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Brian Holtz

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  • Work: Yahoo
  • School: U. Of Michigan

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Last updated Fri Sep 28, 2007 Member since February 2005

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Knowing Humans Full Post View | List View

Study their behaviors. Observe their territorial boundaries. Leave their habitat as you found it.

Last Knowing Humans Post

This is my last Knowing Humans posting on Yahoo 360 and my first posting on Knowing Humans 2.0, hosted by blogger.com through http://knowinghumans.net. Subscribe there now.

With the public announcement of Mosh and Yahoo's embarrassing lack of blog search capability, I can no longer use laziness and company loyalty as an excuse for not migrating off of 360. (When Personals was re-org'd into the Search subdivision a couple years ago, I asked when Yahoo was going to have solutions for searching blogs and our own intranet. We still lack good answers for either.) I've recently resolved to do more of my online political activism through blogs and wikis and less through email-based forums, and so this week I started looking for an alternative to 360.

I picked blogger.com because it met my minimal requirements in being totally free and able to 1) backup my blog, 2) manually import and back-date my 360 postings, and 3) operate through my own domain. I've imported my 360 postings of the last year and soon will all 200 of them up. I've also set my SiteMeter count of the new blog based on the 151K pageviews currently registered on the 360 blog. (Its technorati rank was 2,124,856, oddly up 400K from 2.5M in September despite relative quiescence. The rank of knowinghumans.net was 2.9M, as it was just a page of links to my 360 posts.)

I've indulged this week in customizing my blogger.com template, adding features such as:

  • The title area is centered over an up-to-date image of the current shading of the Earth, and adjusts nicely on window resizings.
  • A table of contents hack borrowed from Beautiful Beta.
  • A borrowed hack to suppress the Blogger nav bar.
  • My blogroll imported from Bloglines.
  • My recent bookmarks imported from Yahoo My Web.
  • My recent email correspondence imported from my Yahoo Group.
Next I want to add better search facility to replace the one that was in the nav bar. I also want to try out the AdSense integration, if only to see what sort of ads Google would place here. I have no financial need to try to monetize my blog, so the only ads I foresee posting here are for causes I endorse. In fact, I have a scheme in mind to de-monetize my blog by giving money to other bloggers. More about that later. :-)
Saturday November 24, 2007 - 09:24pm (PST) Permanent Link | 0 Comments
Impeach George W. Bush
Whereas, George W. Bush has proposed and signed federal laws that have no basis in the Article I Section 8 powers of Congress, such as the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act and the No Child Left Behind Act;

Whereas, George W. Bush knowingly ordered the "extraordinary rendition" of suspected terrorists to other countries for purposes of torture, in violation of the United Nations Convention Against Torture;

Whereas, George W. Bush allowed his administration to condone torture, failed to investigate and prosecute high-level officials responsible for torture, and officially refused to accept the binding nature of a statutory ban on cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment;

Whereas, George W. Bush knowingly violated the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act by ordering warrantless wiretapping;

Whereas, George W. Bush knowingly deprived at least two United States citizens of their constitutional rights by means of military incarceration;

Whereas, George W. Bush proposed and signed the Military Commissions Act, which violates the U.S. Constitution's Article I Section 9 guarantee of habeas corpus;

Whereas, George W. Bush proposed and signed the USA PATRIOT Act, which contained provisions later ruled to be in violation of the First and Fourth Amendments of the U.S. Constitution;

Whereas, George W. Bush invaded Iraq under pretenses about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction that at best were recklessly and negligently false;

Therefore, be it resolved that George W. Bush, by such conduct, warrants impeachment and trial, and removal from office and disqualification to hold and enjoy any office of honor, trust or profit under the United States.
Monday November 19, 2007 - 10:39am (PST) Permanent Link | 1 Comment
A model LP resolution on foreign intervention

A Resolution Affirming the Libertarian Party's Traditional Position Concerning Foreign Intervention.

Whereas, the original Libertarian Party Platform of 1972 warned that the United States should not "act as policeman of the world" while asserting that any legitimate government "must protect itself and its citizens against the initiation of force from other nations";

Whereas, the Libertarian Party Platform of 1976 held that "the principle of non-initiation of force should guide the relationships between governments";

Whereas, the Libertarian Party Platform has held since at least 1980 that "American foreign policy should seek an America at peace with the world and the defense -- against attack from abroad -- of the lives, liberty, and property of the American people on American soil";

Whereas, President Bush's claim that "the Iraqi regime possesses and produces chemical and biological weapons" was at best recklessly and negligently false;

Whereas, President Bush invaded Iraq without a declaration of war;

Whereas, the civil war in Iraq has demonstrated the wisdom of the Libertarian Party's traditional opposition to military adventures;

Whereas, the United States government long ago achieved its purported primary war aims of 1) eliminating any WMD capability or international terrorist infrastructure, and 2) deposing Saddam's regime in favor of a federal democratic constitutional framework (naively) intended to protect minorities and fundamental human rights;

Therefore, be it resolved that the Libertarian Party calls on the United States government to

  • withdraw its armed forces from Iraq, without delay or preconditions;
  • cease all efforts at nation-building in Afghanistan;
  • desist from any further attempts to spread democracy in the Middle East or around the world through military force; and
  • follow its historic libertarian tradition of avoiding entangling alliances, foreign quarrels, and military adventures while protecting America from the initiation of force launched from outside its borders.
Saturday November 3, 2007 - 01:31pm (PDT) Permanent Link | 0 Comments
No 1st Force: A Pledge Against Political Force Initiation
Some Libertarian Party members claim that the LP Pledge requires advocating the immediate repeal and non-enforcement of all laws that initiate force. If they mean what they say, then they will take the following Pledge, and advocate that all LP officers and candidates be required to take it too.

I do not -- and will never -- advocate, practice or abet the initiation of force -- by any person, group, or institution, through any law, regulation, or practice -- for political or social goals.

If I am ever a candidate for political office:
  • I will publicly advocate immediate repeal of all laws that in any way authorize or tolerate the initiation of force.
  • I will never commit to any particular order of destatization, for that would be construed as endorsing the continuation of statism and the violation of rights.
  • I will refuse to accept any salary financed by coercive taxation.
  • I will refuse any funding of my campaign financed by coercive taxation.
  • I will refuse any media access granted by coercive equal-time or fairness laws.
  • I will publicly declare my mental reservation to any oath or affirmation to preserve, protect, or defend any Constitution insofar as it authorizes the initiation of force.
If I ever hold executive office:
  • I will use whatever authority I can to grant full amnesty and pardons to anyone and everyone ever accused or convicted of tax evasion, any other victimless crime, or self-defense against an agent of the State or any other aggressor.
  • I will use whatever authority I can to veto, nullify, or cancel any law that in any way authorizes or tolerates the initiation of force.
  • I will refuse to authorize or commit any initiation of force for any reason.
  • I will refuse to expend any funds derived in any significant part by coercive taxation, except to return them to taxation victims in the exact amounts of their victimization.
If I ever hold legislative office:
  • I will never vote for any bill or amendment containing any provision or language that authorizes or tolerates the initiation of force.
  • I will vote for bills falling short of outright repeal of force-initiating laws only if they straightforwardly amend such laws to strictly reduce their scope or effect without reiterating any language authorizing or tolerating the initiation of force.
  • I will leave it to statist legislators to "reform" their force-initiating laws by trading off force initiations of different kinds or with different victims, and will never taint the cause of liberty by voting for any such "reform".
  • I will never vote to confirm the nomination to political office of anyone who does not take this pledge.
  • I will always vote for the impeachment and removal of any officeholder who does not follow this pledge.
If I ever hold judicial office:
  • I will strike down any law I can that in any way authorizes or tolerates the initiation of force.
  • I will dismiss any case brought before me against anyone and everyone charged with the pardonable "crimes" listed above.
As a citizen:
  • I will never vote for, contribute to, sign a petition for, endorse, or support any candidate who does not take this pledge.
  • I will never join, register for, or contribute to any political party which advocates any initiation of force.
  • I will write in "No 1st Force" in any race in which there is no candidate who takes this pledge.
  • I will never vote for a ballot measure that in any way authorizes or tolerates the initiation of force.
  • I will vote for ballot measures falling short of outright repeal of force-initiating laws only if they straightforwardly amend such laws to strictly reduce their scope or effect without reiterating any language authorizing or tolerating the initiation of force.
  • I will never vote on a grand jury to indict anyone of the pardonable "crimes" listed above.
  • I will never vote on a jury to convict anyone of the pardonable "crimes" listed above.
  • I will never accept any employment financed in any significant part by coercive taxation.
  • I will never accept any payments financed in any significant part by coercive taxation, except insofar as they constitute repayment of funds previously taxed from me.
  • I will never voluntarily participate in the enforcement of any law that in any way authorizes or tolerates the initiation of force.
As an LP member:
  • I will never nominate, endorse, or vote for any candidate for LP office who does not take this pledge.
  • I will never support or vote for any LP Platform that does not advocate immediate repeal of all laws that in any way authorize or tolerate the initiation of force.
  • I will never support or vote for any LP Platform that does not advocate full amnesty and pardons to anyone and everyone ever accused or convicted of tax evasion, any other victimless crime, or self-defense against an agent of the State or any other aggressor.

This pledge was written by Brian Holtz, who opposes only fraud in the reproduction of expression and so does not believe in copyright. If you do believe in copyright, then this text is protected under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license, and may be used in any way provided the use cites Brian Holtz as the original author and http://marketliberal.org/No1stForce.html as the latest version.
Wednesday October 24, 2007 - 10:11pm (PDT) Permanent Link | 0 Comments
LPCA ExCom starting to face fiscal reality
If Starchild and I could agree that Sep 15 in Millbrae was the most encouraging LPCA ExCom meeting we've ever attended, then that's got to be a sign either that the LPCA is making progress -- or that the apocalypse is nigh.
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Don Cowles reported that Angela's sudden departure has kept him from having completely current financial numbers for us, but he stressed again how bad our projected finances are and thus how badly we need to fundraise. Somebody pointed out in response that in recent years much of our funds came from UMP and Operation Breakthrough, but those programs have ended and will not be a revenue source in the future. I took this as underscoring my long-standing contention that we're not going to fundraise our way around the termination of those two huge programs, and that we need to look at expenses.
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We read the status update of Audit Chair Jerry Dixon, who wasn't able to attend. He seems to think that he needs thousands of dollars to finance an outside audit that wouldn't even be done by the 2008 convention, and says that Mark Johnson has disengaged from the audit over his disagreement with that need. The ExCom sided overwhelmingly with Mark on this topic. I stressed again that what ExCom and the delegates need from an audit is not the re-checking of the Treasurer's math and the accuracy of his transcription of the numbers from invoices and checks and receipts into our budget. Instead, what we need most is a clearer picture of what the labels for the numbers mean, and another level of granularity for the bigger numbers. The primary mystery to be cleared up is: how does the roughly $45K/yr we spend on office staff and expenses break down, what do we get for it , and can we get by with less? I cited the information in Beau's report (below) as finally explaining what our non-salary office expenses are, and said that an audit just needs to 1) do the same thing for our staff expenses and 2) answer the 13 questions for the audit committee that I earlier emailed out (appended below) . Chuck Moulton was stressed the importance of an independent audit as a confidence-builder for our delegates and donors, but nobody could recall the LPCA ever spending thousands of dollars on one. Ted Brown said audits have been done on a volunteer basis. I asked for an example of prior art for Audit Committee reports, and was pointed to recent convention minutes. The 2005 minutes give a 3-sentence report saying the 2003 records were fine. The 2004 minutes include a one-page report about the 2002 records saying that they're basically fine, but that it would be nice to have more details about office expenses. I was very encouraged by the sentiment of the ExCom that the audit needs to clarify our finances and expenses (and thus identify potential savings) more than anything else.
_

Beau's report on his handling of office operations since Angela's departure was very encouraging. He has very quickly identified about half a dozen ways to save on recurring expenses, and is working on a proposal to close the office and make its operations more distributed and online. He is documenting the procedures and mechanics of the office's operations, and seems confident that they can be streamlined so as to not require a full-time Executive Director costing us roughly $40K/yr. Since a dollar saved is equivalent to a dollar fund-raised, it looks to me like Beau is poised to become by far our top-performing fundraiser.

California Freedom is costing us about $26K/yr to publish. Mark Johnson proposed a moratorium on its production until we are no longer sliding towards bankruptcy, but the idea had no backers due to the obligation we have to produce CF for members who pay the full dues that includes a CF subscription. I pointed out that we're spending $9K/yr in layout costs so that CF can have nice columns and stories that break across pages, whereas the layout costs of the similar email "eFlyer" we've started producing are zero. I suggested that $9K/yr in layout costs are a pretty extravagant way to spend members' money as we slide toward insolvency. There seemed to be wide sentiment for finding some cost savings here, but Cam McConnell said the meeting was almost over and that we should work offline on bringing our newsletter expenses into alignment with our membership model. Chuck Moulton suggested that dues should finance the newsletter, recurring donations should finance office/staff operations, and fund-raising should be for specific programs. I think that's almost right, except I would say that dues should finance both the newsletter and core office operations (renewals, database, etc.), and that all other programs and non-essential operations should be financed by program-specific fundraising and program-specific recurring donations. This would allow the funding behaviors of our members to act as a clear market signal telling us how much they value our various activities.

The committee adopted the proposal Chuck and I put on the agenda to post human-readable contact info on the LPCA web site for ExCom members who desire to do so.

Chuck and I also put the filling of LNC vacancies on the agenda, but this turned out to be the one dim spot of the meeting. Aaron Starr is now LPUS Treasurer and so his LNC seat as our rep (alongside M Carling) is now effectively vacant, with 2nd Alternate Scott Lieberman routinely filling in for him. Ted Brown moved to formally put Scott in Aaron's seat, but the motion was divided into vacating the seat and then promoting Scott. The first motion succeeded, but there was dissent on the second. Lawrence Samuels said that Scott was "one of these reformers" and was "pro-war". I quoted from a recent email from Scott saying "basic non-interventionism, combined with overwhelming retaliatory military force, is the best way to go." This satisfied Bruce Dovner and perhaps others, but the result was that Scott lost a narrow voice vote in which about half the committee abstained. The agenda item then ran out of time before we consider whether to make Scott 1st Alternate and to consider me for one of the open spots. (It now seems unlikely that I would have won one, as I had just cast the only vote against endorsing an anti-war rally sponsored by ANSWER, which is led by marxist-leninists from the Workers' World Party.)

In other news, the committee voted (over the nays of Ted, Chuck, and me) to make Starchild push his chair back from the table, and he complied. Various members of the committee successfully moved to allow Starchild to be heard as raised his hands at various points, and his comments were quite constructive. Afterward he agreed with me that this was the most encouraging ExCom meeting he'd ever attended.

From the gallery, Brian Miller spoke in favor of a resolution that the LPCA call on the Governor to endorse the gay marriage rights bill before him, and also announced an extremely generous $500 donation to the LPCA. During the public comments at the beginning of the meeting, Miller briefly and elliptically asked the ExCom to address the recent unpleasantness regarding Tim Campbell's remarks about Angela Keaton, but the committee took no official action.

-----Original Message-----
From: Brian Holtz [mailto:brian@holtz.org]
Sent: Tuesday, July 17, 2007 11:40 PM
I spent the evening studying the reports available to members and came up with a set of high-level questions that I as a member would want to see answered by the Audit Committee and the larger LPCA financial management team.
June Balance Sheet
  • What are the details of the "current liabilities" ($10K - county distributions?) and "loans payable" ($3K) mentioned in the June report?
  • What is "deferred revenue"? The convention minutes show it dropping from $20K to $5K over CY2006, and the June report shows it back at $20K.
  • How much (if any) of the $51K in accounts receivable in the June report is not OB pledges? Was the growth from the $30K reported at the April convention purely the result of discovering new OB victories?
2006 Actuals
  • The convention report says 2006 recurring gifts totaled $57K, but the June report reports $21K more revenue than the convention report, with recurring gifts only at $35K, and a new category of "performance-based gifts" at $43K. I take it this is revised accrued 2006 OB pledge revenue to be collected in 2007 as a result of OB victories discovered after the convention? If so, what is the nature of the $15K of additional performance-based gifts anticipated in the budget adopted in June?
  • Why were county party distributions so low in 2006 (~$12K) compared to the previous four years ($33K - $44K)? Dues revenue was $54K in each of 2005 and 2006, but was $44K in 2005.
  • Can we break down the 2006 $10K of "other revenue" to one more level of detail? The March minutes say that $5K is list rental and $800 is interest. Is the other $4K all CF advertising revenue?
  • How does the $10K in 2006 direct mail solicitation and $3K in telephone solicitation roughly break down between the possible purposes e.g. membership prospecting, membership renewal, pledge solicitation, OB solicitation, and cruise attendance solicitation? We should try to break down expenses by purpose/program as well as by type (e.g. phone vs. mail).
  • The March minutes report $4K in 2006 HQ travel and $3K in "outside services". Could we get about a sentence more of description for each of these?
  • The March minutes report almost $3K in telephone expenses in 2006. How did we spend that much? AT&T says it offers businesses unlimited long-distance calls for $20/month ($11/mo the first year). I bet Richard Rider could hook us up with some kind of unlimited long-distance plan that would cost only a few hundred dollars a year.
  • 2007 Budget
    • What will be done with the $15K budgeted for campaigns and elections in 2007? If this is for finishing the discovery of 2006 OB victories, then why do we accrue new 2007 OB revenue discoveries against 2006, while accruing new 2007 OB expenses against 2007? Is there any way to avoid spending any of that $15K?
    • Why are member communications budgeted at $24K for 2007, vs. $18K in 2006? There doesn't seem to be a strong relationship between issues published and expense. The figures I have are: 2002: 9 @ $12K, 2003: 11 @ $13K, 2004: 12 @ $20K, 2005: 12 @ $28K, 2006: 9 @ $18K.
    • Why are we budgeting $20K for member recruitment in 2007 compared to $300 in 2006, while projecting a drop in dues revenue (from $54K to $50K)? What do we think 2007 dues revenue would be without spending that $20K? Don's spreadsheet shows nothing being spent on recruitment from 2002 - 2005.
    • What are the "other fundraising costs" of $5K in the 2007 budget, and why are we budgeting $20K in direct mail fundraising? The analogous figures for these categories were: 2006: $15K, 2005: $12K, 2004: $6K, 2003: $7K, 2002: $15K. What do we think 2007 dues revenue would be without spending that $25K?
Friday September 21, 2007 - 08:57am (PDT) Permanent Link | 0 Comments

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