Hey, our state made the front page of the WSJ yesterday, where the question was asked: How Free Is New Hampshire? A Fight Over Doughnuts Is About to Decide.
New Hampshire lets adults drive without a seat belt, ride without a helmet and pay no sales tax. But when Sean Young tried to hang a painting over the front door of his doughnut shop, he found out that the liberty-loving state has its limits.
The painting—a mountain range made of muffins and doughnuts—has thrust the Conway, N.H., businessman into a First Amendment battle that has divided this picturesque community and sparked debate about the state’s commitment to free speech.
“Live free or die, unless you’re hanging artwork,” said Young, referring to the state motto.
The shop in question is Leavitt's Country Bakery, and it's making me hungry just typing about it. And it is unfortunately far away from Pun Salad Manor, about a 90-minute drive. A further fun fact that I don't think the WSJ story points out: the painting doesn't even face the highway (NH-16) that goes by.
We wrote about this last year. And observed at the time:
The mural's sin was in depicting items similar to those sold inside the bakery.
Note: had the mural shown items not similar to those sold inside the bakery—any items whatsoever—it would have been just fine.
It's easy for Granite Staters to be saddened by the antics of the Conway Roadside Art Police (CRAP). So we'll have to take some comfort from our rankings from the just-released Fraser Institute's Economic Freedom of North America 2024.
The top jurisdiction in the all-government index of Economic Freedom of North America 2024 is New Hampshire at 8.13 on the 0 to 10 scale. New Hampshire is followed by Idaho (8.07), Oklahoma and South Carolina (8.06) tied for third, and Florida and Indiana (8.05) tied for fifth.
It's bad news for Canada, though. Alberta is the freest Canadian province, about as free as Tennessee. British Columbia has Massachusetts-level freedom. And all th other provinces are down there in the California/New York Gulag.
And Mexico… ay caramba, don't even think about it.
Also of note:
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Kash Patel, you're FIREd. Specifically: raked over the coals by Ronald K. L. Collins at the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, who calls Trump's choice for FBI Director a clear and present danger to freedom of the press. Collins provides a lot of quotes, including this from a year-old article in the Hill: Bannon, Patel say Trump ‘dead serious’ about revenge on media: ‘We’re going to come after you’. Eek!
Steve Bannon and Kash Patel claimed that former President Trump is “dead serious” about exacting revenge on his political enemies if he wins a second term as president, and they warned members of the media to take the threats seriously, saying Tuesday, “We’re going to come after you.”
“We will go out and find the conspirators — not just in government, but in the media,” Patel told Bannon. “Yes, we’re going to come after the people in the media who lied about American citizens, who helped Joe Biden rig presidential elections.”
“We’re going to come after you. Whether it’s criminally or civilly, we’ll figure that out. But yeah, we’re putting you all on notice, and Steve, this is why they hate us. This is why we’re tyrannical. This is why we’re dictators,” Patel said, suggesting those were terms used sometimes to describe them. “Because we’re actually going to use the Constitution to prosecute them for crimes they said we have always been guilty of but never have.”
I'm sure there are going to be questions about that in his confirmation hearings. What's he going to say? "Just kidding"?
Patel has also written some books, including The Plot Against the King, Amazon link at your right, and there's a multi-page sample available there. I'd consider it disqualifying all by itself, because it's awful, but that's just me.
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If you, like me, are looking for amusement. My favorite funny guy, Jeff Maurer, writes at the Dispatch: What’s Funny About a Second Trump Term? Gotta be something, right?
With Donald Trump set to return to the White House in a few short weeks, journalists are already thinking out loud about how they’ll cover his second term. These reflections amount to a tacit admission that the methods of covering Trump’s first term can’t be repeated, even if professionalism keeps journalists from using phrases like “we screwed the pooch sideways” or “we dumped our credibility in a port-a-potty and then lit that port-a-potty on fire.” To be fair, it’s hard to know how to cover Trump, since he can’t seem to put on his socks in the morning without doing 10 to 12 things that would doom any other administration.
But journalists aren’t the only ones in need of introspection. My profession, comedy, should also be thinking about how we’re going to approach the next four years. With a few notable exceptions, we didn’t exactly cover ourselves in glory in Trump’s first term. I personally wrote a few bits that I now consider comedy abominations that should be locked away in a dank cellar. The sanctimonious outrage and focus on day-to-day shenanigans that characterized so much comedy during Trump’s first term arguably didn’t work very well, and it definitely won’t work this time around.
Believe it or not, there was a time when Trump material felt fresh and exciting. I remember working on the “Drumpf” piece for Last Week Tonight with John Oliver in early 2016, which—according to always-accurate internet chatter—“DISMANTLED” and “DESTROYED” the soon-to-be Republican nominee. There was a sense that we were working on something big and important. I now know that feeling was: 1) Hilariously wrong, and 2) Poisonous for comedy. Humor shouldn’t be self-righteous; no one walks out of a stand-up set and says, “I really liked the comic who scolded us!” The strangeness of the moment led comics at every level to imagine that we served some vital social function. But that sense was mostly overblown—if democracy could only be saved by the witticisms that I flung at six alcoholics at McZany’s Topless Joke Bunker, then democracy probably wasn’t worth saving in the first place.
I think it's fair to say Jeff provides no recipes, but he does dust off a John Mulaney gag from one of his Netflix specials that worked pretty well.
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A myth is as good as a mile. I know I've said that before, what can I say, I always thought it was funny. Noah Smith has his eye on six, count 'em: "Paycheck-to-paycheck" and five other popular myths.
Senator Bernie Sanders is the latest guy to utter "60% of Americans live paycheck to paycheck", (immediately following "This is what Oligarchy looks like"). and that pushed Smith over the edge:
The claim that “60% of Americans live paycheck-to-paycheck” comes from a survey by the fintech company LendingClub. The company refuses to release its survey methodology, but we can get a general idea from its website, which says: “For those Americans, [living paycheck to paycheck] means that they need their next paycheck to cover their monthly financial outflows.” So what LendingClub is probably claiming is that around 60% of Americans don’t have enough cash in their bank accounts to live off of for one month.
But LendingClub’s survey is probably just flat-out wrong about this. The Federal Reserve does a very careful annual survey called the Survey of Household Economics and Decisionmaking, or SHED.1 This survey asks whether people have a “rainy-day fund” sufficient to cover at least three months of expenses. And it pretty consistently finds that over half of Americans do have such a fund.
Smith gives a sneak preview of those other five myths:
“Exercise doesn’t make you lose weight”
“Pay and productivity have diverged”
“America’s education system is lagging the rest of the world”
“Japan doesn’t allow immigration”
“America spends more on defense than the next ten countries combined”
… unfortunately his debunking of them is behind his substack paywall. We'll have to imagine.
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Big if true. Power Line's Steven Hayward wonders Are Liberals Raising the White Flag on Immigration? Taking center stage is this tweet:
Holy. Shit.
— Geiger Capital (@Geiger_Capital) November 29, 2024
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer just admitted that Western leaders have been running an “open borders experiment”…
"This happened by design, not accident. Immigration policies were reformed deliberately. It has been a failure. They pretended it wasn’t happening.” pic.twitter.com/vHVibQnG38Interesting because I just read The Great Experiment by Yascha Mounk, which I liked quite a bit (My report is here.) But right from the start, Mounk strenuously denied exactly the claim PM Starmer is making.
So someone's either lying or using language in an unconventional manner. I've e-mailed Mounk requesting clarification.
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No white flag raised here. Christopher Freiman writes probably the most provocative abolition proposal in Reason's "Abolish Everything" issue: Abolish Borders.
You've probably moved across state lines at some point in your life. Maybe it was to attend college or take a higher-paying job. Maybe you wanted to live closer to friends and family after having kids or to join a new religious or political community. It could even be as simple as deciding to move from Dallas to Philadelphia because you prefer attending the home games of a successful football team.
No right-minded person would have the government interfere with any of this. If a business offers you a job and you accept, that's between you and the business—not you, the business, and the state. The same goes for buying a house from a willing seller or joining a welcoming religious congregation. To borrow from Robert Nozick, these are "capitalist acts between consenting adults." Granted, these capitalist acts took place across state borders, but so what? The rights to offer and take jobs, buy and sell property, and assemble freely don't depend on your location relative to a government-drawn line.
If government-drawn lines within your country don't possess some sort of moral magic that voids your rights, why would government-drawn lines between countries?
Think before you answer, statist!