So I'm currently reading an old (© 1960) book, Friedrich Hayek's The Constitution of Liberty, Amazon link at your right. My report will be upcoming on the book blog eventually. Consider this a preview, a sentence from Chapter 20:
That a majority, merely because it is a majority, should be entitled to apply to a minority a rule which does not apply to itself is an infringement of a principle much more fundamental than democracy itself, a principle on which the justification of democracy rests.
Obvious, when you think about it.
Spoiler: Chapter 20 is titled "Taxation and Redistribution". And the quoted sentence is in the course of Hayek's argument against tax "progressivity".
Unfortunately, the Washington Post has yet to change its motto to "Democracy Dies in the Imposition of a Progressive Income Tax."
Coincidentally, that state across the Salmon Falls River just thumbed its nose at Hayek. News report: Gov. Mills signs budget featuring millionaire's tax, free community college & more.
And as predictable as the tides off Short Sands Beach, the local op-ed writer Douglas Rooks confirmed (in my awful local paper, Foster's Daily Democrat) that the true "progressive" motto is "Never Enough": 'Millionaire's tax' just the start of needed tax reform in Maine. (archive.today link)
The model for Maine’s new effective 9.15% rate is clearly Massachusetts, where after the Legislature failed to act, a 2022 referendum campaign succeeded in applying a 4% surcharge, bringing the top rate to 9%. Maine’s legislative Democrats are essentially getting ahead of the curve.
Rooks is all in favor, in other words. Not going after the millionaires for more money means you have "failed to act". No argument necessary!
I keep going back to that recent WalletHub study, detailing the Tax Burden by State in 2026. Reader, as a percentage of total personal income, Maine was already taking the fifth-highest fraction. Behind only Hawaii, New York, Vermont, and New Mexico. Where, I wonder, will they be next year?
The Tax Foundation argued (futilely) against the move on pragmatic grounds: Maine’s Proposed Millionaire’s Tax Would Harm the State’s Economy.
The proposed 2 percentage point surtax on high earners, recently endorsed by Gov. Janet Mills (D), would increase the top marginal rate from 7.15 percent to 9.15 percent above $1 million (single filers), raising $74 million per year from an estimated 2,631 filers, according to Maine’s revenue agency. The small number of filers raises significant volatility concerns, and the economic consequences of adopting one of the nation’s highest top rates would affect far more than this small slice of Maine taxpayers by reducing the state’s economic competitiveness.
Maine’s 160,000 small businesses employ 55 percent of all Maine workers, and the vast majority of these businesses are pass-through businesses (S corporations, partnerships, and LLCs), meaning that their income is taxed on owners’ individual income tax returns. IRS data show that 70 percent of Maine filers with more than $1 million in adjusted gross income had pass-through business income on their returns, and that 48 percent of all pass-through business income was earned by filers with more than $1 million in AGI. In other words, a tax on income above $1 million is, to a considerable degree, a tax on small business ownership.
A note to those "2,631 filers": Should you get tired of yet another "infringement of a principle much more fundamental than democracy itself", a reasonable facsimile of Galt's Gulch is conveniently located on the other side of the bridge between South Berwick and Rollinsford.
Also of note:
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Claude, could you summarize this article for me? Never mind, I'll do it myself. Jack Nicastro writes in the May issue of Reason: Both parties in Congress want to regulate AI. Here's where they differ.
At the federal level, Republican-written AI bills tend to be less concerned with policing how individuals use the technology than with regulating the development and deployment of the underlying technology—large language models (LLMs). Democrat-written bills tend to focus on individual malfeasance rather than the tech itself.
Accordingly, Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D–Minn.) was so outraged last year by a (hilarious) deepfake of herself that she called on Congress to affirm "the right to demand that social media companies remove deepfakes of their voice and likeness." In California, Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom signed three bills in 2024 that restricted the use of AI to create political content deemed deceptive in advance of elections.
On the other side of the aisle, Sen. Josh Hawley (R–Mo.) doesn't just want to ban driverless cars to protect unionized truck drivers from automation or ban minors from accessing AI companion chatbots; he wants frontier AI developers to submit their models to the Energy Department for potential nationalization before they're granted permission to deploy their models commercially.
But it's not like there's no overlap. Each of these bills is co-sponsored by at least one senator from the other party.
I'd imagine things will eventually result in a "bipartisan comprimise", featuring the worst ideas from both sides.
But since Jack pointed it out, here's that deepfake of Senator Amy:
Check it out before it's censored!
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It's far from supercalifragilisticexpialidocious. Nellie Bowles had a brief note in her weekly "TGIF" column at the Free Press concerning the latest Acronym of Oppression: MMIWG2SLGBTQQIA+
On my last Canadian note—it’s a 20! I’ll be here all week!—New Democratic Party MP Leah Gazan expressed her frustration at budget cuts by saying: “They provided $0 to deal with the ongoing genocide of MMIWG2SLGBTQQIA+.” Them’s a lot of letters. I thought that surely had to be a joke. So I googled the phrase and sure enough, it’s real. I really try not to make too much fun of the alphabet soup stuff. It’s too easy. It’s played out. I’m better than it. But then a member of parliament drops MMIWG2SLGBTQQIA+ on us. What are we supposed to do here, guys? When will the letters end? Is there pi of letters? Why two Q’s?
Indeed. And is the Bablylon Bee simply being funny or prescient in their take: Here's What Each Of The 73 Letters In Canada's New LGBT Acronym Stands For.
If you haven't heard, Canada has officially dropped a new acronym for the LGBT movement with many, many new additions. The LGBT community in Canada is now:
MMBJOUQTJLAYAWD40ROOMDCF+SVPWIZ¯\_(ツ)_/¯BFJTWLEGOBLT£LADBOSUBDDBLAGF+>:-(
It's quite the mouthful, so to get you up to speed, here are what each of the 73 characters in the acronym stand for:
No spoilers. Click over.




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