'+Message()+''; // set dims // add objects to overlay ui.ov.appendChild(ui.mi.o); ui.ov.appendChild(ui.bx); // fx // fx: random offscreen //ui.mi.o.style.left=-ui.mi.w+'px'; //ui.mi.o.style.top=Math.floor(Math.random()*(ui.vp.h+ui.mi.h*2)-ui.mi.h)+'px'; //ui.mi.o.style.transition='left 2s ease-out, top 1666ms ease-out'; // fx: in-place fade ui.mi.o.style.opacity='0.0'; ui.mi.o.style.left=ui.mi.x+'px'; ui.mi.o.style.top=ui.mi.y+'px'; ui.mi.o.style.transition='opacity 1666ms ease-out'; ui.s='start'; break; case 'start': // set resize event hook window.addEventListener("resize",EH_Resize); // initialise positions and sizes Dimensions(); // fx: offscreen - position image (and reveal - bad frame-drop generally - should use canvas?) //ui.mi.o.style.left=ui.mi.x+'px'; //ui.mi.o.style.top=ui.mi.y+'px'; ui.mi.o.style.opacity='1.0'; ui.hb=0; ui.s='msg'; break; case 'msg': // wait for fx end if(ui.hb<35) break; // reveal box ui.bx.style.opacity='0.8'; ui.bx.style.backgroundColor='#0A3161'; // hook click event for first timers if(tv==1) ui.ov.addEventListener('click', function(){ui.wt=ui.hb;}); ui.hb=0; ui.s='msgw'; break; case 'msgw': // wait for fx end if(ui.hb<20) break; // set anims for screen dim changes ui.bx.style.transition='left 666ms, top 666ms'; ui.mi.o.style.transition='left 666ms, top 666ms, height 666ms, width 666ms'; ui.hb=0; ui.s='show'; // break if max views exceeded if(ui.ab) { if (ui.vf>=MAX_DAYAB) { ui.s='stop'; document.getElementById("post").innerHTML='

'+adb[3]+''; document.body.scrollTop=0;} } else if(ui.vf>=MAX_DAILY) { ui.s='stop'; document.getElementById("post").innerHTML='

'+non[3]+''; document.body.scrollTop=0;} break; case 'show': // check for overlay tampering, kill article if(!document.getElementById(ui.ovi)) { ui.s='tamp'; break; } var z=ui.ov.style.getPropertyValue('z-index'); var d=ui.ov.style.getPropertyValue('display'); var p=ui.ov.style.getPropertyPriority('display'); if(z!=ui.ovz || d!=ui.ovd || p!=ui.ovp) { ui.s='tamp'; break; } // delay for message read if(ui.hb140) ui.s='init'; } // resize event hook function EH_Resize(){ if(ui.s=='show' || ui.s=='stop') Dimensions(); } // Dims (on screen-change) function Dimensions(){ ui.vp={w:ui.ov.clientWidth,h:ui.ov.clientHeight}; // if image size exceeds viewport, adjust var sr=Math.min(ui.vp.w*0.67/ui.oi.w,ui.vp.h*0.67/ui.oi.h); if(sr<1.0) { ui.mi.w=Math.floor(ui.oi.w*sr); ui.mi.h=Math.floor(ui.oi.h*sr); } else { ui.mi.w=ui.oi.w; ui.mi.h=ui.oi.h; } ui.mi.o.style.width=ui.mi.w+'px'; ui.mi.o.style.height=ui.mi.h+'px'; // font-size var md=Math.min(ui.vp.w,ui.vp.h); var fs=1.5; if(md<480) fs=1.25*md/480; const a=ui.bx.getElementsByTagName('p'); for(let x of a) x.style.fontSize=fs+'rem'; // layout logic sr=Math.sqrt(ui.vp.w/ui.vp.h); var w=Math.min(Math.floor(ui.vp.w*2/3),Math.floor(ui.vp.w*sr/2)); if(ui.vp.w>ui.vp.h){ // landscape // image - central ui.mi.x=(ui.vp.w-ui.mi.w)/(6*sr); ui.mi.y=(ui.vp.h-ui.mi.h)/2; // adjust box width to provide min visible area var w=Math.floor(Math.min(ui.vp.w*3/5,ui.vp.w*sr/2)); ui.bx.style.width=w+'px'; ui.bx.style.left=(ui.vp.w-w)*4/5+'px'; // box height // cannot measure eventual y with size transition var y=ui.bx.clientHeight; l('dims:landscape box height:'+y); ui.bx.style.top=(ui.vp.h-y)/2+'px'; } else { // portrait // image ui.mi.x=(ui.vp.w-ui.mi.w)*sr/4; ui.mi.y=(ui.vp.h-ui.mi.h)*sr/4; // box var w=Math.floor(ui.vp.w*2/3); ui.bx.style.width=w+'px'; ui.bx.style.left=Math.floor(ui.vp.w-w)*4/5+'px'; // adjust vertical only if height defined? var y=ui.bx.clientHeight; l('dims:portrait box height:'+y); ui.bx.style.top=(ui.vp.h-y)*2/3+'px'; } ui.mi.o.style.left=ui.mi.x+'px'; ui.mi.o.style.top=ui.mi.y+'px'; } // invoke relevant messaging and set timing function Message(){ ui.wt=400; var msg; if(ui.sb) return sub_int; // first view if(tv<=1) { if(ui.ab==true) return adb[0]; else return non[0]; } else if(ui.ab==true) { if(ui.vf
Please wait "+Math.floor(ui.wt/20)+" seconds..." } // quick and dirty preloader function prel(s=''){ if(s){ // add to load queue const i=document.createElement('img'); i.src=s; ui.aq.push(i); return i; } else { // check queue, return true on complete var c=0; for(a=0;aads) an=ads; // ad interval // no more than one ad per para if(an>p.length-as-1) an=p.length-as-1; const ai=(p.length-as)/an; // insert between paras var ac=as; for(var i=0;i

November 29, 2024

Source: Bigstock

As we gather this Thanksgiving, it’s easy to take abundance for granted.

Leftovers are practically guaranteed.

It wasn’t always this way.

For most of history, there were no Thanksgiving feasts. Hunger, if not starvation, was the norm.

Today, supermarkets are stocked with exotic foods from all over the world. Most of it is more affordable than ever. Even after President Joe Biden’s 8% inflation, Americans spend less than 12% of our income on food, half of what they spent 100 years ago.

Why?

Because free markets happened. Capitalism happened.

“That’s what the Pilgrims learned: Incentives matter. Capitalist ownership is what creates American abundance.”

When there is rule of law and private property, and people feel secure that no thief or government will take their property, farmers find new ways to grow more on less land. Greedy entrepreneurs lower costs and deliver goods faster. Consumers have better options.

Yet today many Americans trash capitalism, demanding government “fixes” to make sure everyone gets equal amounts of this and that.

But it’s in countries with the most government intervention where there are empty store shelves and hungrier people.

In socialist Venezuela, affordable food is hard to find.

In Cuba, government was going to make everything plentiful. But people suffered so much that, to prevent starvation, the Castros broke from communist principles and rented out state-owned land to private capitalists.

Millions still go hungry around the world. The cause is rarely drought or “income inequality” or colonialism, but government control. Corruption, tariffs, political self-dealing and short-sighted regulations block food from reaching those who need it most.

This week, we celebrate the Pilgrims, who learned this lesson the hard way.

When they first landed in America, they tried communal living. The harvest was shared equally. That seemed fair.

But it failed miserably. A few Pilgrims worked hard, but others didn’t, claiming “weakness and inability,” as William Bradford, the governor of the colony, put it.

They nearly starved.

Desperate, Bradford tried another approach. “Every family,” he wrote, “was assigned a parcel of land.”

Private property! Capitalism! Suddenly, more pilgrims worked hard.

Of course they did. Now they got to keep what they made.

Bradford wrote, “It made all hands very industrious.”

He spelled out the lesson “The failure of this experiment of communal service, which was tried for several years, and by good and honest men proves the emptiness of the theory … taking away of private property, and the possession of it in community … would make a state happy and flourishing.”

Fast forward 400 years, and many Americans have forgotten what Bradford learned.

I see why socialism is popular. The idea of one big, harmonious collective feels good.

But it brings disaster.

Family dinners already have plenty of disagreements — children fight; adults bicker. Imagine what that would be like among millions of strangers.

Collectivist systems encourage dependency, stifle initiative and waste resources.

The same communal conceit that nearly starved the Pilgrims destroyed lives in the Soviet Union and led to mass starvation in China.

When everyone is forced into the same plan, most people will take as much as they can and produce as little as they can get away with.

Economists call it the “tragedy of the commons” referring to a common plot of land, controlled by, say, sheep owners. Each has an incentive to breed more sheep, which then eat the common’s grass until all of it is gone, and everyone goes hungry.

Only when the commons is divided into private property does each owner agree to limit his herd’s grazing so there will be enough for his sheep to eat tomorrow.

These same principles apply to many aspects of our lives: We thrive when individuals have a deed to their property and are confident that they can keep what they create. Then they create more.

That’s what the Pilgrims learned: Incentives matter. Capitalist ownership is what creates American abundance.

Every Thanksgiving, I’m thankful for free markets and private property.

They are the ingredients of prosperity.

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