International

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Cuba: July Anniversaries of Two Massacres

by Cuba Archive (http://www.weblogbahamas.com)

Reprinted with the kind permission of Cuba Archive an initiative of Free Society Project, Inc.

Cuba: July Anniversaries of Two Massacres
Unpunished, but not forgotten

July 6, 2007, Summit, New Jersey.

Among the most flagrant atrocities committed by the Castro regime in its long history of human rights’ abuses, two incidents stand out –the Canimar River Massacre of 1980 and the Tugboat Massacre of 1994. Both took place in the month of July and poignantly illustrate the Cuban leadership’s profound disregard for human life and their egregious violation of the fundamental right of citizens to leave their country.

Continue reading "Cuba: July Anniversaries of Two Massacres" »

Lessons in Freedom: Looking Back to Gain Perspective!

by Tibor R. Machan (http://www.weblogbahamas.com)

As one who tasted both a bit of Nazism and Communism, today's economic fiasco strikes me as relatively mild as human disasters go.  For starters many in America remember the Great Depression and the Second World War, both of which had devastated millions of lives, destroying the bulk and arresting even more. The concentration camps, the gulags, the bombings and the wreckage left in their wake across the globe simply aren't anything like what we are experiencing now, economically, mostly, but not exclusively. And the fallout from the loss of all the wealth is yet to be counted up.

Continue reading "Lessons in Freedom: Looking Back to Gain Perspective!" »

Monday, July 13, 2009

James Bartholomew: The Welfare State We're In

Friday, July 10, 2009

Lessons in Freedom: Truncated "Liberty"

by Tibor R. Machan (http://www.weblogbahamas.com)

"Genuine liberty means being in full control of one's life not being accorded the privilege of not always suffering the intrusions of one's oppressors."

Some people seem to believe that when they aren't being directly oppressed, meddled with, intruded upon, interfered with and so on, they are then free. Americans often have this conception of being free because their various governments often leave them be. Only 40 percent of their resources is being taxed! Their bars can be open until 1 AM or even later in some places. Blue laws apply only here and there, on certain days. So, hurray, we are free!

Continue reading "Lessons in Freedom: Truncated "Liberty"" »

Thursday, July 09, 2009

Economic logic?

by Rick Lowe (http://www.weblogbahamas.com)

Here's a question that I've been grappling with lately.

Why do governments wish to challenge companies they believe are "too big" through anti-trust legislation and want to bail out others because "they're too big to fail"?

Hope you can help find an answer.

Lessons in Freedom: Beholden to our ancestors

by Tibor R. Machan (http://www.weblogbahamas.com)

"The best system for what some call inter-generational justice--for squaring with our ancestors fairly--is the private property system that does a reasonably decent job of securing for everyone what he or she has a right to, what everyone is entitled to."

When the idea of paying taxes, especially the exorbitant ones extorted from the well to do, is debated, defenders sometimes maintain that these are due because we owe it to our ancestors who forged institutions and other results that now benefit us all. So even our own selves, our bodies, health, pleasant looks, and, of course, any inheritance we were left by our elders do not really belong to us free and clear.

Continue reading "Lessons in Freedom: Beholden to our ancestors" »

Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Talking heads and food security for The Bahamas and Cuba

by Rick Lowe (http://www.weblogbahamas.com)

Wherever talking heads are gathered in The Bahamas you hear someone mention how wonderful Cuba is.

Stories abound of great health care and educational systems and don't forget food security.

Of course this is a measure of our so called failure here in The Bahamas. We don't farm so we are worse off as a result.

But is it true that Cuba is self sufficient in food? Oh, and don't forget how that dastardly US embargo has forced them to be self sufficient in food and how great the Cuban government is in providing for her people.

I submit that it's all a myth.

Continue reading "Talking heads and food security for The Bahamas and Cuba" »

Tuesday, July 07, 2009

The sweet seductiveness of socialized medicine for The Bahamas

by Rick Lowe (http://www.weblogbahamas.com)

Driving to a lunch meeting on Monday, July 6, 2009 while skipping through the radio dial I stumbled on Love 97's, Issues of The Day programme with host Mr. Wendall Jones interviewing Ms. Etoile Pinder on the benefits of socialized medicine and basically how Bahamians are getting a raw deal by not having it.

For those that don't recall, Ms. Pinder was with the team that was charged by the PLP government to implement Socialized Medicine here in The Bahamas.

Continue reading "The sweet seductiveness of socialized medicine for The Bahamas" »

Monday, July 06, 2009

Lessons in Freedom: The Unearned Wealth Trap

by Tibor R. Machan (http://www.weblogbahamas.com)

The bottom line is that what one has a right to is one's life, one's liberty, and the property that arises from these whether come by some hard way or easy.

Sometimes defenders of human liberty put their case badly and one such instance is when they defend the right to private property by identifying all expropriation or extortion as the taking of earned wealth. But it isn't a matter of whether the wealth was earned or not--quite a lot of one's wealth, the benefits one enjoys in life, belong to one even if one hasn't earned these.

Continue reading "Lessons in Freedom: The Unearned Wealth Trap" »

Saturday, July 04, 2009

Good news for US unemployment: Wal - Mart

by Rick Lowe (http://www.weblogbahamas.com)

You read that right. According to an article by Mr. Greg Kaza he points out that Wal - Mart, the proverbial whipping boy of US retail, is coming to the rescue.

Here's a snippet:

U.S. nonfarm payroll employment has declined by 6.5 million jobs since the recession started in December 2007. One exception is Wal-Mart, which has expanded its domestic work force by 40,000 (2.9%) and announced June 3 that it will add 22,000 jobs in its U.S. stores in 2009.

Read the entire article here...

Thanks to GW for the link to this article.

Nassau

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