TOS Blog: Daily Commentary from an Objectivist Perspective

Government Stimulus: $489,000 to Renovate a Yacht

Port_of_Los_AngelesCBS LA reports that $489,000 of federal taxpayer stimulus money was used to renovate a yacht that gives people “free” tours of the Port of Los Angeles.

Although, in the age of “stimulus” packages and bailouts, this is not a lot of money, it does illustrate the utter disregard the current government has for individual rights.

The government’s job is to protect individual rights, not to take money from hardworking Americans to provide other Americans with free tours on a yacht. If politicians aimed to show perfect contempt for struggling taxpayers, this is the kind of thing you’d expect.

Tom Schatz with Citizens Against Government Waste (CAWG) calls for the government to sell the yacht. This is a great idea. LA is currently more than $70 million in the red; revenue from selling the yacht could be used to pay down some debt while lessening government assets and services that have nothing to do with protecting rights.

More Americans should be outraged at a government that spends their hard earned money on such foolishness.

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Image: Wikipedia Commons

Posted in: Business and Economics, Individual Rights and Law

Obama Admin Seeking to Reestablish Funding for Evil UNESCO

Obama_SchemingThe Obama administration wants to reestablish funding for the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). American funding for UNESCO was cut upon UNESCO’s admission of the terrorist organization, Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO). U.S. law forbids the funding of the United Nations or any of its specialized agencies “which accords the Palestine Liberation Organization the same standing as member states.” The Obama administration is now seeking a waiver to exempt itself from this law.

In an earlier post I wrote:

Since its inception, the PLO has repeatedly attacked Israel and slaughtered Israelis. Massacres include the Coastal Road Massacre, in which PLO agents hijacked an Israeli bus and murdered 38 civilians, 13 of whom were children—and the so-called “Second Intifada,” in which the PLO murdered more than one thousand Israelis. This is the PLO’s MO: attack Israel, kill Israelis.

Another prominent member of UNESCO—so prominent that it is a member of a human rights committee—is Syria. In another post, I recounted the horrors the Syrian regime is forcing upon its citizens:

The Syrian regime has been torturing people in hospitals, killing, raping and torturing children, and killing thousands of protesters who oppose the Syrian tyranny. These horrors alone—even aside from Syria’s alliance with the Iranian theocracy and their support of terrorist organizations such as Hezbollah—should have made any person or government shriek in horror in being associated with such evil.

UNESCO is clearly a fundamentally corrupt, pro-tyranny organization. That the Obama administration seeks to loot Americans to pour money into this foul organization is monstrous.

Americans should demand that Congress stop Obama’s efforts to fund UNESCO and that the United States immediately end all affiliation with it.

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Posted in: Foreign Policy and War, Individual Rights and Law, Presidential Candidates

A Note from Peter Huessy on Egypt

Sinai_Space_ViewI received the following note from Peter Huessy responding to my interview with Cynthia Farahat, in which Mr. Huessy’s views on Mubarak was mentioned (click here to read the interview). I’m posting it here with Mr. Huessy’s permission.

I am glad to read about Cynthia Farahat and her extraordinary courage. I agree with her views on Mubarak and his giving the Muslim Brotherhood room to organize while at the same time pretending to ban them. Her point is well taken; especially how the more pro-liberty elements in Egypt were persecuted and imprisoned.

However, I believe she must see the difference between the previous government in Egypt and, say, Syria and Iran today, and the dangers of Egypt joining such a coalition. Was Mubarak arming Hamas and Hezbollah? And supporting terrorist attacks against the United States and its allies, including Israel? The U.S. government’s withdrawal of support for Mubarak, and now the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood—seemingly with support from the Obama administration—could end up with a very repressive, shariah-compliant, terror-sponsoring state.

Subscribe to the Journal for People of ReasonFor example, the Sinai was relatively quiet for decades. The role of the previous Egyptian government in keeping in check a potential threat to Israel from this area must be kept in mind. Also important are efforts such as the “flotilla” that attempted to undo the blockade of Gaza. Egypt maintained the blockade, along with Israel, while Islamists, Turkey and radical left elements in the United States tried to over-turn the blockade with the aim of making it easier to get weapons into Gaza. It is apparent also that the Sinai has now become what one observer called an “arms bazaar” for terror groups such as Hamas to “stock-up.”

I agree that the failure of the United States to support genuine Egyptians who want freedom, and a more Western style of government was a black mark against our country. Can such an alternative now be pursued? The day may be late in Egypt. But I will support Ms. Farahat and her efforts to do so unequivocally.

(Introduction updated February 18, 2012, 4:02am EST.)

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Posted in: Foreign Policy and War

FDA Shuts Down Farm for… Selling Fresh Milk

Dairy_FarmThe Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has shut down an Amish farm for selling fresh, unpasteurized milk, the Washington Times reports. The FDA’s pretext for destroying the business is that fresh, unpasteurized milk is “unsafe.”

The fundamental issue here, however, is the inalienable right of farmers and their customers to act on their own judgement. It is not about the quality of the milk, but the FDA’s violation of this fundamental right. The Amish farm, Rainbow Acres, was voluntarily trading value for value with its customers who chose this milk specifically because it was fresh and unpasteurized. The customers obviously know the risks of drinking unpasteurized milk, and their right to act on their judgment includes the right to take such risks. Until the FDA showed up, no rights were being violated.

The government’s proper job is to protect people’s rights—not to prohibit people from exercising their judgement. The government should intervene only if rights are violated, for instance, if a company fraudulently misrepresents the nature of its product.

The FDA’s latest assault on innocent Americans is just one of many such assaults. Americans should stop tolerating this bureaucracy’s rights-violating, business-destroying practices, and demand that their representatives abolish the FDA.

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Image: Creative Commons by U.S. Department of Agriculture

Posted in: Business and Economics, Health Care, Individual Rights and Law

Interview with Cynthia Farahat on Growing Up in Egypt, Discovering Ayn Rand, and Fighting Islamists

Cyn_Farah_in_CongressCynthia Farahat is an Egyptian political activist, writer and researcher. She co-founded the Liberal Egyptian Party (2006–2008) and served as a member of its political committee. In 2008-2009, she was program coordinator and program officer at the Friedrich Naumann Foundation for Liberty in Cairo, a multi-national free market think tank. She was a founder of the Masr El-Om (Mother Egypt) Party and was a member of its political committee (2004–2006). She is a fellow at the Middle East Forum and the Center for Security Policy. She has been published in the Middle East Quarterly, and in other publications in both English and Arabic. In December 2011, Ms. Farahat testified before the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission in the US House of Representatives on the roots of the persecution of the Coptic Christian minority in her native Egypt.

I recently had the pleasure of interviewing Ms. Farahat on Egypt, Ayn Rand, the Muslim Brotherhood, and U.S. foreign policy. —JL

Joshua Lipana: What was it like growing up as a girl in Egypt?

Cynthia Farahat: It was horrible! My mother raised my brother and me, as complete equals. She instilled in us that individuals are defined by their choices, actions, and merits. So you can imagine, with that upbringing, I was culturally shocked every time I left my house. Even to go grocery shopping was to risk getting sexually harassed, spat on, or hearing offensive, derogatory remarks while walking in the street. My first real introduction to Sunni tribalism was when a friend and I walked in the street without an adult for the first time, when I was 13 or 14. We were smiling and happy, and she said something funny and I laughed. For that, we ended up being cursed, spat on, and chased down the street by a group of thugs swearing to hurt us and “teach us a lesson.” We ran home horrified and crying without the slightest idea of what we had done wrong. This was not an “isolated” incident; this is the norm.

Arab culture is misogynist, and gynophobic. The state systematically degrades and demonizes women. According to Arab Islamic culture, all women are whores until proven opposite, and you certainly can’t prove the opposite. Wearing makeup and dressing fashionably is considered an invitation to sexual harassment and sometimes rape. Egypt is governed by a Sharia-based constitution, and Sharia law does not define rape as a crime. Rape was only criminalized in Egypt in 1997. You can imagine how bad the situation is for most women in a country where the military arrests female protestors, strips them naked, beats them in the streets, and gives them “virginity tests.”

JL: How did you intellectually break free of that culture?

CF: I didn’t, as I was never part of it. We had an entirely different upbringing than most Egyptians, our family and morality were much closer to being European than what you’d call conventional Egyptian. Egypt before 1952’s Islamic socialist coup d’état was culturally closer to Europe than Arabia. And many Egyptian families still belong to Egypt’s classic liberal era.

JL: What kind of culture and government would you like to see in Egypt?

CF: Egypt needs to reclaim its sovereignty first. Saudi Arabia—through its petro-dollars—has been funding the ideological subversion of Egypt through the international Muslim Brotherhood organization almost since its inception in 1928. The Brotherhood infiltrated Egypt’s military in the 40s and perpetrated the military coup that destroyed Egypt beyond recognition.

As for my dream for Egypt, it’s simply small government, laissez-faire capitalism, individual liberty, and the ideals of the American Founding Fathers. The American constitution is a glorious document; I dream for something similar for my country, and it’s not so far fetched, as Egypt had a great constitution and significant individual freedom in the 20s. But this will only be achieved when the world starts to confront the blood oil of Saudi Arabia and Iran; Ethical Oil is the first step toward a serious solution.

JL: Which thinkers have influenced your pro-freedom views?

CF: Since my childhood my family exposed us to western classic literature and arts. I have always had pro-freedom views, when one is consistently rational and objective it’s hard to come to different conclusions. But also the key is that my views were never defined by my shortcomings, whether financial, emotional, physical, or psychological, so I was never a theocrat, a socialist, or anti-freedom in any way. But no one was able to communicate my ideas and emotions like Ayn Rand did, she put the ideals I always adhered to in perspective and articulated them better than I ever will. The first book I read of Rand was Anthem, and I relate to this book on a very personal level. It parallels our battle for freedom under Islamic totalitarianism where individualism is the worst crime one can commit. The Egyptian state, through several laws, punishes those who don’t abide by the moral, religious, and dress codes of Islamic Sunni tribalism.

JL: In a testimony in the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission in the House of Representatives, you stated that the rulers of Egypt are not the “secular autocrats” they would have the West believe.  Would you elaborate on this?

CF: I’m always baffled and shocked that Westerners believed what Arab Sharia theocrats tell them! Just like Arafat told Westerners one thing in English and told his people the opposite in Arabic, it was exactly the case with every Arab dictator, including in Egypt. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, Hosni Mubarak, and now the Supreme Council of Armed Forces (SCAF), govern Egypt by Sharia based constitutions; so the accurate term to describe them is not “secular autocrats”, but “constitutional theocrats.”

JL: It is generally conceded that Mubarak was a despicable man, but many believe that he and his regime served to prevent the Islamists from attaining power in Egypt. To give one example, Peter Huessy recently said that the United States should not have withdrawn support from Mubarak because he “was a bulwark between the Muslim whackos getting government power in Egypt and using the Suez Canal as a lever.” What is your view on this?

CF: With all my respect to Mr. Huessy, this is a grave misconception. This popular idea—which endangers the lives of millions of people in the Middle East and helps the Islamists—is a result of one of the biggest political scams in modern history. While Mubarak portrayed himself as the “shield against radical Islamism,” he governed Egypt with a Sharia-based constitution and threatened, imprisoned, tortured, abducted, and killed classical liberal secularists, among them many of my friends who were by default the real shield against terror and Islamism.

Mubarak’s Islamist regime rebuffed two political parties I co-founded by two court orders for being secular, classical liberal, and pro-normalization with Israel, and threatened and harassed and terrorized me almost daily for a decade. Mubarak did all this while allowing the legal founding of an Islamist Nazi party in 1990 called Misr al-Fatat, which actually adheres to Nazism and Sharia law.

Mubarak lied and said the Muslim Brotherhood was “banned” while they were the only opposition that was allowed to fully and freely function. He let the Brotherhood acquire millions of dollars in funding from Saudi Arabia and Qatar and have offices in every neighborhood in Egypt. In addition, Mubarak allowed jihadists full control of state media.

In 2005, Mubarak allowed the Muslim Brotherhood to become a parliamentary opposition in a fraudulent election, while banning secularists from public political discourse. Mohammed Tantawi, the head of SCAF, is doing exactly the same today, by giving the parliament to the Islamists in a fraudulent election. The West falls for it every time.

JL: What do you think the U.S. government should be doing with regard to the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt?

CF: The current administration and State Department obviously want the Muslim Brotherhood in power. When President Obama declared Dalia Mogahed as one of his advisors, I wrote on Facebook that this was going to translate to the advancement of the Muslim Brotherhood and we can kiss our dreams goodbye. The Arabic website of the Brotherhood celebrated Dalia Mogahed’s position in the administration and discussed their strong ties with her in an article that was removed shortly afterwards. Dalia Mogahed’s involvement with the Brotherhood—the founders of al-Qaeda and Hamas—is not a secret.

If we had allies in a different U.S. administration, one that understood and advocated freedom, there are things that could be done that would save Egypt and the Middle East:

  1. Cut the annual 1.3 billion dollars in military aid to the Pakistani style military dictatorship in Cairo that funds Salafi jihadists.
  2. Designate the Muslim Brotherhood as a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO), because it is, and if it does not qualify the current definition of FTO then the definition obviously needs to be amended to integrate it. It doesn’t make any sense that the Muslim Brotherhood’s military wings like Hamas and al-Qaeda are on the list while their masterminds and founders are not.
  3. Now that Egypt’s parliament is controlled by the legislative wing of Hamas—the Muslim Brotherhood—Egypt needs to be monitored closely as it is possibly eligible to be designated among the State Sponsors of Terrorism. Saad Katatni, secretary general of Egypt’s Freedom and Justice Party (FJP)— which is the Muslim Brotherhood party—and the current speaker of the parliament who was also the president of the Muslim Brotherhood bloc in the parliament under Mubarak, has made numerous pro Hamas statements. Katatni said in December 2007 in an interview for Islam Today: “The vote for Hamas is a vote for the true form and true path of Islam, and Islamic resistance.” He added, “Hamas is the first front of defense against any aggression on Muslim countries.” Katatni also said in April 2010 in an interview for an Egyptian newspaper called Misr al-Gadeeda: “Hamas are pioneers, and their support is important for resistance.” He also called for opening the borders between Egypt and Gaza and for sending aid to Hamas. So how far is he going to go to support Hamas?

JL: What in your view can freedom lovers in America and elsewhere in the civilized world do to help Egyptians who want freedom?

CF: They can do the kind of thing you are doing now—which I’m truly thankful for. They can help spread the message of dissidents, and anti-Sharia Egyptians who speak the truth about what is happening in Egypt.

After a decade of vigorous political activism in Egypt against international Islamism, theocracy, and the military regime, I know how weak the enemies of freedom are. When America is a strong horse like it was during the first term of President Bush’s administration, we were almost invincible; when America is weak and submissive, we get crushed.

JL: Where can readers keep up with you and your ideas?

CF: You can read my ideas about international politics and religion at www.cynthiafarahat.com.

JL: Thank you very much for your time, Cyn.

CF: Thank you so much for having me, Joshua!

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Posted in: Ayn Rand and Objectivism, Foreign Policy and War, History, Individual Rights and Law, Religion

Israel Should Obliterate the Iranian Regime

IDF_Air_ForcePresident Obama is feverishly trying to dissuade Israel from attacking Iran’s nuclear facilities, warning of the “disruptive” consequence such an attack would have on oil prices and regional security. Instead, Obama is encouraging more diplomacy.

The Iranian regime continues to fund and support Islamist terrorist groups such as Hamas and Hezbollah—both of which have committed numerous massacres on the Israeli people—and has repeatedly staged rallies calling for “Death to Israel.” Making matters worse, as the Associated Press reports, “Israel fears that Iran is fast approaching a point at which a limited military strike would no longer be enough to head off an Iranian bomb.” That Obama and his ilk are discouraging the Israelis from defending themselves against this ongoing and increasing assault is an abomination.

The Israelis should act in their self-interest, ignore the siren songs leading them to their slaughter, and obliterate the Iranian regime.

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Image: Creative Commons by Israeli Defense Forces

Posted in: Foreign Policy and War, Presidential Candidates

Human Rights Watch is Wrong on Islam and Politics

MilitantHuman Rights Watch (HRW) is urging the West to respect the rise of political Islam in the Middle East, saying, “The international community must … come to terms with political Islam when it represents a majority preference.” Instead of being unsympathetic to political Islam, says HRW, the West should encourage Islamist governments to “respect basic rights — just as the Christian-labeled parties and governments of Europe are expected to do.”

But contrary to what HRW implies, the “majority preference” of foreigners is not a standard by reference to which civilized nations should set foreign policy. Further, political Islam means violating rights and, ultimately, killing those who reject Islam. Whether Islamists gain power by force or by vote, they seek to force their barbaric creed on the citizenry and ultimately the world. Encouraging Islamists to “respect basic rights” is like encouraging communists to respect basic rights. It can’t happen.

Further, for Islamists to say that they intend to “respect basic rights” would be a patent lie. Iranian Reza Kahlili, in an interview with TOS, recounts what happened when Islamists took over Iran:

[T]he new government went back on its promise that the clerics would not interfere in government matters, that they would only address the spirituality of the people. The clerics started enforcing Islamic law, which was not supposed to be part of the new government. Soon Khomeini and other clerics declared that they were representatives of God on Earth and that anybody who opposed them would be regarded as a “moraheb,” an enemy of God, and executed.

Following that, tens of thousands of men and women were arrested, opposition political parties were banned, and certain universities were shut down to get rid of the Western influence in our education. Among the thousands taken to Evin prison, where they kept political prisoners, were my best friend and his siblings.

I witnessed the torture and the horror that this new regime was inflicting on Iranian citizens. Teenage girls were raped prior to execution—because of the Muslim belief that virgins go to heaven. Boys and girls were tortured in unimaginable ways, some of which I’ve described in my book [A Time to Betray], and then executed.

Political Islam should not be tolerated; it should be eliminated.

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Posted in: Foreign Policy and War, Individual Rights and Law

Mitch Daniels: Business is “One of the Noblest of Human Pursuits”

Indiana_Governor_Mitch_DanielsIn the GOP’s response speech to President Obama’s State of the Union, Mitch Daniels said, “Contrary to the president’s constant disparagement of people in business, it’s one of the noblest of human pursuits.”

Though Daniels’ speech is a mixed bag, his identification of the nobility of business is spot on and is a refreshing contrast to Obama’s anti-business agenda. Businessmen are productive dynamos who trade value for value to earn their wealth. Steve Jobs, John Allison, Bill Gates, Jonathan Hoenig, and other businessmen deserve to be praised for pursuing their rational self-interest and for creating goods and services that further their lives and, consequently, the lives of those who trade with them.

Republican leaders desperately need to recognize and embrace the moral nature of business. And they need to work to protect the individual rights of businessmen and unshackle producers from regulations and discriminatory taxation.

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Image: Wikimedia Commons

Posted in: Business and Economics, Individual Rights and Law, Philosophy

Obama’s “Tough Talk” Regarding Syria’s Membership in UNESCO Body is Immorally Inadequate

Syrian_MilitaryFox News reports that “the Obama administration has sent a letter to UNESCO’s executive board calling on Syria to be removed from the so called Committee on Conventions and Recommendations which deals with human rights.” But President Obama’s request is immorally inadequate. Consider just a few of the Syrian regime’s activities of late.

The Telegraph reports that  “Children appear to have been singled out for abuse, with some being tortured ‘to death’ in custody,” by the Syrian regime. The Syrian dictatorship recently murdered at least 256 children; its thugs recently gang-raped an eleven-year-old boy; and they recently shot a two-year old girl to stop her from “grow[ing] into a demonstrator.”

The Guardian reports—citing an Amnesty International paper—that the Syrian regime has turned hospitals into “instruments of repression;” torturing and beating patients, while imprisoning doctors accused of aiding protesters. One patient, Ahmed, awoke from surgery surrounded by seven or eight thugs from the regime, a witness recounts, “He opened his eyes and said: ‘Where am I?’ They all suddenly jumped on him and started beating and hitting him . . .  [shouting] ‘You pig, you want freedom, eh?’”

Reuters citing the UN—the body that houses UNESCO—reports that “more than 5,000 people have been killed by the security forces since an anti-Assad revolt began in March [2011].”

The Syrian regime has been torturing people in hospitals, killing, raping and torturing children, and killing thousands of protesters who oppose the Syrian tyranny. These horrors alone—even aside from Syria’s alliance with the Iranian theocracy and their support of terrorist organizations such as Hezbollah—should have made any person or government shriek in horror in being associated with such evil.

That any civilized nation is a member of UNESCO is an outrageous sanction of this evil regime. The United States should not merely call for Syria to be removed from the Committee on Conventions and Recommendations; it should immediately remove itself from UNESCO, condemn all states that remain involved with it—and do the same with the tyrant’s haven known as the UN.

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Image: Wikipedia Commons

Posted in: Foreign Policy and War, Individual Rights and Law

High Time to End the Iranian Regime

Supreme_Leader_of_Iran_with_militaryThe United States government is stepping up its efforts to increase sanctions on Iran in order to impede the Islamist regime’s development of nuclear weapons. These latest efforts, however, ignore how pressing this matter really is.

The Iranian regime has killed U.S troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, has long sponsored terrorist groups such as Hamas and Hezbollah, has slaughtered its own citizenry, and continually calls for “Death to America” and “Death to Israel.”

That such a regime exists—even aside from its efforts to acquire nuclear weapons—should have moved the United States and its allies to obliterate the Iranian theocracy long ago. That the regime is actively seeking nuclear weapons clearly heightens the urgency.

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Image: Wikipedia Commons

Posted in: Foreign Policy and War, Religion