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DATE | 2016-10-05 |
FROM | Rick Moen
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SUBJECT | Re: [Hangout-NYLXS] Hey, Ruben! Plastic bag initiatives!
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Quoting Ruben Safir (mrbrklyn-at-panix.com):
> OK _ I read them and your voting wrong on almost all the referendums.
Awesome!
> Regulation of grocery stores is wrong and immoral.
There go the FDA, OSHA, and building inspectors. I'll give them the bad news for you.
> Juvenal offenders...
Offenders who spend time reading the satires of Juvenal? People whose reading of Juvenal offends someone?
> ...are more violent and dangerous than adults, regardless of the crime > they were actually prosecuted for and need to be jailed more than even > the adults.
So, California should ignore the Federal court orders resulting from Brown v. Plata? Ignore the US Supreme Court when it ordered the state to reduce its prison population to no more than 137.5% of the facilities' design capacity? That could get extremely expensive for both the state as a whole and state officials. The latter would probably start facing contempt of court citations pretty soon, prison time, and fines.
I'll pass along to our officials your suggestion that they do hard prison time. Maybe Nevada can house them (so that, y'know, putting our state officials in prison won't worsen the existing problem).
I'm _sure_ you didn't blow right past the fact that Gov. Brown is trying to find the cheapest and least harmful way to comply with court orders -- because of course you're incredibly careful not to just mouth off in ignorance.
What I cannot understand, however, is your failing to pay attention to Prop. 57 arranging early release only for certain _non-violent_ offenders (both adult and juvenile). At first glance, your comment would appear totally non-sequitur to the issue being voted, as if you merely saw the words 'juvenile court judge decides whether juvenile will be prosecuted as adult' and decided that's the only thing this proposition is about. Care to explan that?
> Executions, that is good.
You'll notice my page aims to be _equally_ useful to people who think executions are good, those who think executions are bad, those who think some are good and some are bad, and those who don't have an opinion. (FWIW, I'm in the third category.)
I'd regard it as extremely depressing if you thought the page was merely some sort of advocacy beat-readers-over-the-head rag like a garden variety Ruben Safir mailing list posting.
> Your understanding of drug pricing is laughable.
Maybe yes, maybe no -- but I didn't express any view on drug pricing.
> They will never be able to purchase anything but a small subset of > drugs at anywhere close what the VA purchases them for in any event > and the VA suffers from extortion just like anyone else.
It's an open question what effects Prop. 61 would have, as noted by outside experts quoted in the linked newspaper stories. I'm undecided on my personal vote (which is why the note about 'with reservations' is there). If the state does pass it and adverse results occur, fortunately the Legislature can annul or modify it with a simple statute. (I.e., it's not a constitutional amendment, just an initiative statute.)
> Your analysis on debt is one area where you are spot on.
It's almost like I passed the CPA exam in the 1980s. (Oh, wait....)
> Debt not only drives down financial stability, but also funds > ambitious liberal programs that should never be allowed in the first > place.
Unless my finance professors mislead me shamefully, general-obligation bonds proceed fund _all_ General Fund programs.
> The Marijuana referendum should be a no until great regulation is > outlined.
Er, the regulation would be that of commerce, as it would be merely a lawful commodity in trade -- plus usual regulations applicable to lawful drugs. You know, mixed-market capitalism.
> The comment about non-corporate drugs is misplaced and borders on > ignorant.
Oh, you mean my passing jibe about the 'War Against Drugs Lacking Major Corporate Sponsorship'? Sometime I use the phrase 'War on Some Drugs', which is just a bit more sly. Would you prefer that?
I mean, there's not a war on drugs, just a war on _some_ of them -- and miraculously the ones with major corporate sponsorship aren't in it. Coincidence, I'm sure, but enough to justify the handy name.
> Redirecting bad sales to a state fund is a no on general principle.
I'm tired of 'general principle', in that it has a depressing tendency to fuel grandiose ideological bloviations that waste everyone's time. I vote on the specific merits of things in their specific contexts.
> The state and everyone should attack corperate funding of political > campaigns.
As I hope you know, no state can overturn Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission. Only the USSC or Congress can do so directly. States can of course propose amendments to the US Constitution to be initiated into the ratification process via either Congress or via constitutional conventions. (The latter method has never been used since before ratification of the base Constitution.)
Prop. 59 would advise the Legislature that an advisory vote of the state electorate wishes to have the state's officers use 'their constitutional authority' to try to get Citizens United overturned. It doesn't dictate how, and has no other effect.
> This should not be done by referendum. Seriously, how is that > supposed to work? Your gonna drag the entire California political > system into court, one by one?
You really aren't even spending more than a few seconds _pretending_ to read these things.
Which means you're wasting everyone's time and just mouthing off.
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