Tim Cavanaugh | May 29, 2006
I'm informed by my brother "Sanford" that my visaless exchange article has been reprinted in the newspaper of my childhood and youth, The Atlantic City Press*, but I find no evidence on the Press' own site. I am also informed that Reason fave Michelle Malkin's column is regularly syndicated in the Press and that her bio line identifies Malkin as a graduate of regional Holy Spirit High School, but that my own line fails to tag me as a graduate of Atlantic City High School.
While I retain few fond memories of ACHS, I am proud of having graduated The High School (and I mean The High School, the now-demolished bombproof castle on Albany Avenue, not the cushy new palace on the Black Horse Pike). I'm also content to have avoided attending Holy Spirit. So upon my prodigal return, I will not carp that it is Malkin who gets the fatted calf. Instead I rejoice that two South Jerseyans have returned to infuriate our own people.
* Clarification of exaggeration: My paper was the Atlantic City Daily Tribune, for which I was gainfully employed throughout the two weeks of its existence.
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I checked out the link you provided. I couldn't find your
article either, but I did find this which strikes me as
well-reasoned:
No Such Thing As Price Gouging article
her bio line identifies Malkin as a graduate of regional
Holy Spirit High School
Dear God - as if I didn't have enough contempt for my alma mater
enough as it was. Though for at least a few reasons, I can't find
it too hard to believe that Malkin hails from it. Just as it didn't
surprise me that
Chris Ford went there. Given her reported age, I might have a
cousin or two capable of relaying an interesting story about
her.
Great article Tim. I recently encountered support from an
unexpected source. My father believes that one of the fundamental
roles of government is redistributing wealth. We often clash over
politics. I was therefore surprised, when the conversation turned
to immigration, to hear him declare, "if I had it my way, I'd do
away with the border altogether". He wasn't especially suggesting
that we allow more immigration however. His point was that the
border was a big waste. Illegal immigrants get past the border and
we have to hunt them down in the interior. He thinks we'd save a
lot of time and money if we just enforced the laws same as we do
now, do away with the border, and let traffic flow.
This issue saddens me more than most that there is so little
support for the libertarian position. The consequential suffering
seems more direct and visible than it does with say school choice.
I'll tell you how sad I am, I'm too depressed to drink.
happyjuggler0,
That was a great article, although the tagline was interesting:
Alex Epstein is a junior fellow at the Ayn Rand Institute.
Ah, Tim, The nuns at Holy Spirit would have taught you proper English, so you wouldn't be writing such illiteracies as "I am proud of having graduated The High School..." One graduates FROM high school, lad. Get yourself a good grammar book to undo the harm they've done you in that Protestant excuse for a school.
I'm glad you corrected him. I had no idea what he meant without that preposition.
Tim Cavanaugh,
"They, too, do wrong who would debar foreigners from enjoying the
advantages of their city and would exclude them from its borders...
Still, to debar foreigners from enjoying the advantages of the city
is altogether contrary to the laws of humanity."
-- Cicero, De Officiis, III xi. 47
http://www.constitution.org/rom/de_officiis.htm
Ah, Tim, The nuns at Holy Spirit would have taught you
proper English
I don't know whether to find that funny or sad. The one nun that I
did have as a teacher, in addition to not being the shiniest penny
in the fountain, was a borderline Marxist when it came to economic
issues. In fact, she actually managed to show a couple of films
during her class glorifying proponents of liberation
theology.
The school's AP English teacher, on the other hand, was pretty damn
good. But if even half the stories about her past are true, then
she was pretty far removed from being a nun.
One graduates FROM high school, lad.
Why stop there, Patrick? Why not say I WAS graduated from high
school, and went on to be matriculated at university, where I read
liberal arts and took holiday at the weekend?
This is a recipe for even more of a police state than we have
now:
He thinks we'd save a lot of time and money if we just enforced
the laws same as we do now, do away with the border, and let
traffic flow.
Down that road lies national ID cards, no-knock searches of
jobsites and rental housing, and certainly no savings of time and
money. It is far less damaging to the civil liberties of the nation
to catch an illegal crossing the border than to track them down in
the interior.
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