Today I received my first payment for my new job. I’m optimizing websites and doing miscellaneous web development work for FullQuality. I enjoy this job a lot more than my old job sacking groceries because it utilizes my talents and helps me learn and grow as a web developer. (more…)
Attending Ron Paul’s Rally for the Republic
I’d been interested in going to Ron Paul’s Rally for the Republic ever since I’d heard of it. It was a rally to be held in Minneapolis, MN on Tuesday, Sept. 2—just a few miles away from the Republican National Convention going on at the same time. For me, attending the Rally was as much about traveling and developing my independence as it was about supporting the libertarian movement. I’d set a goal to travel at least once a month, and this was the first trip.
Despite the barriers to the trip—financial (I would have to pay for transportation, housing, and food) and temporal (I would have to schedule it around my job at a college newspaper and improvisation practices and performances)—I found a ride on Craigslist and set my plan into action. I rode up to Minnesota with strangers, made friends and met new people, and rode back with someone I’d met only the day before. The trip was a complete success; I grew more independent and I had the time of my life celebrating freedom with some of the biggest celebrities in the movement.
On the trip up, I met Brad Spangler, the system administrator for agorism.info. Agorism.info features the New Libertarian Manifesto, a book that presents a possible solution for disolving the State and achieving anarchy through counter-establishment economics, and I recommend it to anyone interested in libertarianism.
After camping out Sunday night, we drove into St. Paul Monday morning, September 1. I left my cell phone in the SUV of the people who I rode up with, so I spent the first few hours wandering throughout the city, trying to find them. While walking through the city, I saw the Xcel Energy Center, the site where the Republican National Convention would be held. It was barricaded off.
I also passed a gathering of people who were rallying for housing as a human right. In my opinion, people do not have a right to housing.
If they want to build one for themselves, that’s great—government shouldn’t get in the way—but to say that other people should have to build houses for the homeless is to be out of touch with reality and incongruous with the concept of self-determination.
Then, I took public transportation to the University of Minnesota (in Minneapolis) where I met with other Ron Paul supporters to volunteer to promote Tuesday’s Rally and hand out free tickets. I was saddened to see that only about ten people showed up instead of the thousands I was expecting.
I rode back to St. Paul to pass out the wristbands (which were redeemable at the box office for tickets) to RNC protesters who might be interested in the Rally. Unfortunately, my shyness got the better of me and I only handed out three wristbands (but I did give several to some Free State Project members who offered to help distribute them.)
Without a phone or a place to sleep that night, I didn’t feel very good. I sat down at a street corner with my Ron Paul sign. Luckily, I met some fellow RP supporters and they invited me to come with them to a bar where other supporters where gathering. There, I met a firefighter who had driven up from Kansas City. He let me check my email on his laptop and allowed me to share a campsite with him that night. He also ended up giving me a ride home.
After hanging out with some really cool libertarians at the bar, we all drove to the Ron Paul Nation celebration where we listened to music and watched Ron Paul speak. The next day was the day of the Rally. I was able to stand directly in front of the podium for most of the Rally. I felt neither hunger nor tiredness; the adrenalin kept me going. I loved watching Aimee Allen’s live performance of the Ron Paul anthem. I high-fived her twice on separate occasions when she was high-fiving the audiences like performers often do.
Of course, my favorite part was Ron Paul’s epic speech.
It was the speech of a lifetime, and afterward I got to shake his hand. I had never been so close to my heroes before, and it really made me feel good to actually hold eye contact with Ron Paul (and the other speakers) for a few seconds. It felt like “I was there; I will not be forgotten,” even though that may not be the case.
The entire 3-day trip cost me $100; $55 for transportation there and back, $20 for camping, $5 for inter-city transportation and $20 for food. I gained valuable experience on my own. This is the first trip I’ve taken entirely without my parents, and it was totally worth it.
Compulsory Education Should Be Eliminated
My experience of public schools has been poor. I don’t remember 90 percent of the things I’ve been taught over the years. I don’t think it was that important for me to learn biology in ninth grade, the rock cycle in seventh, or electricity in third. I know I would have remembered a lot more if I’d been taught what I cared about, instead of being force-fed a curriculum. When I went through a decade of school papers earlier this summer, I was amazed and frustrated by all the busywork I’d done that had no effect on my life.
When I was a junior, I decided to work the system, get the credits, and graduate a year early. Now that I’m out in the business world, I feel like I have to catch up. School never taught me how to program, run a blog, or design websites. It never taught me how to create flash games, compose music, or record a podcast. All of those things were more important than learning about the solar system, but I had to learn them myself.
I’ll admit, I learned some things at school, like English, video editing, and how to write news articles. That doesn’t feel like a decade of studying, though. That seems more like something I could have learn in a few weeks. I learned some other things too, but I’ve either forgotten them or never needed to learn them anyway; most are bits of trivia that I could look up on Google when necessary. That said, I feel like the first 17 years of my life were severely underutilized; I would much rather have gotten business experiences than learn things I’d never end up needing to know.
Out of the nearly 1,000 students that graduated from my high school last year, I was the only one to graduate a year early. According to the KSDE, the statewide dropout rate is about 1.5 percent (that’s 15 students out of 1,000.) The question I’d like to pose is: why? Do students really love school enough to stay in it during your entire youth? If not, why aren’t they protesting it?
Compulsory schooling finds it’s justification in a number of laws. According to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, a declaration passed by the United Nations, children have the “right” to compulsory education. The Kansas legislature has a law (K.S.A. § 72-1111) that requires you to attend school from the age of 7 to 18 (16, if your parents will allow it.) I think most students take that law for granted. Though education is great, I don’t think it should be mandatory, and I think voluntary, privatized education would mean higher quality education for those who want it.
Additionally, I think public schools are immoral because they are funded coercively. The truth is that the government robs people of their property and freedoms even if those people have lived peacefully on their own. Pro-government individuals won’t like to admit that enforcement of their laws often takes the form of aggression against peaceful people, but that’s exactly what they do when you don’t pay your property taxes (a portion of which goes to education) or go to school.
Dennis Fermoyle has taught for 31 years. He wrote a book called “In the Trenches: A Teacher’s Defense of Public Education.” Fermoyle is pro-public schools, but we agree on compulsory education. “If some kids are unfortunate enough to have nitwit parents who don’t want them to go to school, we should let the parents have their way,” Fermoyle wrote on his blog. “And I say that because the chances of those children getting any meaningful benefits from public education are either slim or none, and they will only make it more difficult for us to work with kids who we really have a chance to help.”
You can make someone go to school, but you can’t make them learn. Furthermore, apathetic students won’t learn anyway, and they’ll only make it harder for everyone else. I take online classes through Johnson County Community College, and one major difference from high school is that everybody wants to be there. It makes a difference.
In the long run, I believe that public schools should be transformed into schools funded voluntarily and attended by the children of those voluntary taxpayers. Essentially, they should be privatized. The most immediate step, though, is to protest compulsory education. Write to your local newspapers. Proclaim that you are a sovereign individual\and that you don’t accept the government’s authority to tell you how to live. Campaign for representatives who will end coercion against peaceful people. Broadcast your belief that the government should be a voluntary organization by consent of the governed, not tyranny of the majority. It is through activism that we can change the system.
Students’ freedoms need to be fought for. Ask the questions that no one else will. Assume that you, not society or the government, are the owner of your life. If you want help, send me a friend request on facebook or email me at pshields@gmail.com.
Shields Releases New Web Theme, Inspired by Presidential Websites
Shields.Net’s CSS theme just got a whole lot cooler, according to the site’s webmaster Patrick Shields.
Inspired by presidential websites such as BobBarr2008.com and BarackObama.com, Shields overhauled his site in a similar fashion.
“I loved how Bob Barr and Barack Obama’s websites looked,” Shields said. “Minimalism wasn’t cutting it for PShields.Net. We’re in the ratings race, now, and we need to attract viewers in whatever way possible–even if it means deluding decent content with flash images and animations.”
Though the theme was incomplete, Shields switched to it anyway.
“I felt like action was the best choice, in this case,” Shields said. “I’ll be continuing to work on the theme in the coming weeks, but since it’s mostly functional, I wanted to push it out to visitors.”
Shields concluded by mentioning his new ChipIn widget.
“My goal is to support my life through blogging and web development, and I really appreciate any help that comes my way,” Shields said. “I spend very frugally on a predetermined budget, so funds will not be wasted.”


