프로필
채널 조회수:
7,306
나이:
47
가입:
2006. 11. 28.
구독자:
43
Sapient Being
I recommend the following books:
Net Assets by Carl Bussjaeger
Unintended Consequences by John Ross
The Army of the Republic by Stuart Archer Cohen
The Black Arrow by Vin Sprynowicz
David's Sling and Earthweb by Marc Stiegler
I recommend the following books:
Net Assets by Carl Bussjaeger
Unintended Consequences by John Ross
The Army of the Republic by Stuart Archer Cohen
The Black Arrow by Vin Sprynowicz
David's Sling and Earthweb by Marc Stiegler
국가:
미국





























![2002 - Helen Mirren on Nigel Hawthorne [1/5] 미리보기 이미지](https://web.archive.org/web/20110501172708id_/http://i2.ytimg.com/vi/e5i1vwzVnzI/default.jpg)


















There are two more parts to that series that are equally disturbing. If you can't locate them they are in my uploads. I appreciate your intelligent comment. Peace Michael
I find it very interesting that the "democratic" institution, Parliament, is being understood as the pointless, meddling busybodies that they are, and that things work better without that constant fiddling. Maybe it's time to abolish it and get back to a more efficient, limited, style of govt, like a clearly defined set of responsibilities for the crown and that's all.
Have you heard about Hanse Hermann Hoppe's book, "Democracy: The God That Failed"? It's really good.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
I'm sure it's available in both French and Dutch.
Also good for the budget for no government has to be paid or maybe i'd say should be paid (except our beloved King of course who is the head of the country !).
On top of that comes that the interim-government now cannot spend more money every month as 1/12 of what it spended during the last fiscal year.
For a lot of Belgians our situation is a blessing and maybe we'll live up to see the 5th anniversary of a free people voluntarily living peacefull together without beïng forced to do so.
Belgium is writing history right now !
It seems that the divided "representatives" in the central govt of Belgium has been unable to "form a government", simply because they cannot achieve a coalition that would be a majority. This is a parliamentary problem that the US does not have, because a majority does not actually mean anything except what party gets to appoint the person who wields the big hammer at the front of Congress.
Now I've asked a couple of people who live near Belgium to let me know what is actually happening, like whether the people are still being taxed during this time of invalidity, and I expect they are, but it does show that there really is no need, day to day, for what most people think of as "government".
This is not a general uprising, this is a very specific revolt against a particular ruling group/individual.
I wish the people of Egypt well, may they not make the same mistake again by installing yet another "Ruler".