“Scientific” fraud – carbon and climate

The climate crusade – the idea that manmade global warming, or the current buzzword “manmade climate change,” – is at its heart a fraud. Just as the claim a half-century ago of “manmade global cooling” was false. While claiming to be “according to the science,” in reality, the so-called science is fraud. It is (on a very large scale) the equivalent of an analytical laboratory that asks you what results you need so that they can tailor their tests appropriately.

One of the latest claims is supposedly “causing alarm” among scientists. Last year, if we are to believe the information provided, global sea level has increased by 0.23 centimeters instead of the predicted 0.17 centimeter increase. That is 135%! Run, wave your hands, scream in panic! Not only that, but supposedly this increase is not due to Arctic or Antarctic ice – or glaciers – melting, but the result of the change in density of seawater. A change, we are told, due to the seawater warming up by a few hundredths of a degree Celsius.

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Government-run, tax-funded schools

We here at TPOL have recently been taken to task by several people because we oppose public (government-run, tax-supported) schools and try to point out the dangers of entrusting children to those institutions.

A recent news story explains part of the problem: You no longer have to prove your ability to read, write, and do arithmetic in New Jersey to teach school.

In 2025, New Jersey joins a growing number of States that do not require teachers in their GRTF schools to know basic skills – even in subjects which they are supposedly teaching children. The excuses given for this reduction in qualifications are many. NJ claimed they can’t hire enough teachers otherwise. NY and CA apparently did it for purposes of DEI. (As did LA Fire Department – which got us what?)

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Is rule by judges acceptable? Tolerable?

Paul Craig Roberts, always an irascible writer and prone to calling a spade a spade, recently used an unfamiliar political term in a commentary.

Kritarchy is a system of government in which judges hold the primary ruling authority. The term comes from the Greek words kritēs (judge) and arkhō (to rule). PCR objects to such a thing for a good many reasons, and points out we seem to have fallen into that condition and thus giving up not only a republican form of government but also democracy. He makes many good points.

Some background helps.

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The missionary enterprises of Libertarian movements

Go over and visit Liberty International now and then. It’s an interesting website full of information about the wonderful things going on in the Balkans, Nepal, Russia, Ukraine, and Israel as people seek to spread the gospel (“good news”) of classical liberalism or libertarianism. Some even espouse free markets and free-market anarchism! (See more websites at the bottom of

It is natural for lovers of liberty to do and encourage this. To quote libertarianism.org on “What is a libertarian?” Libertarians believe that in politics, liberty is the most important value. Almost everyone wants freedom for themselves, but a libertarian also seeks to protect and expand the freedom of others.”

In other words (religious terms), libertarians want to be missionaries, evangelists. We want to share what we know with others who will work together with us to establish and maintain liberty and justice for all.

But let us state a sympathetic critique of “Libertarian missionary” endeavors. As we imply in the opening paragraph, like the Christian missionary efforts they appear to imitate and even use as a model, they have their limits. And their foibles. Perhaps they are even ineffective in using limited resources.

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Five years on – the lies continue

The following was an anonymous posting on a social media site. The (P)-labeled italics are the comments of a good friend and correspondent of The Price of Liberty; the (L)-labeled italics are our (usually sarcastic) response to P’s comments. Reader comments are solicited? What do you think?

A major study just revealed heart attacks and strokes *decreased* after COVID-19 vaccinations. Here’s what the science really says.

(P)Who conducted the study? Who financed it? What was the goal behind conducting this study?

(L)No success yet finding any of this – We share your cynicism regarding its goal.

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Capitalism in today’s world

Students for Liberty has recently posted a cool video, showing the impact of capitalism on our world over the past decades. The many statistics that show the way capitalism has improved our lives and those of billions of people across the entire planet.

They have this to say: “Capitalism: the system that didn’t just give you smartphones and sushi delivery — it also reduced global poverty, raised countries’ GDPs, and turned famine into the exception, not the rule. And yet… some people still claim communism just “hasn’t been done right.””

Keep in mind, these impacts are not calculated or based on truly “free markets.” This is real-world, in a world where all too often we see Crony Capitalism as the dominant but perverted form of Capitalism: of markets that are only moderately “free” for certain values of “free.” Yet this corrupted and all-too-fallible system has resulted in extending the lives of billions of people, of ending millennia of poverty and economic oppression – and largely controlled slavery.

Imagine what it might be life if we didn’t have this abomination of a mixed system where too much of the productive elements (both goods and services) are either owned/operated by government or so micromanaged (regulated) by government as to make them nearly as bad. And if the government did not promote and support crony capitalism?

The plain and simple truth is that individual people are generally the best person to decide what they want to do and want to provide to others. Yes, there are exceptions: children too young to recognize and understand the consequences of their actions, and those mentally incapable of doing so, or who have been driven mad and cannot see what is wrong and what is right. Those who commit aggression against others, for example.

Is the free market perfect? Is capitalism perfect? Of course not. But they are largely self-correcting and avoid the dangers of top-down control, decisions made by self-proclaimed elites, and the machinations of con-artists and other parasites on mankind.

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Exclusion – dealing with people who cannot be tolerated in society

A recent comment (thanks, Steve) triggered some thoughts which we’d like to share. And explore.

Coventry is an idea proposed many times but perhaps best known in Heinlein’s version. The basic concept is similar to penal colonies in general: particularly the larger ones, like the present State of Georgia, or present New South Wales or Victoria State in Australia. It serves a dual purpose: to protect society from the actions of the convict (and at less cost and more humanely than a term in jail or prison, or execution) and to deny the felon most if not all of the benefits of society – to cast him or her out, to banish or excommunicate them.

It is a long traditional method of dealing with those who commit acts of aggression and do other “uncivil” things – including teaching matters contrary to the wishes of the powers that be. Does it work? Read on and see.

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Principles of liberty

Dr. Robert Malone recently posted this as a “funny.”

It is, of course, but it is also deadly serious. I equate it to that fine statement coined by science fiction writer Eric Frank Russell in his story “And then there were none.”

Freedom = I won’t.

The fundamental right to say “NO!”

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The intersection of politics and religion today

From The Western Journal: Democratic California Rep. Ted Lieu is slightly more Catholic than Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Supreme Leader of Iran. We will spot him that. (And as we write this, we have no idea what Ted Lieu’s opinion of the new pope is – but we suspect that he may like the guy far less than he did Frances. See below.)

But we can’t give him much more. Going on two bodies of evidence of Lieu’s religious convictions, the guy is about as good a Catholic as, say, Joe Biden or Nancy Pelosi. True, he professes to be a Catholic — albeit if and when it suits him, and on terms that seem decidedly anti-Catholic. No surprise that he fits so well into the Congressional Democratic caucus.

For instance, not only does he support abortion, same-sex marriage, and easy divorce — indeed, most Catholic-professing Democrats do, while holding to the idea that their spiritual beliefs are separate from meliorative public policy — he decided to dare the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops to deny him communion because he seems to morally support these things as positive ends in themselves. (The USCCB, quite regrettably, does not seem to have taken him up on the offer. Perhaps this will change with Pope Leo XIV?)

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The capricious and irrational nature of American governments

The following ad (from Cowboy State Daily, a Wyoming on-line daily newspaper) is not a joke.

Yes, you are reading that right. State Departments of Transportation and their various State cops (Highway or State Patrols, State Police, etc.) supposedly close highways during and after blizzards to protect the public safety. (We know about northern and western States: do southern States close off highways for/during hurricanes? Please let us know.) In Wyoming, there is also another consideration: where a highway is closed during blizzards can have a major negative impact on small communities overwhelmed with a massive number of trucks and other travelers.

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