago
Not JMR

dittoheadadt

So then how is it "despicable" for fellow citizens to keep traffic lanes free, keep hydrants unobstructed, keep fire lanes open, keep handicap spots for the needy, etc.,

When space is limited or areas are densely populated, selfish self-centered illegal parkers cause a great deal of trouble and problems, and are far more than mere "annoyances."

The problem is that, at least in the region where I live, parking spaces are artificially limited to generate revenue. Why does THE ENTIRE BLOCK need to be designated a bus stop for a bus that nobody uses? Why are there four fire hydrants on each block, two of which clearly are not even functional? Why does the street sweeper (which doesn't clean a thing) need to come by at some inconvenient time so that everyone sits in their car waiting for it instead of being able to go to work? Why after it comes by do you need to stay in your car or else get a ticket from the meter maid for being parked at a time reserved for street sweeping? Why is there an arbitrary one hour limit on meters so you need to keep coming back out?

Not JMR

Yeah...ok.

Your friend has been here (the USA or El Paso) since 5, was he born in the United States?

So, were mother, father and son legally in the United States at the time they were hauled off? · 18 hours ago

No, he was brought here by his parents at age 5. They were all here illegally. 

Yeah...ok.

Being 'illegal' should be enough to earn deportation by itself.

Being 'illegal' with no English skills suggests assimilation is not job #1.

This is only true if there can be no such thing as a bad law. I disagree.

With respsect to not having English skills, I would challenge you to learn a new language at your age. It's not exactly a trivial undertaking, and English is far and away the world's most difficult language in terms of the sheer size of the vocabulary. Most immigrants have some command of English, but that wouldn't be close to enough in a legal situation. Not that assimilation actually matters that much. Or do we all excoriate the store owners in Chinatown for having all their signs in Chinese?

Not JMR

Fred Williams

Not JMR: Never watched Kudlow before. Man, he's awful.

I never watched Kudlow either, but I do listen to his Saturday morning radio show on WABC.  It's a good show, and he strikes me as a good man.  Give it a try. "Jimmy P" is a regular. · 18 hours ago

Will do!

Not JMR

CandE

Yudansha: If onemust be such a busybody about improperly parked cars, one can leave a note excoriating the parker. If that is not enough to assuage your righteous indignation, and you insist that minions of Leviathan should come and punish the one who annoyed you, then I would support your neighbors inviting you to leave the neighborhood -- with torches and pitchforks. 

The idea that a local Gestapo is the answer to the petty annoyances of life is an idea I thought the Ricochetti would find anathema. · 56 minutes ago

Edited 51 minutes ago

Wait, wait...

You're using language like "minions of the Leviathan", "torches and pitchforks", and Gestapo... Yet we who favor civilian meter maids are suffering from "righteous indignation"?

Overreact much?

-E · 2 hours ago

NO! That's exactly what they are. Evil, disgusting little creatures. If I had my way... well, let's just be thankful that I don't.

Not JMR

I feel like I understand your position pretty well, to the point where I could make your arguments in your place. Can you say the same? If not, that might suggest that you haven't given my arguments a tremendous amount of thought. I suspect you're dismissing them as irrelevant because you disagree with me in the main. That's fine when you're talking to a dummy, but I am not one of those. 

Not JMR

Adam Freedman

Agreed that Congress can override state laws re: "times, places, and manner" of holding elections, but (as I point out above), Article I, Section 2 is the more specific provision which clearly empowers states to determine voter qualifications. · 8 minutes ago

Right, but deciding on the qualifications is not the same as verifying that the individual voters ultimately are qualified. The former happens long before the election, and it's just a law on the books. The latter is an act that is part of the election process, i.e. showing up and presenting your ID at the voting booth. That latter one really seems like it falls under "manner" to me. 

I'm actually pretty sympathetic to Thomas' dissent, but it's a tricky case, isn't it?

(obviously I have no legal training)

Edited on June 17, 2013 at 11:33pm
Not JMR

Titus Andronicus - No Future Pt III: Escape from No Future

I like to think it's about the effects of big government, but that's probably just me.

I was a river, I was a tall tree, I was a volcano

But now I'm asleep on top of a mountain, I've been covered in snow

Yes, I have surrendered what made me human and all that I thought was true
And now there's a robot that lives in my brain and he tells me what to do
And I can do nothing without his permission that wasn't part of the plan

So now in Rock Ridge pharmacy I will be waiting for my man
But there is another down in a dungeon who never gave up the fight
And he'll be forever screaming, sometimes I hear him say, on a quiet night, he says
You will always be a loser
You will always be a loser
You will always be a loser
You will always be a loser
x10
You will always be a loser
You will always be a loser now
And that's okay

Not JMR

Adam Freedman: 

What gave Arizona the crazy idea that it could make laws about voter registration?  Oh, just the fusty old Constitution. Article I, Section 2 says that the voters in federal elections, “shall have the Qualifications requisite for Electors of the most numerous Branch of the State Legislature.” In other words, voter qualifications for federal elections derive from the qualifications for state elections – and the federal government has no say over state voter qualifications

"The Times, Places and Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representatives, shall be prescribed in each State by the Legislature thereof; but the Congress may at any time by Law make or alter such Regulations, except as to the Places of chusing Senators."

Kind of an important consideration...

Not JMR
Have you ever visited the United States?

Yes, luckily I was born here.

They work- but they aren't paid enough to cover their costs.

But they do get enough to send home to their families?

By law hospitals can't refuse to treat them just because they're never going to pay. 

Whose fault is that?

And if they have families here- who do you think is paying for the food stamps for their American born child?

Same people who pay for food stamps for any American born children -- the foolish taxpayers who haven't tried to get rid of the program.

And for their educations?

Same people who pay for education for any American born children, even all those black kids in Chicago that are going to grow up to be gangsters, or the children in Appalachia that are going to grow up to be hillbillies, living off a disability check. 

Or do you count the American born children on welfare as lazy, native born scum like those Europeans you deride?

Yes, and I actually pity people on welfare; liberal do-gooders have sapped them of their industry. Slackers aren't born; they're made. 

Not JMR

Never watched Kudlow before. Man, he's awful.

Between our own "Jimmy P" and technically also our own John Taylor (he does have an account here, ya know), I'd probably go Taylor because he's got that gravitas thing going on, and because his position seems correct in principle. Of course, Jim's argument is as compelling as anything empirical can be in Economics.

In the end, nobody knows anything.

Not JMR

John Grant: It is habitual in the US for the government not to apply the laws to illegal immigrants. Victor Davis Hanson gives a lot of examples of this.

I lived in Texas for many years, and on a number of occassions I saw local police refuse to ticket or otherwise prosecute illegal immigrants for things like failing to have insurance on their vehicle.

I'm sure there are more than a few sympathetic policemen out there, I would think it especially so in Texas. But when my best friend and his family could not produce their papers after a random bus stop by the ICE last year, mother father and son alike were hauled off to a detention center in El Paso. Mom and Dad, by the way, are small business owners and my friend has been here since the age of 5, top marks in high school, has an aerospace engineering degree, speaks perfect English...

I guess ICE wasn't in a generous mood that day.

Not JMR

The underlying problem, of course, is that Bush is stuck in a mid-twentieth century mindset dominated by a model of labor-intensive production that is now in rapid decline. [....T]he combined effect of automation and globalization is such that the assumption that more people must mean more, widely available and better-paid jobs is hopelessly dated, and hopelessly naïve.

To suggest that it still reflects reality is profoundly misleading. · · June 15, 2013 at 1:35am

Ah yes, the old "the laws of economics no longer apply in this modern and globalized world" routine. I don't buy it when liberals use it, and I don't buy it now.

Not JMR

Andrew Stuttaford

Europe, Governor Bush, they could do with more “young laborers” over there, could they?  Really?

 Over to theAtlantic:

Europe's job market is a historic disaster. The EU unemployment rate set a new all-time high of 12.2 percent, according to today's estimates. But it's the youth unemployment crisis that's truly terrifying. In Spain, unemployment surged past 56 percent, and Greece now leads the rich world with an astonishing 62.5 percent of its youth workforce out of a job….Since April 2012, Greek youth unemployment has grown by about one percentage point a month.

It looks to me like they have a whole lot of young natives who don't feel like working tough jobs because getting handouts from the state is easier.

Illegal immigrants don't get handouts from the state. They work.

Not JMR

Andrew Stuttaford

 “Immigrants create far more businesses than native-born Americans,” 

Fact. "A 2008 analysis by the federal Small Business Administration found that, across the country, immigrants are nearly 30 percent more likely to start a business than are nonimmigrants." - NYT

A large class of hikikomori live with their parents, rarely leaving home and withdrawn from the workforce.

Right. That means Japan is struggling to find young laborers because all they have now are old laborers and young slackers.

China’s swift expansion in education over the last decade, including a quadrupling of the number of college graduates each year, has created millions of engineers and scientists. The best can have their pick of jobs at Chinese companies that are aiming to become even more competitive globally. But China is also churning out millions of graduates with few marketable skills, coupled with a conviction that they are entitled to office jobs with respectable salaries.

That last thing could never happen here of course.

You're quite right; it has happened here. What we need are more unskilled laborers, not overeducated baristas. Yet all I hear is how great STEM education is and how we need to get more skilled immigrants.

Not JMR

Yeah, and in Virginia doing 81 in a 70 is a misdemeanor. You all know very well that this country has an excess of laws and prosecutorial discretion. I'm less than 26 years old, very well-educated, as white-bread conservative as they come, don't do drugs, and yet have been on the receiving end of a legal summons and police inquiry on several occasions. Lucky me, I've always been able to put together enough money to pay off the shakedown artists that are local governments or talk my way out trouble. A poor illegal immigrant with no English skills? Not so much.

Edited on June 17, 2013 at 6:26pm
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