First Article from Selected Salvos 2
Just to whet your appetite and give you a better idea of what I write about and how I write it I'm offering this free read of the opening article in my "Selected Salvos 2 from the Loose Cannon Libertarian."
Reading this means you've read 1/20th of the book. So how about topping off your appetite with the full course meal?
Please download the book, read it, enjoy it, write a review of it and then let me know where the review is posted.
And keep in mind I'll happily answer interview questions too.
Bon Appétit!
Article title:
Tax Dollars for Sex Scholars
Article:
If I were to say "Let's start this book off with a bang" one might take it to be an obvious pun on the opening article in this collec-tion. Given the level of this writer's adolescent libido one might just be right. Here's my first ever article on the "discipline" (snicker, chortle) of Playboynomics.
Can't afford cumquats for your cumquat soup? Getting haircuts every other month to save a few bucks? Still driving that 1988 Yu-go because a down payment for something better is out of your reach? Northwestern University psychology Professor Michael Bai-ley appreciates your sacrifices. He's using your tax money to pay women $75 a pop to find out, as the New York Post puts it, "what types of audiovisual erotica women find sexually arousing."
(It's "audiovisual erotica" when it's taxpayer funded. If you and I pay our own money to watch it, it's "porno." And don't forget that tax money funds research on "sexual arousal." Without tax money, it's just plain old civil society "horniness.")
The research project involves (cover your eyes while you read this) popping a tampon-sized probe into a subject's vagina and measuring the "subjective and genital arousal of 180 lesbian, bi-sexual and heterosexual women as they watch erotic video clips of lesbian, gay or heterosexual interactions." Nice work if you can get it.
(It's "sexual interactions" when it's taxpayer funded. If you and I pay our own money to watch it, it's "screwing.")
This is really really important stuff, Bailey contends, because he's discovered that female arousal seems to be nonspecific. Previous studies (taxpayer funded, no doubt) have shown that male sexual arousal is "target specific," that is, heterosexuals get hot over de-pictions of females while homosexuals pant at images of men.
This would seem to fall under the "duh" category. Does it really take $147,000 of our Yugo replacement money to figure this out?
Northwestern University's daily newspaper reports that women's responses to watching skin flicks – sorry, audiovisual erotica – did not differ whether the images were male-female couples, lesbians, or homosexual men.
(But a nonacademic member of the taxpaying public might suspect that this could be explained because they were not responding to the images, they were responding to the tampon-sized probes in their vaginas. If that's the case, showing them photos of a 1988 Yugo would sexually arouse them. How were those men tested in their sexual arousal studies? With condom-sized probes? "Hey, check out the set of headlights on that Yugo!")
Rep. Dave Weldon, R-Florida, denounces the project. "This is dis-gusting, and is a clear example of distorted priorities." Weldon himself, of course, pockets a salary of $150,000 per year plus perks, benefits, retirement and all sorts of other goodies that in-voluntarily come out of your haircut budget. But that's a screwing of a different sort.
Northwestern University isn't the only institution spending your cumquat money on sexual arousal research. According to an Asso-ciated Press article, Navy and Army personnel have been using government (i.e., taxpayer) credit cards to pay for prostitutes, lap dancers, and strippers.
Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, denounces this practice as a case of "no controls, extensive abuse and no accountability." Grassley himself, of course, pockets a salary of $154,700 per year plus perks, benefits, retirement and all sorts of other goodies that in-voluntarily come out of your haircut budget. But that's a screwing of a different sort.
Libertarians would point out that the only difference between Northwestern University and our military services is that the pro-fessors are performing lab experiments while our uniformed warriors are conducting individual field research. Either way, it's still our tax money at play.
And then there's the problem of adult oriented businesses. (To understand what follows you must remember that it's a "problem" when people voluntarily buy and sell anything that has to do with sex but it's not a "problem" if government forced taxpayer funded programs study anything that has to do with sex.) Cities all over the country keep trying to regulate the sex industry in all of its various forms without running afoul of that pesky Bill of Rights thing. One popular method they use is to ban commercially sexual activities anywhere near a school.
But city councils are apparently missing the lesson of Northwestern University. The solution would seem to be to bring all the prostitutes, lap dancers and strippers into public schools and force all of us taxpaying lackeys to finance it. They could justify it by calling it "sex education." Without public funding and the blessing of bureaucrats, of course, it would be a felony, which would get us tossed into prison where many of us would likely become the sub-jects of yet another type of "sex education." But that's a penal institution screwing of a different sort.
So why do we need haircuts anyway?
Published in Loose Cannon Libertarian February 1, 2003
Reading this means you've read 1/20th of the book. So how about topping off your appetite with the full course meal?
Please download the book, read it, enjoy it, write a review of it and then let me know where the review is posted.
And keep in mind I'll happily answer interview questions too.
Bon Appétit!
Article title:
Tax Dollars for Sex Scholars
Article:
If I were to say "Let's start this book off with a bang" one might take it to be an obvious pun on the opening article in this collec-tion. Given the level of this writer's adolescent libido one might just be right. Here's my first ever article on the "discipline" (snicker, chortle) of Playboynomics.
Can't afford cumquats for your cumquat soup? Getting haircuts every other month to save a few bucks? Still driving that 1988 Yu-go because a down payment for something better is out of your reach? Northwestern University psychology Professor Michael Bai-ley appreciates your sacrifices. He's using your tax money to pay women $75 a pop to find out, as the New York Post puts it, "what types of audiovisual erotica women find sexually arousing."
(It's "audiovisual erotica" when it's taxpayer funded. If you and I pay our own money to watch it, it's "porno." And don't forget that tax money funds research on "sexual arousal." Without tax money, it's just plain old civil society "horniness.")
The research project involves (cover your eyes while you read this) popping a tampon-sized probe into a subject's vagina and measuring the "subjective and genital arousal of 180 lesbian, bi-sexual and heterosexual women as they watch erotic video clips of lesbian, gay or heterosexual interactions." Nice work if you can get it.
(It's "sexual interactions" when it's taxpayer funded. If you and I pay our own money to watch it, it's "screwing.")
This is really really important stuff, Bailey contends, because he's discovered that female arousal seems to be nonspecific. Previous studies (taxpayer funded, no doubt) have shown that male sexual arousal is "target specific," that is, heterosexuals get hot over de-pictions of females while homosexuals pant at images of men.
This would seem to fall under the "duh" category. Does it really take $147,000 of our Yugo replacement money to figure this out?
Northwestern University's daily newspaper reports that women's responses to watching skin flicks – sorry, audiovisual erotica – did not differ whether the images were male-female couples, lesbians, or homosexual men.
(But a nonacademic member of the taxpaying public might suspect that this could be explained because they were not responding to the images, they were responding to the tampon-sized probes in their vaginas. If that's the case, showing them photos of a 1988 Yugo would sexually arouse them. How were those men tested in their sexual arousal studies? With condom-sized probes? "Hey, check out the set of headlights on that Yugo!")
Rep. Dave Weldon, R-Florida, denounces the project. "This is dis-gusting, and is a clear example of distorted priorities." Weldon himself, of course, pockets a salary of $150,000 per year plus perks, benefits, retirement and all sorts of other goodies that in-voluntarily come out of your haircut budget. But that's a screwing of a different sort.
Northwestern University isn't the only institution spending your cumquat money on sexual arousal research. According to an Asso-ciated Press article, Navy and Army personnel have been using government (i.e., taxpayer) credit cards to pay for prostitutes, lap dancers, and strippers.
Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, denounces this practice as a case of "no controls, extensive abuse and no accountability." Grassley himself, of course, pockets a salary of $154,700 per year plus perks, benefits, retirement and all sorts of other goodies that in-voluntarily come out of your haircut budget. But that's a screwing of a different sort.
Libertarians would point out that the only difference between Northwestern University and our military services is that the pro-fessors are performing lab experiments while our uniformed warriors are conducting individual field research. Either way, it's still our tax money at play.
And then there's the problem of adult oriented businesses. (To understand what follows you must remember that it's a "problem" when people voluntarily buy and sell anything that has to do with sex but it's not a "problem" if government forced taxpayer funded programs study anything that has to do with sex.) Cities all over the country keep trying to regulate the sex industry in all of its various forms without running afoul of that pesky Bill of Rights thing. One popular method they use is to ban commercially sexual activities anywhere near a school.
But city councils are apparently missing the lesson of Northwestern University. The solution would seem to be to bring all the prostitutes, lap dancers and strippers into public schools and force all of us taxpaying lackeys to finance it. They could justify it by calling it "sex education." Without public funding and the blessing of bureaucrats, of course, it would be a felony, which would get us tossed into prison where many of us would likely become the sub-jects of yet another type of "sex education." But that's a penal institution screwing of a different sort.
So why do we need haircuts anyway?
Published in Loose Cannon Libertarian February 1, 2003
Published on February 15, 2015 11:18
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This blog is all about my serious book TYRANNY FIGHTERS: THE JULIAN HEICKLEN CHRONICLES and the small quick-read books in my multi-volume "Fun&Freedom" series, each consisting of 20 articles each, sto
This blog is all about my serious book TYRANNY FIGHTERS: THE JULIAN HEICKLEN CHRONICLES and the small quick-read books in my multi-volume "Fun&Freedom" series, each consisting of 20 articles each, stolen from my Loose Cannon Libertarian archives. I call my writing style in this series "Fun&Freedom" because Freedom is always the message while Fun is always the method. The articles are serious about libertarian political, social and cultural issues but the fun is embedded in the writing style. That's because too many libertarians are just too dang serious!
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