Some Red State/Blue State Indicia

RIGHT ?!?

Maybe the taxpayers and family of the deceased can chip in on some veneers so he can have a better life

One thing is for sure the bail should not be too high for this man because that would be prohibitive and unfair based on his means.

Need to let him out until convicted/charged.
 
I’m in the People’s Republic of Massachusetts for the weekend. Last time I was here I said Boston was the city I would pick if I had to live in a city. Beautiful place, surrounded by water, so much history, friendly people, etc.

This time it’s no less of any of those things, but I don’t think it would top my list anymore. Legalized marijuana has taken over and it’s easy to walk a few blocks and get a second hand buzz. I swear one of my kids has had the munchies for the past two days.

I’m personally against legalization for a few reasons and I feel confident that I’ll continue to be shown correct on that years from now. But my gosh, if you’re going to legalize it, legalize it at home and inside businesses that approve it. Walking through Boston Common with groups of kids sitting in the grass while smoking grass really drags the feel of the whole place down.
 
I’m in the People’s Republic of Massachusetts for the weekend. Last time I was here I said Boston was the city I would pick if I had to live in a city. Beautiful place, surrounded by water, so much history, friendly people, etc.

This time it’s no less of any of those things, but I don’t think it would top my list anymore. Legalized marijuana has taken over and it’s easy to walk a few blocks and get a second hand buzz. I swear one of my kids has had the munchies for the past two days.

I’m personally against legalization for a few reasons and I feel confident that I’ll continue to be shown correct on that years from now. But my gosh, if you’re going to legalize it, legalize it at home and inside businesses that approve it. Walking through Boston Common with groups of kids sitting in the grass while smoking grass really drags the feel of the whole place down.
One of my biggest libertarian u-turns I've done

I always supported unlimited legalization and I was fucking wrong

Wrecking society
 
  • Like
Reactions: Jaw
One of my biggest libertarian u-turns I've done

I always supported unlimited legalization and I was fucking wrong

Wrecking society

Yup - Only degenerates think it should be legal or people that don't consider the nature of peoples actions once its legal.

I go on and off now smoking but I've never had issues getting it or enjoying in the comforts of my home.

Why do we need anything to change? Its all very suspect.
 
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2025/10/10/clayton-county-georgia-trump-protectionism/

The federal government, vain about its successes running businesses (e.g., Amtrak; oh, well), has recently plunged into “industrial policy.” The government of Clayton County, Georgia, also enjoys economic planning.

If its opposition to Khalilah Few succeeds, she, a single mother with a teenage son, will have lost much of her savings, and her opportunity for financial security. She will be collateral damage from her local government’s vision of “smart growth.” She is, however, represented by the libertarian litigators of the Institute for Justice. Clayton County has met its match.

Few graduated from beauty school in 2012 and in 2023 opened her own salon. Seeking to relocate, she invested more than $30,000 in renovating and renting a space that had previously been a barbershop. When in May this year she applied for a permit, she assumed approval would be perfunctory.

In July, however, she was denied a permit for two reasons, one unintelligible, the other unconstitutional. The former was that her salon would be incompatible with the county’s vision of “smart growth.” Whatever this vacuous phrase denotes is, the county thinks, compatible with a dry cleaner, a watch repair shop and a pet groomer opening in the same area without needing permits. The county’s unconstitutional reason was that Few’s salon would create “saturation”: There are several other salons within a five-mile radius. This rationale is pure protectionism, a domestic version of a perennial rationale for national tariffs.

Clayton County might seem to be mimicking the Trump administration’s insinuation of the national government into the operations of large corporations (U.S. Steel, Intel, Nvidia, MP Materials, etc.). Perhaps, however, the administration’s “industrial policy” — “smart growth” as envisioned and enforced by supposedly prescient bureaucrats — should be seen as mimicking familiar practices of local governments, but on a grander scale.

Familiar, but incompatible with the Constitution, properly construed. For years, libertarian litigators have been combating domestic protectionism.

For example, a decade ago, such litigators opposed Kentucky’s “certificate of necessity” regulation that said: If you want to start or expand a moving company, you must first prove that existing moving companies are “inadequate,” and that the proposed new service “is or will be required by the present or future public convenience and necessity.”

Litigators argued that this violated the Constitution’s guarantee of equal protection of the law because it is a “competitor’s veto,” favoring existing companies over prospective rivals. And they said crucial terms in the law were unconstitutionally vague. “Required” by what circumstances? How far into the fog of the “future” must you peer?



—————

Serves as today’s daily reminder that I don’t hate government enough
 
I guess you can only buy an ounce at a time here, but they deliver. I watched one of the delivery guys stop in the Common last night but we were walking so I didn’t wait to see what the process entails. Freaking Dominos Dime Bags or Uber Weed is crazy.
 
I’m in the People’s Republic of Massachusetts for the weekend. Last time I was here I said Boston was the city I would pick if I had to live in a city. Beautiful place, surrounded by water, so much history, friendly people, etc.

This time it’s no less of any of those things, but I don’t think it would top my list anymore. Legalized marijuana has taken over and it’s easy to walk a few blocks and get a second hand buzz. I swear one of my kids has had the munchies for the past two days.

I’m personally against legalization for a few reasons and I feel confident that I’ll continue to be shown correct on that years from now. But my gosh, if you’re going to legalize it, legalize it at home and inside businesses that approve it. Walking through Boston Common with groups of kids sitting in the grass while smoking grass really drags the feel of the whole place down.

Visiting for the first time in 2 weeks, but it sounds like Denver (legal), Vegas (legal), and NOLA (not legal).
 

Can't imagine having to work in the city while using public transit.

Fortunately, when I have to go into the HQ office its just the LIRR to grand central and then a walk uptown.

Seems we are going to have swing even more violently to the left until the inevitable Nazi crackdown to get the city back to livable again.

I will say though - Going on occasion or at night to see a show/dinner is still fantastic.
 
And reasonable person knows the issues with the country and if we had the courage to address them and not worry about being called racist we could make American safe again.
What’s your proposal…what exactly does MAGA want to do here, if the rest of us had “the courage”

I'm excited to see where this one goes.
 
Last edited:
What’s your proposal…what exactly does MAGA want to do here, if the rest of us had “the courage”

I'm excited to see where this one goes.
Racial profiling in all policing as stated policy is the first thing that would clean a lot of this up. I don’t think most of these guns purchased are done so legally so getting the gun runners off the street as well as drug dealers would go a long way.

Others are a bit more radical but I’d like to see the result over five years of the profiling to see if anything else needs to be done.
 
Back
Top