Showing posts with label Crazy Laws. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crazy Laws. Show all posts

Thursday, March 19, 2015

FAA Jerks

The concept of private drones and drones for commerce is a really exciting and popular idea. So if the FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) approves a company to use drones, that's got to be great and a lot of social points with the people. In fact here is their front headline for today plus screen capture.
Amazon Gets Experimental Airworthiness Certificate


However, if you read the article you will realize that the decision is nothing more than a headline banner ingratiation for the public.

The details are the excrement of the bowels.

From the page:
The UAS must always remain within visual line-of-sight of the pilot and observer. The pilot actually flying the aircraft must have at least a private pilot’s certificate and current medical certification.
So the FAA rules just completely screws the green movement. If the drone needs to remain in line-of-sight then the controller ( not pilot, there is no pilot ) then they need to follow in a vehicle. And who is this observer? Is the FAA imposing more people to deliver a package than the USPS ( United States Post Office )?

So the more people to deliver a package the more energy needed the less green it is. FAA conspiracy.

And how does piloting a plane translate to a drone? Why is an old technology being applied to a new technology? Don't we need a new standard?

What is the observer? This seems to be an excessive requirement. How many of you do your job and there is someone who's job is to watch you?

How does piloting a plane help piloting a drone? Should we not need a video game expert instead?

What is up with the medical certification? Do you need medical certification to play a video game? No.

Is flying a drone more like flying a plane or more like playing a video game?

If you say a plane you're an idiot.

Sunday, April 20, 2014

Five Ranchers You Have Not Heard About

Some people have mixed feelings about what happened at the Bundy Ranch. Some feel part of it was Bundy's problem since he didn't pay grazing fees. From here on the arguments and little details go on for a while. One thing is for sure and that is that the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) overreacted to the situation.

Even though Bundy might be in the wrong a bit, I'm okay with that because the government is in the wrong a lot. This push against the government is good even if done in a not so kosher manner.

If you play by the rules you might get trampled because the government does not play by the rules. Five ranchers are being trampled on in South Dakota[1][2]. It's not the BLM this time but the Department of Game, Fish and Parks of South Dakota. Still, totally wrong.

These five ranchers have land that had, I repeat "had," a railway running though it. The land has been owned by their families but easement laws allowed some of it to be used for the railroad. So the tracks eventually closed and the railroad gave it back to South Dakota, except these are easements, not possessions. The railroad cannot give the land to anyone. Under South Dakota law the land goes back to the original owners once the easement is void which is the ranchers.

What actually happened was the state took the land and turned it into a scenic trail. It is now a 109 mile trail cutting through five ranchers' lands. The government has made a regulation no motorized vehicles can go on the trail. So now there is a line on their land the ranchers can not cross; a line that was illegal by state law to be made in the first place. A scenic trail is a piss poor use of easement laws.

In short the ranchers can not cross this line because of beautification, at least that is what I read "scenic trail" as meaning. We are not even talking about an endangered species anymore. Ranchers' way of living is threatened just so things can be prettier.

Are you kidding me!? This is why we should start breaking the rules because the rules are stupid. The rules are anti-human. Thank the founders for the Second Amendment. An aerobic exorcise of it might force the government to obey the law too.

So for now enjoy Joe giving a critique of the Bundy Ranch incident.




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Monday, March 4, 2013

The Government Doesn't Create Jobs, It Destroys Them

Remember the Buckyballs' controversy from the summer? Remember how the Consumer Product Safety Commission was suing because a few kids swallowed magnets? Even though the product was not sold in toy stores and marketed to adults and came with warnings not to swallow?

Maxfield & Oberton Holdings, LLC, the Buckyballs company, mocked the lawsuit with some startling facts about beds, stairs, tube steaks, hippos, and coconuts. The blogosphere and conservative sites all bemoaned the lawsuit. And then ... ?

The issue has been closed, and it has been closed for a while and I missed it.

The message you get when you go to the official BuckyBalls' site is as follows:
On December 27, 2012 Maxfield & Oberton Holdings, LLC (the "Company") stopped doing business and filed a Certificate of Cancellation with the Secretary of State of Delaware, thereby ceasing to exist pursuant to applicable Delaware law. The MOH Liquidating Trust has been established to deal with and, to the extent they are valid, pay, to the extent assets are available, certain claims which have been, and may later be, asserted against the Company. If you believe you have a claim against the Company, please click on link below to obtain the Proof of Claim form which you must complete and submit to the Trustee of the MOH Liquidating Trust. If the Trustee determines that a claim is valid, the Trustee will pay that claim, to the extent assets are available, in accordance with the terms of the MOH Liquidating Trust.

Yes. Buckyballs is officially out of business.

How did we miss this? They were gone in December! A Christmas gift going away! Well, they closed in December but the announcement was early November. That means in the final throws of an American election the press were silent on the closing of an American company due to the government frivolously pursuing them in the middle of an American recession, or is it a depression now?

So this means that we can no longer get Buckyballs, right?

Wrong!

There is a place to get them online: Buckyballs Club. Cool! The government didn't win, right? Well, go to the about page and look at the bottom and see the prominent shipment carrier: China Post.

This means I checked the site and got a "WhoIs" from network-tools.com. The result is the site is owned by a Chinese company.
3/F.,HiChina Mansion,No.27 Gulouwai Avenue
Dongcheng District,Beijing 100120,China
Basically we can not buy Buckyballs in stores now, but can get them online. We will no longer buy them from an American company but a Chinese company.

And this administration has been complaining about the sequester and how it would cost jobs? Federal jobs, yes. But do they care about private sector jobs?

I don't know. Maybe it is just too dangerous for Americans to sell magnets. It is much safer to buy them online from China. Tax day is coming up. Pay your taxes so they can make jobs.


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Thursday, September 6, 2012

Stupidity : The Logic Behind Hate Crimes

What Everett did was wrong. He does deserve to go to jail. What did he do? He assaulted someone and fractured their eye socket.

Everett could face 10 years in jail because what he did is considered a hate crime. He assaulted his victim because he thought the victim might be gay.

Again, this was wrong for him to do. But the Department of Justice got involved and leveraged hate crime laws on this case. So why is hate crime so bad? According to U.S. Attorney McQuade:
A hate crime is different than a simple assault because it is an attack on not just one individual victim, but an attack on everyone who shares a particular characteristic.

That is one of the dumbest leaps of logic I have ever heard. Hitting the victim is like hitting every homosexual in America. Really? These are the sort of people we are putting in charge to prosecute crime and putting the power of the federal government behind them?

This hate crime doesn't really penalize Everett any more than he normally would have. According to Michigan law intent to maim can get you 10 years in prison. He attacked someone because he didn't like them. He wanted to hurt them. This is pretty easy to see.

Instead it becomes a federal issue. The federal government is involved in something that could obviously be taken care of locally. Is it really worth our tax dollars to get this labeled as a hate crime? Since the DoJ got involved we all literally funded the prosecution of a local crime.

Then again, if you think that Everett assault every homosexual in America then you probably think this was money well spent.

Monday, August 6, 2012

Army Veteran Arrested for a Message of "Hope"

Argintar, an Army veteran, was trying to promote hope and was arrested. Why? Because he was trying to promote hope by dressing as a super-hero.

Argintar walked into a Home Depot wearing a bulletproof vest, elbow and arm pads, and topped off with a mask and cape. He was also carrying a pair of handcuffs.

His intentions were to inspire hope. Show that there are people out there to help. Instead he was charged with disorderly conduct and unlawful possession of handcuffs.

I consider myself lucky since I believe that an old girlfriend and I could have been arrested for improper use of handcuffs.


Monday, June 25, 2012

Illegal Birth

Just imagine what will become illegal that is normally natural if ObamaCare is not struck down.



Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Cake Declared Illegal

The government is way out of hand in Boston. Yes, we want our kids to have healthy lunches, but the Departments of Public Health and Education want to ban whole milk and white bread. That really hits on a fine line of defining healthy and nutrition. Isn't pizza made on a type of white bread? Will pizza get banned?

So officials are expanding their control over food served from students at lunch time to being a 24/7 enforcement in the school. This means bake sales are illegal. The PTA can no longer sell or auction cakes at the school because they are not healthy.

Could it get any crazier?

Yes!

State officials want to ban banquets and door-to-door candy sales that act as fund raising for the school. Really? You can't sell candy off of school grounds? Do they think people are selling candy bars as if they were a whole meal?

So here is what the state officials want:
  • No whole milk
  • No white bread
  • No cake
  • No candy, on or off school grounds
  • No banquets, on or off school grounds
In other words ...

NO FREEDOM IN BOSTON


Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Wyatt's Billboard

Local government can be every bit as oppressive as the federal government and its agencies. In the town of Lockport, New York, a business man is going to jail for violating a town ordinance. What horrible thing did he do? Images on an electronic billboard were displayed for less than 10 minutes.

The town ordinance states that electronic billboards can not display an image for less than 10 minutes. What on earth is wrong with the government? This seriously affects the income of electronic billboard owners. How long an ad is displayed should be between the electronic billboard owner and the company buying the advertising.

By making a limit of 6 adds an hour the prices of the ads will have to go up. If an ad could be switched every 30 seconds you can get more advertisers, rotate the ads, and get a better chance of having the ad seen. Basically the advertisers would get a better product.

Instead the town legislated that electronic billboards must deliver a crappy product. Have you read "Atlas Shrugged?" The government tries to make sure no one makes something better than another person. They set what the quality should be. Our government is doing that. CAFE Standards is an example so is this sign regulation.

What is wrong with the economy? The government is in the way.

Monday, April 2, 2012

This is not an Internet Hoax

Arizona will make it possible to prosecute you for posting something offensive on the net.

A.  It is unlawful for any person, with intent to terrify, intimidate, threaten, harass, annoy or offend, to use a telephone any electronic or digital device and use any obscene, lewd or profane language or suggest any lewd or lascivious act, or threaten to inflict physical harm to the person or property of any person.  It is also unlawful to otherwise disturb by repeated anonymous telephone calls electronic or digital communications the peace, quiet or right of privacy of any person at the place where the telephone call or calls communications were received.

Get it directly from the horse's mouth and click here.

Sorry. No commentary. Not necessary. We all know what everyone else thinks about this.

Almost Right on Oil Subsidies

MoveOn.org almost gets it right. Their gripe is that the oil companies are getting subsidies because they gave Senators "dirty money." Now I know this is a propaganda poster, but what is "dirty money?" Are they talking about legal campaign contributions? Or is this straight up back room suitcases of money that you hide in your freezer?

Campaign contributions. Yes. Campaign contributions are now "dirty money" as 350.org describes it and made this graphic.
So how did MoveOn.org and 350.org almost get it right?

Subsidies. We need to stop giving oil companies subsidies. But that is only partially correct. We need to stop giving ALL companies subsidies.

How they get it wrong is their motivation. They are just against using fossil fuels. How do they feel about renewable energy subsidies?

Subsidies need to stop for ALL companies and industries. It is not up to the government to decide what companies succeed by giving them money. That is up to the consumers with their purchasing power.

In relation to subsidies are niche taxes : gas taxes, phone taxes, tobacco taxes, et cetera. Those punish a product. That is not for the government to decide either.

See what I did there?

The government gives oil companies subsidies. Then a special gas tax is paid at the pump. What!? Really!? How much money is lost in administrative costs distributing the money and collecting the taxes. How much money is spent on accountants to track this? ( Nothing against accountants. I just think this is an absurd reason to NEED an accountant. )

In case you are curious, here is a break down of where your money at the pump goes according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.




Tuesday, March 27, 2012

EPA Loses at Roshambo

Over a year ago, January 13th, 2011, the New York Times reported on the EPA revoking a permit for a coal mining project in West Virginia. It was a project over 10 years in the making. The Times does a fair job of expressing the views of both sides. The EPA claims that the project would pollute too much and that Arch Coal, the mining company, owner Mingo Logan, did not work with the EPA to design a mining plan that would meet federal law. Arch Coal claims the EPA is overextending its authority by revoking a permit that was approved by the government.

The Times also cannot resist stating that the project was given the permit in 2007, under the Bush administration. Blame Bush.

On Friday, March 23rd, 2012, the New York Times reported that the EPA's decision to revoke the permit was overturned. The story should have been about how the EPA construed the Clean Water Act to give themselves authority it did not have. This was stated, but the Times could not resist restating all of the bad environmental effects that the EPA claimed would happen. Does this mean that would justify the EPA breaking the law?

Also, once again, the Times could not resist stating that the project was given the permit in 2007, under the Bush administration. Blame Bush, again.

The real issue is that the EPA took what seems to be an ambiguously worded statement in the Clean Water Act, section 404(c), and used it as justification to revoke a permit that is the responsibility of the Army Corps of Engineers. You can read this section on the EPA's website.

The court told the EPA that the ambiguous wording of a sentence can be cleared up if read in context of the whole section of 404. The court goes on to explain how the EPA's interpretation would be at odds with 404(p) and 404(q). 404(c) allows the EPA to work with the Corps and reject sites during the approval process, not after.

Upon reading the decision of the U.S. District Court to overturn the EPA, you will find some fun little facts. Remember how Arch Coal did not work with the EPA? Here are a few tidbits from the section "A. Factual Background" :
In the letter commenting on the draft EIS, EPA concluded that it “remains committed to working with the Corps, the state, and the applicant to identify and develop an environmentally acceptable project” and “would encourage additional discussions in an effort to clarify and resolve the issues raised in this letter.”
In December 2005, the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection granted state certification for the individual permit based on its determination that the project would not violate state water quality standards or anti-degradation regulations.3 AR 20924–28.
However, the letter also noted in several places that the agency was encouraged by the progress that Mingo Logan had made to date, and it voiced optimism that EPA could work with the Corps, federal and state agencies, and Mingo Logan to address its concerns and develop appropriate mitigation plans, as well as a Little Coal River cumulative impact assessment and restoration plan.
The Corps released the final EIS in September 2006, and EPA again submitted comments by letter. AR 8330–34, 34962–35342. The comment letter again included concerns about potential adverse impacts to the Little Coal watershed and gaps in the mitigation plan, but also acknowledged Mingo Logan’s progress in reducing impacts and EPA’s willingness to work with the responsible agencies to resolve its concerns prior to a section 404 permit decision. AR 8331– 32.
That sounds a bit different from the idea that Arch Coal was not working with the EPA.

There is also some amusing courtroom banter in the document:
COUNSEL FOR EPA: EPA 404(c) authority authorizes it to withdraw specifications whenever it makes its determination. . . . I grant you that the effect of that, the practical effect of that, would be that the company would no longer be able to operate under the permit. . . .

THE COURT: They have a permit that says this permit is final until it’s suspended or revoked. There’s a missing step here. Why can’t they walk out tomorrow and dump fill in those sites? You say, we’ve withdrawn the specification, but the permit exists.

Is the Corps required now to revoke or modify the permit in light of your determination?

COUNSEL FOR EPA: I don’t think they need to take that extra step. EPA’s withdrawal of that specified site has been final. It has been made. . . .

THE COURT: So everybody with a permit has to on a daily basis compare their permit to your list of specified sites? They can’t do what they’ve been permitted to do by the United States? . . . Where does it say in the statute that they can’t dump tomorrow?
COUNSEL FOR EPA: I don’t see any ambiguity in the statute with respect to the authority of the EPA to withdraw the specification after the permit is issued. . . .

THE COURT: . . . But . . . what are they supposed to do tomorrow? And if your exercise of that power essentially undermined the finality of the Corps’ exercise of their power in 404(a), wouldn’t it have been essential for Congress to say that?

***

There’s this huge gap. I mean, you looked at me very blankly when I said what is Mingo Logan supposed to do tomorrow.
Sometimes it is best not to just read a newspaper or a blogger to truly understand a decision. There is probably a slanted view. The decision is available online and you should read page 31.

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Monday, March 26, 2012

Taxing the Virtual World

Every so often we hear rumors that the government wants to tax our emails. My inbox gets flooded with chain emails about this when it happens. So far, our emails are not taxed. Whew!

But what about virtual currency? What about those online games with in-game currency? Some gamers pay cash for virtual currency. Sex has been used to gain virtual currency. Could the government tax it?

No.

But expect to eventually get some emails stating that your virtual currency will be taxed in reality. There have been some irresponsibly written articles based off of the paper "Virtual Currency in Virtual Economies: Income Characterization Issues for Social Media Companies" in the November 21, 2011 edition of "tax notes international." The most egregious article is at AllGov.com. That is such a disappointment since it is usually a decent site as a source for information.

Just as I titled the post "Taxing the Virtual World" as an attention getter, others also gave attention grabbing titles. But the first paragraph will lead you to think that virtual currency will be taxed. If you do not read the whole article then you were just lied to.

You will see China being cited as taxing virtual currency. This too is a LIE!

What has happened is that one of the issues bought up in the original paper, "Virtual Currency in Virtual Economies," is that the law is unclear if the money made from selling your virtual currency for real money is taxable. The government is looking into that issue. China considers this money taxable. This is what is being mischaracterized. The articles are portraying the taxation of real money as the taxation of virtual currency.

The original paper also focuses on many other issues. Is virtual currency property, a deposit, a real currency, or other another type of intellectual property. In general the paper describes how in general it is not and would not be taxable. Again, the paper's arguments define that virtual currency is not taxable. It does go on to warn that the "user agreements" that online games have need to be written properly so that there is no case for taxation.

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