Showing posts with label new hampshire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new hampshire. Show all posts

Friday, March 12

Petraeus to New Hampshire

Interesting, to say the least.

Yes I am wary of how this country glorifies military service, but that doesn't mean I'd be willing to take the opposite position and regard his service with distaste. I think that sort of prejudice is uncalled for, even if many of his supporters (unfortunately) over-value it.

What does interest me is he seems like a thoughtful, intelligent man without the malice of Cheney, and who could bring the party of Bush-Palin some much-needed gravitas.

Monday, May 18

Link blag

New Hampshire's 'Live Free or Die' UNIX plate turns 20. I suppose the WINDOWS one should say 'Live, Freeze, and Die'.

Perry: Drug laws correlate with drug strength. Essentially, everyone who argues that we shouldn't legalize pot because "It's not like your father's weed" have made the problem they're complaining about worse. It's similar to how high drinking ages contribute to binge drinking, because underage drinkers try to drink all they can, when they can, in a short period of time.

BBC: A database which holds the details of every child in England has now become available for 390,000 childcare professionals to access. Brilliant! ...what could possibly go wrong?

Canadian Parliament sends takedown notice for video of their hearings posted on YouTube.

Cafe Hayek: How health care decisions are really being made.

Fallows admires Obama's speeches.

Cato: Washington DC's Union Station has an Obama shop.

Wednesday, May 6

The left's enervation of freedom

TheNextRight notes that the most left-liberal states are the least free: Connecticut, Illinois, Massachusetts, Washington, Hawaii, Maryland, California, Rhode Island, New Jersey... and you can probably guess the worst:
New York is by far the least free state in the Union (#50 economic, #48 personal). One of us lives in New York and can attest to the fact that few New Yorkers would be surprised by such a finding. Sadly, equally few New Yorkers seem to believe that anything can be done about the situation. New York has the highest taxes in the country. Property, selective sales, individual income, and corporate income taxes are particularly high. Spending on social services and “other” is well above national norms. Only Massachusetts has more government debt as a percentage of the economy. Government employment is higher than average. On personal freedoms, gun laws are extremely restrictive, but marijuana laws are better than average (while tobacco laws are extremely strict). Motorists are highly regulated, but several kinds of gambling are allowed statewide (not casinos, except on reservations). Home school regulations are burdensome, but asset forfeiture has been reformed. Along with Vermont, New York has the strictest health insurance community rating regulations. Mandated coverages are also very high. Eminent domain is totally unreformed. Perversely,the state strictly limits what grassroots PACs may give to candidates and parties, but not what corporations and unions may give.
And the best is, of course, one of the swingiest and independent-minded states:
New Hampshire is by our count the freest state in the country. Depending on weights, however, it really shares the first, second and third slots with Colorado and South Dakota. New Hampshire does much better on economic (#2) than personal freedom (#13). Taxes and spending are among the lowest in the country, but the tax regime is highly skewed. New Hampshire has the third highest property and corporate income taxes in the United States. These should be high priorities for cutting. On the spending side, the likeliest suspect for cutting is transportation, which is higher than average once one controls for federal grants and population density (less dense states spend more on roads). Once state population is controlled for, New Hampshire is one of the most fiscally decentralized states in the country. Local governments also must raise two-thirds of what they spend with their own taxes. Gun laws are among the most liberal in the country, but the state has a weak “peaceable journey” regime (carrying a firearm in a car requires a concealed carry permit). Its alcohol regime is relatively free. Despite state control of retail distribution of wine and spirits, the effective tax rates on these products are zero, according to the Tax Foundation. Marijuana laws are middling; low-level possession could be decriminalized like Maine, while low-level cultivation could be made a misdemeanor like both Maine and Vermont. New Hampshire is the only state in the country with no seat-belt law for adults. It lacks a motorcycle helmet law but does have a bicycle helmet law and authorizes sobriety checkpoints. New Hampshire is one of three states that permit self-insurance for auto liability. Gambling is relatively controlled: Most gaming must take place under a charitable license, social gaming is prohibited, and aggravated gambling is a felony. State approval is required to open a private school. Home school laws are about average on the whole, but the standardized testing and recordkeeping requirements are more onerous than most states. Labor laws are generally market-friendly, but it is not a right-to-work state. Occupational licensing is worse than average. Both eminent domain and asset forfeiture have been thoroughly reformed. The state’s liability system is one of the best, but campaign finance regulations are quite strict. As of 2006, smoking bans allowed many exemptions, but a thoroughgoing ban has since passed (not captured by our index).
It'll get same-sex marriage soon, too. Consider the move.

Saturday, May 2

Link blag

Contrary to popular belief, the Iraq war continues, and it's deadly.

In 1994, five House Democrats and two Senate Democrats switched to the Republican Party. So Specter may not be the only one who wants to jump ship. But more switches are less likely now, because Obama was elected in the second of two wave years, which already ousted many Republicans in moderate districts.

Obama's SCOTUS nominee is likely to be as liberal as David Souter on social issues, so social conservatives won't miss a thing. But Souter was more moderate on business issues, so his replacement is likely to be worse for economic freedoms.

Photos of a Russian nuclear power plant.

New Hampshire, the matriarchy up North? (Fine, as long as they don't get snake-headed whips...)

Daily Beast: Islam issues sex licenses.

Overcoming Bias: Female orgasms are a screening mechanism? Study shows how lust makes one generous.

(video) Song Hye Kyo's McDonald ice-cream ad.

Tuesday, April 7

Your central government at work

Andrew Cline:
New Hampshire's house of representatives is scheduled to vote tomorrow on a bill to mandate that adults wear seat belts. New Hampshire is the last state in the Union not to have an adult seat-belt mandate. Just in time for the debate, new National Highway Traffic Safety Administration data were released Monday. They reveal that New Hampshire has a higher seat-belt usage rate (69.2 percent) than Massachusetts (66.8 percent). Massachusetts, of course, mandates that everyone wear seat belts.

New Hampshire also has the fifth-lowest traffic fatality rate in the nation. Again, it accomplishes this without resorting to a seat-belt mandate.

And yet despite the evidence that a mandate is unnecessary, the house has already given the bill initial approval and is considered likely to pass it again. Why?  One point brought up by mandate supporters over and over again this year: If we pass the mandate, we'll get $3.7 million (FREE!) from Washington.

Damn bribes.  Sigh.  These types of safety laws are such a waste...